The Knicks didn’t need much sorcery to get by the Washington Wizards on Tuesday night.

Metropolitan headliners proved presidential in the nation’s capital, which witnessed the Knicks’ seventh straight victory to the tune of a 132-101 shellacking.

Seven different New Yorkers reached double-figures in scoring as Mikal Bridges (8-of-10, 3 blocks) led all men with 23 while Karl-Anthony Towns had 19 points and 15 rebounds. OG Anunoby and Jalen Brunson each had 19, the latter garnering “MVP” chants from what was clearly a pro-Knicks crowd.

Capital One Arena fell victim to a metropolitan invasion, as commandeering New York fans thoroughly enjoyed watching their Knicks (32-18) set a new high mark for their longest official winning streak of the season. The Knicks have also won 11 straight against Washington and 14 of the last 16 played since 2021.

It proved to be a painful victory for the Knicks, who lost both Mohamed Diawara and Josh Hart to ankle injuries in the first and third periods respectively. The Knicks ruled Diawara out but did not have an update on Hart before the final buzzer started.

Despite those injuries, the Knicks built near-immediately insurance for such calamities when Brunson created a lasting lead with a floating double just 20 seconds in. The rout was on when Anunoby hit a three while being fouled by Keyshawn George and, though he missed the subsequent foul shot, the Wizards never got closer than four after Bridges hit his first try from the field.

The lead got as high as 18 by the end of the frame and jumped as high as 41 in the second half before the Knicks showed mercy with only 2.5 minutes for their starters (all going to Bridges) in the fourth quarter. The 27-point halftime lead built during the first 24 (which saw Brunson, Hart, and Towns all post at least a plus-28) was the Knicks’ largest going into intermission so far this year.

Appropriately, the Knicks hit 17 three-pointers in this one-sided triumph (just under 46 percent), with Landry Shamet going 4-of-6 in another strong showing off the bench. Fellow reserve Ariel Hukporti hit the first three-pointer of his NBA career in one of the many highlights buried in the blowout.

Washington (13-36), which had entered Tuesday’s game as winners of three of four, could at least hang its hat on the fact that it became the first Knicks opponent to break past 100 points in the last five showings, doing so when AJ Johnson earned an otherwise meaningless tally on the final possession.

The Wizards also made it a little more likely that the protected 2026 first-round pick that they owe the Knicks would not be transferred. Rookie Will Riley led the hosts with 17 points in the first matchup with New York since trading for lasting Knicks nemesis Trae Young.

New York will get one more go at Washington on March 22. In the meantime, the Knicks immediately return to action on Wednesday night as the Denver Nuggets await at Madison Square Garden (7 p.m. ET, MSG/ESPN).