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On Saturday night, the waiting ended.

The New York Knicks are NBA champions again.
Behind a defining 45-point performance from Jalen Brunson, the Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs 94-90 in Game 5 of the NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center, closing the series 4-1 and securing the franchise’s first championship since 1973.
It was not elegant. It was not easy. It was not supposed to be. That, in the end, made it unmistakably New York.
The Knicks trailed by 16, stumbled through a 13-point first quarter, shot only 35.6 percent from the field and spent long stretches of the night searching for clean offense against San Antonio’s length, youth and rising superstar power. But they had Brunson. On this night, that was enough.
Brunson scored 45 of New York’s 94 points, carrying an offense that often had nowhere else to turn. He shot 14 of 27 from the field, made 4 of 7 from three-point range, hit 13 free throws and delivered the biggest baskets of the Knicks’ season when the game narrowed into its final, breathless possessions.
With the score tied 88-88 and just over a minute remaining, Brunson drove into traffic and lofted a difficult floater that dropped through the net. The Knicks never trailed again.
Moments later, after Victor Wembanyama’s desperation three missed and the final horn sounded, New York’s bench emptied, Knicks fans in San Antonio erupted, and Brunson stood on the court overcome by what he had just done.
“I’ve got no words,” Brunson said afterward, tears in his eyes. “It’s everything I ever dreamed of.”
Soon after, he was named NBA Finals MVP.
For the Knicks, this championship was not built on one game alone. It was forged through a postseason run defined by resolve. New York entered the Finals after sweeping Philadelphia and Cleveland, then took the first two games in San Antonio. Even after losing Game 3 at Madison Square Garden, the Knicks responded with one of the most astonishing rallies in NBA Finals history, overcoming a 29-point deficit in Game 4 to move within one victory of the title.
Game 5 followed the same brutal script. The Spurs started faster. The Knicks absorbed the damage. Then New York came back.
San Antonio led 23-13 after the first quarter and repeatedly looked positioned to extend the series. Wembanyama, the young force already viewed as one of the faces of the NBA’s future, finished with 19 points, 14 rebounds and five blocks. Dylan Harper led the Spurs with 25 points, continuing a postseason in which the rookie often looked older than his years.
But San Antonio could not close.
The Spurs shot 38.4 percent from the field and missed key opportunities late. De’Aaron Fox struggled through a 3-for-15 night. Stephon Castle shot 1 of 10. Wembanyama, dominant in flashes, could not match Brunson’s command in the closing minutes.

The Knicks, older, tougher and more composed, kept finding the next possession.
Mikal Bridges added 14 points. Josh Hart finished with 13 points and 11 rebounds. OG Anunoby contributed 11 points, eight rebounds and three steals. Karl-Anthony Towns struggled from the field, going 1 of 7, but grabbed 10 rebounds before fouling out.
None of it was smooth. All of it mattered.
Still, this was Brunson’s night.
He scored 15 points in the fourth quarter, including a stretch in which he personally dragged New York back from danger. When the Knicks needed a three, he made one. When they needed free throws, he earned them. When they needed calm, he supplied it. When the franchise needed someone to carry half a century of longing across the finish line, he did.
The performance placed Brunson beside the great names of Knicks history. Reed’s walk through the tunnel in 1970. Frazier’s brilliance in Game 7. Monroe’s artistry. Patrick Ewing’s burden. Carmelo Anthony’s defiance. Now Brunson’s 45 in San Antonio.
For New York, this was more than a championship. It was a release.
Back home, watch parties spilled into celebration. In San Antonio, pockets of Knicks fans who had traveled south roared inside an opposing arena. On the court, players embraced family members, coaches and one another. Brunson shared the moment with his father, Rick Brunson, a Knicks assistant coach, in one of the night’s most emotional scenes.
The Knicks had not won the NBA title since 1973, when Red Holzman’s team defeated the Los Angeles Lakers in five games. That championship belonged to another era, another city, another league. The modern Knicks had come close at times, most memorably in 1994 and 1999, but the final step had remained out of reach.
This team finally took it.
It did so with a roster shaped by toughness and trust, with Brunson as its center of gravity. Since signing with New York in 2022, Brunson has transformed the franchise’s expectations. What began as a strong free-agent addition became something much larger. He became the organizer, the closer, the emotional compass and, ultimately, the championship face of the Knicks.

The Spurs will leave this series with the pain of a missed opportunity, but also with evidence that their future remains immense. Wembanyama, Harper and Castle are young enough to return to this stage often. San Antonio arrived earlier than expected and played large portions of the Finals like a team ready to claim the league’s next era.
But championships are not awarded for promise.
They are won in the final possessions, in the moments when fatigue and pressure expose everything. In those moments, New York was steadier. Brunson was better. The Knicks were ready.
For 53 years, Madison Square Garden waited for another banner.
Now one is coming.
The New York Knicks, once again, are champions of the NBA.
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