‘That was a dumbass play’: De’Aaron Fox’s gaffe leaves door open for historic Knicks comeback

OG Anunoby of the New York Knicks blocks De'Aaron Fox of the San Antonio Spurs in the closing seconds of Wednesday night’s Game 4 of the NBA finals.Photograph: Michael Gonzales/NBAE/Getty Images

For nearly 47 minutes, the San Antonio Spurs looked poised to leave Madison Square Garden with the NBA finals level at two games apiece.

They’d led by 81-52 in the third quarter, brought a frenzied Madison Square Garden crowd to heel and put themselves on the verge of reclaiming home-court advantage after having dropped the first two games at home. Even after the Knicks mounted a furious second-half fightback and wiped out the entirety of San Antonio’s 29-point cushion, the Spurs still appeared to have one final lifeline.

Related: Knicks beat Spurs with largest NBA finals comeback to move to brink of first title since 1973

Then came a decision that could haunt San Antonio for years if the Knicks go on to end their 53-year championship drought.

The Spurs led 106-105 with less than 15 seconds remaining Wednesday night when Jalen Brunson’s floating bank shot ricocheted into the backcourt. The loose ball bounced toward De’Aaron Fox, who sprinted after it and found himself racing toward the basket with only a trailing OG Anunoby between him and what looked like a game-clinching score.

Instead of pulling the ball out and forcing New York to foul, Fox attacked the rim. But Anunoby chased him down and blocked the lay-up attempt.

Seconds later, the Knicks had the ball back. Brunson missed a 31-footer off the front of the rim, but Anunoby soared in from the top of the key and tipped home the winner with 1.2 seconds remaining, completing an improbable 107-106 victory and the largest comeback in NBA finals history.

Fox did not shy away from explaining his thought process afterward.

“You have to score. Try to get a lay-up, get up three [points]. Force them to need a three,” Fox said. “OG made a good block.”

Asked why he went for the basket rather than dribbling out the clock and forcing a foul, the ninth-year point guard was to the point.

“I just thought I’d be able to outrun them. That’s it.”

The explanation did little to quell the criticism.

On TNT’s post-game show, Charles Barkley delivered a verdict that quickly spread across social media and sports television.

“That was a dumbass play,” Barkley said. “He did not have to shoot that ball.”

The blunt assessment reflected the reaction around the basketball world. With the Spurs clinging to a one-point lead, Fox had safer options available. He could have retreated from pressure and waited to be fouled, shaving precious seconds off the clock. He could have used San Antonio’s final timeout. Instead, he chose the most aggressive path – a gamble Anunoby made him pay dearly for.

Of course, reducing the collapse to a single possession would let the Spurs off too easily. The final mistake merely capped a spectacular unraveling that had begun long before Fox found himself alone in the open floor. San Antonio scored 76 points in the first half but just 30 after half-time. The crisp ball movement and long-distance sharpshooting that had carved apart New York’s defense evaporated as the Knicks chipped away at the deficit.

“Obviously let that get away, being up [29 points],” Fox said. “Got away from doing the things that got us up and put ourselves in that position.”

“I think we played a little slower,” he added. “The ball wasn’t moving the same way that it did in the second half like it did in the first half. We didn’t get a flow on the offensive end in the second half.”

Spurs coach Mitch Johnson saw the same thing.

“We got away from what got us the 76 points in the first half,” Johnson said. “Then you saw at times the aggressiveness and just conviction that we played with early on dissipate a little bit. They made some shots. That’s where you felt the momentum a little bit. We just needed few more tough-minded plays to finish the job.”

He added: “To put as much good work into that first half as we did, get the lead that we had and not finish the job, is disappointing to say the least.”

Wembanyama said he was unable to see Fox’s fateful layup attempt after tumbling to the floor during the play, but he offered a curt appraisal of the Spurs’ second-half performance.

“We clearly weren’t the most hungry in the second half,” Wembanyama said. “Stopped moving the ball. Stopped executing.”

That reality may ultimately be what stings most for San Antonio. Fox’s layup attempt did not create the collapse. The Spurs had already let a 29-point lead fritter away by then. What the play did was quash their last chance to survive it.

“Going down 3-1 is obviously very different,” Fox said. “But we feel like we have a team to be able to come back from this.”

Two minutes earlier, the Spurs were staring at a tied series with momentum to burn and a restored clear path to a championship. One miscue later, they were left to reckon with a reality that had seemed impossible minutes earlier.

Knicks must get off to better start in Game 5 to avoid comeback attempt by Spurs

For the fourth time in the NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs, the Knicks did not start off the game well in Wednesday night’s Game 4 at Madison Square Garden, going down 41-22 after the first 12 minutes.

It was actually the worst first quarter, in regards to point-differential, by New York not just in the series, but during the playoffs. And after dropping Game 3 on Monday night following another disappointing opening quarter, the Knicks vowed to get off to a better start in Game 4.

