New York or nowhere, baby!  Brunson wills the Knicks to first NBA title since 1973

Knicks win first NBA title since 1973 with 94-90 victory over Spurs in Game 5, led by Jalen Brunson. The post New York or nowhere, baby!  Brunson wills the Knicks to first NBA title since 1973 appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.

New York or nowhere, baby!  Brunson wills the Knicks to first NBA title since 1973

The wait is over. At last.

Fifty-three years. 1973, the last year the Knicks had won an NBA title before Saturday night. But Jalen Brunson, a transcendent star, made sure New York City, the New York tri-state area, and Knicks fans across this country and abroad wait no longer. 

Coming back once again from a late-game deficit, the Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs 94-90 to capture the franchise’s third league championship, joining the 1970 and 1973 teams. They were led by the steadfast Brunson. The 29-year-old point-guard proved to be the one. Decades of Hall of Famers – Bernard King, Patrick Ewing and Carmelo Anthony, much bigger men with seemingly more physical gifts—couldn’t do what the 6-2 Brunson has done.

He completed the transformation of a once moribund franchise by scoring 45 points in Game 5, including 13 straight for the Knicks during a crucial and defining stretch in the fourth quarter, to secure a 94-90 victory and clinch the series 4-1. It was the Knicks’ remarkable NBA-record ninth consecutive postseason road win.  

Brunson’s performance conjures memories and comparisons to Walt “Clyde” Frazier’s epic masterpiece of 36 points, 19 assists, and seven rebounds against the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 7 of the 1970 finals, lifting the Knicks to a 113-99 triumph. 

Is Brunson now the Knicks GOAT?

Now, the debate has begun: Has Brunson, awarded the Bill Russell trophy as the finals MVP, surpassed Frazier, Willis Reed and Ewing, the latter who never won an NBA title, as the greatest Knick of all-time?  

After the game, Brunson, in an interview with ABC’s Inside The NBA show, like most of the basketball world, never envisioned himself becoming the force multiplier that would shepherd the Knicks to the sports Promised Land. But indeed he is now New York’s metaphorical Moses.   

A little over one year ago, Brunson sat stoically at a dais next to teammate Karl-Anthony Towns in the Knicks’ interview room at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. The emotional toll he was experiencing at that moment saturated the room.

Roughly 45 minutes earlier, the Knicks were eliminated from the Eastern Conference Finals four games to two by the Indiana Pacers, losing Game 6 by 125-108. It was a disappointing ending to their season. The Knicks entered the series as the favorites and firmly believed they would advance to the NBA Finals.  

Brunson looked at the assembled media and in a monotone voice asserted, “It sucks, man. Simple as that.”  

When asked if he felt the group that had just fallen short of their goal could come back the following campaign and finish the job, Brunson didn’t waver. 

“The most confidence,” he maintained. “Overconfident. Seriously, there’s not an ounce of any type of doubt that I’m confident with this group.”

His words were prophetic.   

Brunson embodies the organization’s determination. From team president Leon Rose, to William “World Wide Wes” Wesley, the Knicks’ executive vice president, to head coach Mike Brown and the players

“It’s the most resilient group I’ve ever been around,” Brown told ESPN. “You can’t teach the resiliency this group showed throughout the course of the year.” 

Brown’s crew was behind by 10 or more points in the first quarter in each game. The first-time that has happened in the finals. They trailed with under two minutes remaining in each of the first four games of the series and were down 75-65 early in the fourth quarter last night. 


Conversely, the Spurs, who could have reversed roles with the Knicks and been up 3-1 entering Game 5, go into the offseason with thoughts of what could have been, as the average margin of victory in Games 2 through 5 was 2.25 points, with the Knicks taking three of the games. 

“This is the biggest lesson of my life,” said the Spurs’ 22-year-old center Victor Wembanyama, who finished with 19 points and 14 rebounds. 

“The biggest learning moment. I can’t tell exactly what the lesson is, but we’re learning from that for sure. I’m learning more than any other time in my life.”

Yes, the Knicks schooled the young Spurs. And Brunson stood as the professor at the head of the class.

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