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Three championships. Fifty-three years between the second and the third. The longest title drought in NBA history, and the night it finally ended.
This is the Knicks as you have never read them before: every score checked, every date verified, every legend tested against the documentary record. Ned Irish accepting the New York BAA franchise because arena-ownership rules required Madison Square Garden to hold it. The "Knickerbockers" name pulled from a hat in a Garden office, drawn from Washington Irving's 1809 satirical pseudonym Diedrich Knickerbocker. Joe Lapchick reaching three consecutive Finals from 1951 to 1953 without ever winning one. Nat "Sweetwater" Clifton signing on 26 May 1950 as one of the first three Black players in NBA history. Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 against the Knicks in Hershey on 2 March 1962 - the highest single-game total in league history, still unbroken 64 years later. Red Holzman hired in December 1967 with two pieces of coaching advice that became the franchise's identity: "hit the open man," "see the ball." Willis Reed limping through the tunnel at Madison Square Garden on 8 May 1970, scoring the first two baskets of Game 7 and nothing else, while Walt Frazier produced 36 points and 19 assists in the most-overshadowed great Finals stat line in NBA history. Earl "the Pearl" Monroe traded in November 1971 and seamlessly integrating with Frazier into the most-decorated backcourt of the era. The 1973 championship clinched on the road at the Forum in Inglewood with a starting five that all five reached the Hall of Fame. Bernard King's 60 points on Christmas Day 1984 and his catastrophic right knee on 23 March 1985, the injury that delivered the franchise into the inaugural draft lottery. Patrick Ewing arriving from Georgetown on 12 May 1985 to begin a 15-year career that produced 24,815 points, 11,617 rebounds, 11 All-Star selections - and zero championships. Pat Riley building a defensive monolith that lost five consecutive playoff series to Michael Jordan's Bulls. The Charles Smith game in 1993. John Starks 2-for-18 in Game 7 of the 1994 Finals. The eighth-seeded 1999 Knicks reaching the NBA Finals - still the only team to do it - only to lose Ewing to a torn Achilles and the championship to the Spurs. The dark years under James Dolan and Isiah Thomas. Tom Thibodeau fired in May 2025 after the conference-finals loss to Indiana. Mike Brown - four rings as an assistant, none as a head coach - hired to finish the job. The conference-finals sweep of the Cavaliers. The 29-point comeback in Game 4 of the Finals at Madison Square Garden, won 107-106 on OG Anunoby's tip-in with one second left. Brunson scoring 45 in Game 5 in San Antonio to close it out. Patrick Ewing courtside, in tears of joy. Fifty-three years of waiting, ended.
PERFECT FOR READERS WHO LOVE
New York Knicks history, NBA history, Madison Square Garden, Willis Reed, Walt Frazier, Earl Monroe, Bill Bradley, Dave DeBusschere, Red Holzman, Bernard King, Patrick Ewing, Pat Riley, Charles Oakley, John Starks, Latrell Sprewell, Larry Johnson, Jeremy Lin and Linsanity, Carmelo Anthony, Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby, Josh Hart, Tom Thibodeau, Mike Brown, the 1970 and 1973 championships, the 1994 and 1999 NBA Finals, the Knicks-Bulls and Knicks-Pacers rivalries, the 2026 NBA championship, and the most-culturally-significant single-arena tradition in American professional sport.
After 53 years, your Knicks are finally NBA champions once again. Always the Knicks.
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