What happened instead, though, was New York falling behind by as many as 29 points and going into halftime down by 27 points. A good third quarter helped things slightly, but the Knicks still found themselves trailing by 20 points with nine minutes left in the fourth quarter and almost assuredly leaving New York without a win while losing the momentum of the series as well.

Of course, that didn’t happen after the Knicks pulled off the largest comeback in NBA Finals history thanks to a complete shift in execution and OG Anunoby’s tip-in game-winner with 1.2 seconds left.

While New York is up 3-1 in the series and just one win away from its first NBA championship in more than 50 years, the series, which moves back to San Antonio for Saturday’s Game 5, is far from over. 

Therefore, the Knicks need to start playing like they did in the second half in the first quarter if they want to thwart any ideas of a comeback by the Spurs.

“We got a lot to learn in these next couple of days, but our mentality has to be 0-0 – the way it’s been,” Jalen Brunson said. “It has to be that way and I feel like us moving forward with that mindset could really benefit us. There’s nothing to celebrate because it’s not over yet. Not even close.”

Sure, Brunson is right. While New York hasn’t won anything just yet and the main celebration cannot commence, the team surely celebrated together following Game 4’s improbable comeback win.

But after all of that dies down and the Knicks get closer to Game 5, the goal will once again be to win at all costs.

“We can get excited and enjoy this, but we got one more to do,” Jose Alvarado said. “So that’s the main goal, the next game.”

If New York is able to enjoy a better first quarter, it will give it a better chance to come out on top. And even though it’s possible the Knicks can overcome yet another poor opening frame – let’s face it, they’ve done it three times already – it’s a dangerous way to live.

Sooner or later, New York’s luck will run out if it keeps putting itself into these tough positions. Remember Game 2 where San Antonio was one bad pass away from possibly winning the game? 

One could even make the argument that the Spurs deserve to be up 3-1, not the Knicks. Of course, the most deserving don’t always get what they want, and it’s New York who is one win away, but it goes to show just how close San Antonio is and for the Knicks to not take it lightly.

“The most important thing for me over these next 48 hours is just focusing on what I can do to win Game 5,” Brunson said.

Knicks beat Spurs after record NBA Finals comeback

Karl-Anthony Towns and New York Knicks team-mates celebrate after they beat the San Antonio Spurs in game four of the 2026 NBA Finals
Karl-Anthony Towns added 13 points for the Knicks [Getty Images]

NBA legend Charles Barkley branded the San Antonio Spurs "the dumbest basketball team in the history of civilisation" after the New York Knicks pulled off the biggest comeback in NBA Finals history.

The Spurs led by 29 points as they aimed to level the best-of-seven series in New York before hosting game five, but the Knicks fought back to win 107-106.

London-born OG Anunoby claimed a tip-in basket with 1.2 seconds left to clinch victory, much to the delight of a star-studded crowd at Madison Square Garden, which included Taylor Swift and Timothee Chalamet.

It gave the Knicks a 3-1 lead in the series and put them within one win of their first championship since 1973.

The previous biggest comeback in the NBA Finals was 24 points, by the Boston Celtics against the Los Angeles Lakers in 2008.

San Antonio went 29 points up in the second quarter and their 27-point lead at half-time (76-49) was the largest for a road team in Finals history, but they then scored just 30 points in the second half.

"That was some of the most mismanaged, stupid basketball," said ESPN analyst and former NBA most valuable player Barkley.

"When you blow a 29-point lead, the other team has to help, and the San Antonio Spurs helped the New York Knicks win this game."

Victor Wembanyama scored a team-high 24 points for San Antonio and claimed 13 rebounds.

"I can't really explain it right now," said the NBA's defensive player of the year.

"I don't know. I think it's just execution, greediness of some sort. We clearly weren't the most hungry in the second half."

The Knicks still trailed 90-75 heading into the fourth quarter but Jalen Brunson put them in front for the first time at 105-104 with 82 seconds remaining.

Anunoby then made a block with 11.1 seconds left, to stop the Spurs leading 108-105, before tipping in the game-clinching score after Brunson's three-point attempt struck the rim.

"One word that caps that all is just 'belief'," Brunson told ESPN. "It was chipping away, one possession at a time. It wasn't going to be one play to get us back."

Game five is in San Antonio on Saturday (01:30 BST, Sunday).

Knicks fans throw items at Victor Wembanyama, Spurs after NBA Finals thriller

The New York Knicks won Game 4 of the NBA Finals in as thrilling a fashion as you'll ever see. But some fans celebrating the team's 29-point comeback and 3-1 series lead were not on their best behavior.

Per a video posted by NBA content creator "KingCharge" who appeared to be on the scene, the Spurs were greeted by many hostile fans as they returned to their New York hotel. The most vitriol was reserved for Spurs star Victor Wembanyama − and some fans in the crowd beyond the barricades threw unidentified items in his direction.

