
Mitchell Robinson’s broken pinky has become a real Knicks Finals concern, and one in-game clip from Game 4 against Cleveland may show when the injury happened.
The timing matters because Robinson did not come out of that moment looking finished. He stayed available, kept playing and gave New York the kind of frontcourt toughness it will need in the NBA Finals.
That is why the clip feels bigger than a replay-room detail. It shows how fragile the Knicks’ center depth could become if Robinson’s right hand limits him.

Mitchell Robinson injury clip raises Knicks Finals concern
As SNY’s Ian Begley noted, Robinson got tangled with multiple Cavaliers at the 5:25 mark of the second quarter in Game 4 and pulled his right hand away when a teammate tried to help him up.
Begley did not call it definitive, but the sequence is hard to ignore. Robinson landed near the Knicks bench, stayed down briefly and appeared protective of the hand before continuing through the game.
”Unclear if this is the specific point where Robinson suffered the broken right pinky, but if it is, it’s a good for NYK that he was able to play through it.”
That is the wild part. A broken pinky can sound minor until the player involved is a 7-foot center who screens, rebounds, catches in traffic and absorbs contact on almost every possession.
New York beat Cleveland 130-93 on May 25 to complete the Eastern Conference Finals sweep. Robinson’s injury did not stop the night, but it immediately changed the Finals conversation.
Knicks need Mitchell Robinson’s rebounding in NBA Finals
Robinson’s role has changed since Karl-Anthony Towns arrived, but his value has not disappeared.
He is no longer the featured center every night. He is still the Knicks’ best chaos big, the player who can tilt possessions with offensive rebounds, rim pressure and second-effort defense.
That matters against either Western Conference matchup. Oklahoma City can stretch games with Chet Holmgren, while San Antonio forces every opponent to account for Victor Wembanyama’s length.
Robinson does not need 35 minutes to matter. He needs enough healthy stretches to battle on the glass, protect Towns from foul stress and give Mike Brown a more physical lineup option.
Broken pinky makes Mitchell Robinson status worth watching
The Knicks have bought themselves rest after sweeping Cleveland, while the Thunder-Spurs series has stretched deeper.
That extra time helps, but it does not erase the uncertainty. Reports have described Robinson’s Finals status as unclear, with no firm timetable attached to the broken right pinky.
If he plays, the injury still matters. A damaged shooting hand can affect catches, finishes, free throws and every contested rebound in traffic.
New York has enough talent to survive a lot. But if the Knicks want to finish this run with a championship, Robinson’s hand may be one of the smaller injuries with the biggest consequences.
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