Sports
Jalen Brunson Fulfilled the Knicks’ Dream and Earned His Place Among New York’s Greats

The cameras were rolling, the NBA Finals MVP trophy was in his hands and, here, finally, the world would get to hear what Jalen Brunson thinks. Even in a fishbowl like New York, Brunson has managed to maintain an air of mystery. Some of it is intentional. In interviews Brunson chooses his words carefully, revealing little. “Methodical and intentional,” is how Brunson’s mother, Sandra, once described her son’s Belichickian approach to interviews. Some of it is not.
In the final seconds of the Eastern Conference finals–clinching win in Cleveland, cameras panned to a Knicks roster in full celebration … with an expressionless Brunson planted on the bench behind them. “I was icing my knees,” explained Brunson. “I didn’t even want to get up.” Yet here, in the aftermath of New York’s 94–40 title-clinching win, after delivering a 45-point masterpiece, at the end of the Knicks’ 53-year championship drought, Brunson would finally open up. “I got no words,” he said. “It’s everything I ever dreamed of.”
Some of the greatest athletes in sports history have worn New York uniforms. Names like Namath, Messier and Jeter. Taylor, Frazier and Rivera. Now, Brunson. Only three players—Bob Pettit, Michael Jordan and Giannis Antetokounmpo—had scored 45 points or more in a Finals closeout game. Brunson made it four. He kept New York in it in the first half, scoring 16 of the Knicks’ 37 points. He had 14 points in the third quarter. He had 15 in the fourth. San Antonio threw everything at Brunson. Size, length, athleticism. Nothing worked. “Unreal,” said Mitchell Robinson. “Literally, unreal.”
No one, even the truest of Brunson believers, would have told you this was possible in 2022, when the Knicks poached Brunson from Dallas. The four-year, $104 million deal Brunson signed was looked at skeptically. Surely the Knicks overpaid for a 6’2″ guard who still struggled with shot creation. Leon Rose, the Knicks team president, had a long history with Brunson. As an agent Rose represented Brunson’s father, Rick. Rose had known Jalen since he was a toddler. That relationship had to cloud his decision.
Only it didn’t. Brunson averaged 24.0 points in his first season in New York. He was an All-Star in his second. He was the NBA’s Clutch Player of the Year last season and has earned a spot on an All-NBA team in each of the last three. He steered the Knicks to the second round of the playoffs in his first two seasons and a conference finals in the last one.
And now … this. Brunson averaged 32.6 points in the Finals. He shot 38.9% from three. He scored at least 12 points in the fourth quarter of three of the five games in the series and on Saturday put on a performance that will be remembered for a generation. At his postgame news conference, coach Mike Brown summed up Brunson succinctly. Said Brown, “He is him.”
Brown can remember when he noticed Brunson. Like, exactly. In 2022, Brown was an assistant coach in Golden State. In the conference finals, the Warriors played Dallas. As defensive coordinator, Brown was responsible for scheming ways to slow the Mavericks’ offense. Luka Dončić was Dallas’s top offensive option. “But my concern wasn’t Luka,” said Brown. “My concern was Jalen.”
Brown recalls the frustration at being unable to slow Brunson down. “I remember [the] first couple times we played against them, we put a guard on him,” said Brown. “I was amazed. Because when you look at him, you’re like, O.K., he’s not the biggest guy, not the most athletic guy, not the quickest guy. O.K., you can put a guy 6’4″, 6’5″ guy on him, you’ll be O.K.
“We put guys 6’6″, 6’7″ on him. He got to his spot methodically. He put his back shoulder in them, he still scored. We put Draymond Green on Jalen. That’s how concerned we were. Because we needed a bigger, stronger, tougher guy to try to do it or to try to slow him down at that time.”
In New York, Brunson’s teammates marvel at his ability to create his shot. Karl-Anthony Towns cites his footwork, an ability that falls somewhere between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Mikhail Baryshnikov. That footwork, Towns says, enables Brunson to effortlessly maneuver between spots in the paint.
Said Towns, “Then when he finally gets into the paint he uses physicality to create space, to get his floater off or to get to a scoop layup.”
OG Anunoby points to the deep bag of shots Brunson can go to. “He uses a lot of counters,” said Anunoby. “He’s relentless. Doesn’t matter if he is missing shots or making shots, he’s always the same way, always composed and poised and always aggressive.”