Wembanyama turned back to look in the direction the items came from, but he was quickly ushered inside by security.

Warning: Video contains some strong language

Wembanyama has not made any friends in New York during the Finals after shoving Knicks star Jalen Brunson in Game 3 and escaping what many believe should have been a flagrant foul. Then, he taunted the Knicks in the first half of Game 4 after Knicks center Mitchell Robinson was given a fragrant foul for a forearm to Wembanyama’s chin.

Later in Wednesday's game, Wembanyama was assessed a flagrant foul for throwing an elbow at the throat of Knicks star Karl-Anthony Towns. The Spurs star now has three flagrant points in the NBA playoffs. If he gets a fourth, he would be suspended.

The Knicks have the chance to win their first title since 1973 in Game 5, which is Saturday in San Antonio. This series has certainly put both Wembanyama and the actions of Knicks fans in the spotlight.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: New York Knicks fans throw items at Victor Wembanyama, Spurs

USMNT erupts after wild Knicks comeback win in NBA Finals

The entire sporting world was stunned by the New York Knicks' epic comeback against the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday night, and the U.S. men's national team was no different.

The Knicks pulled off the biggest comeback in NBA Finals history, rallying from a 29-point deficit to defeat the Spurs 107-106 in Game 4. The win gave the Knicks a 3-1 series lead, leaving them just one win from their first championship since 1973.

The game was sealed in dramatic fashion, with OG Anunoby tipping in Jalen Brunson's missed 3-pointer with 1.2 seconds to go.

The USMNT was watching the game at its team hotel, just two days before it kicks off the World Cup against Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

As Anunoby's tip-in went down, the room erupted in wild scenes of celebration. Players screamed and jumped all over the furniture, tackling one another in disbelief. At the center of the action was noted Knicks fan and New York native Tyler Adams.

Several USMNT players dog-piled one another including — in a seemingly positive sign for his health — defender Chris Richards.

The Knicks will aim for a championship in Game 5 on Saturday, one day after the USMNT begins its World Cup journey.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: USMNT erupts after Knicks comeback win vs Spurs in NBA Finals

OG Anunoby's iconic tip-in started with being challenged by coach Brown at Knicks shootaround

"That has to be the most iconic shot in the history of New York basketball."

Mike Brown nailed it with that comment about OG Anunoby's tip-in. Karl-Anthony Towns agreed.

"Right hand from God," Towns said.

However, the play that will go down in Knicks lore as a Finals game-winner in the most iconic of victories — a comeback from 29 points down — started early in the day, at Knicks shootaround, when Brown challenged Anunoby.

"I told OG, as big, as strong, as athletic as he is, he's got to be a monster on the offensive glass tonight," Brown said. "I don't know if there was a play bigger in the history of Knicks basketball. That was a huge offensive rebound. Huge offensive rebound.

"He took on the challenge, and he went and won the game for us doing exactly what I called him out for during shootaround today."

"[Coach] told me I need to get on the glass, offensive glass, especially, and just use my ability, size, strength, athleticism, to make an impact on the offensive glass," Anunoby said. "And it happened at the end."

Anunoby contributes more than points

Anunoby was having a monster NBA Finals before he became a New York legend. The one Knicks player with a ring — he played a big role for Toronto in 2019 — was averaging 20.7 points a game (second on the team) with a ridiculous .722 true shooting percentage through the first three games of the Finals. Plus, he was playing high-level defense.

All of that shone through in Game 4.

Anunoby, along with Brunson, was the only steady offense for New York on the night, and he finished with 33 points, including seven 3-pointers.

However, his defense may have been more critical. When Brown switched Anunoby onto De'Aaron Fox, it threw the Spurs' already-struggling offense even more off-balance. Yet the Spurs kept playing through Fox, and Anunoby kept blowing things up.

Then came the defensive play of the night. The Knicks were down one with 16 seconds left when Jalen Brunson missed a contested six-footer, and in the scramble for the rebound it got knocked into the back court. Fox ran it down and, with 11 seconds left, inexplicably chose to go for a layup that was contested by Anunoby at the rim, rather than dribble the ball out, eat up some clock and force the Knicks to foul. Instead, Anunoby got the block that kept it a one-point game.

Then came the play that means Anunoby should never have to pay for another meal in New York City — the tip-in that changed the Knicks' season.

"I inbounded the ball to Jalen. He got a pretty good look and I just went and crashed," Anunoby said of the play. "Tried to get a tip-dunk or something. The ball went over my head, so I couldn't really dunk it. So I tried to tip it in softly and it went in."

New York came from 29 down to win a game it had no business still being in at the end. The Knicks are now just one win away from their first ring in 53 years, and Anunoby's calm, steady demeanor is a key reason why — he embodied the Knicks' comeback.

