After 53 years of waiting, the Knicks are finally world champions again.
They took down four teams — the Hawks, 76ers, Cavaliers and Spurs — in a brilliant postseason fueled by grit, dominance and perseverance.
Here’s a round-by-round look at how they did it:
Charles Wenzelberg / NY Post
Eastern Conference first round
Opponent: Atlanta Hawks
Outcome: Knicks win series, 4-2
Leaders:
Jalen Brunson (26.3 ppg, 6.2 apg, 37.8 3P%)
OG Anunoby (21.5 ppg, 8.7 rpg, 1.2 bpg, 56.7 3P%)
Karl-Anthony Towns (18.7 ppg, 11.3 rpg, 6.0 apg)
How it happened:
The Knicks faced their biggest test right away. They trailed the Hawks two games to one after a pair of one-point setbacks in Games 2 and 3. Atlanta guard CJ McCollum was torching them, averaging 27 points through the first three games of the series.
Ahead of a pivotal Game 4 in Atlanta, reserve guard Miles McBride sounded the alarm.
“I’d say we’re playing for our lives,” he said.
The Knicks responded by reeling off three straight victories to win the series. It started with coach Mike Brown making a major tweak to the offense. With Brunson being hounded by standout Hawks guard Dyson Daniels, the Knicks started running offense through Towns. He notched a triple-double in Game 4 — the first of his playoff career — in a 16-point win.
The Knicks won the final two games of the series by a combined 80 points. In the clincher, they set an NBA playoff record for the largest halftime lead of 47 points, going on to win by a whopping 51. The entire starting five reached double figures on a night the Knicks shot a scalding 59 percent from the field. It also included a Mikal Bridges breakout. Amid calls for Bridges to be benched, Brown stuck with the struggling veteran wing, and he rewarded him with a 24-point performance on 10-for-12 shooting. It started a torrid stretch for Bridges and the Knicks, who wouldn’t lose again until the NBA Finals.
“He just did what he’s capable of doing,” Brown said. “Is he gonna go 10-for-12 every night? No. But he was aggressive. Took great shots. I wouldn’t let it go unnoticed that his defense was phenomenal.”
Eastern Conference semifinals
Opponent: Philadelphia 76ers
Outcome: Knicks win series, 4-0
Leaders:
Jalen Brunson (29.0 ppg, 6.0 apg, 44.8 3P%
Mikal Bridges (17.5 PPG, 3.5 rpg, 3.5 apg, 38.5 3P%)
Karl-Anthony Towns (15.5 ppg, 8.0 rpg, 7.5 apg, 1.3 bpg)
How it happened:
This series was never close. The 76ers’ lack of depth combined with a short turnaround after a grueling seven-game series victory over the Celtics gave them no shot. Only one of the four games was decided by single digits — the Knicks’ six-point Game 2 victory – and even that was never really considered in doubt. A hobbled Joel Embiid created major defensive issues for Philadelphia that the Knicks took advantage of. They won the four contests by an average of 22.2 points.
The most interesting part of the series was the final two games in Philly. Ahead of the matchup, Embiid implored 76ers fans to not sell their tickets, to avoid a repeat of two years prior when Knicks fans took over Xfinity Mobile Arena (then Wells Fargo Center). His plea fell on deaf ears.
Game 4 sounded like Madison Square Garden. Embiid heard boos during warmups.
Afterward, a giddy Josh Hart joked: “I used to think Philly was a sports town. I don’t know if it is anymore.”
Said 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey: “It absolutely sucks, if I’m being honest. It just sucks.”
There wasn’t much for 76ers fans to cheer about. The Knicks won the series finale by 30 points, 144-114, and equaled an NBA playoff record with 25 3-pointers.
The series also showed off their depth. Anunoby suffered a mild hamstring strain late in Game 2 and missed the last two games. It didn’t matter. McBride and Landry Shamet stepped up in his place. Shamet, buried on the bench before Anunoby’s injury, exploded for 15 points in Game 3 and McBride drained seven 3-pointers in Game 4.
