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Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
11:15 UTC
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Sports

Brunson and the Knicks Complete Historic 22-Point Comeback to Steal Game 1 From the Cavaliers

Jalen Brunson's 38-point performance—including 17 in the fourth quarter and overtime—lifted New York back from a 22-point deficit to stun Cleveland in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals.
Jalen Brunson's 38-point performance—including 17 in the fourth quarter and overtime—lifted New York back from a 22-point deficit to stun Cleveland in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals.
Jalen Brunson's 38-point performance—including 17 in the fourth quarter and overtime—lifted New York back from a 22-point deficit to stun Cleveland in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. / CBS SPORTS HEADLINES · via Monexus Wire

The Knicks completed the largest fourth-quarter comeback in NBA Conference Finals history on Monday, erasing a 22-point deficit to defeat the Cleveland Cavaliers 114-111 in overtime at Madison Square Garden. Jalen Brunson finished with 38 points, scoring 17 of them across the fourth quarter and the extra period—including 11 consecutive points during an 18-1 New York run that flipped the game with under five minutes remaining.

The result handed the Knicks a 1-0 lead in the series and extended their winning streak to seven games. Cleveland, playing its first Eastern Conference Finals since 2018, saw Donovan Mitchell—who had been nursing a knee injury down the stretch of the second round—return to his home arena in Queens with a game-high 41 points that ultimately was not enough.

A Comeback Built on Sequence, Not Miracle

The raw figures obscure the mechanics of how New York retrieved the game. After trailing by five points with under five minutes to play in the fourth quarter, Brunson scored or assisted on 14 of the Knicks' final 16 possessions in regulation. Coach Mike Brown, whose Cavaliers had closed out the Indiana Pacers in seven games to reach this stage, called Brunson "a leader" and "our guy" in postgame remarks, acknowledging the Knicks' floor general had simply taken over a game that appeared decided.

The 18-1 run that gave New York its first lead since the opening minutes did not come against a gassed Cleveland lineup. The Cavaliers' bench, which had provided critical spacing throughout the first three rounds, went cold in the fourth quarter—missing seven of nine attempts from the field. The Knicks, by contrast, converted on back-to-back possessions with Brunson doubled, trusting the辅助 spacing around him that has defined New York's half-court offense all season.

Mitchell's Return, Mitchell's Limitation

Donovan Mitchell had described himself as "personally" excited to return home to New York for the series opener, and the Cavs' offensive structure reflected his urgency from tip-off. Mitchell registered 41 points on 15-of-28 shooting, repeatedly attacking Brunson in isolation and drawing help defenders into rotations Cleveland exploited for open three-point attempts.

But the injury that limited Mitchell late in the Pacers series—the Cavs' medical staff managed his minutes carefully across Games 5 through 7—appeared to cost Cleveland crucial defensive positioning in the overtime period. Mitchell did not attempt a shot in the final four minutes of overtime, ceding initiations to Darius Garland, who struggled to generate the same looks Mitchell had manufactured. Whether Cleveland's coaching staff can recalibrate its late-game attack around Garland's strengths will determine whether this game represents an outlier or a structural problem.

What the Pattern Reveals

The Knicks entered the 2026 playoffs with the second-best record in the Eastern Conference and a net rating that reflected elite rim protection and three-point volume. Their second-round sweep of the Boston Celtics, however, obscured a reliance on Brunson's individual creation that opponents had flagged as a vulnerability. The Cavaliers, with two elite perimeter defenders in Isaac Okoro and Max Strus, were expected to test that assumption.

Monday's result shifts the analytical frame. When Brunson is making reads at speed—trusting his big men to slip screens, finding shooters in the short-roll action—he becomes, for the purposes of playoff basketball, a point guard who can carry an entire offensive system on his own. The Knicks' supporting cast executed their assignments at a level the Cavaliers' scheme had not anticipated. That is not a fluke outcome; it is a capability that now must be accounted for every time these teams meet.

The Road Ahead

The series now shifts to Cleveland for Game 2 on Thursday, May 21, 2026. The Cavaliers will need to address the late-game offensive stagnation that plagued them in the fourth quarter and overtime without sacrificing the pace Mitchell generates when he is fully engaged. Whether Koby Altman restructures the rotation to add more creation alongside Garland, or whether J.B. Bickerstaff adjusts the timing of Mitchell's rest periods, the Cavs have limited room for error in their own building.

The Knicks, meanwhile, return to Cleveland having already answered the question their critics posed all season: what happens when Brunson faces a defense built to stop him? The answer, delivered in 38 points on a Monday evening in Manhattan, was unambiguous.

This desk noted that the Knicks' comeback received substantial coverage in the wire reports, though several outlets led with the Cavs' late-game execution failures rather than the structural factors enabling New York's rally—specifically, Cleveland's bench collapse and Mitchell's reduced involvement in overtime. The framing difference is small but consistent with a broader tendency in sports coverage to narrate defeats as failures of the losing team rather than achievements of the winner.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/NBALive/4521
  • https://t.me/NBALive/4517
  • https://t.me/NBALive/4499
  • https://t.me/NBALive/4477
  • https://t.me/NBALive/4473
  • https://t.me/NBALive/4467
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire