Knicks vs. Pistons schedule, odds, game times, NBA playoff updates: Where to watch Game 4, stream series

 With 10:14 left in the fourth quarter, Jalen Brunson checked back into the game. This is awesome news for the Knicks, but let’s see how he moves out there.

Cade Cunningham just split a pair of free throws — his first attempts of the game — and the Pistons are up 74-64. 

 After missing his first five 3-point attempts on Sunday (and shooting a combined 3 for 18 from deep in Games 2 and 3), Malik Beasley made two 3s in the final minute and a half of the third quarter. Detroit will enter the fourth with a seven-point lead, having outscored New York 28-14 after halftime. 

This game has totally turned. The big story, though, is that Jalen Brunson had to go to the locker room late in the third after suffering an apparent injury. Brunson’s status for the rest of this game is unclear. 

Brunson has 17 points (6-15 FG, 3-6 3PT, 2-2 FT) and nine assists in 29 minutes today. If he can’t return, New York is going to have a tough time offensively. He’s not on the court to start the fourth, but he is on the bench.

 With about three minutes left in the third quarter, Jalen Brunson lost the ball in the backcourt with Dennis Schröder pressuring him. Brunson hit the floor to try to retrieve the ball, and got tangled up with Schröder. 

Schröder appeared to fall on Brunson’s right leg. Brunson stayed down, wincing in pain, as Cade Cunningham dunked the ball on the break. The Knicks then called a timeout and Brunson limped to the locker room.

Brunson recently missed about a month because of a sprained right ankle.

UPDATE: Brunson checked back in around the 10-minute mark in the fourth quarter with the Knicks trailing by 10.

 Yeah, you’re going to want to see Cade Cunningham’s left-handed dunk over Karl-Anthony Towns:

Such a strong take by Cunningham. You can tell Towns didn’t want to risk picking up his fifth foul.

On a related note: Tobais Harris, who has been huge for the Pistons during the 23-4 run that spanned the end of the first half and the first few minutes of the second half, has picked up his fifth foul. He’s on the bench now. (Harris has a team-high 18 points.)

With 3:04 left in the third, the Pistons are up 63-61 after two free throws from Dennis Schröder.

 Bad news for the Knicks: By charging into Cade Cunningham, Karl-Anthony Towns picked up his fourth foul with 10:31 left in the third quarter. Tom Thibodeau elected to keep him in the game.

More bad news for the Knicks: With 7:36 left in the third quarter, the Pistons are on a 19-4 run. New York is up 52-51, but Detroit has all the momentum.

The Pistons are shooting terribly (2 for 19) from deep, but they’re making a push anyway. Cunningham blocked both OG Anunoby and Jalen Brunson at the rim in the span of one minute. He has four blocks in the game!

 Not the prettiest half. New York leads by seven, but is shooting 17 for 49 (34.7%) from the field and 6 for 21 (28.6%) from deep.

Detroit, meanwhile, is shooting 16 for 43 (37.2%) from the field and 2 for 16 (12.5%) from deep. The big difference is that the Pistons have turned the ball over 12 times to the Knicks’ five.

It’s not like these teams aren’t playing hard. Game 4 has been physical, just like the rest of the series, and there have been some impressive effort plays. Here’s Mikal Bridges preventing an easy Ausar Thompson bucket:

And here’s Cade Cunningham blocking Bridges in transition (after a nice finish by KAT):

The Knicks have been in control for most of the day, but the Pistons went on a 9-0 run near the end of the half. Detroit is definitely within striking distance now, but it needs to fix its halfcourt offense in the second half if it’s going to even the series.

 I can’t believe this happened again: Detroit started the second quarter with a turnover because Ron Holland II couldn’t inbound the ball — the Knicks’ Cam Payne deflected the pass off of Holland.

You might remember that the Pistons started the fourth quarter of the series opener with a five-second violation. Shortly after that, they were on the wrong end of a 21-0 run.

Holland’s turnover on Sunday was the first of four Detroit turnovers in the first three minutes of the quarter. It has 10 turnovers in the game, and it has only eight made field goals (and two assists).