To Brown, the player he saw in 2022 has continued to evolve. “Now it’s different,” said Brown. “If you put a power forward on him, he’s in a ball screen, out in transition, he can score from all three levels. He does it with a patience that you embrace as a coach because it’s not hurried and frantic all the time. It always seems like he’s in control, which helps you as a coach be in control, which helps his teammates be in control.”
To Brunson, it simply comes down to the work. When the buzzer sounded on Saturday, Brunson shook hands with Spurs coach Mitch Johnson. When he turned around, Rick was there waiting. Brunson routinely shrugs off questions about pressure. This wasn’t pressure. Playing for eight NBA teams in nine seasons, as Rick did, that was pressure. Short-term contracts, non-guaranteed contracts, never knowing if you would stick for more than a year. He watched his dad doing three-a-days in the summers, trying to squeeze just a little bit more out of his career.
“I’m very fortunate to be in the position I am, and I definitely think I worked pretty hard,” said Brunson. “And so when the opportunity presented itself like it did today, I just trust my work. And if we win, we win. If we don’t, we learn, we move forward. But I’m just never afraid to fail.”
And he didn’t. It’s rarified air Brunson entered on Saturday. The greatest Knick of all time? He’s in the conversation. The greatest small guard in NBA history? He joins a very short list. Most unlikely superstar? Let the debate rage.
Not that Brunson is interested in it. As he wrapped up his news conference, Brunson was asked about his journey, from second-round pick to sixth man, from starter to superstar, and what it all means. It was another opportunity for Brunson to open up.
“It hasn’t sunk in but I honestly,” Brunson said, his voice trailing off. “I honestly don’t know right now. I don’t know.”
More NBA Finals From Sports Illustrated
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Knicks vs. Spurs NBA Finals: It all started with Jalen Brunson, and it all ended with him as well – as NBA champion
SAN ANTONIO — As Jalen Brunson wended his way through the bowels of Frost Bank Center in the wee hours of Sunday morning, he did so laden with gold. Everywhere he went — from interview to interview, from embrace to embrace, from moment to celebratory moment — the New York Knicks captain toted the Larry O’Brien Championship trophy and the Bill Russell NBA Finals MVP trophy that he’d just won.
Those suckers — especially the Larry O’B — are pretty damn big. They didn’t seem too heavy, though, in arms that have been carrying a hell of a lot more than that: the weight of expectations, the fate of a franchise, the hopes and dreams of millions upon millions of New Yorkers.
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When Brunson finally made his way into the visitors’ interview room, and set his newly won trophies down on the podium, he wondered aloud about setting something else down, too.
“The question is,” Brunson asked the assembled media, “do I be myself? Or do I talk my s***?”
When presented with the opportunity to do so, though — to describe how he was feeling, to discuss everything that led him to this point, all the slights and slings and arrows that fueled him and brought him to the top of the mountain — Brunson made the simple read, the easy play.
“Words can’t describe it,” Brunson said. “But I’ll say: I put a lot of time and effort into trying to be the best player I can be to try and help a team win. Just really thankful to have the organization, the coaching staff, my teammates, to have my back every single day.”
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That Brunson even considered choosing violence, though, showed just how much this remarkable moment — the overwhelming emotion he’d felt on the court after the game, the thrill of reaching the pinnacle of his profession — had thawed his typically icy exterior. The king of the anodyne quote, forever preaching “0-0 mindset” and “one possession at a time” and all that, had finally reached the point where there were no more games to prepare for, no more possessions to lock in for — nothing to do but bask in the glow of the achievement he’d worked for his entire life.
For the first time in 53 years, the New York Knicks are the champions of the NBA, and Jalen Brunson is the Most Valuable Player of the NBA Finals, an honor he’d earned unanimously after authoring a Game 5 for the ages: 45 points on 14-for-27 shooting from the field, 4-for-7 from 3-point range, 13-for-15 from the free-throw line in 41 peerless minutes.
Yet again, the Knicks had trailed the San Antonio Spurs by double digits in these 2026 NBA Finals. And yet again, Brunson and his teammates just steadily walked the Spurs down, chipping away at the deficit until — yet again — Victor Wembanyama and Co. found themselves wondering what the hell had just hit them.
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What hit them was No. 11, who scored 29 of his 45 after halftime, including 16 in the fourth quarter, continuously applying pressure to the younger, less seasoned Spurs until, eventually, they broke. What hit them was weaponized stubbornness, internalized rage at being told all the things you can’t do — a chip on the shoulder sharpened into a blade dangerous enough to slice through any defense, even one led by a 7-foot-infinity unanimous Defensive Player of the Year.
