Irving helps Nets beat Knicks 113-109 after blowing big lead

NEW YORK (AP) — The Knicks had the momentum on the court and their fans cheering wildly in the stands.

The Nets have Kyrie Irving.

He's the main reason that for now, all roads — and bridges and tunnels — point Brooklyn's way in New York's basketball rivalry.

Irving scored 26 points and made a go-ahead 3-pointer with 22 seconds left after the Knicks had taken a late lead, and the Nets held on for a 113-109 victory Friday night in the first meeting this season between New York's teams.

"Having a player like that, where you know that he can make plays down the stretch, it gives the team a lot of confidence," Nets forward Joe Harris said. "I don't think any one of us, when the Knicks got up by three there with a like a minute and a half to go, I don't think any of us were worried."

The Nets controlled much of the game and then responded just in time after the Knicks had surged ahead with a big fourth quarter.

Irving, who scored 50 points in an overtime loss in his Brooklyn debut, scored five straight points down the stretch after New York took a three-point lead. Spencer Dinwiddie added 20 points.

Allonzo Trier scored 22 points for the Knicks, who fell to 0-2. Rookie RJ Barrett and Kevin Knox II each added 16.

Nets fans hoping to see the first victory for their new-look team had to wait through an anxious fourth quarter, when the blue-shirted fans in the building started making plenty of noise after the Knicks came back from 19 points down.

Wayne Ellington's 3-pointer capped a run of 10 straight points that tied it at 104. Irving made a layup, but then Ellington hit another 3 and Barrett stole Irving's pass and made a layup, making it a 15-2 run and giving New York a 109-106 lead with 3:41 to play.

"So I just had to bring the guys, tell them to calm down," Irving said. "We just had to get three solid possessions offensively and defensively, and down the stretch I feel like we made some big-time plays."

Irving then hit a jumper and a step-back 3-pointer from the right wing that was reminiscent of his game-winning 3 in Game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals for Cleveland.

"He's a great player. A champion. Great players make great plays and that's what he did tonight," Barrett said. "Same shot he hit to win the championship against Golden State."

The Knicks had a chance to tie but Julius Randle lost the ball on a spin move under the basket and Dinwiddie closed it out with two free throws.

The Nets have been in New York since 2012, but this is the first time they clearly have the bigger share of the city's basketball buzz. Kevin Durant and Irving committed to come to Brooklyn in the opening hours of free agency, and the Knicks weren't able to get an All-Star, even though they had enough salary cap space to sign two of them.

The Nets gave away Irving jerseys — which some people took as an attempt to taunt the Knicks. There was certainly plenty of Brooklyn black inside Barclays Center, which often seems split more evenly and where Knicks fans have made plenty of noise in the past during better times.

This time, when the Knicks came out to warm up they were greeted with chants of "We got Kyrie! We got Kyrie!" and "Where is Zion?" ''Where is Zion?" — a reminder that the Knicks didn't make the biggest score in free agency or the draft, where they ended up with the No. 3 pick and missed a chance to draft Zion Williamson.

TIP-INS

Knicks: Randle was just 5 for 15 and finished with 14 points and 11 rebounds. ... Mitchell Robinson started at center after missing the opener with a sprained right ankle. He had six points and seven rebounds.

Nets: DeAndre Jordan, who signed along with Durant and Irving, had seven points and 11 rebounds after finishing with just two points and three rebounds in his debut. ... Harris scored 13 points.

SECOND-QUARTER SCUFFLE

Bobby Portis and Taurean Prince were given second-quarter technical fouls after a brief scrum. Randle leaped to stop a drive by Irving, who landed on the court with the ball in his hands. He refused to let go as Portis tried to rip it out of his hands — all but lifting Irving off the court in his attempts — and Prince ran over to pull Portis away from Irving before other players rushed in.

BRONX CHEER

Aaron Judge and CC Sabathia were in the crowd and both received loud ovations when they were shown on the overhead board. Fans stood and cheered for Sabathia, who injured his shoulder in the American League Championship Series in his final outing before retiring.

UP NEXT

Knicks: Host Boston on Saturday in their home opener.

Nets: Visit Memphis on Sunday, their only road trip in their first five games.