Game Five Preview: San Antonio Spurs vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 24: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs celebrates during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Game Four of the NBA Western Conference Finals on May 24, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Everything is tied up heading into Game Five of the Western Conference Finals. The San Antonio Spurs played stout defense against the Oklahoma City Thunder on their way to a 103-82 victory in Game Four. Now the Spurs need to win two of the next three games, including one on the road, to reach the NBA Finals for the first time since 2014.

San Antonio made a major adjustment in the Game Four win. The Spurs doubled Shai Gilgeous-Alexander early and often in the first three games of the series. That may have neutralized SGA’s impact to an extent, but it also led to more open shots for the Thunder’s role players. In Game Four, the Spurs guarded Gilgeous-Alexander 1-on-1 and sent light help on drives. The result was a 19-point game for SGA and a 6-33 night from deep for OKC.

The playoffs are all about adjustments and counter-adjustments. The Thunder will certainly come out with a solution to San Antonio’s defense. They’ll have to do it without key ball-handlers. Ajay Mitchell is out with a calf strain, and Jalen Williams is questionable as he deals with his hamstring injury.

Every playoff game is a “must-win,” but Game Five feels particularly important. Defeating a shorthanded OKC squad on the road with two chances to clinch the series would put the Spurs in a strong position to advance to the Finals. They’ll need another dominant defensive performance to steal Game Five on the road.

San Antonio Spurs (2-2) vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (2-2)

May 26th, 2026 | 7:30 PM CT

Watch: NBC / Peacock | Listen: WOAI (1200 AM)

Spurs Injuries: No injuries to report.

Thunder Injuries: Thomas Sorber – Out (knee), Ajay Mitchell – Out (calf), Jalen Williams – Questionable (hamstring)

What to watch for:

Interior scoring

The Spurs outscored the Thunder in the paint 50-36 in Game Four. So far in the playoffs, if San Antonio can control the battle on the interior, they typically can win the game. The Thunder have been good at keeping Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs’ guards from dominating inside. In Game Four, Wembanyama was able to score through or over Isaiah Hartenstein and Chet Holmgren, while the guards did a better job getting downhill, particularly in the pick-and-roll. Outscoring the Thunder inside again will be crucial to winning Game Five.

Limiting turnovers

The best part about having De’Aaron Fox back in the lineup is the calming presence he brings alongside Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper. San Antonio has been much better at valuing possessions since Fox returned to the lineup in Game Three. The Spurs had just 13 turnovers in Game Four. OKC is at its best when it can create turnovers and score easy buckets in transition. San Antonio’s defense is already suffocating enough. They can’t give the Thunder breaks by turning the ball over and letting them get easy shots.

Champagnie’s shooting

Julian Champagnie has been ice-cold in the Conference Finals. He’s shooting 19.4% from three-point range in the series. San Antonio desperately needs him to start hitting shots. The Thunder have loaded up on Wembanyama and the Spurs’ guards. Devin Vassell has taken advantage of the lack of defensive attention. If Champagnie can follow suit, San Antonio’s offense could be set for an explosion in Game Five.

Knicks reach NBA Finals for first time in 27 years

The New York Knicks reached the NBA Finals for the first time in 27 years with a commanding 130-93 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Knicks continued their fine form as they swept the best-of-seven Eastern Conference finals 4-0 and extended their franchise record play-off win streak to 11 games.

Karl-Anthony Towns led the Knicks' scoring with 19 points and 14 rebounds, while the series' Most Valuable Player Jalen Brunson added 15.

The Knicks, whose only NBA titles came in 1970 and 1973, last reached the NBA Finals in 1999 when they lost 4-1 against the San Antonio Spurs.

Brunson, 29, was just two years old at the time, but his father Rick - who is now an assistant coach at the franchise - was a guard on the team.

"It means a lot, but I wouldn't be here without my team-mates, the belief they had in me," said Brunson.

"They give me the confidence. They let me be me. Most importantly, we all believe in each other from top to bottom. It's an honour to play with them."

The Knicks will face either defending champions Oklahoma City Thunder or the Spurs in next month's showpiece, with the teams tied at 2-2 in the Western Conference finals.

Landry Shamet, who scored 16 points and netted all four of his three-pointer attempts, said his side are remaining focused on the "larger goal" rather than dwelling on their victory over the Cavaliers.