What hit them was the entirety of what Brunson had to give. And in Game 5, with a championship on the line, what he had to give was …
“Everything,” he said with a laugh. “I was just trying to go out there and just will us to win. Wasn’t focused on anything else besides trying to win the game. Getting stops. Getting out and running. Just figuring out how to cut that lead, or to gain it when we got it. Really exciting moment, knowing we won’t give up.”
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That relentlessness, that indefatigability became the defining quality of these Knicks. They came back from a pair of 20-point deficits on the road against the favored Boston Celtics last spring. They came back from down 2-1 in the first round to the Atlanta Hawks, punctuating that surge with a historic 51-point beatdown. They came back from down 22 in the fourth quarter of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals against the Cleveland Cavaliers. They came back from double-digit deficits four times in these Finals — most notably in Game 4, when they erased a 29-point Spurs lead in what will go down as the greatest comeback in NBA history. And on Saturday, they did it again.
“Tonight, we played like we wanted to go home champions,” Brunson said, before clarifying: “To finish the game. Not to start the game.”
The Knicks got off to another slow offensive start in Game 5, struggling to create space and good looks against a snarling Spurs defense that smothered every action, every pass, every rim attack, every catch-and-shoot chance. The Knicks had more turnovers (five) than made shots (four) in the first quarter, shooting a dismal 18.2% from the field in the opening frame. Things improved in the second, but only marginally; New York went into halftime down only five, but that owed as much to San Antonio’s own offensive struggles as anything that any Knick besides Brunson (who had 16 of the Knicks’ 37 first-half points) was doing.
“Yeah, we owe him,” said Knicks guard Landry Shamet, who scored five points on 2-for-7 shooting. “We weren’t great offensively tonight. But he is generationally great offensively.”
He proved that in the second half, when it seemed like everything that had made the Knicks so incredible over these past two months was being stripped away. Karl-Anthony Towns — a revelation earlier in the postseason as a high-post playmaking hub, and a dominant stretch-5 who’d outplayed Wembanyama in the early stages of these Finals — was racked with foul trouble, contributing just two points on 1-for-7 shooting (albeit with 10 rebounds and three steals) before fouling out in just 23 minutes. OG Anunoby — so brilliant and efficient all series long, and the hero of that Game 4 stunner — was similarly limited offensively, chipping in just 11 points on 11 shots. The Knicks’ entire bench was scoreless until the final minute of the third quarter.
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Nothing else was working. So Mike Brown had to rely on his fastball. Good ol’ No. 11.
“I’ve said it, and I hope you guys will listen to me, but he’s a top-three MVP candidate,” Brown said. “You know, everybody kind of mentions his name in passing. They don’t do it seriously enough. You know, people say he’s too small. People say he’s a 1B or a 2B or whatever. He is a freaking 1A. He is an MVP candidate. […] You know, he understands what winning is about.”
Brown then spoke about the decision that helped shape this Knicks roster: Brunson deciding to sign a four-year, $156.5 million contract extension in the summer of 2024, rather than waiting a year, when he would have been eligible for a five-year pact that could have topped out at an estimated $269 million. That decision — that $113 million haircut — created the financial conditions that enabled the Knicks to pony up to retain Anunoby when he hit free agency, to bring in and later extend another college buddy in Mikal Bridges, and to fit in the supermax salary of All-NBA stretch-big Towns — all without going over the second apron.
“You know, he comes and he probably takes a pay cut that I wouldn’t have taken,” Brown said. “Every time they would’ve thrown that number in front of me, I would have said no — and I feel like I’m a good guy! He set the bar before he even stepped on the floor.”
It was a choice that came with some risk; there’s no guarantee that a player will make up the nine figures of guaranteed salary he’s forsaking for flexibility and roster functionality. But Brunson said Saturday that he had this night in mind when he put pen to paper — that he believed this outcome was “very possible.”
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“With a lot of hard work and effort, I knew it was achievable,” he said. “But that was only a small portion of it. I think everyone bonding, coming together, having the mindset of just believing in each other, never giving up, no matter what the situation was, made this all possible. Yes, it may look like [the contract] had something to do with it, but it’s a credit to my teammates.”
