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Karl-Anthony Towns didn’t bring any Jimmy Butler baggage into Knicks rivalry

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Karl-Anthony Towns didn’t bring any Jimmy Butler baggage into Knicks rivalry

MIAMI — Karl-Anthony Towns changed uniforms and said his turbulent past with Jimmy Butler is irrelevant before he punished his old nemesis with 44 points in Wednesday’s 116-107 victory over the Heat.

“I’m a Knick,” Towns repeated three times when asked about Butler. “You’re bringing up Minnesota.

“I’m not a Timberwolf anymore. I’m a Knick.”

Karl-Anthony Towns looks to make a move on Jimmy Butler during the Knicks’ 116-107 win over the Heat on Oct. 30, 2024. Getty Images
Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) drives around Cleveland Cavaliers forward Georges Niang. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Butler and Towns were teammates for just over a season in Minnesota, clashing both during their tenure together and after the separation in 2019.

The most famous incident involves Butler reportedly tormenting Towns in a practice under coach Tom Thibodeau.

It transitioned quickly to Butler being traded to Philadelphia and a rift between Thibodeau and Towns.

The coach and center, now reunited in New York, squashed their beef in a subsequent conversation — “That was years and years ago,” Towns said Wednesday. “We are totally different men. So it’s cool to be in this spot in our lives together.”

But there’s been less indication of peace with Butler, as the two have jawed back-and-forth in head-to-heads.

Jimmy Butler #22 of the Miami Heat controls the ball around Ronald Holland II #00 of the Detroit Pistons. Getty Images
Jimmy Butler #23 and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the Minnesota Timberwolves during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on October 27, 2017. NBAE via Getty Images

On Wednesday morning, Heat center Bam Adebayo snickered when reminded that Butler and Towns have a history.

But he didn’t think Butler was carrying extra motivation into the Knicks game — at least not until something triggers his memory.

“I don’t think he gets fired up for matchups,” Adebayo said. “I think if they start it, that’s when it starts. Or he’ll feel like — he’ll see something, and he just digs in.

Jimmy Butler #23(L) and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the Minnesota Timberwolves interacts during practice in 2017. Getty Images

“He’ll see body language, something small, and just goes with it.”

If anybody played with extra juice Wednesday, it was Towns, who finished his great performance with an and-1 dagger over Butler. Towns then turned away from Butler and flexed his muscle.

Butler was asked postgame specifically about Miami’s inability to stop Towns but he turned the answer into a generalization.

“I don’t believe we made too many people’s shots difficult tonight,” Butler said. “We were lazy on the defensive rebounding. I would say that’s about it.”

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