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Eastern Conference Finals: Josh Hart pushes pace as Knicks test Cavaliers defense in Game 2
The Times Of India | May 22, 2026 11:39 AM CST

Eastern Conference Finals basketball has quickly turned into a chess match for the New York Knicks , and much of that tension now surrounds Josh Hart . After New York escaped with a stunning Game 1 comeback against the Cleveland Cavaliers , attention shifted toward one uncomfortable reality. The Knicks looked far more dangerous offensively once Hart left the floor and sharpshooter Landry Shamet entered the game.

That adjustment changed everything. Cleveland’s defense, led by big men Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley , had spent most of the night sagging away from Hart and crowding the paint. Once New York surrounded Jalen Brunson with five shooters, the floor finally opened. Suddenly, the Cavaliers could no longer park their rim protectors inside, and the Knicks exploded with one of the wildest playoff rallies in recent memory.

Josh Hart sparks Knicks offense against Jarrett Allen in crucial Game 2 vs Cavaliers

The Cavaliers came into Game 2 with the same defensive plan. Allen continued ignoring Hart along the perimeter, daring him to shoot while loading extra help toward Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns.


Hart is in his league, as the game progresses, he is doing far better than any Knicks player. He is leading the scoreboard for the Knicks waith a stunning 24 points in 26 minutes, forcing the Cavs to trail by a huge margin. By the end of the third quarter, Knicks were on the top with a 81-65 lead (as of writing).


It is not a new problem for New York. Hart shot over 41 percent from three during the regular season, but his playoff rhythm has disappeared at the worst possible time. Across this postseason, he has struggled to consistently punish defenses from deep, allowing Cleveland to clog driving lanes and disrupt the Knicks’ spacing.

The numbers from Game 1 reflected that imbalance. Hart finished with 13 points, seven rebounds, and four assists, but his minus-23 plus-minus stood out sharply. Meanwhile, Shamet delivered nine points and a game-best plus-25 while helping fuel the Knicks’ 44-11 avalanche across the fourth quarter and overtime.

Even with those struggles, Hart’s value inside the locker room remains unquestioned. His energy, rebounding, and defensive toughness still matter deeply to a Knicks team chasing its first NBA Finals appearance in decades.

Coach Mike Brown appears to understand the balance required in this series. Hart may remain in the starting lineup, but New York increasingly needs flexible combinations built around spacing and shooting if it hopes to survive Cleveland’s elite frontcourt defense.

Josh Hart on benching in Game 1

Hart did not hide his emotions after spending most of the closing stretch on the bench, though his response revealed why teammates trust him so much.

“That’s always difficult, watching it on the bench. Obviously, I want to be out there. I want to help my guys win, but at the end of the day, for me, I don’t have an ego to it. I approach this game with extreme humility. That’s how I approach it,” Hart said.

He continued with the same honesty.

“I don’t have an ego. I said it last year, the last several years, I’m here to serve these guys,” he continued. “That’s the gift God’s given me to go out and serve these guys, make sure they’re in the best position to be successful. I put the success of the team over the success of myself any day.”

That attitude may become one of the Knicks’ biggest strengths as this series tightens. Hart understands playoff basketball often demands uncomfortable sacrifices, especially against a team as physically imposing as Cleveland.


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