"We're a resilient group. We've been through a lot," Anunoby said. "We've come back plenty of times when we're behind. Just staying with it, weathering the storm, not being too down or angry or frustrated. Just staying with it, cut down to 18, cut it down to 6, push it through. It's a 48-minute game, just play till the end."

Anunoby did, and he might get a second ring because of it.

Charles Barkley calls Spurs 'dumbest basketball team in the history of civilization'

NBA commentator Charles Barkley did not hold back while providing his opinion on the San Antonio Spurs' collapse in Game 4 of the NBA Finals.

Barkley called the Spurs the "dumbest basketball team in the history of civilization" after they blew a 29-point lead on Wednesday, June 10.

The Spurs had the chance to even the series at 2-2, but the Knicks stole it late and now have a commanding 3-1 lead in the series.

"That was some of the most mismanaged, stupid basketball," Barkley said during the “Inside the NBA” postgame show. "When you blow a 29-point lead, the other team has to help you. The San Antonio Spurs helped the New York Knicks win this game by doing some of the stupid(est) stuff I've seen on a basketball court."

The Spurs found success early in the first half, setting an NBA Finals record with 14 made 3s (on 26 attempts).

San Antonio did not have the same luck in the second half and struggled from long range. The team went 3-for-17 from deep in the second half.

The Spurs missed nine of those 3s in the third quarter, allowing the Knicks to take advantage of the missed opportunities and crawl back into the game.

“They played terrible basketball," Shaquille O'Neal said on the show. "They got comfortable with the lead and talking about going back to San Antonio and just didn't play smart."

The Knicks returned to the locker room at halftime trailing 76-49 before going on to outscore the Spurs 58-30 in the second half.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Charles Barkley calls Spurs 'dumbest basketball team' after collapse

Spurs suffer worst collapse in NBA history in game 4 vs Knicks

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 08: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs reacts during the second quarter against the New York Knicks in Game Three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden on June 08, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I don’t drink. But after what just happened, the temptation is growing.

The first half of this game was absolute joy. Fox drew a foul on KAT on the very first possession, then Big Purr drew one on Wemby right after. Mitch Johnson elected to challenge the latter call, and upon review, it was deemed that KAT hooked the Alien. This forced the Knicks to sit their All-Star centre since he already had two personal fouls, while Wemby’s slate was wiped clean. The Spurs took advantage shortly after by hitting two threes and scoring off a turnover, continuing their streak of building a 10-point lead early in each game.

With KAT on the bench, New York was forced to play Mitchell Robinson for extended minutes, helping San Antonio stay hot. The good guys started 6-8 from deep and scored 30 points in just the first eight minutes of the game, and the Knicks had to dust off fantasy specialist Ariel Hukporti to give Robinson a breather. The once raucous MSG crowd suddenly turned nervous as the Spurs built a 20-point lead, with hushed murmurs reverberating throughout the arena.

Unlike the other games (this still stands, but for all the wrong reasons), San Antonio continued throwing haymakers. After back-to-back threes from Fox, the entire team joined the party. Seven Spurs made a triple before half-time, and their 14 total set a new record for threes in a single NBA finals half. The Knicks became discombobulated on offense too, resorting to hero-ball from Brunson — one of their most inefficient scoring options in the series (at the time). As a result, the Spurs led 76-49 at the half, which is also the most points a road team has scored in the first half of any finals game in history.

Then, the entire world started to crumble.

New York went on a 13-0 run in the third to cut the lead down to 15, while San Antonio’s offense halted to a stop. The Spurs continued hunting threes and forgot about a guy who’s kind of tall, and as soon as their hot streak ended, the once massive lead began to dwindle. They were outscored 26-14 in the third alone, and worst of all, Brunson started getting hot.

Suddenly, it was as if the Knicks played the uno reverse card on the Spurs, as they began hitting all their shots: from three, from mid-range, from the Statue of Liberty, you name it. What was once a 15-point lead with eight minutes left became a two-possession game, as New York capitalized on the Spurs’ over-aggressive defense with pinpoint ball movement. San Antonio made some panicked adjustments to try and get the ball out of Brunson’s hands, but that left the Knicks’ shooters wide open, who all had auto-aim activated.

On the other end, San Antonio’s strategy was to watch one player dribble the air out of the ball while the other four prayed to some sports deity that had already abandoned them. Somehow, that actually resulted in a three from Fox and a foul line jumper from Wemby, but it wasn’t enough to stem the tide against a New York team shielded by plot armor. After Brunson splashed a 27-foot missile over Wemby (of all people), the Knicks cut the lead down to just one with 2:30 left, and the Spurs’ counter was to play one of the worst possessions you’ll ever see.

Fox tried to run a high pick-and-roll to get Wemby an open path to the rim, who set a screen that hardly grazed Anunoby. As a result, Anunoby easily went over and forced Fox to pick up his dribble and jump without a clear passing lane. Instead of just living with the double dribble, however, Fox threw the ball to the middle of the court, which was picked off by Josh Hart, who then proceeded to smoke a wide-open dunk. Then, the Knicks isoed Brunson against Castle, and Captain New York made a tough floater that bounced in, to put the home team up one.

