Immanuel Quickley’s magic runs out, Jalen Brunson sits again

Starting point guard Jalen Brunson missed his second consecutive game Tuesday night for the Knicks with a sore left foot, but Immanuel Quickley couldn’t post another starring performance.

Quickley, who played 55 minutes and scored 38 points in Sunday’s double-overtime win in Boston, managed just 14 on 5-for-16 shooting in Tuesday’s 112-105 streak-busting loss to the Hornets at the Garden.

“Obviously we had a double-overtime game but I’ve gotta play better than that,” Quickley said. “But we’ll learn from it, I know I will. Look at the film, see how we get better and move on to the next game against [Sacramento on Thursday].

“I’m fine. Ain’t no excuse. Just got to find ways to win the game. We did it in Boston. So just gotta do it every night we can.”

Tom Thibodeau said Brunson was “much better today” but “not ready yet” to return to the lineup. He added that Brunson is expected to accompany the Knicks on their four-game western trip.


Immanuel Quickley, who scored just 14 points, drives to the basket during the Knicks’ 112-105 loss to the Hornets.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Asked if the $104 million point guard would be playable if Tuesday’s game was a playoff contest, Thibodeau responded, “I leave that up to the medical staff and the player. To me, I know he’ll play if he can play and if the medical people and he feels that he needs another day, then we give him the day. We love our depth. The next guy, get in there and get it done.”


Obi Toppin hit a key 3-poiner late in the fourth quarter, but he finished 1-for-4 from long distance and is mired in a 7-for-39 shooting slump from beyond the arc over his past 13 appearances.

“Just, if you’re open, shoot it,” Thibodeau said. “I think he had a great drive in the Boston game on a closeout. So just read the game, the game will tell you what to do.

“I think we’re shooting a really good percentage from three the last 10, too. I think everyone shares in that responsibility, it’s not necessarily one guy.”


LaMelo Ball (ankle) and Cody Martin (knee) were out for the Hornets.

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Hornets’ LaMelo Ball suffers devastating ankle injury

The injury struggles for LaMelo Ball have continued in his third season.

Ball fractured his right ankle during Charlotte’s game against the Pistons on Monday night, the team announced. He tried a crossover dribble against Detroit guard Killian Hayes in the third quarter, but when Ball stepped back behind the 3-point arc, he appeared to land awkwardly on his right foot.

According to a video posted on Twitter, Ball appeared to tell a Hornets staffer, “It popped. I heard it pop.” In its release, the Hornets revealed that Ball will be out Wednesday against the Suns and “updates regarding his status will be provided as appropriate.”

It’s the latest injury setback for Ball, the star guard who Charlotte drafted No. 3 overall in 2020. He sustained a Grade 2 sprain in his left ankle that made him unavailable for the opening 13 games of the regular season, when the Wizards’ Anthony Gill stepped on that area. But just three games after he returned, Ball tried to save a ball from going out of bounds and stepped on a fan’s foot — aggravating that same left ankle.

The Hornets were seconds away from a 125-113 defeat that night, with Ball scoring 26 points in his first home game of the season, but that kept him out of the lineup for another month.

Similar to that second injury, Ball’s fractured ankle Monday night occurred during a productive game for the 21-year-old. He had connected on six 3-pointers and compiled 18 points on 6-for-9 shooting, adding five assists and another six rebounds. Hornets forward Gordon Hayward called the injury disappointing because “he’s a major part of our team and we felt like we were rounding the corner,” according to the Associated Press.


LaMelo Ball appeared to fracture his ankle while attempting a crossover dribble in the third quarter.
Screengrab via Twitter

LaMelo Ball suffered another devastating ankle injury Monday night.
Getty Images

“It’s just a basketball ankle and there is nothing that you can do about that,” Hornets head coach Steve Clifford said following the game.

The Hornets still managed to defeat the Pistons, 117-106, but they’re 23 games under .500 and 14th place in the Eastern Conference — nowhere near the seeding required for a spot in the play-in tournament. Ball has averaged a career-high 23.4 points per game this year, one season after he made his first All-Star Game and started 75 games.



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