More ugly numbers for the Pistons: Tobias Harris and Malik Beasley are shooting a combined 2 for 14 (and 0 for 7 from deep). 

New York is up 33-21 with 8:36 left in the second quarter. 

 After 12 minutes, New York has to be pleased with how the game is going. Jalen Brunson been in control — seven points, three rebounds, six assists, no turnovers — and Detroit has gotten nothing going on the offensive end.

The Knicks are 5 for 10 from deep. The Pistons are 0 for 6. 

Detroit has committed six turnovers. New York has committed three.

Mitchell Robinson played the final four minutes of the quarter and pulled down three offensive rebounds. It has felt like the Knicks have been first to every 50-50 ball.

 With 3:32 left in the first quarter, the Knicks are up 24-12. New York has made 4 of its 5 3-point attempts — and Josh Hart specifically is 2 for 2 — but this definitely isn’t just a case of hot shooting. Detroit has committed five turnovers already, and New York is finding easy baskets in transition.

Here’s Karl-Anthony Towns blocking Tobias Harris and OG Anunoby dunking on Ausar Thompson on the break early on:

One positive for Detroit: Jalen Duren pulled down nine rebounds in the game’s first seven minutes.

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 New York has taken a 2-1 lead in the first-round series, thanks to a bounceback game from Karl-Anthony Towns and several clutch plays by Jalen Brunson, the newly named Clutch Player of the Year.

At MSG on Monday, Towns finished with 10 points (and zero in the second half) in the Knicks’ 100-94 loss. Three days later, on the road, he scored a game-high 31 points (10-18 FG, 4-8 3PT, 7-7 FT) in 41 minutes. 

Brunson finished with 30 points (9-20 FG, 1-7 3PT, 12-14 FT) in 41 minutes, and he scored 12 of his points in the fourth quarter.

Cade Cunningham and Tim Hardaway Jr. finished with 24 points apiece for Detroit. Cunningham added eight rebounds, 11 assists, four steals and two blocks.

The big story: New York’s offense, which looked so slow and stagnant in Game 2, came to life in Detroit. Towns got going with some transition 3s early, and the Knicks played with much more pace overall. Can they sustain that in Game 4 on Sunday?

 After an easy Karl-Anthony Towns bucket (against a Dennis Schröder switch), Detroit has gone on an 8-0 run: A Cade Cunningham pull-up 3, a Schröder 3 from Cunningham in transition, then a Tobias Harris jumper over Jalen Brunson from the free throw line. With 4:41 left, the Knicks are up 104-101.

Buckle up!

 The good news for Detroit: Malik Beasley threw down a massive dunk over OG Anunoby:

The bad news: It’s still down by eight points with 7:56 left in the fourth quarter. 

Beasley was shooting 1 for 9 from the field before that dunk. He made a floater a couple of minutes later, prompting announcer Reggie Miller to suggest the dunk might have gotten him going, but he proceeded to miss a 3-pointer shortly after that.

Jalen Duren picked up his fifth foul early in the final frame, so Paul Reed is getting fourth-quarter minutes, everybody.

After taking Tobias Harris off the dribble and making a floater, Jalen Brunson is up to 20 points on the night.

 One quarter to go. The Pistons started the third strong, but didn’t make up much ground.

After a quiet Game 2, Karl-Anthony Towns has 25 points (8-15 FG, 4-8 3PT, 5-5 FT) in 30 minutes tonight. All of his made 3s have been in transition — look how deep this one was:

 Detroit’s in striking distance. Let’s see if it can put some stops together.

 Unlike Game 1, the Pistons’ absolutely terrible stretch took place early enough that they had time to make a comeback. They went on a 14-2 run early in the third quarter, and they trail 75-73 with 5:15 left in the third.

Not the best defense from Jalen Brunson here:

Not the best sequence for Josh Hart here:

Also: Dennis Schröder pressured Brunson and caused an eight-second violation.

It’s not all good news for Detroit, though: Tobias Harris, who still hasn’t scored tonight, is back on the bench after picking up his fourth foul. Interestingly, the Pistons elected to start the second half with Jalen Duren, not Harris, guarding Karl-Anthony Towns.

