Knicks’ Mike Brown Drops Major Quote After Strong Game 1 Win

Mike Brown, Boston Celtics
Getty
Mike Brown, Boston Celtics

The New York Knicks did what they were supposed to do on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden. They beat the Atlanta Hawks 113-102 in Game 1 of their first-round series, with all five starters scoring in double figures and Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns combining for 53 points to lead the way.

For Mike Brown, the win carried more weight than the box score suggested. Owner James Dolan made his expectations clear earlier this season, publicly stating the Knicks need to reach and win the NBA Finals. Brown replaced Tom Thibodeau with that mandate hanging over him from day one.

Saturday was a step in the right direction. After the game, Brown reflected on what it feels like to coach in this building.

What Brown Said After the Win

Mike Brown reacts as Knicks rotation changes raise questions about a fan favorite’s role

GettyMike Brown, New York Knicks.

Brown did not shy away from the magnitude of the moment when asked if the night felt different from his previous postseason experiences as a head coach.

“It always feels special walking into MSG,” Brown said. “I pinch myself every time I walk in.”

He was equally measured when addressing what made the Knicks successful in Game 1.

“We feel like the team is deep and anybody can get going at any time,” Brown said. “For us, it’s about sacrificing and not worrying about shots, minutes or anything like that. Just try to go do what you can to help the team win.”

The message reflected exactly what Brown asked of his team from the moment he arrived. Individual sacrifice. Connectivity. Competitive spirit. Belief in the process. The Knicks delivered all of it on Saturday night.

How the Knicks Won Game 1

Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, New York Knicks,

GettyKarl-Anthony Towns and Jalen Brunson of the New York Knicks.

Brunson set the tone immediately, scoring 19 points in the first quarter alone and putting the Hawks on their heels from the opening tip. He dropped Atlanta’s best defender Dyson Daniels with a behind-the-back bounce pass that led to a Mikal Bridges corner three, the kind of play that reminded everyone why New York entered this series as the clear favorite.

Towns provided the firepower down the stretch to protect the lead, finishing as the complementary force alongside Brunson that the Knicks need him to be throughout this postseason.

The Hawks came into this series having won 19 of their final 24 regular-season games and were not afraid of the Knicks. Atlanta’s youth, athleticism, and perimeter defense posed real questions. Saturday answered them, at least for one night.

The Pressure on Brown

The stakes surrounding Brown’s first playoff run in New York are unlike anything most coaches face in their opening season with a franchise. Dolan’s public declaration that the Knicks need to reach and win the Finals removed any ambiguity about what success looks like. Brown signed a four-year, $40 million contract with the understanding that deep postseason runs are the expectation, not the ceiling.

Thibodeau took the Knicks to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2025 and was still let go. Brown inherited a roster talented enough to go further, and a fanbase that has been waiting since 1973 for a championship.

One game into the playoffs, he is off to the right start.

Final Word for the Knicks

Game 1 belongs to New York. Brunson delivered. Towns delivered. The supporting cast delivered. And Brown coached his team to exactly the kind of performance the moment demanded.

Game 2 is next. The Hawks will adjust. The pressure on Brown does not diminish with one win.

But on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden, he made it look manageable.

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Knicks’ Mike Brown Drops Major Quote After Strong Game 1 Win

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