Knicks dominate Pacers in rout
This was a blowout -- and that was after only the first few
minutes.
By the end?
"Domination," Knicks forward Al Harrington said.
Wilson Chandler scored 23 points, David Lee added 22 points
and 16 rebounds, and New York flirted with the biggest victory in
franchise history in beating the Indiana Pacers 132-89 on Sunday
night.
Danilo Gallinari finished with 20 points and eight rebounds
for the Knicks, who led by 48 points -- the largest lead in the NBA
this season -- and won for the 10th time in 15 games over the last
month. Their second straight victory was never in doubt, as they
quickly pounced on a team that had little energy on the second
night of a back-to-back. New York led by double digits for nearly
the final 44 minutes.
"They were tired and then we caught them, but then we also
played well. Otherwise it'd be 10 or 15 points and you can make a
case either way," Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said. "But we played
about as well as we could play and just really liked the ball
movement, the unselfishness and just making the right plays."
The Knicks' largest victory is by 48 points, done three
times. New York still led this one by 48 with 3:15 remaining. The
previous largest lead in the NBA this season had been 45 by Golden
State over Minnesota on Nov. 9, according to STATS LLC.
"It's a different feeling trying to play when you have a
20-point lead," Lee said. "It's more difficult to extend that lead,
and it could be easy to relax and let a team back in the game. But
we didn't do that tonight, we extended the lead and put the game
away."
Luther Head scored 18 points for the Pacers, who snapped an
eight-game losing streak by beating Minnesota on Saturday but never
had a chance for consecutive wins. With Troy Murphy resting a
sprained left ankle and the demoted T.J. Ford sitting near him on
the bench, the Pacers who did play were completely overmatched.
"It's no fun to get behind 15, 20 points early on in the
game," Pacers coach Jim O'Brien said. "We found ourselves digging
holes early in games and generally we fight back and make it a
ballgame, but we did not tonight."
Nate Robinson and the rest of the reserves played the final
quarter as the Knicks improved to 14-20 -- quite a turnaround after
a 3-14 start.
The Knicks opened a 9-0 lead and made eight of their first 11
shots, the last one emphatically. Gallinari faked a jumper and
drove into the lane, rising over 7-foot-2 Roy Hibbert as he came to
help and slamming it down for a 20-5 lead.
Robinson entered a few minutes later to a loud ovation, his
first home game since Dec. 1. He was nowhere near as sharp as he
was Friday in Atlanta, when he was given a chance after being
benched the previous 14 games and responded with 41 points in the
Knicks' 112-108 overtime victory over the Hawks.
He finished with only six and shot just 2 of 11, but he
remains the most popular Knicks player -- even among other popular
New Yorkers. Shown on TV at halftime, actor Dustin Hoffman unfolded
a picture of Robinson to show the camera.
"I'm so glad they put Nate back in," Hoffman said during a
halftime interview.
The Knicks didn't get anything special from Robinson this
time. Four players already had at least 14 points in New York's
highest-scoring first half of the season.
O'Brien made his own lineup shakeup, making Earl Watson the
starting point guard, rookie A.J. Price his backup and dropping
Ford from the rotation. The new lineup produced the victory over
Minnesota, but Watson shot 4 of 12 for nine points Sunday. Price
scored 11.
After racing to a 38-16 lead after one, the Knicks followed
with their biggest second period of the season. They scored 36 in
the quarter, with Chandler's follow shot with 5.7 seconds left
making it 74-42 -- at the time their largest lead of the season.
"They came out and they were hitting a lot of shots early,"
Hibbert said. "We just didn't do what we were supposed to do from
the start. They played an extremely good game today."
Lee and Gallinari each had 16 in the half, while Chandler and
Harrington had 14 apiece. Chris Duhon then scored 12 in the third
quarter, which ended with the Knicks leading 107-62.
Notes: The Knicks' last 48-point victory was in a
130-82 rout of Philadelphia on April 21, 1994. ... The Knicks tied
a season low with nine turnovers. ... The Knicks outrebounded the
Pacers 55-34, their largest rebounding margin of the season.