New York Knicks Win NBA Championship After 53 Years!
16 Jun, 2026
- 🏆Knicks end 53-year drought with their first NBA championship since 1973
- 🔥Jalen Brunson becomes Finals MVP after a 45-point closeout masterpiece
- 📉Spurs collapse late as New York wins four Finals games after double-digit deficits
For 53 years, Madison Square Garden carried ghosts. Willis Reed limping out of the tunnel. Clyde Frazier slicing through defenders. Patrick Ewing battling, bruising, dreaming. Allan Houston’s runner. Carmelo Anthony’s scoring explosions. Jalen Brunson’s arrival. Decades of heartbreak, punchlines, false dawns, lottery nights, front-office chaos, playoff exits, and “maybe next year” misery stacked higher than the Garden rafters.
Then came 2026 and the team that refused to die.

The New York Knicks are NBA champions again, beating the San Antonio Spurs in five games to capture their first title since 1973 and the third championship in franchise history. They did it with grit, scars, late-game nerve, Villanova DNA, big-city swagger, and one small guard with a heavyweight’s heart.
Jalen Brunson did not just lead the Knicks - he dragged the city out of basketball purgatory by the collar. In Game 5, with a title sitting there like a live wire, Brunson poured in 45 points, the biggest Finals closeout performance in Knicks history, and turned a tense 94-90 win in San Antonio into a coronation. There would be no Game 6, no return to New York, no more waiting, and no more curses.
This was not just a championship run. It was an exorcism in orange and blue.
The Road to the Ring
The Knicks did not suddenly wake up as champions. This was years in the making.
They built around Brunson’s leadership, Karl-Anthony Towns’ scoring gravity, OG Anunoby’s two-way violence, Mikal Bridges’ versatility, Josh Hart’s chaos engine, and Mitchell Robinson’s paint prowess. It was not the prettiest roster in the league, nor the flashiest.
What it was, however, was brutal to play against. New York became the kind of team that turned every possession into a street fight. They had enough shooting to punish help, enough size to survive inside, enough creators to bend defenses, and enough maniacs to win the ugly minutes. The Knicks were not chasing perfect basketball - they were chasing winning basketball.
By the time the Finals arrived, the Spurs looked like the future of the NBA. Victor Wembanyama was already a defensive monster, Dylan Harper looked fearless, Stephon Castle had grown up under playoff lights, and San Antonio’s young core had sprinted ahead of schedule. But the Finals are no talent show. They are a stress test. New York passed, but San Antonio cracked.
Finals Series Breakdown: Knicks Beat Spurs 4-1
Game | Result | What It Meant |
Game 1 | Knicks 105, Spurs 95 | New York stole the opener in San Antonio and immediately flipped home-court pressure |
Game 2 | Knicks 105, Spurs 104 | The Knicks survived a knife-edge finish and put the Spurs in a 2-0 hole |
Game 3 | Spurs 115, Knicks 111 | San Antonio punched back at MSG and briefly made the series feel alive |
Game 4 | Knicks 107, Spurs 106 | New York completed a wild comeback from 29 down, the emotional turning point of the Finals |
Game 5 | Knicks 94, Spurs 90 | Brunson’s 45-point closeout ended 53 years of waiting |
The final series margin was tighter than 4-1 suggests. Across five games, New York outscored San Antonio by only 12 total points, 522-510. That is not domination on paper - it is execution under fire, and boy were the bookies and betting shops mad about it after having to pay out all those optimistic parlays diehard ‘Bockers fans played!
The Knicks averaged 104.4 points per game while the Spurs averaged 102.0. New York’s edge was not massive in raw scoring, but it was enormous in timing. The Spurs often owned the beginning, but the Knicks owned the ending.
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New York Would Not Stay Dead
The defining stat of the 2026 NBA Finals is simple: the Knicks erased double-digit deficits in every game of the series and won four of them.
San Antonio kept landing the first punch, but New York kept getting up and walking forward. The Spurs looked like the better team for long stretches, but the Knicks looked like the team that knew how to finish. That is why this Finals will not be remembered as a routine 4-1 win. It will be remembered as a slow-motion Spurs collapse and a Knicks team refusing to die.
The turning point was Game 4. San Antonio led by as many as 29 points, had Madison Square Garden quiet, and seemed ready to drag the series back to 2-2. Then the Knicks detonated. The defense tightened, the crowd exploded, Jalen Brunson started hunting, and OG Anunoby caught fire. When Anunoby hit the late winner for a 107-106 victory, the series changed forever. The Spurs no longer believed any lead was safe. The Knicks knew the title was theirs to take.
And then came Brunson’s coronation. His Finals were all about control, not glamor plays. He controlled tempo, pressure, nerves, and every late-game possession like New York had handed him the keys to the city (which they probably will after the win).
In Game 5, he delivered 45 points, the Bill Russell Finals MVP, and a place in Knicks history that will never fade. His own father might not consider him the greatest Knick ever over Patrick Ewing, but many other New York fans certainly do.

However, while Brunson was the headline, this was not a solo act. The Knicks won because every player had a job, and nobody treated that job like it was beneath them. Players like Josh Hart, Mitchell Robinson, and even end-of-bench legend Landry Shamet got their licks in, each one making key plays at key moments to earn their share of the gold.
Across the series, New York outscored San Antonio 522-510, winning by only 12 total points despite taking the Finals 4-1. That tells the real story. The Knicks were not dramatically better for 48 minutes. They were dramatically better when the game got dangerous.
For New York, this championship rewrites everything. The Knicks are no longer the league’s grand old theater of disappointment. They are champions. The jokes get quieter. The ghosts of 1973 finally rest. Jalen Brunson is no longer just beloved, he is immortal in New York.
For San Antonio, the pain will last. Wembanyama is still a generational cornerstone, Harper looks like a future star, and the Spurs arrived earlier than expected. But Finals windows are never guaranteed. They were close enough to touch the trophy, and the Knicks ripped it away.
After 53 years, New York basketball finally gets its roar back. The Knicks are NBA champions!





