The 2026 National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals will forever belong to Jalen Brunson. Norms of 29.5, 4.5, five, and two off a ridiculous usage rate of 37.8 in 38.8 minutes of play. Forty-five points of the Knicks’ 94 in the series clincher. Yet when history of their first title in 53 years is written, their campaign will be remembered as much for their resilience as for their star guard’s brilliance. They did not simply beat the Spurs, and thrice in hostile territory. They survived the heavily favored silver and black. They overcame double-digit deficits with alarming regularity and, in the process, ended one of the longest championship droughts in professional sports.

To contend that the Knicks spent the Finals playing from behind would be to understate the obvious. The Spurs held double-digit leads and entered the fourth quarter ahead in every single contest. And yet every time they found themselves staring at the abyss, they responded with a calm that belied the pressure resting on their shoulders. To be sure, the defining turnaround came in Game Four. Down by 29 midway through the third period, they engineered the largest comeback in NBA Finals history, turning what appeared to be certain defeat into stunning victory. The conviction they gained from the monumental escape carried over into Game Five, where they again erased a significant deficit and relied on their undisputed leader to navigate the final minutes.

Certainly, Brunson deserved every accolade that followed. He scored 29 of his 45 markers after halftime and authored the type of performance that permanently alters his standing in pro hoops lore. Yet even he will admit that success was not solely his to claim. Josh Hart supplied relentless energy. Mikal Bridges delivered timely offense. OG Anunoby remained indispensable on both ends of the floor. Even Karl-Anthony Towns, limited by foul trouble in the clincher, played a significant role throughout the postseason run. Collectively, they showed the importance of fit, versatility, and competitive stubbornness amid a relative lack of talent.

Which is why the Knicks only too appropriately outworked all and sundry to claim the Larry O’Brien Trophy. For decades, they were defined by what they lacked: stability, patience, and a coherent vision. Their current iteration possesses all three. It has been built methodically by Leon Rose, coached confidently by Mike Brown, and, above all else, anchored by the indefatigable Brunson, who repeatedly delivered when circumstances demanded it. Granted, the title does not erase the myriad of frustrations accumulated since 1973. Nothing can. What it does, however, is change their part in the narrative. The wait is no longer the story. They are champions again, and after more than half a century, the very fact is enough.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.



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