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Knicks’ road to preferred playoff path begins with rival Cavs

knicks’-road-to-preferred-playoff-path-begins-with-rival-cavs
Knicks’ road to preferred playoff path begins with rival Cavs

Forget the Pistons. That train left the station for good.

The Knicks have 24 games left in the regular season. They are 6 ½ games behind Detroit and need to make up nine games in the loss column since the Pistons own the tiebreaker. If the Knicks went 20-4 the rest of the way — and I doubt even Ben Stiller, Timothée Chalamet and Steve Schirripa on truth serum believe they will go 20-4 the rest of the way — the Pistons would need to go just 14-13 to win the East.

So for the 55th time in the 56 seasons since 1969-70, the Knicks will not be the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference. Not unless Cade Cunningham decides to request a sabbatical the next six weeks to join Aaron Rodgers in a Sky Cave Retreat in Ashland, Ore.

The Celtics are still catchable, even if Jaylen Brown plays like an MVP every night, even if there is a good chance he’ll be joined by his old wingman, Jayson Tatum, in the weeks ahead. But when you get right down to it, the difference between the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds in the East is only one thing: the extra home game. The Knicks beat the Celtics twice in Boston last season, and the Celtics beat the Knicks once in the Garden. That one’ll be a toss-up no matter who has home court.

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