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Mike Brown Saw The Whistle Become The Story

by Philipp Dembowski
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Mike Brown did not need a calculator after Game 3. He had already done the math in his head, and he hated every digit.

After the Spurs beat the Knicks 115-111 at Madison Square Garden to cut New York’s NBA Finals lead to 2-1, Brown was furious about the second-half free-throw gap. San Antonio attempted 24 free throws after halftime. New York attempted eight. Brown’s reaction was blunt:

“I never thought I’d see that in an NBA Finals game, and I saw it tonight.”

That number became impossible to ignore because the game was decided by four points. Victor Wembanyama delivered the response San Antonio needed with 32 points, eight rebounds and six assists, while Stephon Castle added 23 points and De’Aaron Fox made timely plays late. The Spurs avoided a 3-0 series hole and turned the Finals back into a fight.

For the Knicks, the frustration was layered. Jalen Brunson scored 32 and OG Anunoby poured in 28, but New York’s offense tightened in the fourth quarter. The rest of the Knicks’ supporting cast struggled badly late, and even if Brown’s anger was aimed at the whistle, the missed shots and stalled possessions were real too.

That is what makes Brown’s postgame fire so fun and dangerous. He had a point about the disparity. He also knows the Knicks had chances to win anyway. Coaches complain about officiating for two reasons: because they believe it, and because they want the next game called differently.

Game 4 now gets even spicier. The Spurs have life. The Knicks have a grievance. And the referees just became part of the scouting report.

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