PHILADELPHIA — Josh Hart pointed at the Sixers’ bench and called timeout for them.
76ers head coach Nick Nurse followed suit.
He had no choice.
Jalen Brunson had just made the game, and potentially series-winning bucket, and the Sixers needed to regroup.
They will have plenty of time to do so in Cancun, or wherever their vacation plans are this summer. Barring a meltdown of epic playoff proportions, this series is cooked — in favor of the Knicks.
With less than a minute left in regulation and the Knicks up four, Brunson, who’d carved up the Sixer defense all afternoon, took out his sword and did it once more, knifing into the lane, this time inexplicably uncontested in crunch time for a floater at the rim.
Game, Knicks. History says the series will follow suit.
The Knicks beat the 76ers, 97-92, to win Game 4 at the Wells Fargo Center on Sunday.
They have taken a commanding 3-1 series lead over the 76ers, who employ the NBA’s reigning Most Valuable Player Joel Embiid and a budding star in dynamic guard Tyrese Maxey.
Embiid played the entire second half, while Brunson went to the locker room at the end of the third quarter after taking a shot on an Embiid chase down block. He emerged from the tunnel to lead the Knicks to victory.
It was Brunson who received M-V-P chants on the road, and as hard as Sixers fans tried to drown them out with boos, they failed, as did their team.
And of the 281 teams in NBA playoff history to take a 3-1 series lead, 268 of them — 95.4% — have gone on to win the series.
If the Knicks are to follow suit, as they are now positioned to do in the driver’s seat of this series, it will be because of Brunson, who is playing like the MVP candidate he became this season.
The first-time All-Star guard hung a legendary 47-point performance with Sixers legends Julius “Dr. J” Erving and Allen Iverson, as well as South Carolina Gamecocks women’s basketball head coach Dawn Staley watching baseline, cheering on the home team.
Brunson shot 18-of-34 from the field and dished 10 assists with only one turnover on the night, setting two Knick records: first 45-point game by a Knicks player in the playoffs, and first 40-point, 10-assist game in the playoffs.
It marked his second successful scoring game against a Sixers defense that had his number in Games 1 and 2 at Madison Square Garden. Game 3’s 39-point performance fell on a disappointing 11-point loss, but Sunday would be different.
Sunday, Brunson became teflon.
OG Anunoby scored 16 points on 8-of-16 shooting from the field and added 14 rebounds, and Miles McBride added 13 points on 3-of-5 shooting from downtown off the bench.
The Knicks got little scoring elsewhere: Josh Hart missed all seven of his shots, Donte DiVincenzo shot 3-of-11, Precious Achiuwa missed all five of his attempts, and Bojan Bogdanovic hurt his ankle in his first minute on the floor.
But Hart added 17 rebounds and five assists and played elite defense all night. Achiuwa closed the game for Isaiah Hartenstein, who picked up five fouls late in the third quarter,
Embiid finished with 27 points, 10 rebounds, six assists, three steals and two blocks, and Maxey added 23 points and six assists.
The Knicks out-rebounded the Sixers, 52-32, despite missing Mitchell Robinson, a game-time scratch with a sprained left ankle.
The Knicks now have a chance to close out the series back at home with Game 5 looming on Tuesday.