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Knicks vs. Spurs: Wu-Tang at MSG, OG Anunoby’s Heroics, and the Night the Knicks Rewrote NBA History




Knicks-Spurs: The Greatest Comeback Ever in the Finals


New York doesn’t do “normal” sports nights. It does chaos, noise, belief… and occasionally, basketball miracles that feel like they were written by a screenwriter who’s had too much espresso.


Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden looked like a funeral at halftime. The San Antonio Spurs had just dropped a Finals-record barrage from deep, the Knicks were turning the ball over like it was a hot potato, and the scoreboard read a brutal 76–49. A 29-point deficit in the Finals? In New York? That usually means one thing: a long walk home and a very angry tabloid cover.


But then came the twist nobody saw coming.

Somewhere between the boos and disbelief, Wu-Tang Clan turned halftime into something spiritual. Not just a performance, more like a sonic pep talk for a city that refuses to stay down.

And when Method Man casually dropped a “Knicks in five,” it sounded less like trash talk and more like prophecy.

The second half? Pure madness.


The Knicks didn’t “chip away” at the lead; they dismantled it piece by piece like they were solving a problem only they could see. OG Anunoby became a two-way nightmare, locking in defensively while quietly building one of the most lethal playoff performances of his career. Every stop felt louder. Every bucket felt heavier.


Then there was Jalen Brunson doing what Jalen Brunson does, dragging New York back into reality, one fearless possession at a time.

And yes, somewhere in the chaos, Jose Alvarado turned into the human spark plug nobody expected, flipping momentum with energy plays that made the Garden feel like it was about to lift off its foundations.


By the time the final minutes arrived, the Spurs weren’t just missing shots; they were missing control. The Knicks weren’t just coming back; they were taking over the entire story.

The final possession will be replayed in New York for decades. A missed shot. A scramble. OG Anunoby right there at the right time, tipping in the kind of basket that turns players into legends and games into folklore.

Knicks win: 107–106.


From 29 down to history. The largest comeback in NBA Finals history wasn’t just a stat; it was a statement. In New York, the game is never over until the city decides it is.

And on this night, MSG decided the script.

The Knicks didn’t just win Game 4. They stole immortality.



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Teo Drinkovic
Teo Drinkovic
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