Another thing the 2014-15 Knicks can’t do: Play snowed-out makeup games.

Originally scheduled for late January, the Knicks-Kings game was postponed by a blizzard and contested on Tuesday night. The rain and snow still fell outside the Garden and so did the boos in the second half as the Kings humiliated Team Tri-tanic 124-86 before a trove of empty seats.

Many fans didn’t bother to use their old tickets and it proved wise to stay home as the 20-37 Kings ran all over the Knicks, whose two-game winning streak was snapped as they tumbled to 12-47.

“It was definitely not the level of character and integrity this group has been showing in recent weeks,’’ coach Derek Fisher said. “That was the most disappointing part. It’s not necessarily losing the game but just the way as a group, we couldn’t find a way to compete.’’

In the final minutes, the bored fans chanted “Tom Hanks’’ very loudly — in honor of the actor sitting in celebrity row.

Fisher said the lack of energy from the starters was similar to the lethargy he saw in them at Monday’s practice. It got so bad, the Knicks fell behind by 44 points late in the third.

None of the starters — Tim Hardaway Jr., Langston Galloway, Andrea Bargnani, Lou Amundson or Cleanthony Early — hit double figures. The quintet combined to shoot 8-of-29 for 24 points total.

Kings swingman Rudy Gay put on a show, scoring 25 points as three Sacramento starters reached the 20-point mark. DeMarcus Cousins added 22 and athletic Ben McLemore schooled Hardaway Jr., dropping in 20, including an awesome alley-oop slam in transition.

The Knicks, who missed all 12 of their shots from the 3-point line in the first half, were led by Alexey Shved’s 15 points off the bench. Hardaway, playing with a white headband after recently needing stitches near his eyebrow, was miserable in a starting role, playing just 16 minutes, going 2-for-7 and finishing with seven points.

“We were flat and they were just out there playing free-flowing basketball,’’ said Shane Larkin, who finished with 13 points.

New Kings coach George Karl, who coached Carmelo Anthony to seven straight playoff berths in Denver, said he thought Anthony’s adjustment to the equal-opportunity triangle offense would not be simple.

“Carmelo is a very bright, basketball IQ guy,’’ Karl said. “The triangle is going to be different for him. I think it can enhance some of his skills and he’s going to sacrifice his commitment to how he played in the past.

“But I’ve never seen that resentment. People at times harshly judge Melo because a scorer at times does look selfish. I can’t complain. Melo helped the Nuggets, when I was there, win 50 games consistently. We didn’t have that ultra playoff success except that one year. In the same sentence, the standard he stands for in scoring is top-three, top-five in basketball.’’

Anthony is out for the season after surgery to repair a partially torn patellar tendon.