
Little-used Jordan Clarkson sees action with Knicks desperate for offense
NY Post
LOS ANGELES — Desperately searching for offense, the Knicks dusted off little-used guard Jordan Clarkson on Sunday.
The guard logged 10 minutes — including eight in the fourth quarter — and was largely productive while scoring nine points on 3-for-4 shooting.
However, the Knicks were too deep in a hole by the time Clarkson was inserted. They were plus-four in Clarkson’s minutes but lost to the Lakers 110-97.
“He’s a guy we can lean on. He can put the ball in the hole,” said Brown, whose team trailed by as many as 23 in the third quarter. “We were struggling to do that. So I threw him out there to see if we can mix it up. He definitely helped us. But it was too big of a deficit if you’re talking about 20 points to try to come back from versus a good team on their home court.”
Before Sunday, Clarkson was pulled from the rotation and hadn’t played meaningful minutes in weeks. It was a surprise since Clarkson was considered a significant part of the plans before the season, but Brown said he’s facing a numbers crunch.
“It’s hard to play 10 guys. It’s hard to play nine guys,” the coach said. “So right now we got our starting group, we got [Mitchell Robinson], Landry [Shamet] has been playing well. And we need a backup point guard and Jose [Alvarado] has played well. Now you’re talking nine, 10, 11. And we got a young kid in Mo Diawara who has played really, really well. … So it’s just a matter of circumstance based on available time.”

Most of the words Chris Drury said in July about defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov centered around the defensive side of the $49 million defenseman’s game. The Rangers president and general manager wanted to be better in front of their goaltenders. He wanted improved coverage in high-danger areas. And Gavrikov, inked to a seven-year deal at the start of free agency that month to pair with Adam Fox, possessed “qualities of an elite shutdown guy.”