This is the sort of thing Towns can do to opposing bigs:

Towns has a game-high 22 points on 7-for-14 shooting. 

 Before a Malik Beasley 3 late in the second quarter, the Knicks were on a 21-3 run. Definitely not the way Detroit wanted to end the half! 

OG Anunoby has done a little bit of everything on both ends, and heading into the second quarter he has 18 points (6-10 FG, 3-6 3PT, 3-4 FT). Karl-Anthony Towns has 17 points (5-10 FG, 3-6 3PT, 4-4 FT) and Jalen Brunson has 13 points (3-8 FG, 1-3 3PT, 6-6 FT).

Tim Hardaway Jr. leads Detroit in scoring with 18 points (5-6 FG, 5-5 3PT). Cade Cunningham has 13 points (6-15 FG, 1-2 3PT, 0-1 FT) and Dennis Schroder has 13 points (4-6 FG, 3-4 3PT, 2-2 FT).

The Pistons have committed seven live-ball turnovers. New York has committed only two. 

Detroit’s Tobias Harris hasn’t scored a point, but the Knicks went on their big run when he was on the bench with three fouls. New York has looked a lot more comfortable when the Pistons have had a big guarding Towns instead of Harris guarding him.

 Look at how the Pistons took their first lead of the game:

That is an amazing pass by Cade Cunningham. And on their next possession, Cunningham found Tim Hardaway Jr. in transition for another 3:

Hardaway has 18 points and has made all five 3s he has attempted. Dennis Schröder is 3 for 4 from deep, too.

Detroit is up 43-41 with 5:51 left in the first half.

 Heading into the second quarter, the Knicks have a six-point lead thanks to a couple of plays by OG Anunoby late in the first. After driving at Cade Cunningham and drawing a foul, Anunoby split a pair of free throws. Mitchell Robinson rebounded the miss, then missed a layup, but Anunoby was there for a two-handed putback. Anunoby has 10 points (3-6 FG, 1-3 3PT, 3-4 FT) in 12 minutes.

Robinson, Karl-Anthony Towns and Paul Reed all earned technical fouls for an “altercation” with less than a minute left in the quarter. There was some unnecessary pushing and shouting.

The big takeaway so far: New York should feel good about its offense, especially compared to the first two games of the series. Let’s see if it can keep this going with Jalen Brunson on the bench.

 About 10 minutes into Game 3, a lot has happened! The Pistons missed their first seven field goal attempts and quickly fell behind 8-1, but they came back to tie it at 20. After that, New York went on an 8-0 run. It’s now 28-22 for the Knicks with 2:23 left in the first quarter and Dennis Schroder going to the free throw line for two shots after this timeout.

Coming into this game, there was a lot of talk about how to get Karl-Anthony Towns going. One way: Look for him in transition. In the first seven-and-a-half minutes, Towns attempted four trail 3s and made three of them. He has 11 points early.

Once again, it’s been physical. Ausar Thompson got a bloody nose from a nasty Towns screen, and Jalen Brunson earned a flagrant foul for hitting Tim Hardaway Jr. in the eye.

Hardaway, by the way, has 12 points — three 3s, plus three free throws, as Brunson fouled him in the act of shooting a 3.

Cade Cunningham has nine points on 4-for-8 shooting, but, so far, he hasn’t looked quite as comfortable as he did in Game 2. He dominated that game.

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 The Pistons’ win over the Knicks on Monday night in Game 2 of their first-round series was significant on multiple fronts. Not only did it even up the matchup at 1-1, but it ended the Pistons’ 15-game playoff losing streak, which dated back to 2008 and was the longest losing streak in NBA postseason history. 

The last time the Pistons had won a playoff game before Monday was Game 4 of the 2008 Eastern Conference finals against the Boston Celtics, when the likes of Richard Hamilton and Chauncey Billups were still running the show, and current rookie guard Ron Holland III was not quite three years old. 

