The Knicks are sitting pretty: With dominant sweep of 76ers, New York is in great shape ahead of ECF
The Knicks are sitting pretty: With dominant sweep of 76ers, New York is in great shape ahead of ECF
New York is on a hell of a run, and it has put itself in an excellent position with a seven-game playoff winning streak
By
James Herbert
May 10, 2026
at
8:05 pm ET
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4 min read
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Imagn Images
Before Game 1 of their first-round series against the New York Knicks, Philadelphia 76ers coach Nick Nurse said that it felt like a "really long two days" since Game 7 of their first-round series against the Boston Celtics.
"I always said, even when I was coaching in the minors, that when your team's winning, you just want to keep the games coming," Nurse said.
In retrospect, perhaps some rust would have been acceptable if it meant getting a little more rest. The Knicks ran the Sixers off the floor in the opener, and, less than a week later, the series is already over. With Joel Embiid playing through hip and ankle ailments and Tyrese Maxey compromised by an injured finger, Philadelphia never resembled the team that won three straight games to erase a 3-1 deficit against Boston.
The Knicks, meanwhile, wouldn't change a single thing about these playoffs, aside from OG Anunoby's strained right hamstring. After a 144-114 rout to sweep the Sixers in Sunday's Game 4, they've won seven straight games since falling down 2-1 against the Atlanta Hawks in the first round. In those seven games, they scored 130.5 points per 100 possessions, allowed 103 points per 100 possessions and had a true shooting percentage of 66.2%. For the second consecutive season, they're headed to the Eastern Conference finals, which will begin on either May 17 or May 19.
Given how well things have been going, maybe New York will find itself antsy to get back on the floor in the next few days. This break, however, will give Anunoby at least a week to rest and rehabilitate his injury. It will also give the coaching staff at least a week to scout the Cleveland Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons without having to think about its own second-round series.
Perhaps most importantly, by making short work of Philadelphia, the Knicks don't have to worry about anything else going wrong in the next seven days. In the playoffs, when you're often playing every other day, wear and tear is cumulative. New York should be rooting for the Cavaliers to tie their series on Monday, and then it should be rooting for them and the Pistons to beat each other up in a seven-game slugfest.
Two years ago, the Knicks lost the war of attrition against the Indiana Pacers in the second round. In Game 7 at Madison Square Garden, Anunoby played five minutes on a strained hamstring, Josh Hart played 37 minutes with a strained abdomen, Jalen Brunson fractured his hand in the third quarter, and the Pacers won by 21 points. Mitchell Robinson had ankle surgery during the series. New York didn't fall apart physically the same way when they lost in last year's conference finals, but it again couldn't keep pace with Indiana. Part of the rationale for replacing coach Tom Thibodeau with Mike Brown was that Brown would play a deeper bench and the team would be fresher when it matters.
It is impossible to overstate how much the Knicks' outlook has improved in the last two-and-a-half weeks. On April 23, when they lost a second straight one-point game against Atlanta, questions swirled around Brown, Karl-Anthony Towns and Mikal Bridges in particular. Now, that existential crisis seems like a distant memory. In the last seven games, New York has played like the best version of itself, especially on offense. It has seamlessly toggled between Towns-as-a-facilitator mode and Brunson-as-a-pick-and-roll-playmaker mode. It has exploited opponents' pressure points far more effectively than those opponents have been able to pick on Towns and Brunson. It has done damage on the offensive glass, gotten solid production from the bench and gotten to the free-throw line. And it has been absolutely scorching from 3-point range.
> 25 3PM IN GAME 4. KNICKS ARE MOVING ON.
McBride: 7 3PM
Brunson: 6 3PM
Hart: 4 3PM
Shamet: 4 3PM
Towns: 2 3PM
Alvarado: 1 3PM
Dadiet: 1 3PM
NYK’ 25 3PM ties the record most in any postseason game in NBA history 🤯
MIL: 25 3PM on April 19, 2023
CLE: 25 3PM on May 4, 2016 pic.twitter.com/2BoetvBqzC
— NBA (@NBA) May 10, 2026
In the clincher against Philly, the Knicks tied NBA playoff records for 3s made in a half (18) and game (25). Twenty-one of those 3s were assisted, with Brunson and Bridges assisting five of them apiece and Towns assisting four. Their ball movement and player movement have been purposeful, and their confidence has been through the roof. Having watched the Sixers' perimeter defenders stifle the Celtics' offense so recently, it was a bit jarring to see a team put them into scramble mode so easily. After the win, Brown complimented Philadelphia's quickness, athleticism and ability to jump passing lanes, which forced the Knicks to make sure their sp