A 14-1 opening surge and a steady second-half push send New York home with no real path back.
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NYK | 21 | 29 | 22 | 22 | 94 |
| HOU | 37 | 26 | 29 | 19 | 111 |
Houston sets the tone immediately
The Knicks never get a clean footing in Houston, because the Rockets come out firing and never really let go. It starts with a 14-1 burst in the opening minutes, capped by A. Thompson’s 6-foot driving floating jump shot that pushes the game from a razor-thin 0-1 deficit to a full-on early statement at 14-1. That’s the kind of start that changes the whole feel of a night. New York briefly steadies itself with an 8-point run late in the first — J. Clarkson’s 9-foot turnaround fadeaway helps trim the margin — but the Rockets still finish the period in command, up 37-21 and already dictating pace, shot quality, and physicality.
The Rockets keep answering every Knicks push
New York’s best stretch comes in the second quarter, when it strings together a 10-point run to cut Houston’s lead from 63-44 to 63-54. K. Towns gets to the line and finishes the sequence with 2 of 2 free throws, and for a brief moment the Knicks look like they might make this a live game. But Houston answers with the kind of quick-hit offense that kills comeback momentum. The decisive counterpunch is an 11-point run that ends with R. Sheppard running to the rim for a dunk, set up by J. Smith Jr. for the assist. That possession matters because it’s not just two points — it’s a reminder that every New York run is getting met with a bigger, cleaner Rockets response. By halftime, Houston has stretched the lead back to 63-50 and then widens it again in the third, outscoring New York 29-22 in the period to build a 20-point cushion entering the fourth.
Durant controls the game, Sheppard keeps the pressure on
Kevin Durant looks like the stabilizer Houston needed all night. He finishes with 27 points, 6 rebounds, and 8 assists in 35 minutes, and the box score only tells part of the story. He’s not just scoring in isolation; he’s bending the defense and creating clean looks for teammates, including a late A. Thompson step-back jumper at 4:54 of the fourth with Durant recording the assist. That sequence is the Rockets in a nutshell: Durant probes, the defense shifts, and Houston cashes in from the elbow or the arc. Reed Sheppard is the other major difference-maker, pouring in 20 points and repeatedly punishing the Knicks with timely shot-making. His 3-pointer at 3:33 of the fourth pushes Houston to 106-86, and his earlier running dunk helped break the second-quarter resistance. He doesn’t just score; he keeps the Knicks from ever feeling a full-scale swing is available.
New York gets production, but not enough stops
For New York, Karl-Anthony Towns fights through the loss with 22 points and 8 rebounds, and his fourth-quarter work at least prevents the final from getting uglier than it could have been. He scores on a driving layup at 3:19, then follows with a putback layup at 1:55, showing the kind of effort you’d expect from a player trying to drag his team back against a deeper, hotter opponent. But the issue is obvious: every Knicks bucket seems to come after Houston has already won the previous matchup. Mikal Bridges chips in with a fadeaway at 4:02, O. Anunoby records a steal late in the fourth, and J. Sochan finishes with a late alley-oop dunk from T. Kolek, but none of it alters the outcome. Houston’s offense is too organized, and its edge in ball movement — especially with Alperen Sengun’s 10 assists — keeps New York chasing from behind without ever forcing real panic.
What it means going forward
This was a controlled win, not a chaotic one. Houston led by as many as 21, never trailed after the first minute of the game, and used its shot creation plus playmaking to keep the Knicks at arm’s length throughout. The Rockets finish with a convincing 111-94 result and a clear formula: Durant as the engine, Sheppard as the spark, and Sengun’s passing as the connective tissue. For New York, the loss underscores how hard it is to climb back when the first quarter goes sideways and the opponent keeps answering every push. Houston leaves with momentum and a blueprint that travels; the Knicks leave with another reminder that against disciplined, high-usage shot-makers, early deficits can become long nights fast.
Turning Point
Houston’s 14-1 opening run immediately put New York on the back foot, and the Knicks never fully recovered.
Key Performers
He controlled the pace, created for others, and made Houston’s offense feel inevitable.
He kept attacking inside and on the glass, but New York needed more stops around him.
His scoring burst and finishing punch helped Houston crush every Knicks response.
His 10 assists gave Houston the kind of interior-initiated playmaking that kept the offense humming.
Box Score Leaders
| Player | PTS | REB | AST | 3PM | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kevin Durant | 27 | 6 | 8 | 4 | 56% FG |
| Karl-Anthony Towns | 22 | 8 | 3 | 2 | |
| Reed Sheppard | 20 | 5 | 2 | 4 | |
| Alperen Sengun | 13 | 5 | 10 | 1 | 10 AST |
How Our Predictions Held Up
Our predictions landed at a 54.5% hit rate overall, so this was a mixed showing rather than a clean sweep. We nailed several Reed Sheppard overs, especially rebounds and PRA, but missed badly on his points and threes, where he outperformed conservative expectations. The biggest misses were on lower-end scoring projections that didn’t account for how aggressively Houston would lean on him in the win.