With a minute left, the Spurs isoed Fox at the elbow, who missed the shot but resulted in free throws for Castle, who knocked both down to put San Antonio back up by one. With 20 seconds left and the ball back in the Knicks’ hands, Brunson missed a bank shot that was tipped to mid-court, and Fox got to it first. Instead of dribbling out the clock, however, he had delusions of grandeur and went up for a layup, which was blocked by Anunoby.

Still, all hope wasn’t lost, yet. New York only had 5 seconds left to put up a final shot, which ended up being a Brunson prayer from the logo over Wemby. He missed, but in the ensuing chaos, Anunoby flew in and tipped the ball over the outstretched hands of three Spurs. Of course, it somehow went in. 107-106, Knicks.

With 1.2 seconds left, San Antonio actually drew up a good inbounds play that had Castle open for a dunk, but Harper flubbed the pass, and probably the Larry O’Brien trophy, too.

Game notes

  • History is now on the Spurs’ side: there have been five instances in NBA history where a team tied the finals at 2-2 after trailing 2-0, and all five of those teams went on to win the title.
  • I’ve suffered through some pretty bad heartbreaks in my years as a sports fan, almost entirely at the hands of the Canucks. Most notably, the 2*11 NHL finals between them and Bruins, which might still be the most traumatic thing that I’ve ever experienced. Well, this game is now on that list, and the series isn’t even over yet.
  • This game was basically the final fight in every Rocky movie. His opponent would pummel him to bits for most of the match, only for his iron chin to withstand everything and land a knockout blow at the very end. New York is Rocky, and he indeed, did not die.
  • I hated the process of this game and said that before the comeback even materialized. It took until the fourth before the Spurs remembered that they have an Alien on their side, but it was too little, too late. After barely seeing the ball the entire half, Wemby had lost all his touch by then, resulting in a stretch in which he shot 1-11 from the third to the middle of the fourth.
  • Wemby now has 3 flagrant points in the playoffs following an inadvertent elbow against KAT in the third quarter. I thought it was a borderline call, but considering he got away scotch free with the Brunson shove in game 3, he definitely deserves another flagrant in the aggregate. The bigger story, though, is that accumulating 4 flagrants results in an automatic suspension. I’m confident that won’t happen, but it shouldn’t have gotten to this stage, either. Wemby needs to keep a cooler head, and he’s got no one to blame but himself for ending up in this position.
  • Live by the three, die by the three. The Spurs experienced both sides of that in game 4, making 14 threes in the first half and just three in the second. San Antonio wanted to see if they could keep up the momentum and settled for too many jumpers when their rhythm was gone, and it resulted in the largest single-game collapse/comeback in NBA Finals history. The commitment to threes would even make Joey Mazz proud.
  • It’s been said before, and I’ll say it again: this series will be determined by turnovers. It’s not a coincidence that the Spurs only had two turnovers in the first half and had nine in the second. New York actually finished with 13, but almost none came during their comeback. San Antonio had more turnovers than made buckets in the third quarter alone.
  • Castle was pretty brutal for most of the game, but he deserves credit for hitting those clutch free throws at the end and going 8/8 from the line. Remember, he iced game 3 from the line too, and I was ready to personally deliver him the finals MVP if Anunoby’s fingers were an inch shorter. Those free throws will be lost in the craziness, but the streets won’t forget.
  • What won’t get lost is 2023 Clutch Player of the Year De’Aaron Fox. I’ve had a love/hate relationship with him since before he was traded to the Spurs, and have given him flowers for playing through his ankle injury. However, I only just learned that an ankle could impede one’s processing, too. Why didn’t he just dribble out the clock with 15 seconds left??? He doesn’t have his usual burst and knew that Anunoby was coming, and still decided to go for the layup. Mind-boggling.
  • I’m not a spiritual person. I don’t believe in any deities, or even ghosts. But what this Knicks team has become over the past two months is something beyond my simple comprehension. Maybe Timothy Chalamet and Anne Hathaway sprinkled magical powder on MSG in the middle of round one so they could be cast in Spike Lee’s new movie: The Miracle in the Garden. Speaking of which, it’s time to boycott The Odyssey and Dune.
  • Conduct a wellness check on your fellow Spurs brethren. And for the love of the basketball gods, do NOT answer any calls/texts from friends who troll. This is the start of our healing journey. We will get through it together.

Play of the game

Dylan Harper is the only thing keeping me going.

Next game: in San Antonio on Saturday for Game 5

Well, Game 5 will be back in San Antonio on Saturday at 3:30pm Central Time. The sun will still rise tomorrow, I guess.

