Jordan Clarksons Return Just Put More Heat On Tyler Kolek

The Knicks' decision to prioritize Jordan Clarkson over Tyler Kolek reveals deeper strategic moves amid roster constraints.

Jordan Clarkson’s return says plenty about where the Knicks stand on Tyler Kolek.

For a New York team with limited spending power, bringing Clarkson back makes sense on its face. It keeps the roster intact almost everywhere, with the reserve-center spot still the one place the Knicks seem willing to keep tinkering. But the move also sends a pretty clear message: the Knicks do not seem ready to hand Tyler Kolek steady minutes.

That doesn’t mean Clarkson and Kolek are redundant. Their games are actually pretty different.

Kolek’s value comes from being a pass-first guard who can stay composed in traffic and push the pace after missed shots. Clarkson, on the other hand, has built himself into a player who attacks the offensive glass, gets downhill off those extra possessions, and works hard on defense.

Neither guy is a clean solution as a scorer, but they get there in different ways. Clarkson is the more natural bucket-getter.

Kolek creates more of the little events that matter on defense. The problem for Kolek is that Clarkson already finished the regular season and playoffs ahead of him in the rotation, and now he’s back in the mix.

Kolek’s path was already shaky. He spent part of last season looking like he might become the Knicks’ answer to their backup ball-handler issues, only to fade out of the rotation and slide back into garbage-time work. With Jose Alvarado also on the way back, the squeeze gets tighter.

Clarkson may actually fit what the Knicks need more right now, especially with Mitchell Robinson suiting up in Beantown. His work on the offensive boards could matter a lot there.

And even if Kolek somehow beats Clarkson in the guard pecking order, that still doesn’t guarantee him a stable role. Clarkson’s minutes were up and down late in the season and through the playoffs anyway.

The bigger issue is that neither Clarkson nor Kolek is going to jump Deuce McBride. Mike Brown is also going to give Alvarado his chances before leaning on Kolek. The Game 4 against the San Antonio Spurs note is part of that picture.

Landry Shamet adds another layer to the logjam. The Knicks may use him more like a wing, but that versatility is exactly why he matters here.

He can scale up to guard 3s. More than half of his defensive possessions last season came against wings, according to BBall Index.

McBride and Alvarado can’t do that, and Kolek can’t either.

So unless injuries open the door, Kolek looks set to start next season behind Clarkson, McBride, Shamet, and Alvarado. And the odds of him passing any of them are slim.

If there’s a realistic opening, it may come against Clarkson more than the others. That’s understandable, but it’s not automatic.

Alvarado’s defense can be useful, but it doesn’t always cover for his offensive dry spells. If his three-point shot isn’t falling, Kolek’s passing could earn him another look.

Even then, the Knicks aren’t as desperate for secondary playmaking as they once were. Karl-Anthony Towns’ postseason evolution changed that. Giving Towns more of the ball when Jalen Brunson sits is a real option now, and that also trims down what Kolek can offer, since part of his appeal is his ability to get KAT the ball.

At this point, the likeliest route for Kolek to find a role may be through a trade. McBride is on track for free agency in 2027, and New York could consider moving him before the deadline if an extension doesn’t come together this summer.

In Other News...

Knicks Fans Finally Get A Look At One Intriguing Newcomer

The first real look at Jack Kayil has been a little slower in coming than Knicks fans probably hoped after New York took the Alba Berlin guard with the 39th pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. Kayil sat out the clubs first Summer League game because of a delay tied to his team in Germany, but the wait appears close to ending, giving the Knicks a chance to see the kind of newcomer they added after trading down and stockpiling second-round picks in a draft shaped by their salary cap realities.

Kayils arrival also comes with the usual questions that follow an international pick in this spot. He does not have an obvious opening on the big club right now, and the Knicks may ultimately leave him in Germany next season as a draft-and-stash option. For now, though, the more immediate intrigue is simply getting him on the floor, with his debut expected soon and a matchup against the Spurs looming as the next chance for New York to evaluate what it has. [Read more 🡒]

Knicks May Have Made Their Smartest Summer Move Without Fixing Center

The Knicks spent part of the summer adding familiar depth pieces in Jose Alvarado, Landry Shamet and Andre Drummond, but the quieter move may have come in the draft-pick column. New York has also picked up four future second-rounders in recent trades, a stash of low-cost assets that gives the front office more ways to keep tinkering without touching the top of the roster.

That matters because the center spot still looks like the area most worth watching, even after the Drummond addition. The Knicks have been linked to other frontcourt possibilities, including Kyle Filipowski, and the extra picks could give them a path to chase another big or package together a broader trade if they decide the current group still needs one more answer inside. [Read more 🡒]