“I always feel like I’m going to make shots,” McBride said. “I trust my work, trust my preparation. They left me open.”
Eastern Conference finals
Opponent: Cleveland Cavaliers
Outcome: Knicks win series, 4-0
Leaders:
Jalen Brunson (25.5 ppg, 7.8 apg, 3.3 rpg)
Mikal Bridges (18.5 PPG, 4.3 rpg, 2.8 apg)
Karl-Anthony Towns (15.8 ppg, 12.0 rpg, 4.0 apg)
Josh Hart (14.3 ppg, 7.8 rpg, 5.5 apg)
How it happened:
The series was really decided by Game 1. With a nine-day layoff, the Knicks were rusty. The Cavaliers took advantage, building a 22-point lead early in the fourth quarter. Cleveland seemed on its way to stealing home-court advantage. Then, Brunson slipped on his Superman cape.
The Knicks’ captain rallied them from down 22 in the final 7:52 of regulation, finishing with 38 points. He relentlessly attacked Cavaliers All-Star James Harden during an 18-1 run, and the Knicks dominated overtime. The win marked the Knicks’ eighth straight playoff victory. It was also the first time in the play-by-play era (1997 and on) that a team that trailed by 20 or more points in the final seven minutes of the fourth quarter had ever won.
The Cavaliers never recovered, blasted in the final three games by a combined 66 points. There was a different Knicks star in every game. Brunson owned the first game, Josh Hart was terrific in Game 2 — he made five 3-pointers and scored 26 points – Anunoby and Bridges shared the spotlight in Game 3 and the bench took over the finale, scoring 58 points in a 37-point romp.
Like Philadelphia, Knicks fans took over Cleveland to see their team advance to the NBA Finals for the first time in 27 years. The playoff win streak was now at 11, and 10 of those victories had come by at least 11 points.
“To be part of this team that revives the word ‘hope’ in this city, it’s something special,” Towns said. “It’s something really, really special. And it’s an honor.”
NBA Finals
Opponent: San Antonio Spurs
Outcome: Knicks win series, 4-1
Leaders:
Jalen Brunson (32.6 ppg, 4.6 apg, 38.9 3P%)
OG Anunoby (21.2 ppg, 4.8 pg, 1.4 bpg, 50.0 3P%)
Karl-Anthony Towns (13.0 ppg, 10.6 rpg, 2.4 apg)
How it happened:
The Spurs started fast and the Knicks finished faster. That was this series in a nutshell. In all four wins, the Knicks trailed by double digits and were behind late in the fourth quarter. It included a Finals-record comeback from 29 points down in the third quarter of Game 4. It included the Knicks becoming the third road team in Finals history to win the first two games of the series, along with the 1993 Bulls and 1995 Rockets.
It included Brunson proving all his critics wrong, that he was good enough to be the star of a championship team despite all the questions about his limitations. He poured in 38 points in that Game 4 rally, then scored 45 more in the clincher en route to MVP honors.
Anunoby had the biggest play of the series – arguably the biggest play in franchise history — with his flying tip-in of a Brunson miss with 1.2 seconds left, capping that iconic Game 4 comeback. It saved the Knicks from a 2-0 series lead becoming 2-2, a win that will stand alone among the 16 it took to end a 53-year drought.
“That has to be the most iconic shot in the history of New York basketball,” Brown said.
The Spurs entered the betting favorite after eliminating the defending champion Thunder. They had the superhuman Victor Wembanyama and two of the brightest young guards in the league in Dylan Harper and Stephon Castle. But the Knicks had experience, and they had Jalen Brunson. That won out in the end, as the Knicks won all three games in San Antonio at Frost Bank Center.
“I’m sorry it took so long but here we are,” owner James Dolan said, “and hopefully it won’t take that long again.”
