NBA News From The Athletic The Athletic: Karl-Anthony Towns' curious season has taken a turn for the better Towns has looked like his old self since the All-Star break, setting into a comfortable place in Knicks coach Mike Brown's offense. James L. Edwards III, The Athletic February 23, 2026 6:26 PM Karl-Anthony Towns scored 28 points in a win over the Bulls Sunday night. Editorās Note: Read more NBA coverage from The AthleticĀ here. The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA or its teams.Ā *** CHICAGO ā Trying to make sense of Karl-Anthony Townsā season has at times felt like attempting to solve a Rubikās Cube while wearing drunk goggles in a dark room. Thereās mystery. Thereās confusion. Thereās bad luck and good luck. For months, the default answer is that the Knicksā All-Star is simply struggling to find his old form in his new coachās system. Because of his position on the court, Towns has more to digest than his smaller counterparts. Those excuses were acceptable a month or two into the season. A week past the All-Star break, though, Townsā season is still a rollercoaster ride full of stomach-turning drops. Here we are in late February, and Towns is in the midst of his best three-game stretch as a scorer since early December. Heās doing it in the same system that he said heād struggled to grasp. Heās doing it from the same spots on the floor as before. Heās doing it with most of the same teammates. The change? Towns, who scored 28 points in a nail-biting 105-99 win Sunday night over the Bulls, is making shots. Simple. One of the gameās best outside shooters is putting the ball in the basket. āWhen anyone sees the ball go through the hoop, it gives a level of confidence and makes you feel like you can do anything on the court,ā said Jalen Brunson. āThen you shot-fake, they bite, and then youāre able to make plays for yourself or others. āFor (Towns), itās a great sign. Heās sticking with it. Thatās who he is.ā For months, Towns hasnāt been the player weāve known him to be for the greater part of a decade. The shots he usually makes havenāt gone in at the same rate. Yet heās found his stroke since the break, hitting nine of his last 16 3-point attempts. Coincidentally or not, his improved 3-point shooting has also brought about an uptick in finishing at the rim, another area where he was having a hard time in his 11th season. Itās easy to blame Mike Brown for Townsā erratic play. The Knicksā first-year head coach is the only major change from last season, when Towns made Third Team All-NBA. Yet, Brown isnāt the reason Towns was immersed in his worst 3-point shooting season since his rookie year before the weekend. He was at a meh 36.5 percent on wide-open 3s (two attempts per game) and an even-worse 34.8 percent on open 3s (2.2 attempts per game) beforeĀ Saturdayās victory against Houston. Shooters of Townsā ilk would salivate over four of those looks per game, but he just hasnāt converted enough of them. Brown also canāt put the ball in the basket for Towns around the rim, where the veteran big man is shooting a career-worst 61 percent. Brown isnāt leading the NBA in offensive fouls committed. Thatās on Towns. As Brunson alluded, everyone feels better when shots go in. The rim gets bigger. The court feels wider. Better decisions are made with the ball. For the last three games, Towns has sensed and done all of those things. In turn, the offensive system feels like itās working. Brown isnāt free of blame for Townsā head-scratching season, and neither are Townsā teammates. Brownās offense is known to rely more on read-and-react principles than traditional play calls. That method hasnāt always appeared to suit one of his most talented scorers. And Townsā teammates do have to make sure to find him when heās open. Brown does have calls for Towns, who hasnāt always capitalized on those opportunities. Maybe calling Townsā number more often could make it so he doesnāt feel as absent on multiple trips down the floor. Bending the teamās offense to get one of the Knicksā stars more involved might not be a bad thing. Itās a give-and-take situation. āWhenever youāre making shots or getting plays called for you, you feel more involved, you feel more in the flow of the game,ā Josh Hart said. āSometimes, for a player, thatās all you really need to get back on track. He gave us a lot of energy today and yesterday by making shots, but also defensively he brought it yesterday.ā Towns is averaging a career low in shot attempts, and that might be where some of the fan frustration comes from. He can vanish. Thatās not what anyone expected when the KnicksĀ traded for himĀ at the beginning of last season. Still, Towns has never played on a team with this much offensive talent. Just like he needs shots, so do Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby and Landry Shamet. And we all know Brunson is getting his. In an offensive system that tries to avoid predictability and prioritizes paint touches and 3-point shooting, the ball will gravitate to different players on different nights. The Knicks hired Brown to make that happen, a sharp turn from last seasonās approach. āIāve said this before, Jalen had four shots in the first half (the other night), and heās our best player,ā Brown said. āThere have been other halves when he doesnāt have as many shots, but, at the end of the day, heās getting the most field-goal attempts. (Towns) is our second-best player, and if you go look at the cumulative stats, heās getting the second-most field-goal attempts. Heās the second-leading scorer. Heās an All-Star. Heās going to have halves like that and nights like that, but if it averages out to where heās second in those categories and an All-Star ⦠heās having a pretty good year. āHeās getting an opportunity. We donāt call a ton of plays. If you compare his numbers to last year, (Mitchell Robinson) didnāt play much during the regular season. (Towns) averaged 36, 37 minutes per game. Mitch is playing now. Landry didnāt (play much) last year. Weāre trying to get him to 17 to 22, or 23 minutes per game. We have Jose (Alvarado) now. ⦠When you do that, not only are guysā minutes going to go down, so are their field-goal attempts and all of those other things that impact the game that you can see statistically.ā The version of Towns weāve seen since the break is closer to the one weāre accustomed to. Itās the same system, the same coach and the same teammates. And his shots are falling. The solution can sometimes be that simple. If this is a turning point for Towns, then the Knicks are in a good place. When his shots go in, life gets easier for a lot of people. *** James L. Edwards IIIĀ is a staff writer for The Athletic covering the New York Knicks. Previously, he covered the Detroit Pistons at The Athletic for seven seasons and, before that, was a reporter for the Lansing State Journal, where he covered Michigan State and high school sports.Ā Follow James L. on TwitterĀ @JLEdwardsIII Related Power Rankings: Celtics return to Top 5 Boston returns to the Top 5 in a Top 10 that sees few changes as the season's home stretch gets rolling. Best game to watch for all 30 teams in Week 19 The stretch run continues with an action-packed week across the league. The Athletic: How do we feel about the Knicks going into final stretch of season? To examine the Knicks' final stretch of the season, James L. Edwards III and Fred Katz discussed the franchiseās last 20 games. 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