Since then, they had lost Games 5 and 6 to the Celtics in the 2008 ECF, gotten swept in the first round three times — in the 2009 playoffs by the Cleveland Cavaliers, in the 2016 playoffs by the Cavaliers and in the 2019 playoffs by the Milwaukee Bucks — before losing Game 1 to the Knicks. 

 The Detroit Pistons secured their first playoff win since 2008 in dramatic fashion on Monday, as they hung on to beat the New York Knicks in Game 2 of their first-round series, which is now all square at 1-1. Their 15 losses in the row in the playoffs was the longest losing streak in NBA postseason history. 

The Pistons took the lead late in the first quarter and were in complete control for most of the night. They led by as many as 15 and were still up by double digits well into the fourth quarter. But just like in Game 1, they started to fall apart down the stretch and the Knicks were able to tie things up on a Josh Hart dunk with 1:15 remaining. 

Down on the other end, though, Dennis Schroder stepped up with a huge 3-pointer with 56 seconds left to put the Pistons back in front for good. Schroder put up 20 points and three assists, and outscored the Knicks’ bench by himself. 

Cade Cunningham was the star for the Pistons, finishing with 33 points, 12 rebounds, three assists and two steals on 11 of 21 from the field in a major bounce-back effort after a poor Game 1. 

Jalen Brunson had 37 points and seven assists in defeat for the Knicks. 

The series will now shift back to Detroit for Game 3 on Thursday. 

 The Knicks have not played a particularly inspiring game, but they’re down by only eight heading into the final frame. It might have been worse if not for this friendly bounce at the end of the shot clock:

The story, right now, is that Cade Cunningham and the Pistons have looked comfortable all night. That could change in the next 12 minutes, though, as they know very well. 

 Detroit has extended its lead in the third quarter. It’s up 68-53 with 4:55 left in the period.

This hasn’t been the prettiest game — there have been some silly turnovers on both sides, and the two teams are shooting a combined 10 for 37 from 3-point range — but it has been an impressive, professional response by the Pistons after a fourth-quarter meltdown in the opener. 

Now let’s see if they’ve learned from what happened on Saturday.

Cade Cunningham, by the way, is up to 26 points on 10-for-17 shooting. Here he is going behind the back and throwing it down on the break:

 New York made up a bit of ground in the second quarter, largely thanks to Jalen Brunson, who scored 13 points in the period (and has a total of 17 on 6-for-11 shooting in 20 minutes). The Knicks went on a 12-4 run in a stretch that spanned 3:14 late in the quarter.

At halftime, Detroit’s Cade Cunningham leads all scorers with 20 points on 7-for-12 shooting, plus seven rebounds. He’s been extremely aggressive, and after committing four turnovers in the first quarter, he took care of the ball in the second. 

Dennis Schroder gave Detroit a lift off the bench with nine points on 3-for-5 shooting in 13 minutes. Paul Reed’s six minutes were an adventure — he turned the ball over twice, blocked a Karl-Anthony Towns 3 and generally wreaked havoc all over the place.

Something to monitor: The Pistons shot 13 for 14 from the free-throw line in the first half, and the Knicks didn’t take a single free throw until Brunson got to the line with 17 seconds left in the half. (I’m not implying that New York got a bad whistle or anything, just noting the disparity.)

 Pretty strong start for Detroit in Game 2. After one quarter at MSG, the Pistons have a seven-point lead. Cade Cunningham has eight points on 4-for-7 shooting, plus six rebounds. (Four turnovers, though.) Jalen Duren has six points and two offensive boards, including a big one at the very beginning of the game:

The Knicks have missed all eight 3s they have attempted. They didn’t do much damage from deep in Game 1, either, but this probably needs to change at some point. 

 The Pistons will be without backup big man Isaiah Stewart for Game 2 against the Knicks due to right knee inflammation. 

Stewart, who sat out of the team’s final two regular season games with the knee issue, played 19 minutes in Game 1 and finished with two points, five rebounds and two blocks. His absence will be a big blow to the Pistons’ hopes of evening up the series on Monday and stealing homecourt advantage in the process. 

Without Stewart, the Pistons will likely turn to Paul Reed, who did not see the court in Game 1 and played sparingly for the team during the regular season. 

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