Steve Serby

Steve Serby

NBA

Stan Van Gundy gives Knicks ‘puncher’s chance’ at playoff run with 50 wins realistic

Only twice in the past 24 seasons have the Knicks reached 50 wins. The 2012-13 Mike Woodson Knicks won 54 games before losing in the conference semifinals to the Pacers. Then you have to go back to the 1999-2000 Knicks when the Jeff Van Gundy Knicks won 50 games before losing in the conference finals to the Pacers.

The only other Knicks coaches who belong to the 50-win club: Red Holzman (five times) Pat Riley (four), Rick Pitino (one). Van Gundy also won 57 games in 1996-97.

It is an exclusive club and there is no reason why Tom Thibodeau should not be joining that club this season.

“I think that 50 games has always sorta been a marker in the league of a really good regular-season team, and I think unfortunately, people discount the challenge of the regular season and the consistency it takes to go out and play high-level basketball every single night in the NBA, and I think the Knicks are doing that,” NBA on TNT analyst Stan Van Gundy told The Post before the Knicks’ 113-109 win over the Wizards on Thursday night at the Garden.

“I think if I’m a New York fan, I’m excited about this team, and look, I don’t think they’re as good as those other three teams [Boston, Milwaukee and Philadelphia], but I’m sincere in saying Miami was not nearly as good last year as the Knicks are now, and they ended up in the NBA Finals. In boxing you’ve got a puncher’s chance.

Stan Van Gundy said the Knicks could become a 50-win team this season. NBAE via Getty Images

“I think New York has a better chance now than they’ve had in a long time to go a step further or two steps further in the playoffs. But I still think anything beyond winning in the first round they would need some breaks, or maybe they hit it right and continue to improve.”

The second half of the season began Thursday night with the 25-17 Knicks rolling past the woeful Wizards, and with 23 home games remaining, a 25-15, 50-32 finish is hardly an unreasonable expectation, whether or not they make a move before the Feb. 8 trade deadline.

“I just think there’s a narrative around [Thibodeau], everybody thinks he’s a good coach, they think he’s old school, they think he’s all defense and the whole thing,” SVG said, “and it doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. It’s two years in a row now he’s had a top-10 offense, and I don’t think when you look at the roster, that’s a roster that you would think would be a great offense, either last year or now. They’re a top-10 offense because [Thibodeau] maximizes the abilities of people around him.”

Tom Thibodeau “maximizes the abilities of people around him,” according to Stan Van Gundy. Charles Wenzelberg

The OG Anunoby trade has changed the complexion of the Knicks’ defense, especially if Mitchell Robinson makes it back before the regular season ends. “He can go match up with best player on every other team in the league,” SVG said of Anunoby. “It makes them a far more formidable playoff team than they were before.”

Above all else, it is the presence of Jalen Brunson alongside Julius Randle that makes 50 wins better than a 50-50 proposition.

“I think what New York did with that trade with OG was a step forward,” SVG said. “I think they gave themselves a puncher’s chance. If somehow they can add a bench scorer to that group, now they’ve got a little bit more of a chance. But I don’t see a route for them to come up with a roster where I would look at it and say, ‘Yeah, I think their roster’s as talented as Milwaukee’s and Boston’s, I don’t think that’s gonna happen. Or Philly’s.

“I think right now that I would put the Knicks in a group with Miami and Cleveland in those 4 through 7 spots. But the caveat is Miami was even lower than that a year ago and ended up in the Finals. So I think if you get in those spots and put things together at the right time and get the right matchups and have the right health, you could make a run from being that horse coming up on the outside and get in. But it’s still something of a long shot.

The Knicks wouldn’t have a chance at 50 wins without Jalen Brunson on their roster. Charles Wenzelberg

“Brunson and Randle are good players, but are you taking Brunson and Randle over [Joel] Embiid and [Tyrese] Maxey? Are you taking them over [Jayson] Tatum and [Jaylen] Brown? Are you taking them over [Damian] Lillard and Giannis [Antetokounmpo]? You’re not, you’re just not. So I think they’re still on the outside. They certainly have a chance if things go right, but you would need a lot of things to align correctly for them to have a run.”

The Knicks remain in the market for a bench playmaker/facilitator and have been linked to the likes of Dejounte Murray, Malcolm Brogdon, Jordan Clarkson, DeMar DeRozan and most recently, Bruce Brown (12.1 ppg, 4.7 rpg), who was just traded by the Pacers to the Raptors in the Pascal Siakam deal. “I think a guy like Clarkson, a guy who would be able to add some offensive punch off the bench would be what they would need the most, that’s just me looking from the outside,” SVG said. “Those are all great names. I don’t see a lot of trade value left on the Knicks. That’s the problem.”

The Knicks have reportedly been fielding calls on Quentin Grimes. A backup big to relieve the stress on godsend Isaiah Hartenstein is also a possibility.

“I love Quentin Grimes myself … but I don’t know that it gets you any of those guys,” Van Gundy said. “I think their centers have some value, but I don’t think they would want to give away either of those guys.”

In no world would it be justice for Brunson to be snubbed a second straight time for the All-Star Game.

“When I did my media vote for All-Star starters, so you’re only coming down to five guys, the three guys I considered were [Tyrese Haliburton], Brunson and Maxey,” Van Gundy said, “and I ended up going with Haliburton and Brunson, and I love Tyrese Maxey. And what it came down for me was as good as Tyrese has been, he hasn’t had to carry as heavy a load because of Embiid, obviously, as Brunson has.”

The Garden knows that without Jalen Brunson, the Knicks wouldn’t have a prayer to win 50 games.