"We've got four more wins to try and go get and we know it's going to be even harder. Being in this position with this team, it's pretty special," he said.

If the Knicks continue their unbeaten run and sweep the finals, they will equal the NBA's record play-off win streak of 15 set by the Golden State Warriors in 2017.

The Knicks ended the first quarter with an 8-0 run and began the second with 12 unanswered points to lead 50-26.

Shamet's third three-pointer later put the Knicks 61-32 up and they never looked back, overwhelming the Cavs after half-time with 22 turnovers.

Donovan Mitchell top-scored for the Cavs with 31 points.

Game five of the Western Conference finals takes place on Tuesday (01:30 BST Wednesday).

The New York Knicks celebrate winning the Eastern Conference Finals
The New York Knicks are hoping to win their third NBA title [Getty Images]

Jalen Brunson left humbled by series MVP honor as Knicks reach Finals: ‘Don’t take for granted’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jalen Brunson wearing a New York Knicks cap, a gray

CLEVELAND — Four years later, nobody is questioning that $104 million contract the Knicks gave to Jalen Brunson.

Looking back now, it was a bargain.

Brunson has the Larry Bird Trophy, given to the MVP of the Eastern Conference finals, as proof.

In his fourth postseason as a Knick, Brunson led the franchise back to the NBA Finals for the first time in 27 years, capped by their emphatic series sweep of the Cavaliers on Monday night.

Getty Images

“The belief that the organization has in me has been amazing, and something I don’t take for granted, and something not a lot of people get the opportunity to do,” Brunson said after notching 15 points and five assists in the 130-93 clincher over the Cavaliers in Game 4. “So I’m very thankful. It’s an honor to be here in this city for this organization with my teammates.”

Brunson set the tone in the series opener, exploding for 38 points and rallying the Knicks from a 22-point fourth-quarter deficit. Overall, he averaged 25.5 points and 7.8 assists in the sweep.

Brunson has changed so much for the Knicks during a short period. In the 21 years before his arrival, they won just a single playoff series. Since his arrival, they have claimed seven and will pursue their first championship since 1973 starting next week, against either the Spurs or Thunder.

Before the game, coach Mike Brown was asked if Brunson’s leadership reminds him of anyone he had coached, and he didn’t hesitate: Tim Duncan and Stephen Curry.

Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) reacts in the third quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers. Ken Blaze-Imagn Images
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“The aura that those guys have, the quiet strength that they have, is unbelievable,” Brown said.

High praise for the Knicks captain — praise he has earned since he joined the franchise four years ago this summer. 

Knicks' journey to NBA Finals a testament to Leon Rose's determination, decision-making

CLEVELAND - In some ways, it’s fitting that Leon Rose and the Knicks are headed to the NBA Finals after knocking out Donovan Mitchell and the Cavaliers. 

Rose’s decision to pass on trading for Mitchell was one of the biggest pivot points of this Knicks era. 

Remember: New York had the draft picks and the personnel to obtain Mitchell from Utah. But Rose ultimately decided that he didn’t want to meet Danny Ainge’s asking price. 

At the time, it was a controversial decision. 

In hindsight, it’s one of several pivotal choices by Rose that helped the Knicks ascend to the NBA Finals. 

Instead of trading a package centered around RJ Barrett for Mitchell, Rose and his group moved Barrett, Immanuel Quickley and a second round pick to Toronto for OG Anunoby.

Anunoby has been one of the best players in the postseason. He had 17 points, seven rebounds, four assists and two steals in the Knicks’ closeout win over Cleveland on Monday

Instead of using multiple first-round picks to acquire Mitchell, Rose sent most of his draft capital to Brooklyn in a trade for Mikal Bridges

Rose took a ton of criticism for the trade, particularly when the Knicks had a chance to acquire Giannis Antetokounmpo the following summer. 

So, of course, Bridges made play after play on the defensive end throughout the postseason. He also found ways to attack within the flow of the Knick offense. He and Anunoby have peaked at the best possible time. 

If they’d traded for Mitchell, there’s virtually no way they would have signed Donte DiVincenzo the next summer. And without DiVincenzo, the Knicks would’ve needed to use more draft capital to acquire Karl-Anthony Towns from Minnesota. 

This was another trade that was criticized and questioned, but Towns on Monday hit 8-of-11 shots and grabbed 14 rebounds. 

