Watching Tyrese Haliburton navigate Game 5’s struggles, as someone who wants to live his entire life without New York winning a title because I grew up always seeing them as the bad guys like an 80s film villain, I can’t help but root for him to figure this out. But every possession now comes under a microscope that few players ever experience – and fewer still learn to master. And standing directly in his path? A New York team that desperately wants to ensure he doesn’t crack the code.
Did you hear the chatter about Haliburton being a superstar on the verge?
Stephen Curry went through this gauntlet over a decade ago, learning how to perform when every defensive coordinator in the league has spent weeks studying your tendencies. By now, Curry operates in that fishbowl with the ease of someone who’s been there countless times. He knows how to find his spots when teams pick him up at half court. He’s mastered the art of creating space against schemes designed specifically to stop him.
That mastery didn’t happen overnight – it took years of playoff battles, each one teaching him something new about handling the pressure.
For the second consecutive year, the Knicks have positioned themselves as Haliburton’s primary obstacle to breakthrough stardom. They’re not just playing defense – they’re doing all they can to make sure Haliburton never sees the NBA Finals . Mikal Bridges picking him up at half court, the switching on every screen, the physical bump-and-grind approach – this is a team that has studied exactly how to make Haliburton uncomfortable.
The Knicks know they have a window here. They understand that if Haliburton figures out how to solve their puzzle, he might never be stopped again. So they’re throwing everything at him, hoping to plant seeds of doubt that will linger for years.
For Haliburton, every dribble, every screen, every shot selection gets dissected now. When the Knicks disrupted his rhythm in Game 5, it wasn’t just tough defense – it was a calculated attempt to keep him frustrated before he fully figures this league out (if ever). This is psychological warfare disguised as basketball.
3-1 comeback brewing between Knicks-Pacers?
Dallas: "If there was a year for a team to comeback from down 3-1 I think the Knicks have what it takes."
PG: "It's over." pic.twitter.com/OkNsMes5Yk
— Podcast P with Paul George (@PodcastPShow) May 29, 2025
The encouraging sign? His response showed maturity. “I got to be better, and I’ll be better in Game 6.” That’s the right mindset, even if the execution has yet to catch up.
Curry had the luxury of failing and learning in relative obscurity during those early Warriors years. Haliburton is figuring it out one game away from the Finals, with a hungry New York team determined to send him home disappointed for the second straight year. The Knicks know that stars are made in moments like these – and they’re hellbent on making sure this isn’t his moment.
There’s something compelling about watching a young star navigate these waters against a team specifically designed to stop his ascension. Haliburton has the talent and the temperament – now he needs to develop that sixth sense Curry has, the ability to find solutions when teams throw their best punch and mean it personally.
Saturday night in Indianapolis will tell us whether he’s ready to break through New York’s wall, or if the Knicks will successfully delay his superstar coronation for another year.