The Pressure On Utah’s Front Office Has Never Been Higher

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 27: Cameron Boozer #12 of the Duke Blue Devils looks on during the second half against the St. John's Red Storm in the Sweet Sixteen of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Capital One Arena on March 27, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been exactly one month since the Utah Jazz won the NBA lottery, and each day the pressure mounts as we get closer to draft day. In some drafts, the #1 pick is a foregone conclusion, like with Cooper Flagg and Victor Wembanyama. The thing that makes this draft so unique, and a great one to be #2, is that the top three players all have a case to be the #1 pick. You could even argue Caleb Wilson and not get laughed at. With the luxury of of having so much top-tier talent at the top also comes the anxiety to make sure that you aren’t the team that ends up picking the worst of the three.

AJ Dybantsa is favored at FanDuel to go #1 at -475, which is up from yesterday at -450. That seems to be the consensus more and more around the league. For Utah, that leaves them with the decision between Cam Boozer and Darryn Peterson. That choice is one of the biggest choices the Jazz will ever make. Do they go with the guard that had one of the weirdest seasons in recent memory in Darryn Peterson? The creatine story is a hard one to believe. But if he’s healthy and looks like he did in his high school tape, he could be an all-time scorer in the league with defensive chops as well. Or do they go with the hyper-efficient big who sits at the top of every raw and advanced stat? But who isn’t a good rim protector and seems to get a large portion of his points in the post, a place that he probably won’t use as much in the league.

That is the question the Jazz have to answer. Chances are that both players will be great, and you can’t go wrong. But even that brings pressure because when you’re drafting in the top 3 in a draft like this, you don’t just want the All-Star, you want the All-NBA player.

For Jazz fans, it’s easy to say who you would pick, but when the pressure is on come draft night, and they have to submit their pick, that choice gets really hard, and that pressure might be daunting. All we can hope is that the Jazz have done their homework and will make the best possible choice.

NYC abuzz as thousands celebrate Knicks’ stunning Game 4 victory — flooding streets, bars, bodegas: ‘Electrifying’

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Fans cheer while watching the NY Knicks game 4 of the NBA Finals on an outdoor screen, Image 2 shows New York Knicks fans celebrate their team's Game 4 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals, Image 3 shows OG Anunoby tipping the basketball into the hoop

New York City was buzzing Wednesday night as Knicks fans rejoiced in bars, bodegas, watch parties, city streets, and their own living rooms across the five boroughs after the team’s stunning comeback to win Game 4 — with the NBA championship now just one victory away.

The Knicks stormed back in the second half with the biggest comeback in NBA Finals history to steal Game 4 at Madison Square Garden with a 107-106 win and take a 3-1 series lead over the Spurs.

The Big Apple became one big celebration following the orange and blue’s miraculous rally within the final seconds to clinch the game.

New York City erupted Wednesday night as Knicks fans celebrated in bars, bodegas and streets across the five boroughs after the team’s stunning Game 4 comeback — putting them one win from the NBA title. AFP via Getty Images

New Yorkers set off fireworks, erupted in booming cheers and chants of “Knicks in Five,” crazily honked, hugged each other, danced in the streets and sang in the subways.

“It was electrifying. Oh my God, words can’t describe it,” Frederick Cassie, 21, of Flatbush, told The Post outside Midtown bar Lady Wilde’s. “This was historical.”

The feeling was electric in all corners of the city.

One joyous fan climbed up the pole of a bus stop sign on Seventh Avenue and did a backflip off it to raucous cheers from hundreds in the street. In Central Park, complete strangers huddled beside each other while watching the game on cellphones. Staten Island’s skies erupted in fireworks, while crowds lined up on Smith Street in Carroll Gardens, chanting “OG, OG, OG!” in reference to Knicks player OG Anunoby’s dramatic game-winning shot.

“Anything can happen in a New York Minute. What the F just happened? Knicks in six,” said Randy Sanchez, 28, from the Hudson Valley.

Fans watch the NY Knicks game 4 of the NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs outside of Healthy Market on Wednesday, June 10, 2026 in New York City. Michael Nagle for NY Post
Fans celebrate at Herald Square after the Knicks’ historic comeback. Jennifer Bain
New Yorkers set off fireworks, erupted in booming cheers and chants of “Knicks in Five,” crazily honked, hugged each other, danced in the streets and sang in the subways. William C Lopez/NY Post
Fans during Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 10, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. NBAE via Getty Images

“I feel so great right now. I’m actually so lit. 
This is amazing. I can’t wait for the next game,” Layla David, 19, said outside the Central Park watch party.

The Knicks can clinch their first NBA title since 1973 with a victory Saturday in San Antonio.

“After tonight, I’m convinced that game five, we are taking it, they’re gonna win in San Antonio, and they’re gonna bring that championship trophy back to New York City, and that parade is gonna be insane,” James Egiziaco, 44, said. “And I’m taking off of work, and I’m gonna be there.”