The Cavs cut the Knick lead to 16 at one point in the third quarter. Towns then went to work, blocking a shot on one end and then knocking down a three-pointer on the other end. Anunoby found Bridges for a wide-open three on the Knicks’ next possession. 

That sequence took the life out of any Cleveland comeback. 

Shortly after the trophy presentation, Rose spent a quiet moment with his family. Like the rest of the Knicks, Rose seemed to see Monday’s win as a major accomplishment -- but not one worth a raucous celebration. 

Maybe that celebration will come in a couple weeks, but the fact that the Knicks are where they are today -- preparing for a trip to the NBA Finals -- is a testament to Rose’s determination and decision-making. 

A few weeks ago, the Knicks executive did not receive a vote from his peers for the Executive of the Year award. It’s a regular-season award, and the Knicks had an uneven regular season. 

But if you took another vote today, the results would look much different. Rose would probably be at or near the top, which is where his Knicks sit after this remarkable playoff run.  

Knicks peaking at perfect time in playoffs as trip to NBA Finals a culmination of hard work paying off

The road to get here wasn’t always easy, but the Knicks are headed to their first NBA Finals since 1999 after sweeping the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals on Monday night, and they are peaking at just the right time.

After going down 2-1 to the Hawks in the first round, New York has rattled off 11 straight wins and has a +272 point-differential over that span. It’s been one of the most dominant stretches not just in Knicks history, but NBA history, and it all starts with head coach Mike Brown who saw his team start playing a this version of basketball towards the end of the regular season.

“Down the stretch, like 6 or 7 games to go, after Landry [Shamet] got back, I started to see us play some good basketball and do more things that were selfless or more sacrificing from the group,” Brown said. “Throughout the course of the season you have your ups and you have your downs, and you have your good and your bad and your adversity that you have to fight through. Sometimes we got through it quickly, sometimes it took us a minute to figure it out.”

The trials and tribulations that the Knicks have faced not just this season but in postseason’s past where they got close to their final destination but couldn’t get over the hump has prepared them for this moment. 

Even Brown, in his first season in New York, saw that the team had what it takes to get the job done.

“From afar, I just felt that this team was ready,” he said. “And I’m just thrilled to death that Mr. Dolan gave me an opportunity and Leon Rose gave me an opportunity to be a head coach again, especially here in New York.”

Brown had been a head coach for the Sacramento Kings for two full seasons and helped turn the franchise around before getting fired in the middle of last season. 

He’s also no stranger to reaching the finals as he was an assistant coach with the Golden State Warriors for six seasons at the height of their dynasty. Therefore, he knows what it takes to finish the job and has been doing what he can to set his players up for success.

“Our group is playing good basketball and they’re doing it in different ways,” Brown said. “They’re doing it differently, depending on who our opponent is and when you show that type of versatility on both ends of the floor, it adds to your belief. 

“I’ve said it before, you use the regular season to get ready for the postseason and our guys did a hell of a job with that.”

“This team is hungry and that’s the most important thing,” added Karl-Anthony Towns. “Even with an amazing, historical win we had tonight, the celebrations were minimal. We really want to get back to work. [We] asked coach can we get back to work quick.”

While the Knicks will and certainly deserve to celebrate their incredible accomplishment of reaching their first NBA finals in more than two decades, they know their ultimate goal is still out there.

However, it’s now within their grasps and closer than it’s ever been for them.

“It feels good. We’re excited, we’re happy we won, but we’re also not satisfied,” said OG Anunoby. “We’re gonna celebrate tonight, but then once tomorrow comes, start resting and preparing for the next round.”

If New York is able to defeat either the San Antonio Spurs or the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, it’ll be the franchise’s first championship since 1973. But the way they’re playing right now – the best they’ve played all season – the Knicks should be considered the favorites.

“We’ve gotten to this point because we worked together, we’ve been a team, we’ve been unified,” Towns said. “The collective group has shown up in spots when we need to.”

Walt Frazier, Spike Lee see Knicks as ‘team of destiny’ with shades of 1970s glory days

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Walt Frazier and Jalen Brunson present the Eastern Conference Championship trophy to Jalen Brunson, Image 2 shows Spike Lee in a New York Knicks bucket hat and jacket at a basketball game

CLEVELAND — These Knicks remind Clyde Frazier and Spike Lee of the versions in the 1970s.

