
Mike Francesa unloads on Knicks' offensive game plan in Game 2 loss
Mike Francesa, the New York sports radio legend, showed yet another example of that after the New York Knicks' loss to the Detroit Pistons in Game 2 of the first round, which evens up the NBA Playoffs series.
During his Bet Rivers podcast on Monday, Francesa unloaded on the Knicks, specifically head coach Tom Thibodeau due to the team's odd offense in his eyes.
"The stagnant four guys watching one guy play basketball is not an offense, and I don't care what your name is," Francesa said, referencing point guard Jalen Brunson playing primarily in an isolated set up, with his teammates spaced apart on the floor around him.
"And Brunson is not Michael Jordan."
Brunson has always been the focal point of the Knicks' offense, but many on social media felt it was stale in the 100-94 loss at Madison Square Garden.
He did finish with a game-high 37 points over his 44 minutes on the floor, going 12-of-27 shooting. However, he shot one-third of the team's 81 field goals, and it ultimately wasn't enough to notch a solid 2-0 lead heading into Game 3 in Detroit.
"If this offense is just going to be Brunson bouncing the basketball for 15 seconds and then, if he's double-teamed, he'll flip a pass to somebody and hope they hit a long three, or he's going to find a way to get to the foul line. Dive against a guy and get free shots. Flop to the ground," Francesa said.
Mikal Bridges had 19 points on 8-of-18 shooting, while Karl-Anthony Towns, Josh Hart and OG Anunoby each had 10 points to round out the starting five.
One of Brunson's main tactics when he has the ball is trying to draw fouls, because he is a solid free-throw shooter. He knocked 9-of-11 shots on Monday night.
But Francesa doesn't like that style of basketball.
"How many times in one night is Brunson on the ground? Thirty-two? It's not appealing basketball. It's all about Brunson. Why do you think the other teams think he flops? He's on the ground the whole game. That's half the Knicks' offense," he said.
Of course, it's not a dire situation for New York just yet. The series is only two games into a best-of-seven set.
But Francesa worries about a potential future series, perhaps with the reigning NBA-champion Boston Celtics, who would line up with New York in the second round if they were to win their first-round series.
"Four guys are going to be standing around watching Brunson, you're never going to beat a good team. You're never going to beat the Celtics," Francesa said.
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