One of the starkest advantages in the first round of the playoffs for the Knicks was the domination on the offensive glass by Mitchell Robinson and his teammates.
As a result, the Knicks averaged 18.2 second-chance points per game in their five-game elimination of the Cavaliers and their primary big men, Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley.
That number dropped to 11 on Sunday in their second-round opener against All-Star center Bam Adebayo and the Heat.
The with Knicks secured just 12 offensive rebounds — and five by Robinson in 31 minutes — in a 108-101 loss at the Garden.
“They play two different roles, two different styles of play,” said Robinson, who had a whopping 11 offensive boards in Game 5 in Cleveland. “Bam brings it up, Jarrett didn’t. So you gotta be aware of that. Just gotta get back to the film and learn.”
The 7-footer also appeared to suffer a hard fall in the first half, landing on his hip.
Robinson acknowledged afterward that he’s “very” banged up and required “some treatment,” before adding, “I’m gonna be alright” for Game 2.
The Knicks did hold a 48-39 overall edge on the boards in Game 1, with Robinson snaring a game-high 14 rebounds.
Robinson, backup center Isaiah Hartenstein and Josh Hart attempted to crash the offensive glass more in the second half, but they couldn’t corral many rebounds, leading to three long outlet passes from Kevin Love to Butler for easy baskets.
Follow The Post’s coverage of the Knicks vs. Heat NBA playoff series
- Vaccaro: Knicks’ failure to help Brunson is why their season’s over
- Knicks battle but fall in season-ending Game 6 loss to Heat
- Knicks couldn’t survive two minutes without Brunson
- Brunson’s heroic night spoiled by late turnover
“Boardman gets paid; it’s not that easy to keep that 7-1 off the glass, 270 [pounds] whatever he is,” Love said, referring to Robinson. “But I think we sent bodies at him, and other guys clean up, or myself, when Bam’s on him. Yeah, I think that’s part of it.
“But game plan? I don’t know. We certainly want to get easy triggers, easy buckets, buckets in transition if we can. But, you know, we felt like that just worked for us. We’ll see what happens.”
Obi Toppin, who finished with eight rebounds, said that allowing Love’s outlet passes was “definitely miscommunication” by the Knicks.
“We can’t allow those free buckets,” Toppin said, “so we’re gonna fix that.”