Randle, Knicks beat Bulls 113-94 for 10th win in 11 games

Julius Randle scored 34 points and the New York Knicks beat the Chicago Bulls 113-94 on Wednesday night for their 10th win in 11 games.

RJ Barrett added 22 points as New York bounced back from its loss to Phoenix that snapped a nine-game winning streak. Immanuel Quickley and Reggie Bullock each scored 13 points as the Knicks regained sole possession of fourth place in the Eastern Conference.

Nikola Vucevic had 26 points and 18 rebounds for Chicago. Lauri Markkanen added 14 points, while Colby White and Garrett Temple each had 12.

The Knicks outscored the Bulls 37-19 in the fourth quarter after leading just 76-75 through three.

New York took a 30-12 lead on Barrett’s drive with 2:11 remaining in the first quarter. The Bulls used a 16-9 run to pull within 52-48 at halftime.

A 9-0 run gave the Bulls their first lead of the game at 59-58 on Tomas Satoransky’s layup with 7:20 left in the third quarter. The Knicks followed with their own 9-0 run and Randle’s short jumper for the final basket of the period put them back in the lead and ignited an 11-0 run that stretched into the final quarter.

The Knicks boosted their lead to 91-77 on Quickley’s floater with 7:39 remaining. After Chicago pulled within nine, the Knicks went on a 20-9 streak punctuated by Randle’s 3-pointer with just over a minute left as New York took its biggest lead at 113-93.

Thaddeus Young added 10 points for the Bulls, who had won four of their previous six games.

TIP-INS:

Bulls: Leading scorer Zach LaVine (27.5 ppg) missed his eighth consecutive game due to health and safety protocols. … No one has played in all 62 games for Chicago this season, but Patrick Williams has started all but one.

Knicks: Barrett is the only Knick to play in all 63 games this season. He has started each one. … Tom Thibodeau was the Bulls’ coach for five seasons (2010-15) and is the third-winningest coach in franchise history (255).

RED LETTER DAY

Exactly 63 years earlier, on April 28, 1958, Red Holzman was named Knicks assistant coach. He took over as head coach midway through the 1967-68 season and proceeded to lead the franchise to a record 613 victories and two NBA titles during his Hall of Fame career.

HEADING IN OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS

The Knicks are in position to make the playoffs for the first time since the 2012-13 season, while the Bulls are headed toward a fourth straight year without a spot in the postseason.

HITTING THE CENTURY MARK

The Bulls had scored at least 100 points in eight straight games and in 17 of their previous 18 before falling short on Wednesday. The Knicks have hit the century mark in their last 11 games.

UP NEXT

Bulls: Host Milwaukee on Friday.

Knicks: Visit Houston on Sunday.