RJ Barrett could use a jump shot under his Christmas tree. 

The Knicks forward continued his rancid stretch Saturday by missing 12 of his 17 attempts with just one assist as the Knicks were again humbled by the Bucks in a 130-111 defeat at MSG. 

In his past six games, Barrett, the highest Knicks draft pick since Patrick Ewing, connected on just 36.7 percent of his field goals and 20.8 percent of his treys.

His dud Saturday helped waste a 36-point gem from Jalen Brunson. 

After starting this campaign on a tear, Barrett’s efficiency has plummeted, and he is back to around his career average.

The migraine issue from November, which should’ve only briefly derailed Barrett’s season, can no longer be used as an excuse. 

With a chance to cut the deficit to single digits early in the fourth quarter, Barrett missed consecutive floaters in the lane. He then nailed a couple shots in garbage time, making his statline — 13 points in 29 minutes — look better than its reality. 


New York Knicks guard RJ Barrett (9) puts up a shot as Milwaukee Bucks center Brook Lopez (11) jumps to defend. Robert Sabo for NY Post

The Knicks (16-12) snapped a two-game losing streak, with owner James Dolan in a festive spirit wearing Christmas antlers in his baseline seat. 

His performance Saturday was the worst offensively from the Knicks (Immanuel Quickley and Josh Hart were also in the running), but team defense was again an issue.

The sharpshooting Bucks (22-7), who’ve already defeated the Knicks thrice and return to MSG for a Christmas matchup, buried 16 3-pointers on 32 attempts. 

It was the third time the Bucks punished the Knicks from long distance, hitting at least 50 percent in their matchups.

Coach Tom Thibodeau will need a different game plan — or better closeouts from his players — by Christmas. 


New York Knicks forward Julius Randle (30) defends against Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo
New York Knicks forward Julius Randle defends against Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo during New York’s home loss. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Bobby Portis, the former Knick, scored an energetic 23 points off the Bucks bench.

Giannis Anetotokounmpo added 28 points. 

The Knicks were playing at a deficit for most of the first half and trailed by 16 late in the second quarter.

But they closed the half on a 10-2 run, capped by Brunson’s buzzer-beating jumper to cut the deficit to eight. 

Then the Bucks went on a run in the beginning of the third quarter and never looked back.



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