Brunson just kept carrying it all until his teammates could catch up. Josh Hart, who spent so much of the series — and this postseason, really — fighting through the mental challenge of being intentionally left alone by centers cross-matching onto him so that they could ignore him to muck up driving lanes elsewhere, stepped into a pull-up 3 that kept the deficit within single digits early in the fourth. After missing 14 of his previous 15 shots stretching back to Game 3, Shamet finally hit a pair of huge shots — a pull-up 3 off a dribble handoff with Bridges to cut the deficit to six with just under nine and a half minutes to go, and a hard drive for a layup a minute later. Anunoby found a pocket of space in transition, cutting baseline for a dunk that was ruled a goaltend, putting the Knicks up three with 2:07 to go.
But through it all, it was Brunson who gave the Knicks what they needed when they needed it. Pump-faking defender after defender into the air, drawing contact, and getting himself to the line — the unglamorous, engine-room work that chips away at a big lead. Pushing the pace off Spurs misses whenever possible, seeking the opportunity to attack a lane not filled by Wembanyama. Pulling up from 3 in Wembanyama’s face, drilling it, landing on Wembanyama’s foot, turning his ankle … and just getting back up, getting back in the game, and keeping it pushing.
“I’m hurting right now,” Brunson admitted after the game. “I’m not going to lie to you. I’m hurting right now. But like I said before, the opportunity presented itself. Whatever you’ve got to do.”
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“That’s who Cap is — Cap always find a way to get back on the court and produce,” Towns said. “That’s a testament to who he is, and just his story — never giving up, always have been the underdog, always been looked down upon. It always takes one person to believe in you. This organization believed in him, and we believed in him. We were going to do whatever it takes to get him to the next level.”
A personal 10-0 Brunson run tied the game at 83 with 4:48 to go. When a Devin Vassell pull-up put San Antonio back on top, Brunson got himself back to the line to give the Knicks the lead. When ace rookie Dylan Harper hit a short jumper to tie it at 88, Brunson pushed the ball right back down the floor, drove right around Stephon Castle — a monstrous defender who’d been draped all over Brunson all series long — and got into the paint for a patented floater to regain the advantage.
“I don’t think it took a toll on me mentally,” Brunson said of the Spurs’ defense, which came in waves, hectoring him the full length and width of the court, minute after minute, game after game. “Maybe a little bit physically, obviously, just because of the game and what they are trying to do. Mentally, I feel fresh. I feel like that’s where I thrive.”
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The numbers bear it out. Through the first two games of the Finals, Brunson averaged 25 points on 33.9% shooting, including 23.5% from 3-point range — woeful efficiency, even if he was nails in the clutch when it counted. Over the final three games, though, after he’d felt the Spurs out and decided on a plan of counter-attack: 37.7 points per game, 48.1% shooting, 52.6% from 3-point range and 85.3% from the free-throw line.
“That was unreal — just, literally, unreal,” said Knicks center Mitchell Robinson. “I’m speechless. I seen it a couple times here and there, but to do it in a closeout game against a good team like that … it’s different. His mindset, his work ethic, his energy that he just brings — you know, he just brings joy, and you know, we need that.”
Time after time, possession after possession, that was the difference: For all the incredible young talent the Spurs have, all the ascendant athletic marvels who might soon run this league, the Knicks had Jalen Brunson. And that meant they had enough.
“He got going, then he got going later on,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said. “He’s a heck of a player. He deserves everything he’s got.”
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“That was a good team,” Spurs forward Julian Champagnie said. “I mean, we lost. Super tough. That’s a credit to them. They’ve got a great superstar in Jalen Brunson that gets the job done.”
Superstar. Funny word, that.
It’s not a title many would have ascribed to Brunson when he fell to the second round in the 2018 NBA Draft, even after all the collegiate accolades he’d accrued at Villanova. It’s not one many would have believed he’d grow into during his first few years in Dallas. Frankly, it’s one many wondered if Brunson would be able to live up to when Knicks president Leon Rose first signed him — his former client, later his son Sam’s client, and the son of his first client, former Knicks player and current Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson — in unrestricted free agency in 2022.
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A nine-figure deal carries with it a certain amount of pressure. A nine-figure deal to be the starting point guard of the New York Knicks, one expected to restore the franchise to a glory it had rarely seen in the previous half-century? That’s a very, very different proposition.
“People don’t understand — we don’t really talk about it — but the weight of that jersey, the expectations, the pressure of that jersey,” Hart said. “And like I say: Today, right now, it’s the lightest it’s ever felt.”
