There is nowhere like New York City. You either know that or you don’t, and if you’ve ever actually lived here you don’t need me to explain it. The city is loud and expensive and exhausting and completely, entirely irreplaceable. New Yorkers don’t just live here. We wear this city.
Which is why this Knicks run doesn’t just feel like your average sports story–it feels like something that was owed.
The Knicks are in the NBA finals for the first time since 1999. Up 2–0 on the Spurs with game three coming home to the garden, June 8th, 2026. Thirteen straight playoff wins. With Game 2 being a one point nailbiter, 105-104, the Knicks were somehow surviving on a Brunson free throw with 9.5 seconds left while the whole city watched through their fingers. The relief, the chaos, the pride, the whole city has been unraveling in the best way at every single step.
I grew up with two brothers who are die hard Knicks fans. Live or die, every season, every trade line, every “this is our year” conversations that didn’t pan out. I watched them sit through seasons that had no business being watched, even seasons like last year where they were just so close. You kind of get into it whether you plan for it or not. In a year that felt full of losses, coming home and watching this run made my NYC heart beat again.
And the city feels exactly the same way.
The MTA painted the subway entrance at 34th St. Penn Station, right outside Madison Square Garden, blue and orange. They even went back and redid the orange because the first coat didn’t match the exact shade. They wanted it perfect. They replaced the globe lights with basketball signs. And people are standing around that station, taking pictures of each other instead of going through it. In New York. Where locals don’t stop for anything.
When the Knicks swept the Cavaliers to punch their Finals ticket, fans carried brooms through Manhattan, climbed traffic lights, and Radio City Music hall erupted with Knicks chants. Right outside my apartment you could hear the roars, and it felt like I could still hear them all the way down at Washington Square Park. The city co-named streets after the players, Jalen BrunsonBoulevard andJosh Hart Street, with blue and orange signs spread across Manhattan.
The city that never sleeps finally felt awake again.
The City That Never SLeeps Finally Felt Alive Again
The $10 watch party tickets inside MSG sold out in under an hour. The free watch party in Central Park, sold out. Online cues hit over 100,000 people. Watch parties in every borough. Strangers making eye contact on the subway. The mayor in the crowds. The city that moves too fast to stop for anything keeps stopping.
Even with Game 1. The Knicks were down after the first quarter, quiet in San Antonio in front of a crowd that wanted them gone. But back in NYC it didn’t matter where the game was, the crowd was ready to support. With projectors on buildings and personal TVs out on sidewalks, and every bar locked in, the energy was already there. When the fourth quarter came, Brunson with 30, KAT with 18 and 12 boards, and Josh Hart with 3 points and 15 rebounds and 4 steals, the Knicks outscored the Spurs 29-19 to close out the game with a score of 105-95
Collective joy is rare. The kind that crosses boroughs and backgrounds and every reason people usually don’t talk to each other is even rarer. New York has been through a lot. This feels like the city is finally exhaling. Up 2–0. Game three at the Garden tonight. 53 years of waiting and we’re right here. New York or Nowhere right?