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Adjusting Without Brunson

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By Eddie Castro
The New York Knicks are in the middle of a challenging West Coast trip. As we go to press, the team is currently 1-2 with their lone win coming against the Sacramento Kings this past Monday. Unfortunately, the team will be without their top player, Jalen Brunson, not only for the rest of the West Coast swing but at least the next few weeks. Brunson sprained his ankle driving to the basket in a crucial time of the game. The Knicks would go on to lose that contest to the Los Angeles Clippers on Friday night.


Brunson’s injury adds to a season that has been marred by notable absences to significant players missing time due to injury. Brunson’s injury comes at an important time of the season. New York will now have to piece it together and hope to get key step up contributions from players like Karl-Anthony Towns, Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges to name a few as the team tries to secure a top three playoff seed in the Eastern Conference.


The Knicks currently sit at the No.3 seed in the East behind the Boston Celtics and the Cleveland Cavaliers. There is no timetable for Brunson’s return. Life without Brunson will be a huge challenge but it is not impossible. In their first game without their star point guard, the Knicks may have found the formula to weather the storm and still be competitive despite missing the spacing and scoring ability Brunson provides on a nightly basis.

Monday’s win against the Kings was highlighted by a career-high in assists from Anunoby and Josh Hart knocking down four three-pointers, the first time he has done that in the new year. With impeccable passing and spacing the team displayed Monday night, the Knicks also got some timely baskets from Deuce McBride.

With Brunson out, McBride’s role is expected to increase. McBride’s play can be unpredictable, like the New York weather, but when he is able to make shots, he is a lethal weapon. In the Knicks wins this season, McBride is shooting 43.3% from the three-point line.

In losses, that percentage doubles down to just 24.7%. Along with McBride’s shooting, sharing the ball will be a major key for the Knicks to find success moving forward. On Monday night against the Kings, the Knicks dished out 34 assists on 45 field goals made. The third-most they’ve had since the new year.


Without their team captain, the Knicks’ spacing and ball movement will be top priorities if they are going to withstand a lengthy absence of Brunson. The team showed great ability to execute both against Sacramento, however, Sacramento is not the caliber team Boston and Cleveland are right now. Those are likely the two teams New York will have to go through if they hope to have a strong playoff run.

There should be more information provided regarding the most important ankle in New York sports today in Brunson. Even without Brunson, the Knicks’ roster is more than capable of collecting notable wins and securing their playoff spot in the east.

SPORTS NOTES: (Baseball) The injury bug continues for the Yankees as their ace pitcher Gerrit Cole will miss the 2025 season as he undergoes Tommy John Surgery to repair the Ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow. His recovery time is expected to be around 12-18 months. Huge blow for the Yankees, who will already be without reigning AL Rookie of The Year Luis Gil until July with a lat strain. (FOOTBALL) NFL free agency has begun. The New York Giants made a few deals on Monday, re-signing receiver Darius Slayton (3 years/$36 million) and former Miami Dolphins safety Jevon Holland (3-year/$45.3 million). The Jets have their new quarterback agreeing to a 2-year/$40 million deal with Justin Fields. Fields, 26, had a pretty good season last year in Pittsburgh and now reunites with wide receiver Garret Wilson, whom he played at Ohio State.

Quincy Wilson: An Olympic Phenomenon at 16

By Anthony Jones
Quincy Wilson holds the indoor and outdoor national Records in the 400-meter dash. A student at the Bullis School, Potomac, MD, He also ran the fastest 400-meter relay split in high school and Junior Olympic division under 20 last year at Penn Relays Carnival at the tender age of 16. He went on to become the youngest ever Olympian to win a Gold Medal in Paris 2024.


Quincy will be defending his National Championship at the New Balance High School Championships in Boston today through Sunday.
He wants to be the first to run a sub 44-second split in high school on Penn Relay’s 4-400 April 2025!

