Knicks fans who tuned into Sunday night’s game against the Houston Rockets could have been forgiven for believing that the team had solved its scoring problems. Though they ultimately lost the game in overtime—their fourth straight defeat heading into Wednesday’s matchup with hapless Philadelphia—the Knicks got a badly needed surge of offense against the Rockets, shooting a blistering 57.7% and scoring 111 points in the defeat.

The showing was all the more impressive given that they did it without Carmelo Anthony, who missed the game due to illness.

But the Knicks haven’t really solved anything. After opening the season with one of the NBA’s most efficient offenses, they have posted the league’s seventh-worst attack recently, scoring just 97.5 points per 100 possessions since Nov. 18. So while the Knicks, at 8-10, have shown some improvement over last year’s train wreck—they didn’t notch their eighth victory until Jan. 23 last season—there’s a strong argument to be made that the team’s triangle offense still needs some new wrinkles.

In particular, the helpful tweaks the Knicks implemented late last season and earlier this summer to get faster—including using more basic pick-and-rolls and drag screens, and committing to look for more fast-break opportunities—have appeared to dry up in less than a month’s time.

So far in 2015-16, the Knicks’ two best games in terms of up-tempo offense were the first two games of the season, when they scored 19 and 17 fast-break points against Milwaukee and Atlanta, respectively. Since then, it’s been rare to see New York get a bucket in transition.