With celebrities, sky-high ticket prices and decades of Knicks heartbreak all colliding at MSG, their leader is the only one not caught up in the moment.
New York loses its mind, Brunson keeps his
Madison Square Garden has not hosted an NBA Finals game since the summer of 1999, and the city of New York is making sure everyone knows it. On the eve of Game 3 between the Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs, the scene outside the arena looked less like a basketball event and more like a red carpet premiere crossed with a block party.
Rappers and lifelong Knicks supporters were spotted inside the coaching staff’s pregame news conference. Actor Ben Stiller, who has become something of a fixture at courtside this postseason, was there documenting the moment on his phone. The coach, clearly tickled, made it a point to announce to the room that he had just met the Hollywood star.
Outside the building, the financial reality of the moment was equally staggering. Floor seats and even modest views were trading at prices most fans could never justify, with the cheapest available tickets reportedly hovering around seven or eight thousand dollars. For a fanbase that endured years of losing seasons and false starts, the cruelest irony is that many of the people who stayed loyal through the lean years cannot afford to walk through the door now that their team is finally here.
Brunson blocks it all out
While the city swirled around him, Jalen Brunson walked into Madison Square Garden wearing the same expression he brings to every building. No awe, no spectacle, just preparation. The Knicks arrive at Game 3 with a 2-0 series lead, having survived a tense 105-104 finish in Game 2, but Brunson was far more focused on what nearly went wrong than what went right.
He pointed to the 14-point lead his team surrendered in that game as a reminder that nothing is sealed, and credited the Spurs with the quality and resilience it took to climb back into contention. That kind of measured thinking, crediting the opponent and correcting internal mistakes, has defined his approach all postseason.
The Brunson blueprint
Brunson has not been at his sharpest statistically in this series, shooting well below his usual efficiency through the first two games. But those around him are not worried. His teammates describe a player who carries the same composure whether his shots are falling or not, always pressing, always finding ways to manufacture advantages.
His head coach has perhaps the most unique perspective of anyone. Back in 2022, while working as an assistant focused on defense for the Golden State Warriors, he identified Brunson as the true engine of the Dallas Mavericks and assigned his best defender to slow him down. Even then, Brunson averaged 18 points on efficient shooting before Dallas was eliminated in five games. That same offseason, Brunson signed with New York.
A moment 26 years in the making
The Knicks have not won an NBA championship since 1973, and the weight of that drought is present in every conversation surrounding this team. Two other franchises in league history have won the first two Finals games on the road and both went on to win the title, though both carried recent championship experience with them.
New York arrives with something different: hunger built over decades, a city ready to exhale and a point guard who has decided he will not feel any of it until the very last buzzer sounds.