Brunson, though, insists that it never feels that heavy to him. Because, as he puts it, he grew up with an up-close-and-personal look at what real stress looks like.
“My dad [Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson] being on eight or nine unguaranteed contracts throughout his career and not knowing when you’re going to get cut, when a team is going to move on from you, while your family is on the East Coast and you are wherever you are in the country? That’s pressure,” Brunson said. “Working out three times a day in the summertime and watching him push himself just to get a training camp deal, that’s pressure. I’m very fortunate to be in the position I am, and I definitely think I worked pretty hard. So when the opportunity presented itself like it did today, I just trust my work. And if we win, we win. If we don’t, we learn. We move forward.
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“But I’m just never afraid to fail.”
That’s why he succeeds, again and again — and why, on Saturday, he did so to a degree that etched his name into the history books.
Brunson is the first Knick ever to score 40 points in an NBA Finals game. He’s one of just 11 players in NBA history with a 45-point game in the Finals, joining a who’s who of the greatest of all time: Jerry West, Michael Jordan, Bob Pettit, Elgin Baylor, Rick Barry, Wilt Chamberlain, Allen Iverson, LeBron James, Stephen Curry and Giannis Antetokounmpo.
He’s one of just six players ever to hang 45 in the Finals on the road. One of just four ever to do it in a closeout game.
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On the road and in a closeout? It’s just Michael Jordan, Game 6 in Utah, 1998, and Jalen Brunson, Game 5, in San Antonio, on Saturday.
It was arguably the greatest individual performance in Knicks history — one that, in the mind of his coach, cemented Brunson’s place in the upper echelon of franchise legends.
“I love Pat[rick Ewing],” Brown said. “Pat’s up there. I hope Pat doesn’t kill me. He’s bigger than me. We’re both old and slow but because he’s got a longer reach, he might be able to kill me. But Brunson … he is him, man. When it comes to New York basketball, he is freaking him.”
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After Game 5, Ewing — who’s been a fixture at Madison Square Garden for years, who’d been traveling with the team during this playoff run, and whom Brown said had become a valuable sounding board for current Knicks players throughout the process of pursuing a title — didn’t seem too concerned about chasing Brown down to argue for his place in the pecking order. (Maybe that’s because Rick Brunson was busy doing it for him.)
Ewing looked … ecstatic, actually.
“I’m doing great,” Ewing told Yahoo Sports. “I’m feeling so blessed.”
Like, decades after his Knicks teams fell short and he was eventually traded to the Seattle SuperSonics, a weight had at long last been lifted off those massive shoulders.
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“Oh, definitely,” he said, in between hugs with friends and Knicks staffers. “It took 53 years. … Yes, it feels great.”
Ewing was hardly alone in that feeling in San Antonio on Saturday; there were thousands of Knicks fans feeling it, too.
It was the first thing you noticed, as you walked around Frost Bank Center: all the jerseys. And shirseys. So many friggin’ Knicks shirts.
It wasn’t the Brunsons or the Harts or the Anunobys or the Townses that stood out (although there certainly were plenty of those). No — it was the Ewings, the Oakleys, the Masons. The Sprewells, LJs, Kurt Thomases and Charlie Wards. The Melos, Amar’es and Lins. The Porzingii, Barretts and Quickleys. The Alec Burks and Kevin Knox (singular).
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It was how worn they looked. Not carefully distressed vintage; just, y’know, distressed. Naturally. By the ravages of time, and by rooting for the team they represented. Yards, miles even, of fabric-as-testimonial — threads as throughline, all telling the story of a lifelong love that was so often unrequited by a franchise that, for the better part of 30 years, could never seem to get out of its own way, but that continued to captivate generations of city kids and Tri-State suburban ex-pats all the same.
That’s why they travel like this. OK, yes, it’s partly because it’s more cost-effective than actually getting into Madison Square Garden, which would require taking out a second mortgage on the house you can’t afford to buy anywhere within an hour of Midtown. But it’s also because some things you do for money — like, say, sell your ticket to some dude from Jersey who’s willing to crack open his 401(k) for it — and some you do for love, love, love.
It’s that love that had Jose Alvarado sprinting toward the Knicks locker room, a Puerto Rican flag that Knicks PR had procured for him draped across his shoulders, screaming about how he was going to party. That had Fat Joe walking back to the locker room sweating, accepting congratulations, saying that he’d “played a hard one tonight.” That had Ben Stiller, who’s spent months documenting this incredible Knicks run, beaming as he walked toward the bus home, holding Mike Brown’s whiteboard as a souvenir from a night he’ll never forget.