BAM Free Music: Pedrito Martinez

By: Marquis Sanchez

Percussion is everything and ascending to the second floor of the Peter Jay Sharp Building, with DJs from Discolocas setting the tone, I could feel the music in my bones. I had the privilege to attend BAM’s Free Music event featuring Afro-Cuban percussionist Pedrito Martinez.

Martinez, born in Havana, Cuba before settling in New York City in his 20s, is a world-renowned musician who has worked with the likes of Wynton Marsalis, Quincy Jones, Eddie Palmieri, Bruce Springsteen, and many more. One word that stuck with me as I was trying to process what I was experiencing was energy. There was such energy, such a speed to the music. You could feel it with the snap of their percussion, the sound of the trombone rippling through the air in conjunction with the tap dance of the piano.

In addition to the echoing voice of Martinez himself and the collective harmonization of the band as a whole, there wasn’t a pocket of silence in their performance. Even the most timid of souls couldn’t resist at least a two-step. What first struck me was the demographic of people in attendance. People of different races and backgrounds showed up and showed out for Afro-Latin music and danced the night away.

It allowed me to appreciate the physicality and spectacle that is Salsa dancing. It’s a cultural ritual of chemistry and intimacy; there’s a confidence that protrudes through each step taken or body twirled. Everyone else exists to watch the dancers engaged in it. If I can learn to be half as good of a dancer as what I saw yesterday, I’ll sleep that much better at night. 

Meme Mania: Hype and Speculation or the Future Meme Economy?

By Taurean Hall

In one of the most bizarre moves by an incoming president, just days before his inauguration, Donald Trump endorsed his own meme coin, TrumpCoin, on social media. Within days, its valuation skyrocketed to nearly $15 billion, placing it among the top 10 most valuable cryptocurrencies.

Naturally, other celebs quickly followed suit, from rappers like Tyga and DaBaby to influencers like NPC Miles and Dave Portnoy. With TrumpCoin effectively legitimizing the idea that anyone can launch their own meme coin, a new era of digital hype-driven currencies seemed to emerge.

The general understanding of meme coins is that although they lack the economic value of assets like stocks or bonds, the value comes from public sentiment surrounding what they represent, whether a celebrity, viral meme, or joke.

Dogecoin, the most well-known Meme Coin, was originally created as a joke. Over time, it grew a passionate community of investors, reaching a $40 billion valuation and cultural significance.

Meme coins typically follow a familiar pattern: an initial surge to million-dollar valuations as speculators jump in, eager for rapid gains, followed by an inevitable crash. The notorious HawkTuah coin, launched by a viral influencer, collapsed within hours, leaving investors unfortunately holding the bag.

Online platforms are also making it easier than ever for anyone to create their own coin, aiming to capitalize on speculation and quick profits. 

While most meme coins will ultimately fail, a handful—like Dogecoin—have managed to endure, fostering tight-knit communities and lasting cultural impact.

Whether meme coins represent a passing fad or a disruptive shift in digital finance remains uncertain, but one thing is clear: understanding meme culture may soon be just as valuable as understanding financial markets.

View From Here

Importance of Voting

By David Mark Greaves

October 24, 2024

This election is teaching us more about the country than many had believed before. 

That almost half of the electorate is enthusiastic about electing a man for president who has said he will be a dictator deporting millions and deciding who the justice department and the military should be arresting.  They will be arresting those who he sees as opponents “enemies within” or who he believes have disparaged him in the past. 

Trump’s been called “a fascist” by those who have worked most closely with him: former Chief of Staff General John Kelly and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley.  Yet he still has the faith of almost half the country. 

Polls say the election is too close to call. A coin flip.  We don’t believe it. 

We believe the majority of people in the country do not want to be ruled by a fascist and will vote for Kamala Harris and I refuse to accept that a majority of people in the swing states will vote for Donald Trump.  We believe Vice President Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz will win in a landslide.

Envisioning the consequences of any other outcome are too disturbing to the body and are best left for the bridge we’ll cross if we come to it.