So to no surprise, both are predicting an end to the 53-year championship drought — regardless of whether the opponent is the Thunder or Spurs.

“The way we’re playing now, I don’t think it matters who we play,” Frazier said after the Knicks beat the Cavs 130-93 on Monday, advancing to their first NBA Finals since 1999. “Their suffocating defense, the ball movement. [Coach Mike] Brown came in wanting to run pace and space. But that was one thing they didn’t do. Now the last 11 games, the way they’re getting up and down the court, Bridges, Hart, they’re just moving and grooving.”

Walt Frazier presents the Eastern Conference Championship trophy to Jalen Brunson of the New York Knicks after the game against the Cleveland Cavaliers during Game Four of the 2026 Eastern Conference Finals. NBAE via Getty Images

Lee, the original Knicks celebrity superfan, offered similar analysis of a team that has captured a franchise record 11 consecutive playoff games. They steamrolled the Eastern Conference.

“I don’t care about San Antonio. OKC. We’re going to win. May 8, 1970 [the first Knicks championship]. I was at the Willis Reed game. Thirteen years old,” Lee said. “So going to keep it going. This is a team of destiny, heart, drive. … It reminds me of Willis, Dave DeBusschere, Bill Bradley, Dick Barnett, Cazzie Russell. I’m going back. I’m old, though.”

Frazier, arguably the greatest Knick in history, fittingly handed the conference finals MVP trophy to Jalen Brunson on Monday. It was a passing-the-torch moment alongside another Knicks legend, Patrick Ewing.

Spike Lee looks on after the New York Knicks win the 2026 NBA Eastern Conference Championship NBAE via Getty Images

But as Frazier explained, the job’s not finished.

“It’s been a long time. Carrying on a tradition. Passing it down to Jalen so he’s the guy now who has to carry it,” Frazier said. “But you got to capitalize when you get there. So we’re going to stay on him. As Red Holzman would tell us at this point, ‘Hey, Clyde, we haven’t won nothing yet.’ ”

Landry Shamet’s playoffs have taken a complete turn since benching

New York Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) slamming the ball during the third quarter.
Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) slams the ball during the third quarter.

CLEVELAND — Remember when Landry Shamet was buried on the bench?

That feels like another universe.

He drilled all four 3-pointers he took and recorded 16 points in the Knicks’ 130-93 Game 4 beatdown of the Cavaliers on Monday night at Rocket Arena that secured their place in the NBA Finals. He was at the heart of a 58-24 advantage in bench points that the Knicks had.

Across the last six games — Games 3 and 4 of the second round against the 76ers and all four games of this conference finals — Shamet went an incredible 17-for-21 from 3-point range.

“Landry Shamet has continued,” coach Mike Brown said, “to step up big on both ends of the floor.”

Shamet entered the postseason entrenched in Brown’s rotation, but his struggles early in the first round prompted Brown to elevate Jose Alvarado over him. Shamet then exclusively played garbage time until Games 3 and 4 of the second round, when OG Anunoby’s absence due to a hamstring strain reopened the door for him.

Shamet took the opportunity and ran with it.

Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) slams the ball during the third quarter. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

He played a pivotal role in the historic 22-point comeback in Game 1 of these conference finals, drilling three critical 3-pointers in the fourth quarter and overtime. That comeback set the tone for the series and crushed the Cavs’ soul.


Jalen Brunson did not play a single minute of any of the Knicks’ three closeout games.

Brown was able to pull his starters and empty the bench for pretty much all of Monday’s blowout, just like he did in Game 6 of the first round and Game 4 of the second round.

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Karl-Anthony Towns used a personal snub as a chance to praise the overall team.

Towns was not named to any of the All-NBA teams despite his critical role on a team that just secured its place in the Finals. It meant the Knicks had just one player — Brunson — on the three All-NBA teams. Brunson made the second team.

“I think it talks more about our team, you know? That we’re selfless, and we’re willing to do whatever it takes for the development of our team and organization, and winning,” Towns said. “Like you said, you brought up a lot of, I guess, stats and things like that, but it just shows that it’s a collective effort getting the job done every single night in New York, and it speaks volumes to this team.”

Knicks continue to take care of business, show killer instinct in closeout games

Closeout games are the hardest games to win. 

Home or on the road, your opponent is desperate trying to keep their season alive. 

For the 2026 Knicks, though, they continue to be no sweat.

