Josh Hart's 26 Lifts Knicks to 2-0 Series Lead

The Knicks did not need Jalen Brunson. That is the story of this series, and it became undeniable on Thursday night in Indianapolis. Josh Hart scored a postseason career-high 26 points and the Knicks beat the Pacers, 116-95, to take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference Finals. The series shifts to Madison Square Garden for Game 3 on Saturday. New York has won seven of its last eight games. Two wins away from the NBA Finals for the first time since 2000, the Knicks are making this look routine.
Hart's 26 came on efficient shooting — 10 of 16 from the field — and included five rebounds and no turnovers. He scored 20 in Game 1. That back-to-back makes him the first Knicks player with consecutive 20-point games in a single postseason run since Patrick Ewing in 1995, per available game records. The timing could hardly be more significant. Brunson, the Knicks' leading scorer and the driving force behind their 51-win regular season, did not play on Thursday. He suffered a right foot injury late in Game 1. Head coach Tom Thibodeau offered no timeline for his return. New York's supporting cast filled the void completely.
Hart, Bridges, and the bench that does not falter
Mikal Bridges, the former Phoenix Sun and Brooklyn Net acquired in a blockbuster trade before last season, matched Hart's pace with 19 points on 8-of-14 shooting. Precious Achiuwa added 12 points off the bench on 5-of-8 shooting. The collective response to Brunson's absence has been clinical. For a team that leaned on its star guard more heavily than almost any other roster in the league this season, the depth being tested and holding is a meaningful data point. Brunson's usage rate this season ranked among the highest in the NBA. That the Knicks have not spluttered without him tells you something about the infrastructure built around him.
Hart has been the focal point of that infrastructure in this series. His 26 points came with a calmness that suggests the moment has not grown too large for him. By Game 2, the Pacers had not adjusted. Whether that is a failure of game-planning or simply that Hart is too versatile to defend with a single approach is an open question. The Knicks have won both games by a combined 29 points. The margin suggests the Pacers' coaching staff, led by Rick Carlisle, has not yet found an answer.
The Brunson question that defines the next two weeks
Brunson's injury is the variable that could still reframe this series. The Knicks have navigated two games without him, but the sample is still small and the competition has not been at full strength in return. Tyrese Haliburton, the Pacers' All-Star point guard, has been limited to 12 and 11 points in Games 1 and 2 respectively, well below his regular-season average of 20.1 points per game. The Pacers are not getting what they need from their best player, which compounds the difficulty of losing the series lead without Brunson's replacement playing at a diminished level.
The structural significance here is theKnicks' roster design. New York entered this season with questions about whether a team built around two high-usage wings and a defensive-first centre could survive the physical grind of a deep playoff run. The answer, so far, is yes. The Knicks' pace, their shot selection, and their ability to generate quality looks without Brunson's isolation dominance suggest Thibodeau has built a system flexible enough to survive an injury to its most indispensable player. Whether that holds up if Brunson remains sidelined through the Conference Finals is a question the next two games will answer.
What this series means for the Knicks' trajectory
The Knicks are two wins from the Finals. Their last appearance was in 2000, when they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games. The fanbase, hardened by decades of near-misses and a revolving door of roster decisions, has waited. This team has given them a reason to believe. Hart's emergence — from a bench player in earlier playoff runs to a 26-point centerpiece when the stakes are highest — is the kind of arc that defines fanbases. The Knicks have been patient with him. He is delivering at the moment patience is being rewarded.
The Pacers face a difficult road. Falling behind 2-0 in a Conference Finals means winning four of the next five games, including two on the road against a Knicks team that has won 12 of its last 15 home playoff games. History is not destiny, but the arithmetic is unforgiving. Haliburton needs to become the player the Pacers traded for. The bench production needs to improve. Carlisle needs adjustments. None of that is impossible, but the evidence through two games points in one direction. The Knicks have been better, healthier in the moments that matter, and more composed when the game was close. Hart's 26 makes it difficult to argue otherwise. Two more wins stand between New York and a first Finals appearance in 26 years. The Knicks are close enough to taste it, and close enough that their opponents know it too.
This article is based on NBA Live Telegram wire reports from the evening of 22 May 2026, covering Game 2 of the Knicks–Pacers Eastern Conference Finals series.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive