Knicks Fans Already Have Reason To Regret This Draft Night Trade

The New York Knicks' draft night decisions face scrutiny as Bruce Thornton's standout Summer League performance raises questions about missed opportunities.

The Knicks didn’t just move a draft pick - they may have moved away from a player who already looks worth keeping an eye on.

On draft night, New York sent the No. 31 pick and No. 55 pick to the Houston Rockets in exchange for No. 39, No. 53, and a 2029 second-rounder. Houston used that No. 31 selection on Ohio State guard Bruce Thornton, and his first Summer League outing gave Knicks fans plenty to think about.

Thornton was a major factor in Houston’s 97-86 win over the Denver Nuggets on Friday night. He logged 35:06 and put up 27 points, three rebounds, three assists, and three steals, while shooting 7-of-18 from the field and 3-of-8 from three-point range.

That kind of debut is exactly why New York’s trade already has the look of one that could linger. Thornton didn’t just score - he flashed the kind of all-around production that makes a guard look ready to matter sooner rather than later.

The Knicks, to their credit, have spent the summer putting the roster back together after winning the 2026 NBA Championship. Mohamed Diawara, Landry Shamet, and Jose Alvarado are back in the fold. Andre Drummond was brought in to fill the spot left by Mitchell Robinson, who departed in free agency for the Boston Celtics.

And the main pieces remain untouched. Jalen Brunson is still there, along with Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, and Josh Hart. The foundation is intact.

But Thornton would have given them something different.

New York doesn’t have a ton of youth on the roster, with Diawara and Tyler Kolek among the few younger names. A player like Thornton could have helped balance that out, even if he wasn’t asked to play heavy minutes right away. He also would have fit the Knicks’ reality as an expensive team, where a cost-controlled guard can carry real value.

Instead, he’s in Houston now, and his first Summer League game looked a lot like the kind of performance that makes a front office pause.

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