Remarkable 3-point performance helps Knicks rout 76ers, complete sweep

(Reuters) — Closing out a playoff series is one of the toughest challenges in sports, but the red-hot New York Knicks are making it look easy.

Miles McBride made 7 of 9 3-pointers for 25 points and Jalen Brunson scored 22 on 6-of-10 shooting from long range as the ​visiting Knicks throttled the Philadelphia 76ers 144-114 in Game 4 on Sunday to sweep their second-round playoff series.

Josh Hart (17 points) and ‌Landry Shamet (12) each made four 3-pointers for New York, which started 11 of 12 from long distance on its way to tying NBA playoff records for most 3-pointers in a quarter (11), half (18) and game (25).

“It’s the spacing,” said Knicks coach Mike Brown, whose team also dominated the decisive game of its first-round series with the Atlanta Hawks 140-89. “(The Sixers) are so quick, ​they’re so athletic. … So, if you’re not spaced the right way, you’re not going to get great looks.”

Karl-Anthony Towns chipped in 17 points ​and 10 assists for the third-seeded Knicks, who shot 56.8% from 3-point range (25 of 44) in advancing to their ⁠second straight Eastern Conference finals. New York will battle either the top-seeded Detroit Pistons or the fourth-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers for a spot in the NBA Finals. ​Detroit leads that series 2-1 with Game 4 set for Monday in Cleveland.

“One game at a time. One game at a time,” Brunson said of the ​two potential opponents in the conference finals. “We’ll cross that bridge when we get to it.”

The Knicks’ offensive assault came despite the absence of second-leading scorer OG Anunoby (hamstring), who missed his second straight game.

The seventh-seeded Sixers had oft-injured Joel Embiid for the second straight game, but his 24 points on 8-of-8 shooting didn’t make a dent in the lopsided result. Tyrese ​Maxey contributed 17 points for Philadelphia, which trailed by double figures for the final 43 minutes.

“The energy obviously was a big gap, between their energy ​and our energy, I thought,” said Sixers coach Nick Nurse, “and we dug ourselves a big hole that we could never really get out of.”

The Sixers have not reached the ‌Eastern Conference ⁠finals since 2001.

“We’ve haven’t won,” Embiid said, “but I’ve been doing this for a long time — it’s hard to win in this league. … Quite frankly, New York — they were just better than us, in everything.”

The Knicks stormed out of the gates with 3-pointers by Brunson and Hart in the first three minutes. Shortly thereafter, McBride went 4-of-4 from 3-point range in less than 90 seconds as the lead quickly ballooned to 20-6.

Even when the Sixers briefly got within 11, Brunson made ​a pair of 3-pointers to stretch ​the lead back to 35-18. Shamet ⁠then came off the bench and tacked on two more 3-pointers later in the quarter as New York led 43-24 after 12 minutes.

“That’s what they do,” Brunson said of the key contributions from McBride and Shamet. “It just happened to ​be they were both locked in on the same day.”

Shamet, Towns and McBride each made a 3-pointer early in ​the second quarter ⁠as the lead grew to 59-32. The Knicks missed their next five from long range, but Brunson and Hart connected on back-to-back triples to get the visitors back in a groove.

In the final minute, McBride’s sixth 3-pointer of the half made it 78-52 and Hart added one more for good measure to help the Knicks ⁠go into the ​locker room ahead 81-57.

Midway through the third quarter, McBride’s final 3-pointer stretched the lead to ​30 for the first time. New York went on to lead 122-83 after three quarters and cruised to the finish line.

“Just a heck of a game by our guys,” Brown said. “Their focus. ​Their attention to detail, while bringing energy and effort — not just tonight, but through the course of the series — was at a pretty high level.”

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