The New York Knicks may be without their most important player at the worst possible time. Jalen Brunson is listed as questionable for Wednesday’s matchup against the Memphis Grizzlies due to right ankle soreness, placing immediate pressure on a team trying to stop its first real skid in weeks.

New York enters the night having lost three straight games, all by double digits, and now sits just one game ahead of the Cleveland Cavaliers in the race for Eastern Conference seeding. If Brunson can’t go, the Knicks’ offensive structure takes a direct hit. That’s the part that matters most right now.

Knicks Offense May Have to Survive Without Brunson

Of course without Brunson, the Knicks not only lose their leading scorer but also their offensive engine and lead-decision maker in crunch time. Luckily for them, they have dominated under .500 teams this season with a 30-6 record in those games. The Memphis Grizzlies who are mathematically out of even Play-In tournament contention will likely look to make this competitive but would like to lose to continue their momentum towards securing the best odds to land a top-4 pick in the upcoming 2026 NBA Draft.

All signs point to the Knicks leaning on Karl-Anthony Towns to shoulder the offensive load along with bounce back games from Mikal Bridges and OG Anunoby who combined for a mere 15 points in the loss to the Houston Rockets Tuesday night. As for filling out the point guard minutes, if Brunson is ruled out, expect increased on-ball responsibility for secondary guards like Jordan Clarkson and Jose Alvarado.

Robinson, McBride Absences Thin Rotation

The injury report doesn’t stop with Brunson. Center Mitchell Robinson will sit out Wednesday as part of injury management on the back-to-back, continuing a trend that has defined much of his career. Across eight seasons, Robinson has missed 243 of 629 possible games, a number that reinforces why the Knicks carefully manage his workload.

Backup point guard Miles McBride is also ruled out due to a pelvis issue, removing another guard option from the rotation. His recent return from surgery has been uneven, and he acknowledged the challenge of regaining form midseason.

“It’s tough having surgery in the middle of the season,” McBride said. “Especially on an area that’s so important to everything you do. So it’s just going to be a learning process. I’m going to figure it out, though.”

That quote reflects where the Knicks are as a whole which is still figuring things out at the wrong time. The one positive: Landry Shamet is available after being removed from the injury report, offering some perimeter depth. But depth only goes so far when your primary creator may be sidelined.

With playoff positioning tightening, this isn’t just another regular-season game. It’s a stress test and the Knicks are running out of room for error.