New York Knicks fans celebrate outside Madison Square Garden after their team’s Game 4 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals in New York on June 10, 2026. AFP via Getty Images
OG Anunoby’s tip-in with 1.2 seconds remaining propelled the Knicks to a historic 107-106 comeback win over the Spurs in Game 4 of the NBA Finals on June 10, 2026, at the Garden. ESPN
Timothee Chalamet celebrates after Game Four of the 2026 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and the New York Knicks on June 10, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. NBAE via Getty Images
NYPD makes arrests on 8th Avenue. Fans outside Madison Square Garden as the New York Knicks host the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 of the NBA Finals. Aristide Economopoulos for NY Post

Madison Square Garden remained packed after Game 4 ended with hometown fanatics too thrilled to leave the arena, clips showed.

“It was the largest comeback ever. If any team could do it, the New York Knicks can. They’re going to win the championship,” Tommy Connors, 19, of Queens, said a few blocks up from the Garden. “Wemby [San Antonio villain Victory Wembanyama] folded under pressure. He couldn’t handle the Garden. He’s crying right now.”

For longtime Knicks faithful, the historic win was even more special.

Madison Square Garden remained packed after Game 4 ended with hometown fanatics too thrilled to leave the arena, clips showed. Anadolu via Getty Images
The Big Apple became one big celebration following the orange and blue’s miraculous rally within the final seconds to clinch the game. Aristide Economopoulos for NY Post
Taylor Swift and actress Mariska Hargitay react on celebrity row with Ben Stiller nd his wife Christine Taylor during the fourth quarter. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

“I’ve been a fan since ’92. We haven’t won a championship since ’93. This day is a day in history,” Steven St. Pierre, a 40-year-old actor and filmmaker. “We are here to witness it. Let’s go next. Jalen Brunson, the king of New York — he’s getting a statue outside the Garden. Let’s talk about it. Let’s go.”

The Knicks will face the Spurs in San Antonio on Saturday for the chance to win the finals once and for all.

“I’m honored to be a Knicks fan. I love this team. I love this city,” Marco Pace, 18, said. “This was the most truly inspiring game.”

Jaylen Brown, the basketball world and even WWE's Danhausen react to Knicks' historic Game 4 win: 'OG Anunoby is different'

The talk of the basketball world -- and if we're being honest, the sports world -- was on Game 4 between the Knicks and Spurs, especially after the way it ended.

New York completed their miraculous 29-point comeback to take a commanding 3-1 series lead in the NBA Finals. Of course, the highlight of the night was OG Anunoby's flying tip-in with less than two seconds remaining to give the Knicks a one-point lead that they would hold on to.

And with such a momentous game, social media blew up with reactions on the win, including from former, current and future players from around the NBA....

Knicks-mania has even seeped into the WWE with Paul Heyman and Danhausen -- who uncursed the team earlier in the postseason -- chiming in. 

Victor Wembanyama blames ‘greediness’ on Spurs’ Game 4 demise

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama, Image 2 shows San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama #1 defends against New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson #11 during the second quarter
Knicks

Victor Wembanyama was almost at a loss for words after the Spurs blew a 29-point third-quarter lead as the Knicks moved one win away from an NBA title. 

The Spurs big man and NBA Defensive Player of the Year had a hard time trying to explain what happened in Game 4. The Spurs scored just 30 points in the second half, and Wembanyama was held to just eight over the final two quarters in a 107-106 loss. 

Wembanyama, 22, also missed a pair of free throws late in the game with the Spurs clinging to a one-point lead with a little less than two minutes on the clock. 

San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama defends against New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson during the second quarter of NBA Finals Game 4 on June 10, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“Can’t really explain it right now,” he said bluntly. “It’s just execution. Greediness, of some sort. We clearly weren’t the hungriest in the second half.”

Wemby and the Spurs were dominant early on, going into halftime with a 27-point lead. The big man scored 16 points on 6-of-11 shooting. 

Even late in the game, the Spurs kept the Knicks at bay, leading by 17 points with less than nine minutes to go. 

According to NBA researcher Jacob Kaye, no team had ever won a game trailing by 17 or more points in the final nine minutes of regulation of an NBA Finals game since 1970-71. 

San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama said “greediness” hurt his team during an epic collapse. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

That was, until the Knicks came along on Wednesday night. 

“It was painful, of course,” Wembanyama said about the emotions of walking off the court. “It feels like we worked too hard to give up our leads. It’s as simple as that. It just hurts.” 

The Spurs will have two days before they return to the court for Game 5 on Saturday night. 

The series shifts back to San Antonio with the Knicks on the verge of capturing their first NBA championship since 1973.

Knicks' Jose Alvarado showcases talent on national stage in Game 4: 'He’s a big time player'

Just looking at his stat sheet, Jose Alvarado wouldn’t stand out as having a huge impact on the Knicks in their 107-106 win over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday night.

