The Knicks Are NBA CHAMPIONS!

After more than half a century without winning a title, the Knicks put themselves back on top of the basketball world with a historic run to the championship.

The New York Knicks are world champions! Fifty three years since they last won it. Thirty two years since they came within one game of winning it all.

A lifetime of cheering for them for your humble correspondent and his not-so-humble feline overlord.

The cameras captured this incredible moment when Knicks captain and Finals MVP Jalen Brunson hugged his dad, Rick, after the final buzzer:

Brunson, who had been relentlessly double teamed all series, took over the game tonight, scoring from every angle in a magnificent 45-point performance that the Spurs had no answer for.

The Spurs and their towering, 7’4″ Goliath of a star could not stop the smallest player on the court as he used impeccable footwork, head fakes, rapid changes in angle of attack and exceptional court vision to score basket after basket.

Jalen Brunson is diminutive by NBA standards, but has a massive heart and unshakable confidence in himself and his team.

Brunson entered the league as an afterthought, the 33rd pick in the second round of his draft class. He was expected to be a bench player, a guy who might have a decent career playing limited minutes

He has been repeatedly described as too small, too slow, not talented enough to lead a contending team. One NBA coach famously said no team could win with a him as its leader.

When the Knicks signed him, he was the backup to a superstar on the Mavericks. The Mavericks never realized his value. One prominent ESPN analyst sniffed that the Knicks had overpaid for a “role player,” even though the team signed Brunson for less money than the average starter at his position. Others panned him as a player of limited potential, saying he’d never make an All Star team (he’s made the last three) or compete with the best guards in the East. (He’s surpassed them all.)

One writer compared him to Eddie Curry, one of the greatest busts in Knicks history. The league collectively laughed at him and the Knicks.

TheBigLead has now quietly deleted its story claiming the Knicks were “about to vastly overpay for Jalen Brunson.”

And when Brunson could have signed a massive extension, he forfeited more than $100m so his team could afford to shore up the last few pieces of its roster. No other player has ever given up that much money, let alone in their career prime, to help their team.

Here’s a clip of little Brunson when he was a kid working his butt off under his father’s tutelage. The hard work paid off:

The elder Brunson was an NBA journeyman who played his best years with the Knicks, and young Jalen spent some of his formative years watching his dad play for the franchise that would ultimately hand him the keys and put its faith in him. The above video shows Rick taking a young Jalen through drills in drives to the basket and bringing the ball up court, with Jalen’s mom behind the camera offering words of encouragement.

Rick (who is also a Knicks assistant coach) and Jalen shared an emotional moment after the game, hugging as reality sunk in. Jalen Brunson, overcome with feeling at accomplishing his life’s dream, draped a towel over his head and wiped away tears as his teammates lent him support.

Brunson not only made Knicks basketball exciting again, he helped establish a winning culture with a team of great guys who do an enormous amount of charity work and are exceedingly generous with their time and money. Brunson, Hart and Bridges were teammates on a Villanova squad that won two NCAA titles, bringing a winning attitude, a confidence that they can match up with any team, to the Knicks.

Anunoby, the hero of game four’s historic comeback — when the Knicks overcame the biggest deficit in NBA Finals history — is even involved in promoting cat adoption, and rescues in New York have named adoptable cats after him.

It was also special to see the 90s Knicks legends who came so close to winning it all, supporting the young guys from the stands and crying tears of joy as the buzzer sounded. Patrick Ewing, John Starks, Charles Oakley and Allan Houston were all there along with Walt “Clyde” Frazier to cheer on the young Knicks. Ewing was crying tears of joy as well as he hugged Big KAT in celebration.

The champs with their shiny new trophy.

Brunson, Josh Hart, OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, Karl Anthony “Big KAT” Towns, Mitchell Robinson, Deuce McBride, Jose Alvarado, Landry Shamet, Jordan Clarkson, Ariel Hukporti and the rest of the squad worked their behinds off for this moment, and they deserve every bit of it.

It’s funny how things turn out. Last year the Knicks seemed to have enormous momentum behind them and pulled off a huge upset against the Celtics in the playoffs, only to get stopped by Indiana. This year, the team had an uneven regular season and hit its stride at precisely the right moment, winning 16 of their 19 playoff games en route to the title.

As for New York, the city is ecstatic. What a season. What a night!