New York has dominated their opponents in general throughout the playoffs, but they’ve been especially stellar when given a chance to send their opponent packing. 

First it was the Hawks in Atlanta, then the 76ers in Philly. 

And on Tuesday night the Cavaliers became the latest team to fall victim, as the Knicks rolled through Game 4 in Cleveland to closeout the Eastern Conference Finals sweep. 

They did so yet again in dominant fashion, establishing an early lead which they never looked back from, en route to a 37-point laugher that saw the benches empties early in the fourth quarter. 

With that, the 2026 Knicks became the first team in NBA history to win three closeout games by 30+ points.

Their average margin of victory of 39.3 points is also an NBA record. 

“We don’t want to leave any doubt,” Miles McBride said. “We just want to come out and handle our business.”

“We’ve been playing hard and mixing in a little luck,” Jalen Brunson added. “But most importantly, we’ve been coming in focused and are just locked in on the moment.”

That next moment for them will be the opener of the NBA Finals -- a place the franchise hasn't been since 1999. 

The scalding hot Knicks will be looking to come home victorious for the first time in 53 years. 

Mariners win battle of piggyback starters against A’s, 9-2

SACRAMENTO, CA - MAY 25: Luis Castillo #58 of the Seattle Mariners reacts during the game between the Seattle Mariners and the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on Monday, May 25, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Don Collier/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The piggyback situation remains an uncomfortable – and I would argue, untenable – situation for Luis Castillo and Bryce Miller, but both of them pitched through that tonight and did their jobs, pitching all nine innings without touching the bullpen, giving up two runs (both Miller’s) with a combined 10 strikeouts to just two walks (both Castillo’s). Meanwhile, the offense jumped on A’s starter Aaron Civale, lighting him up for six runs in one inning alone en route to a 9-2 series-opening win.

The box score for today’s game says “Wind, 18 mph” and where it would normally say a direction instead just says “varies.” Seems rude to ask Luis Castillo to both step into a new role and be all four of the Anemoi, but this is just another thing The Rock must absorb with dignity and grace. The wind early in this game was enough to shake the center field camera significantly and provide a uniquely unpleasant viewing experience that had me reaching for Dramamine (or at least hum the Modest Mouse song). Initially it seemed like it might be affecting Castillo, who walked his leadoff hitter on some fairly significant misses, but was able to lock things down after that, as he did for the rest of his outing.

Meanwhile, the Mariners were able to finally stack up some runs using their (almost) fully-operational lefty lineup. Lefties are hitting almost .300 off Aaron Civale this year, and after getting some traffic on early, the Mariners were able to finally break through in the third during the lefty-heavy portion of their programming. Colt Emerson, continuing to show maturity at the plate, led off with a five-pitch walk and then moved to third on a Julio Rodríguez single. Civale leaned heavily on his cutter, as he did last year, but the Mariners hitters seemed ready for it – Civale had struck out Julio on the cutter in the first inning, and tried to go to it again on the single, but Julio was able to adjust. Josh Naylor knocked Emerson home on a would-be double play that was luckily mishandled by the A’s infield to give the Mariners their first run of the game, and Randy Arozarena pounced on a first-pitch curveball for a double – also mishandled by Carlos Cortes in the outfield, allowing Naylor to score. How fun when it’s not the Mariners making defensive miscues and instead punishing other teams for theirs.

Civale then tried to get a first-pitch cutter past Luke Raley, who intercepted the pitch at the bottom of the zone and squeaked it over the right field fence to double up the Mariners lead – “squeaking” not being a way we’re used to referring to Raley homers, but we’ll take it. Cole Young followed that up by doubling on a splitter, poking it down the right field line, and then Dom Canzone saw a first-pitch fastball to his liking for a decisive homer to right-center, opening up a 6-0 advantage.

It’s a good thing the Mariners built Castillo that cushion because the bottom of the third started with some patented Sutter Home Park Silliness as nine-hole hitter Darell Hernaiz got a leadoff “double” on a ball that first got grabbed by the wind and then bounced in the outfield like an eight year old at a trampoline park birthday party. Castillo, to his credit, cleaned things up and didn’t let that runner score. Carlos Cortes, who is Annoying, hit a ball hard but not home run distance, enough to move Hernaiz to third. Castillo then pitched carefully to Nick Kurtz, walking him, but was able to attack the other head of the monster in Shea Langeliers, getting him to expand off the plate for a swinging strike three on a fastball. He then got Brent Rooker on three pitches, none of which were on the plate, as Rooker continues on a rough start to the season.