But the game is played on the court, not on a piece of paper, and Alvarado’s contributions to his team on Wednesday were enough to make head coach Mike Brown give him a round of applause during his postgame news conference.

“Jose was unbelievable tonight. He changed the game,” Brown said. “His speed, his ability to touch the paint… if you don’t close out to Jose, as hard as he works on his shot, he’s gonna make you pay. If you close out to him, he’s quick enough to go by you and he made some great basketball plays offensively tonight. And then he was great defensively.”

Alvarado ended his night with eight points on 3-for-4 from the field (2-for-3 from deep) while adding three assists and two rebounds in 16 minutes off the bench. It was the most action the point guard has received during the playoffs and it came while New York was trailing and chipping away at its deficit.

Some of those minutes also came in the fourth quarter and were big minutes with the Knicks making their comeback attempt in a historic win. And even though Alvarado has been a solid player for New York since being traded during the regular season, most of his playing time has come either earlier in the game or with his team up big to give some of the stars some rest.

This time, Alvarado was right there alongside starters Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and OG Anunoby in the final seconds of the game and spoke about playing in the fourth quarter of a tightly-contested NBA Finals game.

“Playing in the fourth quarter, that’s something, when you play this game, that’s when you want to play at,” he said. “Shout out to our bench… we all stepped up when our number was called and I’m glad we got the job done today.”

On a national stage, Alvarado was able to showcase what his teammates and the Knicks have already known for a while: that he’s a player who plays with energy, passion and love for the game.

As a Knicks fan growing up in Brooklyn, Alvarado’s coming out party happened in a game that New York won on an epic Anunoby tip-in, which was even more special for the 28-year-old who went undrafted out of college. He even said he almost started to cry after he saw the game-winner go in because it meant so much to him.

“Just to be part of the journey is amazing,” Alvarado said. “I appreciate coach [Brown] and everybody giving me my flowers, but this is what I worked hard for, to be in moments like this and it’s showing. I’m glad we got a win today and I’ll definitely remember this for the rest of my life.”

Alvarado getting the golden opportunity and running with it doesn’t come as a surprise to his teammates, who clearly love and respect him since he joined the team, not only because of his talent, but because of his hustle and the emotion he plays with every day.

In a sense, Alvarado embodies the city of New York as perfectly as anybody else on the team.

“He’s a special player,” Towns said. “His tenacity, his defensive ability and his offensive ability that I got to see first-hand… He has so much to his basketball game that people don’t give credit to and I’m glad at this stage and like this he was able to show the world what he can do when he’s given a chance. 

“Jose Alvarado literally told everybody in the world tonight he’s a big time player.”

How Knicks flipped the script on the ‘fluke’ that put NBA Finals at risk

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows The Knicks defend Stephon Castle on the final possession of the game, Image 2 shows San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) goes up a shot as New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11), New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23), and New York Knicks forward Og Anunoby (8) triple team him during the fourth quarter
Knicks defense steps up in Game 4

After Game 3, the Knicks stressed that their defensive shortcomings, in particular missing assignments and not being as connected, had to be corrected. 

It took them a half, but they found their defensive mojo in time. 

After getting tattooed for 76 first-half points, the Knicks shut down the Spurs over the final 24 minutes, keying the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history, a hard-to-believe 107-106 victory. Over the last 6:24, they held the Spurs to seven points, moving to within one win of their first championship in 53 years. 

“Really, we didn’t change much. We basically kept the same game plan,” coach Mike Brown said. “But defensively, we just did it [better] for longer stretches, and we were really in tune to what we were supposed to be doing. Our level of physicality increased without sending them to the free-throw line as well, which is huge.” 

The Knicks defend Stephon Castle on the final possession of the game. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

San Antonio put on a shooting display in the first half, making 14 3-pointers in 26 attempts. Some of it was impressive shot-making, but a lot of it was the Knicks’ inability to defend the Spurs. There were so many open looks from deep, partly due to the Knicks overcommitting to Victor Wembanyama. But their inability to stop the ball was particularly evident. The Spurs had 17 assists in the first half and plenty of balance, four players scoring at least 13 points. 

“We needed to show them that first half was a fluke,” Jose Alvarado said. 

The Knicks surround Victor Wembenyama on defense. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

They certainly did. The second half was a vastly different story. The Spurs were limited to 30 points, committed nine turnovers and shot 3-for-17 from 3-point range. 

“Our contests were better, just 1 percent better,” OG Anunoby said. “Getting out faster and then finishing possessions with rebounds.” 

The Knicks did it with a small lineup, Alvarado in the backcourt with Jalen Brunson for a good chunk of the fourth quarter. Wembanyana missed 11 of 14 shots, and was held to eight points. San Antonio only had four points in the paint after halftime. 

“That’s unreal, and doing that especially in the fourth quarter,” Josh Hart said, referring to the defensive effort over the final two periods. “We were able to get stops without fouling, and that fueled our offense.”