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That had centers Robinson and Ariel Hukporti, already bottle in hand and goggles on minutes after getting off the court, leaping into each other with joy, body-bumping so hard that they knocked a nearby photographer’s phone out of his hand. That had a shirtless Jeremy Sochan leaping in to join them. That had Knicks staffers bumping Ja Rule’s “New York” in the visiting locker room, where the celebration had long since wrapped up by the time the media was allowed in, with spent magnums of Moet and Ace of Spades littering a soaked carpet as cigar smoke curled toward the fluorescent lights in the ceiling.
It’s that love that led Brunson back to the franchise he’d grown up inside, and that led said franchise to move heaven and earth to surround him with a team worthy of his talents.
“I see a man that’s grown up and took the challenge of being in the biggest market in the world, being with a team that hasn’t made it to the NBA Finals in 27 years and hasn’t won in [53] years, and knowing that he could do it,” Towns said, flanked by a nodding Anunoby. “Shoutout to everybody who told him he couldn’t do it, because it gave him fuel for the fire. For him to welcome both of us here into this organization and trust that we were here for him, it means a lot. It means a lot to have a person like that who has been handed the keys to the city and was willing to have the door open for both of us to join.”
It’s that love that was on display as Brunson accepted the honors he’d earned, his father watching him, his teammates serenading him, droves of Knicks fans chanting his name.
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“It’s everything we dreamed of,” Brunson told ESPN’s Ernie Johnson during the championship ceremony after the game. “It’s why I came to New York.”
He came, he saw and he conquered. The Knicks’ path toward a championship started with Brunson, and it ended with Brunson hoisting the trophy as the best player on the best team in the world.
After the game, Brunson was asked what that fact said to those who’ve wondered about whether or not he was a “1A” player.
“I didn’t respond to them then,” Brunson said. “And I’m damn sure not going to respond to them now.”
It took him a while. But the king of New York finally talked his s***.
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Spike Lee, Timothee Chalamét Celebrate
The New York Knicks have won their first NBA championship since 1973, and longtime fans Spike Lee, Timothée Chalamet and Ben Stiller were on hand to watch their team secure the long-awaited title.
Both Lee and Chalamet were shown celebrating on the court after the Knicks’ 94-90 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5. Chalamet was seen hugging Knicks star Karl-Anthony Towns and proclaiming to ESPN’s SportsCenter, “way rather this than the Oscars,” after the acclaimed actor has failed to win the best actor Academy Award two years in a row.
Cameras caught up with Stiller, sporting a Knicks 2026 NBA Champions t-shirt, after the win, as he said he felt “as happy as I’ve ever felt. It’s pretty amazing.”
Towns also shared an emotional embrace with fiancée Jordyn Woods, who brought her lucky orange purse with her to Game 5. Earlier Saturday, Woods told The Hollywood Reporter that heading into that night’s game she felt “excited” and “nervous” but was sending out “positive vibes and energy” ahead of a potential championship-clinching Game 5.
And though she and Towns are planning a wedding, she wasn’t sure how they’d celebrate an NBA championship win.
“We’ve literally just been living moment by moment,” she said. “The highs, you don’t want to get too high; you don’t want to get too low; you just want to stay humble. We’re not thinking too far ahead; we’re just thinking game by game.”
The win, which took place in San Antonio, Texas, wasn’t as celebratory as it would have been if the Knicks had won on their home court at Madison Square Garden as the Frost Bank Center arena mostly full of Spurs fans quickly cleared out after the final buzzer.
Still at watch parties in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, New Yorkers were cheering at the long-awaited victory.
Longtime Knicks superfans Lee, Chalamet, Tracy Morgan John Turturro and Stiller, who’s been filming the team’s Finals run on his iPhone, made the trip to San Antonio for Game 5. Knicks stars Walt “Clyde” Frazier, part of the 1973 championship team, and Patrick Ewing were also on hand for the Knicks victory. Sydney Sweeney and Scooter Braun were also photographed supporting the Knicks in San Antonio. Other stars spotted courtside during the finals include Dave Chappelle, Chris Rock, Pete Davidson, Adam Sandler, Jay-Z, Jimmy Fallon, Michael J. Fox, Larry David, Jerry Seinfeld, Mariska Hargitay and, in Game 4, Taylor Swift.
