CourtFrame
NBA
Monday, April 6, 2026 • State Farm Arena
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Total
Atlanta Hawks31262226105
New York Knicks32212827108

Team Statistics

StatAtlanta HawksNew York Knicks
Field Goals22/5331/51
3-Pointers16/4211/33
Free Throws13/1713/17
Rebounds4847
Assists2329
Steals79
Blocks47
Turnovers1517

Game Recap

New York walked into State Farm Arena needing stability after a skid and walked out with a statement: a 108-105 win over Atlanta on April 6, 2026, tightening the margins in a game that never let either side breathe.

The Knicks (50-28) snapped their recent slide in the cleanest way possible — by winning the possession battle late and leaning on ball movement. Atlanta (45-33) had its chances, but couldn’t flip the final sequence after spending most of the night trading punches.

How the game swung

The opening quarter set the tone: New York led 32-31 after 12 minutes, with both teams operating at pace and getting into their offense early. Atlanta answered in the second, winning the period 26-21 to take a 57-53 halftime lead and briefly put the Knicks on their heels.

The turning point came out of the break. New York flipped the script with a 28-22 third quarter, reclaiming control and turning a four-point deficit into a 81-79 lead entering the fourth. In a game without a true separation, that six-point swing was the margin that mattered.

Atlanta made one last push in the fourth, but New York matched it shot-for-shot, taking the final period 27-26 to preserve the three-point win.

Ball movement told the story

The clearest team-level separator was creation. New York finished with 29 assists, consistently generating offense through multiple actions and keeping Atlanta’s defense in rotation. The Hawks posted 23 assists — solid, but not enough to keep pace with a Knicks team that repeatedly found the next pass when the first option was covered.

In a one-possession game, that gap in assisted offense often shows up in the most critical minutes: fewer stalled possessions, cleaner late-clock decisions, and more reliable shot quality without needing hero-ball.

By the numbers: quarter pressure

Knicks won the response quarters

Atlanta’s best stretch came in the second quarter, when it seized control with a 26-21 edge. But New York owned the two swing periods — the third (28-22) and the fourth (27-26). That’s where close games get decided: not by one run, but by the ability to answer immediately after halftime and to avoid the late-game lull.

What it means going forward

For New York, the win is a stabilizer. After entering with a rough patch in form, the Knicks found a repeatable formula — organized offense and a strong third-quarter adjustment — to close a tight road game against a playoff-caliber opponent.

For Atlanta, the loss stings because the structure was there: a halftime lead, a home floor, and a fourth-quarter chance to steal it back. The next step is turning those windows into finishes, especially against teams that can manufacture quality looks through passing when the game tightens.

Key Takeaways

  • Recent form advantage for Atlanta (4-1) vs New York (2-3)
  • Overall record advantage for New York, keeping the game close
  • No significant injuries reported on either side

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