MSG Just Saw a 40-Point NBA Massacre

The Knicks delivered a 40-point NBA massacre, exposing the Bulls as a "glorified G-League squad." This wasn't a game, it was public humiliation.

THE EDIT:

  • Knicks demolish Bulls by 40 points, exposing Chicago’s paper-thin roster.
  • OG Anunoby’s 31 points and Mitchell Robinson’s 11 boards highlight a complete team effort.
  • Bulls’ Giddey and Buzelis combine for 17 points on 9-21 shooting in a pitiful display.

The New York Knicks didn’t just beat the Chicago Bulls on Tuesday night; they ANNIHILATED them, delivering a brutal 136-96 beatdown at Madison Square Garden. This wasn’t a basketball game; it was a PUBLIC HUMILIATION, a ruthless dissection that exposed the Bulls as nothing more than a glorified G-League squad masquerading in an NBA uniform. The final score, a staggering Knicks 136, Bulls 96, barely scratches the surface of the absolute carnage that unfolded.

From the opening tip, the Knicks played with an unyielding intensity the Bulls couldn’t even begin to comprehend. This was COMPLETE DOMINATION, a clinical demonstration of how a real NBA team dismantles a pretender. Chicago arrived with a dismal 29-48 record, already a flashing red light for their mediocrity, but this 40-point thrashing hammered home the brutal truth: the Bulls are a team utterly devoid of identity, heart, or leadership. They are soft. They are rudderless. They are a joke.

Bulls: Paper Tigers Exposed, Again.

Let’s be clear: the Bulls didn’t just lose; they capitulated. Their starting five, featuring the much-hyped Josh Giddey and Matas Buzelis, offered less resistance than a wet paper bag. Giddey, supposedly a future cornerstone, bricked his way to a pathetic 3-12 from the field, a stat line that screams “bench warmer,” not “star.” Buzelis wasn’t much better, hitting a meager 4-9. Are these truly the players Chicago is banking its future on? If so, prepare for decades of irrelevance.

The Bulls’ offensive struggles were not just glaring; they were catastrophic. They shot a dismal 39.5% from the field, an embarrassing figure that stands in stark contrast to the Knicks’ scorching 56.8%. You don’t win NBA games with that kind of anemic shooting. You get blown out. You get laughed off the court. This wasn’t just a bad night; this was a fundamental failure to compete at an NBA level.

Knicks’ Ruthless Efficiency & Unstoppable Force

The Knicks, now standing at a formidable 50-28, showed the league precisely what a cohesive, well-coached unit looks like. OG Anunoby was an absolute force of nature, dropping a scorching 31 points and snatching 8 rebounds. He wasn’t just scoring; he was doing it with surgical precision, shooting an insane 9-15 from the field, including a sizzling 7-10 from deep. That’s not just efficiency; that’s a killer instinct. That’s the mark of a player who understands what it takes to win.

Meanwhile, Mitchell Robinson owned the paint like it was his personal kingdom, grabbing a dominant 11 rebounds and adding 17 points on a perfect 7-7 shooting. He was a monster, a brick wall, shutting down any flicker of hope for second-chance points the Bulls might have harbored. And then there’s Jalen Brunson, the maestro, who orchestrated the entire symphony of destruction, dishing out 10 assists alongside his 17 points. He carved up the Bulls’ defense with surgical precision, making it look utterly effortless. This Knicks team is a well-oiled machine, and Chicago was merely a speed bump.

The Coaching Mismatch: Thibs’ Masterclass vs. Donovan’s Debacle

This blowout wasn’t just about superior player talent; it was a COACHING MASTERCLASS by Tom Thibodeau. His Knicks played suffocating defense, forcing a staggering 17 Bulls turnovers. Those turnovers weren’t just mistakes; they were gifts, leading to easy buckets and an avalanche of momentum that buried Chicago. Thibs had his team locked in, focused, and hungry. They executed his game plan to perfection.

Billy Donovan’s Bulls, on the other hand, looked utterly lost, adrift without a compass. No adjustments. No fight. Just a team going through the motions, collecting their paychecks. When your supposed future stars like Josh Giddey are shooting a pathetic 25%, what exactly is the game plan, Billy? What are you telling them? The Bulls’ bench provided minimal, if any, relief. Collin Sexton led their scoring with 19 points, but these were empty calories, individual stats in a team-wide disaster. Leonard Miller added 14 points, but he couldn’t stop the bleeding, couldn’t inject any semblance of urgency into a lifeless squad.

The Analytical Blight: What Went Wrong?

This game was a perfect, brutal example of what’s fundamentally flawed with the modern NBA’s obsession with analytics over grit. Teams like the Bulls are built on abstract notions of “potential” and “future assets,” yet where was the grit on the court? Where was the heart? Where was the competitive fire? It was nowhere to be found.

The Knicks played old-school basketball, the kind that wins championships: tough, suffocating defense, dominant rebounding, and smart, efficient shot selection. They didn’t need fancy spreadsheets or complex algorithms to tell them how to win. They just executed. The Bulls’ pitiful 28.6% from three-point range against the Knicks’ blistering 48.4% speaks volumes about the true gap in talent and execution. Analytics can preach three-pointers all day long, but if you can’t hit them, you don’t just lose; you get routed. You get embarrassed.

What’s Next for Chicago? A Franchise Adrift.

This isn’t just a loss; it’s a FULL-BLOWN CRISIS for the Chicago Bulls. They are a franchise adrift, a ship without a captain, sinking slowly into irrelevance. Their record of 29-48 is an absolute embarrassment for a major market team, a slap in the face to their loyal fanbase.

What do they do now? Tre Jones managed 8 assists, but his 13 points were utterly meaningless in the face of such a catastrophic defeat. They have no true identity. They have no superstar to rally around. This team is stuck in NBA purgatory, a wasteland of mediocrity with no clear path forward. The fans of Chicago deserve so much better. They deserve a team that shows up, that fights, especially against a heated rival like the Knicks. This performance wasn’t just a loss; it was an insult, a betrayal of every fan who still clings to hope.

The New York Knicks are for real. They are a legitimate contender in the Eastern Conference, and this 40-point drubbing of the Bulls was not a fluke. It was a powerful, undeniable statement. The Bulls, meanwhile, are a cautionary tale, a franchise built on false hope and empty promises. And hope, as this brutal game unequivocally proved, doesn’t win you a damn thing.

Photo: Erik Drost


Source: Google News

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Jalen 'Swish' Carter

NBA and College Hoops insider with the freshest takes.