Knicks Just Took Another Cheap Wing Gamble Fans Will Want To Watch

Despite early struggles with the Grizzlies, the Knicks see untapped potential in Toby Okani, giving him another chance to prove himself this Summer League.

The Knicks are taking a low-cost swing on a player the Grizzlies barely had time to evaluate, bringing Toby Okani back into the fold this summer with a spot on their Las Vegas Summer League roster.

Okani, a 6-foot-8 wing, went undrafted in the 2025 NBA Draft after playing at West Virginia and then spent last season with the Westchester Knicks in the G League, appearing in 34 games. Memphis later signed him to a 10-day contract as the Grizzlies leaned heavily on replacement bodies during the final stretch of the season, and he ended up playing in six games while logging 36.2 minutes per night.

That opportunity did not go well. Okani shot 35.7 percent from the field and 29 percent from three, and his box score numbers were sparse. His defense is the trait that keeps him on the radar, but in a situation where Memphis was trying to lose and surrounded him with mostly non-NBA players, there was little chance for him to shine on that end.

Now the Knicks get another look. Summer League in Las Vegas will give the organization a chance to see whether his defense is strong enough to stick and whether there’s any real progress on the offensive side. The hope is that he’s used the time since the season ended to work on his jumper and passing, then can show something in the Knicks’ system alongside other players the team is evaluating.

The raw numbers from Memphis leave plenty of doubt. Okani shot 12.5 percent from the free-throw line, averaged fewer than one steal per game despite playing 36 minutes a night, and produced a sample that was small but clearly rough.

Still, the Knicks are giving him another shot. If he flashes enough to matter, an Exhibit 10 and a trip to Training Camp could follow. If not, he may head overseas and keep his career going there.

For Okani, Summer League is about more than just getting reps. It could decide whether his path stays in the NBA or veers somewhere else entirely.

In Other News...

Knicks Reward Landry Shamet With Long Term Deal After Title Run

Landry Shamets value to the Knicks went well beyond the box score during their championship run, where he gave them needed shooting and steady defense at exactly the right time. His best stretch came in the Eastern Conference Finals, when he helped stabilize the rotation and fit neatly into a team that leaned on versatility and timely shot-making all spring.

Now the Knicks have made sure that contribution is part of their longer-term plan. Shamet agreed to a four-year, $24 million contract that gives New York some security without fully locking in every season, and team president Leon Rose made clear the organization views him as more than a short-term piece after the way he helped push the club to the title. [Read more 🡒]

Knicks Fans Just Learned How Much Brunson Was Really Dealing With

Jalen Brunson is headed for offseason surgery on his left wrist, a move the Knicks have been able to put off until now because of how deep their run went. The procedure is expected to keep him on the shelf for about two months, but the bigger point for New York is that the team is finally addressing an issue that had been hanging over its star guard as it pushed through the spring.

Brunson is expected to be ready by the start of next season, which matters as much as anything for a Knicks team built around his availability and steadiness. The surgery is meant to prevent the wrist from getting worse and to protect his long-term health, leaving the organization with a brief offseason concern but no reason to believe its centerpiece will miss opening night. [Read more 🡒]

Knicks May Already Regret This Cost Cutting Draft Decision

The Knicks spent draft night looking for savings, trading back in the 2026 NBA draft to trim rookie costs before bringing back Jose Alvarado and Landry Shamet. On paper, it was a tidy bit of roster management, the kind of move that helps a team preserve flexibility while filling out the back end of the rotation. But the cost-cutting approach also meant passing on a couple of intriguing young players who fit obvious needs for a team trying to balance win-now depth with a little long-term upside.

Cameron Carr and St. John's Zuby Ejiofor have both looked the part early in Summer League, which only sharpens the question of what the Knicks gave up by moving back. New Yorks veteran-heavy roster already leaves little room for developmental mistakes, and the ripple effects of that draft-night decision could reach beyond this summer if the team keeps trying to squeeze in more proven pieces around the edges. [Read more 🡒]