

#Heat of the moment free
Martin’s allowed Randle to take one technical free throw. Reacting to this, Miami’s Caleb Martin shoved Hartenstein, too. But Hartenstein saw this and pushed Zeller in the back. As he did, Zeller collided with Randle and Randle took a spill into the basket stanchion. Immanuel Quickley had just made a 13-foot floater for the Knicks. The game was over, despite there being 12 minutes and change left, anyone who’d watched already knew that. There was 14.1 seconds left in the third quarter Saturday and the Heat led 87-70. Apparently, heading into Game 4 on Monday night, it is over. They acted in the heat of the moment, then metaphorically shook on it. If we are talking like responsible citizens then we applaud all of the parties involved, sure. These were the three principals in the dustup - if it can even qualify as a dustup - that broke up the monotony of the Heat’s 105-86 throttling of the Knicks in Game 3 of these Eastern Conference semifinals Saturday.Īnd that was that. “You just start over,” Isaiah Hartenstein said. They’re right, and they’re keeping it all in perspective, and they’re acting like grown-ups, and they’re acting like professionals and … and, well, damn them for all of that. Jalen Brunson just wasn't going to let Knicks lose this one Knicks enter Game 6 with the long-shot odds they've preferred all season Knicks' failure to help Jalen Brunson is why their season's over Walt Bellamy trade provides lesson for how Knicks should deal with enigmatic Julius Randle What Knicks can learn from NY champs who took final step to titles
