Knicks fade late vs. Blazers, lose sixth in a row

The Knicks' Tim Hardaway Jr. looks on in the first half against the Trail Blazers at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday. Credit: Jim McIsaac
David Fizdale reached into the hat and pulled out another starting lineup Tuesday night, his sixth different one in 18 games. And if the lineup juggling act might have an air of mystery, the results do not.
While the new lineup performed well by the standards of their predecessors, as the game wore on so did the reality that the new lineup was much like the old ones. The Knicks led for a half, but eventually were worn down for their sixth straight loss, to the Western Conference-leading Trail Blazers, 118-114.
Fizdale ended the experiment of starting three rookies, replacing them with Enes Kanter, Noah Vonleh and Mario Hezonja. When he started the rookies the last two games, he admitted it was an effort to advance their learning curve.
“Every game we play to win,” Fizdale said. “There’s never a time we step out on the court not to win the game. These guys are putting their heart and soul in this. Me and staff are putting our heart and soul in winning every game and preparing for every game.
“But you have to learn through that. It doesn’t always come from everything being good and rosy. You get smacked away and go through your lumps and try to teach through that. We’ve got a young group. That’s the bottom line. They have to learn from some suffering.”
But no combination of players on the Knicks’ roster, rookies or veterans, could contain the explosive Blazers backcourt of Damian Lillard and C.J. McCollum. The Knicks (4-14) led 35-33 after a quarter and 60-58 at halftime, which was a step forward. But Lillard and McCollum totaled 33 points in that first half, which was an ominous sign. McCollum finished with 31 points and Lillard added 29. Tim Hardaway Jr. led all scorers with 32 points.
“We’re playing teams all the way down to the wire and we’re coming up short,” Trey Burke said. “I think that’s been an ongoing story all year. I think the biggest thing is continuing to put our heads together collectively. Not point fingers, not make excuses, but to own it. We’re in a storm right now. We gotta understand that there’s beauty in the storm. We gotta figure out how to get out of it, collectively as a team. I believe the group we have, we will.”
The Knicks started defensive-minded guards Frank Ntilikina and Damyean Dotson together earlier this season, but went with Emmanuel Mudiay and Hardaway in the backcourt.
“This is something he has to go through,” Fizdale said of starting Mudiay against Lillard, who was averaging 26.6 points per game. “I don’t want to just hunt for that. I’ve got to put these guys through some stuff so they can learn and grow from it and not just say, ‘Oh, he’s not good at that right now. This isn’t necessarily his strength now. So let’s keep him away from that.’ I don’t think that’s player development.
“You’ve got to go through getting beat up and learning and doing again and doing it again. Over that time you grow. The suffering part is tough. If you don’t do it well, you lose. That’s part of it. We’re going to just keep growing from the experiences.”
The Knicks ran off seven straight points early in the second half, capped by a Kanter three-pointer for a 70-62 lead. When Mudiay hit a three to up the lead to 75-65, the Knicks were leaping off the bench.
But by the time the fourth quarter began, the Blazers had pushed ahead 89-85. After trailing by 11 the Knicks cut the deficit to 104-101 on a Burke three-pointer. They had a chance to cut it to one, but Vonleh missed two free throws.
With the Blazers up 109-107 with 2:16 left, Hardaway was called for a foul as Lillard tried a three. He made two and the Knicks were down four again. Hardaway made amends with a layup to pull it within two again, but McCollum converted a three. Hardaway made three free throws after an Evan Turner foul with 1:43 to play.
Vonleh had another chance to tie it with 1:04 left, but missed both free throws again. Lillard drilled a jumper over Burke with 44 seconds left, and the Blazers were up 116-112. After Hardaway hit a pair from the line, Turner followed a Lillard miss with nine seconds left, pushing the lead to four again and sealing it.


