Knicks Stun Cavaliers in Overtime Thriller

The Knicks' 121-120 overtime victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday was decided in the final seconds, when Jalen Brunson's floater rattled in and New York completed its largest playoff comeback in fifteen years, overturning a 22-point deficit with less than twelve minutes to play. The Knicks trailed 84-62 early in the fourth quarter and were still down 98-86 with under seven minutes remaining before their surge. The game reached overtime at 109-109. Brunson's winner — a leaning mid-range floater under pressure — sent the visiting crowd into disbelief and left the Cavs' coaching staff searching for answers in the immediate aftermath.
That answer involves Kenny Atkinson. The Cavs coach defended holding on to his timeouts throughout the fourth-quarter collapse, telling assembled media on Tuesday he was comfortable with the decision. His team went scoreless for nearly five minutes and watched a 22-point lead disintegrate. Atkinson, who led the Golden State Warriors to a Game 7 comeback against the Celtics in 2016, has here inherited a very different roster — one with no clear answer when the half-court offense breaks down under pressure. The Knicks' comeback will now shadow the series. Game 2 is in Cleveland on Thursday.
The Knicks' Fourth-Quarter Intensity
New York forced five turnovers in the first 2:46 of the fourth quarter alone, according to the BBC's game report. That sequence alone shifted the momentum decisively. The Knicks' defensive activity — full-court pressure, active hands, physicality at the basket — disrupted everything Cleveland tried to run. By the time the Cavs found any rhythm, the deficit was under ten and the home crowd was fully engaged. Brunson's ability to manufacture a clean look at the buzzer, after five minutes of Knicks hunting and probing, was the product of that pressure paying off. The comeback was not accidental. It was constructed.
Atkinson's Calculated Risk
Speaking after the loss, Atkinson said he was comfortable holding timeouts as his team struggled through the stretch. The Cavs went scoreless for nearly five consecutive minutes and watched their 22-point cushion vanish. Atkinson has now overseen two significant late-game collapses this postseason — the Warriors in 2016 came back against a team holding timeouts, and he was on that bench. Whether that precedent informs his confidence now or merely haunts it will be tested in Game 2. The sources do not specify what specific plays Atkinson was saving his timeouts for, or whether the Cavs' offensive system has set plays that require a timeout to activate.
What the Numbers Reveal
The 22-point reversal is the Knicks' largest playoff comeback in fifteen years, per BBC Sport. Cleveland shot just 33 percent in the fourth quarter and committed five turnovers during the collapse — a combination that handed New York the transition opportunities thatFueled the run. The Cavs entered the game having outscored opponents by an average margin of twelve points per game at home this postseason. That record now includes a loss that exposed a structural vulnerability: when the half-court offense cannot generate clean shots against active, physical defense, the Cavs have no reliable Plan B. Atkinson will need to address that before Thursday.
The Series Stakes
Game 2 is in Cleveland on Thursday. The Knicks stole homecourt advantage and handed the Cavs their most damaging loss of the postseason. Cleveland remains the deeper, more talented roster — but the questions Atkinson faces now are tactical and psychological. Can the Cavs build an offense that holds up under pressure? Can their coaching staff adjust the late-game approach that left them without a timeout when the game was slipping away? The Knicks will target these vulnerabilities again. If the structural answers do not arrive quickly, a series that looked settled in May will be anything but.
The Cavs entered Game 1 as the higher seed and the deeper roster. Tuesday's collapse raises questions that Atkinson will need to answer before Thursday.