Social media reacts to Knicks storybook NBA Finals win

2026 NBA Finals - Game Five

The New York Knicks just won their first NBA championship since 1973, ending one of the longest title droughts in professional sports, and both New York City and the internet have erupted in response. But you don’t need to be a basketball fan to appreciate what just happened. In fact, we would argue that last night represents one of the finest storybook endings in sports history, something so picture-perfect that you would think it was scripted. 

Skeptical? Hear us out first. 

The ‘Nova Knicks win big

Last night, three college best friends came together to repeat their improbable 2016 NCAA March Madness run on an even bigger stage.

Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, and Mikal Bridges were all teammates at Villanova University 10 years ago, where they helped to defeat a heavily-favored North Carolina team 77-74 in one of the most celebrated NCAA tournament games of all time. 

And the friendship they forged a decade ago is simultaneously a major reason for their incredible team chemistry today and the single reason the Knicks have the roster they currently have, because it required team captain and certified superstar Jalen Brunson to take a $113 million pay cut in the summer of 2024 to clear up the necessary cap space.

Two years ago, NBA analyst/savant Adrian Wojnarowski called that move “largely unprecedented,” but last night it paid off in a big way, as Brunson has been crowned the King of New York, and he and his college buddies are now NBA champions.

The redemption of Karl Anthony Towns

It’s hard to think of an NBA superstar who has been more unfairly maligned than Karl Anthony Towns. Former Minnesota Timberwolves teammate Jimmy Butler famously called him “soft” all the way back in 2018, and the insult has stuck ever since — until last night. 

Not only did KAT put up fantastic numbers throughout this series, averaging over 15 points, 11 rebounds and 2.5 assists per game, he did it while taking on the toughest defensive matchup, guarding Spurs superstar Victor Wembanyama, a 7’4″ center with a silky-smooth jump shot and superhuman agility (they don’t call him “the Alien” for no reason).

But it’s the behind-the-scenes drama, so often overlooked by casual fans, that makes KAT’s victory so meaningful. In 2020, his mother and biggest supporter passed away from complications from COVID-19. Unlike many superstar athletes and celebrities, or famous men in general, Towns was extremely open about sharing his grief. In an emotional YouTube video entitled “The Toughest Year of My Life,” he went into detail about his mother’s difficult upbringing, her unwavering support for him, and their pre-game rituals, and in a post-game interview after game one of the Finals, he spoke about what she still meant to him: “I felt like I was seeing her in the stands. It felt like a certain presence that was very comforting and very loving and I felt like I could have fun out here in Game 1 of the NBA Finals, which is the weirdest thing because you would expect to have the pressure at the highest.

From that great sadness, though, good things have emerged, including his engagement to long-time girlfriend Jordyn Woods.

Instead of “soft,” the internet will now refer to him as NBA Champion Karl Anthony Towns, and that’s as it should be. 

Brunson burns his haters

If Jalen Brunson wasn’t a household name before this NBA Finals, he certainly will be now. But before he balled out on the game’s biggest stage, he had to put up with a lot of criticism. In fact, the 6’2″ point guard has been overlooked and underestimated for his entire career. In 2023, former WNBA superstar-turned-analyst Becky Hammon famously dismissed him as too small to be a “1A” player on a winning team, and Stephen A. Smith, the NBA’s most famous talking head, described his signing with the Knicks as “nothing,” a disaster move destined not to pan out. 

Not only did Brunson deliver the first NBA title to New York in more than half a century, but he also did it while averaging 32.6 points, 4.6 assists, and 4.2 rebounds per game, and 45 points in the close-out Game 5 on the road, en route to his winning Finals MVP. And it gets better: his father, Rick Brunson, a former Knicks player and current assistant coach for the Knicks, got to share the moment with him.

Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing cast reunion

For decades, the Los Angeles Lakers had A-list actor Jack Nicholson sitting courtside, cheering on the Showtime Lakers, the Shaq-Kobe three-peat, and the Kobe-Pau era, an absolute fixture of Lakerdom. In the entire NBA, only one other celebrity matched that level of dedication: Spike Lee. 

The celebrated director can be seen in Knicks highlights from decades past, harassing refs, taunting Reggie Miller (when he was a Pacer, not an analyst!), and generally showing support. But ironically, his biggest moment as a Knicks fan would occur not in Madison Square Garden, but in San Antonio, where he reunited with Giancarlo Esposito and John Turturro, major cast members of his breakout film Do the Right Thing, to cheer on the Knicks together. 

In hindsight, it’s pretty fitting that a film director would be the headline fan of this Knicks’ run, because there were enough fantastic storylines here to make a movie about — maybe the next Spike Lee joint?  

Click here to read more >> https://mashable.com/life/the-new-york-knicks-storybook-championship

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