When Quentin Grimes and Miles McBride were out of the Knicks rotation early last season, they had a specific game day routine. It was a full-court one-on-one drill. Before games, Grimes defended McBride. After games, they switched. They did the same thing in the offseason.
"All summer, Coach Erm (Knicks assistant Darren Erman) had me picking him up full-court. Him picking me up full-court," Grimes said Wednesday. "…. It just makes it easier when we both come together."
Grimes and McBride have been together on the court a lot over the past two games. And the results are encouraging.
The Knicks are 2-0 in that span thanks to two of their best defensive performances of the season.
On Sunday, they held the Cleveland Cavaliers to 35 percent shooting in a home win. On Wednesday, they bothered the Atlanta Hawks all night, limiting them to 37 percent shooting in another victory.
Coincidence or not, Grimes and McBride have played heavy minutes in the past two games.
The playing time is a result of Tom Thibodeau’s latest tweak to the rotation. On Sunday, Thibodeau inserted McBride into his nine-man rotation and removed Derrick Rose and Cam Reddish.
So far, the rotation has worked well.
The Knicks have home wins over two quality opponents (of note: Dejounte Murray missed most of Wednesday’s game with an injury). Before the rotation change, New York had dropped eight of nine at home.
It’s reductive to credit just Grimes and McBride for the results. The Knicks have defended and rebounded well as a team. And they’ve protected the ball.