Josh Hart surpasses Clyde Frazier for most triple-doubles in a Knicks’ season
Josh Hart reached a new level to prove he is not a one-dimensional player on Tuesday night.
The veteran notched his ninth triple-double of the season in the Knicksā 128-113 win over the Mavericks at Madison Square Garden, surpassing Walt āClydeā Frazier for most triple-doubles in a single season in the franchiseās history.
Frazier, who held the record for 56 years, completed his eighth triple-double on March 21 of the 1968-69 season against the Suns with 24 points, 14 assists and 11 rebounds.
Hart broke the record with 16 points, 11 assists, and 12 rebounds.
āItās just a blessing. I got a great group of guys,ā Hart said. āGreat high-character group of guys. Means I at least played nine good games out of 82 so far, or sixty whatever. But yeah man, itās just a blessing. Canāt say more than that.ā
Outside of the feat, it was an important shooting night for Hart, who hadnāt found the basket as easily in the Knicks previous eight games, all without Jalen Brunson.
Hart averaged 40.8 percent shooting from the field and 37.5 percent from 3-point range, averaging 9.9 points per game before Tuesday.
In the 59 games before Brunson landed on the health bill, Hart shot 54.7 percent from the field and 32.8 from beyond the arc for 14.5 points.
Yet, scoring isnāt the singular thing that defines Hart, and Karl-Anthony Towns, who also had a triple-double to mark the first time in franchise history two Knicks recorded a triple-double in the same game, was glad to see his teammate have several of his talents represented in one game.
āThe way he does it is special. Itās all energy, itās effort, and itās for the betterment of the team,ā Towns said. āIām just happy that Josh gets stats on the sheet that show the impact heās making on the game because I feel thereās much more stats that donāt show up on the stat sheet that he does for our team. So, Iām happy heās having this moment.ā
Hart grabbed the game ball following the win, but didnāt take it for himself. Rather, he gave it to rookie Kevin McCullar Jr., who scored his first career points in the fourth quarter.

āFor me, thatās an easy decision,ā he said. āThat record is cool and a blessing, but at the end of the day that recordās going to get broken at some point. ⦠Getting your first NBA points, no one is going to take that away from you.ā
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