Weeks before the New York Knicks ended a 53-year championship drought, owner James Dolan stood before his team and delivered a speech that was equal parts motivational address and personal plea, asking his players to commit themselves fully to a playoff run he believed could change their lives forever.
The video, captured on April 3 with five regular-season games remaining, was released publicly Monday on a podcast hosted by two of the Knicks’ key players. What followed that speech became one of the more remarkable runs in recent NBA history. New York won four of its final five regular-season games before resting starters in the last, then went 16 and 3 through the playoffs, including a record 13-game winning streak, before defeating the San Antonio Spurs in five games to claim the franchise’s first NBA title since 1973.
What Dolan said to his team
Dolan spoke with notes in hand and delivered a message centered on opportunity and sacrifice. He framed the upcoming playoff run as a rare window that most people in sports never get, telling his players that winning a championship would stay with them for the rest of their lives, and that falling short would too.
He addressed the midseason coaching change directly, acknowledging the departure of the previous head coach and defending the decision to bring in a replacement. His argument was that the roster was talented enough to win but needed a coaching approach that emphasized collective effort and shared responsibility rather than a single voice directing everything. The new staff, in his view, gave the group its best chance.
Dolan urged the players to limit media interactions, pay closer attention to diet and sleep, and surrender as many distractions as possible for the duration of the postseason. He even suggested, with apparent humor, that players consider abstaining from sex for the ten-week playoff window, invoking the discipline of ancient Spartan warriors as a frame of reference while also acknowledging the conversation their partners would need to have. He promised that championships rings would follow for the people who supported that sacrifice.
Follow your coach blindly
Perhaps the most pointed instruction in Dolan’s speech was his directive to follow the coaching staff without reservation. He told the players that the coach had the answers they needed, and that success would require trusting that guidance completely, correcting the things they had been asked to correct, and leaving nothing in reserve over the course of the postseason.
The framing was unusual for an owner to deliver directly to players, bypassing the coaching staff to speak in unmediated terms about what he believed they needed to hear. That it was received well enough to be shared publicly by the players themselves months later, after they had won the championship, suggests it landed as intended.
A speech that aged remarkably well
The outcome gave Dolan’s words an almost prophetic quality in hindsight. He told his players that when they were introduced for the rest of their lives, regardless of what else they accomplished, the first thing mentioned would be that they were NBA champions in 2026. That prediction proved accurate within ten weeks.
The Knicks’ title ended the longest active championship drought among the four major American sports leagues. For a franchise and a fan base that had spent more than five decades watching other teams celebrate, the speech Dolan gave in April now reads as the moment a team began to understand what it was genuinely capable of.