Note: When the Knicks won the NBA Cup earlier this season they were heavily criticized by some for celebrating a supposedly meaningless win. The team they defeated? The San Antonio Spurs. Although it’s been clear teams are absolutely motivated to win the NBA Cup, analysts have dismissed it as an indicator of postseason potential. That should change now that the Knicks have become the first NBA Cup winners to go on and win the league championship.

Note To Self: Acting Like A Lunatic While Watching Sports Isn’t Good For My Cat

Cats are highly attuned to our emotions, especially when we share a strong bond with our little buddies.

I realized I needed to calm down when Bud turned and gave me a wide-eyed, uncertain stare.

It was the fourth quarter of the NBA Finals’ second game, and the San Antonio Spurs were chipping away at the New York Knicks’ lead with ample help from the referees.

The Spurs collapsed in as the Knicks’ Karl Anthony Towns (KAT, or Big Kat as he’s fondly known) drove the lane, pummeling him and grabbing at his shooting hand while the refs just watched.

It had been happening all night. Spurs star Victor Wembanyama even grabbed a much smaller Knicks player by the neck and tossed him at one point without so much as a peep from the refs.

(Above: 7’4″ Spurs center Victor Wembanyama grabs 6-foot Knicks points guard Jose Alvarado by the neck and tosses him. The refs did nothing.)

I shouted something not nice as the refs ignored the bludgeoning and the Spurs barreled down the other end for another bucket.

Then I saw Bud’s alarmed face and his uncertain crouch.

“Aw, sh–,” I said, softening my tone and doing my best to sound reassuring. “Not you, Bud. I love you, little guy.”

I held out my fingers, Bud rubbed his cheek against them happily, and we returned to watching the game as I scratched his head.

Still, it was a much-needed reminder that our little pals look to us for emotional cues, and our bad moods have a profound impact on them.

Jalen Brunson is the Knicks’ captain and point guard. Josh Hart (header image) is the team’s “Hart and soul.” Credit: Wikimedia Commons

I will never forget what my brother observed one day when Buddy was still a kitten: “You’re his whole world.”

Bud likes to pretend otherwise, of course, but the point stands. He picks up on everything, and it is deeply unfair for me to allow any outside emotions to impact him. Making sure he’s happy means everything to me.

The comedian Bill Burr has a bit about this, putting it in more crude — but much more hilarious — terms:

Happily, despite the abominable officiating, the Knicks won the game. They have now won 13 games in a row in the playoffs (!), they haven’t lost a game in six weeks, and after defeating the Spurs twice on their home court, the Knicks return to New York two wins away from being NBA champions…for the first time in 53 years.

It’s not only a big deal to me and millions of New Yorkers, it’s something I’ve wanted so badly since I was a kid watching the Knicks reach the Finals in 1994 and 1999, falling agonizingly short both times.

The Knicks came within a game of winning it all in the 1994 NBA Finals when Patrick Ewing (pictured) was the team’s leader.

Wembanyama, San Antonio’s best player, is a towering 7’4″ and doesn’t even have to jump to dunk the basketball, while the Knicks’ best player is Jalen Brunson, who at six feet tall is diminutive by NBA standards.

Wembanyama was the number one pick in his draft, already hailed as the future of the sport before he set foot on the hardwood. Brunson was the 33rd pick in the second round in his draft class, an afterthought who wasn’t predicted to be anything more than a bench player at best.

OG Anunoby, who hails from the UK, is a lockdown defender and explosive scorer. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

When the Knicks signed Brunson four years ago, the entire sports world laughed. One ESPN “expert” insisted the idiot Knicks had pinned their hopes on a “role player,” while another compared Brunson to one of the team’s all time great busts. A third declared the Knicks would never win anything with Brunson leading the team.

And yet here we are on the cusp of history. The Knicks aren’t just two games from a championship, and they haven’t merely punched their ticket to the Finals. They have absolutely obliterated every team they’ve faced, sweeping the last two series and winning by a margin of almost 24 points per game.

But it ain’t over until they win it, so I’m heartened by what the Knicks’ KAT and Mikal Bridges both said after the last two games: they’re treating each game as if they have no lead, as if they must fight tooth and nail to save their season. They are not resting on their laurels, they’re not taking anything for granted, and they refuse to underestimate their opponents.

So let’s hope they win two more and finally bring a championship home, at which time Bud and I will partay!