Sports Live! With Steve and Justin

Why The New York Knicks Are So Hard To Guard Right Now

59 min · 25 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why The New York Knicks Are So Hard To Guard Right Now

Descripción

The Knicks are playing like the kind of team that makes opponents look confused. We get into why New York’s offense suddenly feels unstoppable and why it’s not just about star power, it’s about buy-in. Jalen Brunson’s control, Josh Hart’s timely shots, Karl-Anthony Towns bringing real force inside, and a bench that stays effective all add up to one of the most frustrating teams in the NBA playoffs to defend. Then we pivot to New York baseball and say the quiet part out loud: MLB makes it hard to be a fan. We talk Yankees slumps, league standings, and why watching a simple game now turns into a hunt across streaming platforms, blackouts, and paywalls. From there we debate the modern obsession with baseball analytics, rule tweaks, and interleague play, plus what we miss from the older style of the sport: contact, situational hitting, smart baserunning, and games that don’t feel engineered for a spreadsheet. We also take a sharp turn into Formula 1, because the weekend had everything: Mercedes on top, Kimi Antonelli vs George Russell tension, Lewis Hamilton still hunting rhythm at Ferrari, and Monaco on the horizon. We break down how strategy, tires, weather, and massive budgets shape results, and why the sport feels so high-stakes right now. We close on a Memorial Day reflection about athletes, protest, and respect, with a reminder of what we’re actually honoring. If you enjoyed the ride, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave us a review. What part are you most fired up about right now: the Knicks run, MLB access, or the F1 title chase?

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49 episodios

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30 de jun de 202652 min
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You can hear it in our voices right away: this one hits different. After a lifetime of Knicks memories that usually end in heartbreak, we finally get the ending New York has been chasing since 1973. We unpack the game like fans who care and coaches who can’t turn off the film room, starting with the wild truth that a 16-point lead never felt safe once Jalen Brunson started hunting his spots.  From there, we get into the guts of playoff basketball: why a physical series takes on its own rhythm, how defenses can make the 24-second clock feel ominous, and why “playing better” means nothing if you can’t finish possessions. We debate the worst officiating moments, the value of patience on offense, and the difference between surviving ugly stretches and actually controlling a game. Then we give Mike Brown his flowers for rotation feel, matchup decisions, and the kind of real-time coaching that doesn’t show up in a spreadsheet.  We also spend real time on Victor Wembanyama, because you don’t see a player like that often. We talk about what he already does that’s unreal, what looked shaky late, and what the Spurs need if they want talent to turn into wins. If you love the NBA, the New York Knicks, coaching, analytics, or the psychology of clutch performance, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a Knicks fan who’s still buzzing, and leave a review telling us: what was the moment you knew the title was real?

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