In a rare show of bipartisan support, both former President Barack Obama and current President Donald J. Trump congratulated the Knicks on their victory.
Hargitay, a fervent Knicks fan and close friend of Jalen Brunson, sprinted to Madison Square Garden for Game 4 after two performances of Every Brilliant Thing on Broadway. And she couldn’t contain her enthusiasm about that comeback win.
“I love my husband, and our wedding night was great and all, but I think it might have been the greatest night of my life,” Hargitay told THR in a statement. “The game was so brutal, down 29 at the half, but I’m telling you, to watch this team fight and claw their way back — to see that look in Jalen’s eyes — there are just endless life lessons in there. And then OG [Anunoby] comes flying in, his orange and blue cape fluttering behind him, and then it’s just pandemonium. It‘ll get replayed again and again, not just as an epic moment in basketball, but on the highlight reel of the best moments in sports. And all I could think was ‘THAT JUST HAPPENED!!!’ And ‘OH MY GOD, I LOVE THIS TEAM!!!’ And ‘OH MY GOD, I LOVE THIS CITY!!!’”
Following the Knicks’ championship Game 5 win, Hargitay showed her support for Brunson in a post on Instagram.
After hoisting the Larry O’Brien trophy into the air, Knicks owner James Dolan said of the long-awaited win, “Hey, New York, I’m sorry it took so long, but here we are and hopefully it won’t take that long again!”
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced shortly after the Knicks’ victory that the team’s championship parade would happen Thursday in Manhattan.
The NBA Finals appearance was the first for the Knicks since 1999, which incidentally was also against the Spurs and saw the Knicks lose to San Antonio in Game 5.
The Knicks, who led the series against the Spurs 3-1 going into Game 5, made the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history in Wednesday’s Game 4, winning 107-106.
Ahead of Game 5, New Yorkers across the city were decked out in their Knicks finest, sporting jerseys, merch and, in some cases, just orange and blue attire. Even the Empire State Building was lit up in orange and blue.
Even New Jersey’s own Bruce Springsteen got caught up in the Knicks spirit, ending his brief performance at the Tribeca Festival in Lower Manhattan on Saturday with “Go Knicks.”
Read on to see how Hollywood stars and public figures are reacting to the Knicks’ win.
Sports
Knicks rally again behind Jalen Brunson’s 45 points to defeat Spurs, win franchise’s first NBA championship since 1973
At long last, the New York Knicks are NBA champions.
In a Game 5 of the NBA Finals Saturday night that looked much like the previous four, the San Antonio Spurs took a double-digit lead in the first quarter.
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But like in three of the previous four games, the Knicks rallied — this time from a 16-point deficit — to secure a 94-90 Game 5 win and a 4-1 series victory in the NBA Finals.
Jalen Brunson led the way with a legacy-securing 45-point effort as New York’s only reliable source of offense on a night in which both teams struggled from the field. But for New York, the win didn’t have to be pretty. The result is the franchise’s first NBA championship since 1973. And Brunson has secured his place among New York’s sporting greats.
Brunson helped the Knicks chip away at an early 31-15 deficit by making his first three 3-point attempts of the game. In the third quarter, he hit three free throws after drawing a foul on a 3 to give the Knicks an 86-85 lead, their first of the second half. From there, the Knicks held on to win a tightly contested battle down the stretch.
Per Opta Stats, Brunson is the second player in NBA history to score 45 points on the road in a championship-clinching victory. The other was Michael Jordan in 1998 against the Utah Jazz to secure a sixth NBA title for the Chicago Bulls.
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When the final horn sounded following a desperation missed 3 by San Antonio’s Victor Wembanyama, a swarm of Knicks fans who’d traveled to San Antonio to watch the closeout game celebrated in the San Antonio stands. And fans at watch parties back home across New York City partied in the streets.
Knicks players, meanwhile, were overjoyed on the court, finally able to exhale after securing three gritty NBA Finals wins prior Saturday’s Game 5 clincher. Karl-Anthony Towns, whose legacy-altering effort as a focal point of New York’s offense in the playoffs, cried tears of joy as he shared a post-champinoship embrace.
Brunson shared the moment with his father and Knicks assistant, Rick Brunson on a night when he scored 45 of New York’s 94 points in a championship-securing win.
Brunson scored 15 of his 45 points in the fourth quarter and hit multiple buckets down the stretch to lead the Knicks back from a 75-65 deficit early in the stanza. No other Knick scored more than 14 points, and only four tallied double figures.
