The New York Knicks defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 137-98 on Monday night at Madison Square Garden, becoming the first team in NBA history to win three consecutive playoff games by 25 points or more.

The 39-point victory brings New York’s combined margin over the last three contests to 119 points, the highest three-game point-per-game differential in postseason history.

Statistical Dominance & Depth

New York established control early, shooting 63% from the field in the first half. Jalen Brunson recorded 27 of his 35 points before the intermission. The Knicks hit 51% of their three-point attempts and led by 40 points before Philadelphia removed its starters in the third quarter.

Karl-Anthony Towns provided 17 points, 6 rebounds, and 6 assists in 20 minutes, while the New York bench outscored Philadelphia’s reserves, 52-36.

New York head coach Mike Brown attributed the performance to team-wide execution: “It’s a lot of fun when you have concepts on either end of the floor, and the guys are trying to embrace those concepts at the highest level. And when they do, it doesn’t really matter what you call or who initiates the action, because guys are trying to play the right way.”

Philadelphia’s Offensive Struggles

Philadelphia’s primary scoring options were limited by New York’s defensive length and switching schemes. Joel Embiid finished 3-of-14 from the floor. Tyrese Maxey, who went scoreless in the opening period, noted the difficulty in finding a rhythm following a seven-game series against Boston that concluded 48 hours prior.

“I don’t think I shot once in the first quarter,” Maxey said. “I don’t think it was a real shot. The ball came out of my hand. So I’m just trying to read and figure it out. I’m not too worried about it.”

Jalen Brunson of the Knicks dunks the basketball during a game against the Pacers.

Who’s to Blame?

Philadelphia’s coaching staff and primary rotation players face the heaviest accountability. While the 48-hour turnaround from a Game 7 is a valid fatigue factor, allowing 63% shooting and a 40-point deficit indicates a failure in preparation.

To lose by nearly 40 points in a series opener suggests the 76ers were physically and mentally unprepared for New York, turning what should have been a competitive opener into a rout by the middle of the third quarter.

Game 2 Outlook

Since trailing 2-1 in the first round, New York has won four straight games by an average margin of 33.2 points. This stretch includes a 51-point demolition of Atlanta in Game 6 that set a new franchise record for the largest postseason win. Despite the recent scoring margins, Brunson maintained a cautious outlook regarding the remainder of the series.

“I don’t think we’re going to see that team, from Game 1 to Game 2,” Brunson said of the 76ers. “They’ll be ready to go.”

The series remains at Madison Square Garden for Game 2 on Wednesday.

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