knicksonline.com

Hart is back, and the Knicks finally look like themselves

Josh Hart returned to the lineup after suffering an ankle injury on Christmas Day, and it did not take long to realize just how badly he had been missed. The timing could not have been better, because the stretch without him exposed cracks that were impossible to ignore.

Over the eight games Hart missed, the Knicks managed just three wins. Two of them were narrow escapes against the Hawks and the Pelicans, and the other came against the Clippers. Needless to say, all three were against teams sitting below .500. When stronger opponents showed up, things unraveled quickly.

There was a two-point loss in San Antonio that slipped away late, followed by two home defeats in a building that had been close to untouchable. Atlanta got its revenge with a 111-99 win, and one night later Philadelphia followed suit in a 130-119 loss where Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid combined for 62 points. It was a frustrating night, capped by the uncomfortable sight of Embiid celebrating at Madison Square Garden after beating the Knicks by running the same play over and over.

Things only got worse. Two days later came a blowout in Detroit, a 121-90 loss that doubled as revenge for the Pistons after their first-round playoff exit. The second half of that game was as rough as it gets, with Detroit outscoring the Knicks 57-36. Even when things tightened up again in Phoenix, the result was the same. Devin Booker poured in 31 points, Royce O’Neale delivered in the final two minutes, and a 112-107 loss closed the book on a miserable stretch.

Then Hart came back, and everything changed. In Portland, the Knicks finally looked whole again, grinding out a 123-114 win that felt steadier than the score suggested. Hart logged 31 minutes, scored 18 points, added six assists and three rebounds, and injected the kind of energy that had been missing from both ends of the floor.

His impact was immediate. Hart scored eight points in the first four minutes, setting the tone early, and his presence was felt everywhere. In crunch time, he came up with a steal and finished a layup to extend the lead to ten, a play that summed up exactly what he brings when the game tightens.

From hustle to defensive instincts to timely offense, Hart’s return reminded everyone how thin the margin is without him. The difference was obvious, the result followed, and the message was clear.

Welcome back, Josh Hart.

rady

KnicksOnline.com founder. Software tester by day time, sports shooter by free time. Rocking with the orange and blue since the mid 90s.

Read full news in source page