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Brunson was at a loss for words when met by ESPN’s Lisa Salters on the court for a postgame interview.
“I’ve got no words,” Brunson said after a long pause, with tears in his eyes. “It’s everything I ever dreamed of.
“I don’t know what I’m feeling. I’m just, like, I’m in awe. I don’t know. Whenever someone counted us out, we find a way to come back and do something about.”
Moments later, Brunson was awarded the NBA Finals MVP trophy.
The championship for New York culminates one of the most remarkable postseason runs in NBA history. The Knicks entered the Finals on an 11-game postseason win streak fresh off sweeps of the 76ers and Cavaliers in the Eastern conference semifinals and finals. They extended that streak to 13 games with two wins on the road against the Spurs, both after trailing by double figures in the first quarter.
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After losing Game 3 at home in the first Finals game at Madison Square Garden since 1999, the Knicks pulled off the greatest comeback in NBA history, overcoming a 29-point deficit secure a Game 4 win and send New York into a frenzy.
Then on Saturday, after a miserable first quarter that produced 13 points, New York maintained its poise, chipped away at its deficit and outlasted the Spurs for the fourth time in five NBA Finals game.
This story will be updated.
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WASHINGTON (AP) — One by one, the burly mixed martial arts fighters made their entrance past the solemn, hulking marble statue of America’s 16th president and jogged down the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to roars from thousands of fans drawn to the unusual sporting weekend marking the nation’s 250th anniversary and President Donald Trump’s 80th birthday.
The news conference Friday night featured the fighters who are preparing to face off Sunday in the Octagon built outside the White House. But it was also a chance to see the UFC fans who have thronged to Washington and endured lightning, humidity and bugs for the spectacle.
Tracy Philbeck and his son Levi drove from Charlotte, North Carolina, with a group of friends to support their favorite fighter, American Justin Gaethje, in the upcoming lightweight title bout against Georgian Ilia Topuria.
“You will hear an eagle screaming when Justin Gaethje wins,” the elder Philbeck chuckled.
David Halstead journeyed from Albany, in Western Australia, to watch the sport he has loved for a decade. Halstead said Trump, who regularly attends the fights, “put UFC on the map.”
The UFC has said it spent $60 million on this weekend’s festivities, and Republican president has billed it as “the greatest show on earth.”
Not everyone agrees.
The Public Integrity Project described the event as a “private, commercial, corrupt use of our most sacred national monuments for private gain” in a lawsuit the watchdog group filed to try to stop it from happening on federal land. A federal judge ruled on Friday that the White House was allowed to go ahead.
Only about 1 in 10 U.S. adults consider themselves mixed martial arts fans, according to Ipsos Sports polling conducted in February and March. That polling suggests MMA fans skew male and nonwhite. They are more likely to identify as Republicans than Democrats.
“One misconception is that everyone who watches UFC is a Trump supporter, but that’s not the case,” said Ricardo Rodriguez, 24, explaining he loves the physicality of the sport. “People also expect a knock out every time,” he said.
Ellie Louizes, who practices Muay Thai, or Thai kickboxing, and jiu-jitsu martial arts, drove from Daytona Beach, Florida, with her boyfriend, Jacob Purvis.
Female fans of MMA are the minority. But Louizes said she knows a lot of women who get into watching the sport through their male partners. She said “female fighters are often way more aggressive” than the men.
Fans brushed off the criticism about White House as host
The fans at the Lincoln Memorial brushed off criticism about the bouts being held at the White House.
Holding fights at the “People’s House,” Tracy Philbeck said, “goes back to the days of Teddy Roosevelt.”
Roosevelt regularly held sparring sessions at the White House, though they were not formal public prizefights. He was an enthusiastic amateur boxer who had boxed at Harvard and continued the sport throughout much of his life.
Boxing fans also make up a large part of the UFC’s fan base.
At a UFC-sponsored community event this week at the District of Columbia’s Midtown Youth Academy, the boxing gym’s executive director was helping out with a visit from UFC fighter Randy Brown, who sparred with more than a dozen local teenagers and preteens.
Gloria Lee said meeting the fighter was a big deal for kids at her gym. “It’s just been a thrilling week, and I was about to fall out when he came in the door!” she said.
Asked about her personal UFC fandom, Lee said she had not watched it much. But by the end of Brown’s visit, she got into the ring with the professional fighter and threw some slugs of her own.
___
Associated Press writer Linley Sanders contributed to this report.
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