In the fourth, J.P. Crawford accidentally made himself the story of the inning, hitting a solo shot to make it 7-0 but throwing the ball away on what should have been an easy groundout to open the bottom of the inning. Once again, Castillo was forced into cleanup duty, striking out rookie centerfielder Henry Bolte looking, getting my personal enemy Jeff McNeil to pop out, and then striking out Zack Gelof looking on a pitch that was probably outside a hair but since the A’s were already down to one challenge, went unchallenged.

The Mariners’ early onslaught of runs forced the A’s into their own piggyback situation, bringing out Jack Perkins as their own second starter, but the real storyline here wasn’t on the field but in the Mariners dugout, as Dan Wilson was seen deep in conversation with Luis Castillo, who looked visibly displeased to be told he would be departing the game in order for Bryce Miller to come in. Considering Luis defeated the A’s hitters, the haunted tuna can of Sutter Health Park, the wind, and his own infield defense, it seems only fair he’d be given a win for that outing. But with the lineup turning over, Wilson opted to go to Miller.

Miller, presenting a completely different set of looks to the A’s hitters, was able to work the back five of the game, allowing Dan Wilson to keep his bullpen in bubble wrap for another day. A brief moment here to also appreciate catcher Jhonny Pereda, who had to prepare for two different starters in this game with two vastly different arsenals.- during Miller’s first hitter Pereda had to burn a mound visit after Miller shook him three times in succession – but guided his two starters through the game. Miller came out throwing hard although slightly less hard than his last outing, touching 98.2 in his first inning of work before settling in at 96.5. The standout for Miller today was his splitter, which looked sharper than his last outing; three of his four strikeouts were on the pitch. Miller was also mostly successful throwing his slider, although he did hang one to Langeliers for a homer for the A’s first run of the day in the eighth.

But Randy Arozarena got that run back plus one, finally getting to Perkins in the ninth with two outs, scoring Naylor, on base with a Naylor Special (a base hit to left off a pitch up and away).

The A’s would claw one more back off Miller off a couple of objectively stupid hits as the A’s were in swing mode down big in the ninth. Tyler Soderstrom led off with a double on a curve that he didn’t hit so much as vaudeville hook into left, then advanced to third on an infield hit. A run did score when Jeff McNeil grounded into a double play – niftily handled by Naylor, who managed to both tag speedy rookie Henry Bolte and touch first before McNeil creaked his way down there, setting up a game-ending strikeout of Zach Gelof. Since Miller didn’t get the glamor of being the opener this time, we’ll give him the honor of closing out the recap – just don’t look too carefully at the win dance, which is a little messy; appropriate, given the situation.

Timothée Chalamet’s epic Knicks celebration includes includes Leon Rose embrace: ‘Motherf–king Finals’

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Timothée Chalamet, Kylie Jenner, and Tracy Morgan watching a basketball game, Image 2 shows Spike Lee, Al Palagonia, and Timothée Chalamet celebrate the New York Knicks advancing to the 2026 NBA Finals, Image 3 shows New York Knicks president Leon Rose and Timothée Chalamet celebrate on the floor after the Knicks advanced to the 2026 NBA Finals

Timothée Chalamet may be one of the biggest Hollywood A-listers on the planet at the moment, but the “Dune” actor was every Knicks fan on Monday night after the Knicks swept the Cavaliers to earn their first trip to the NBA Finals in 27 years. 

In images captured after the game by The Post’s photogs, Chalamet was spotted celebrating with Knicks president Leon Rose and taking a picture with him. 

In another photo, the actor was seen celebrating alongside fellow Knicks celeb superfan Spike Lee. 

The two posed for an Instagram Story photo earlier in the day, which was posted to Chalamet’s account. 

Knicks president Leon Rose and Timothée Chalamet celebrate on the floor after the Knicks advance to the 2026 NBA Finals.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

In other scenes from the postgame celebration, video showed Chalamet sharing a moment with Mikal Bridges, calling him “The GOAT.” 

“Bro, I got your jersey in my house,” Chalamet could be heard telling him. 

In another moment, he dapped up Jalen Brunson and called him “the king.”

He posted a photo to his Instagram Stories of the team receiving the East trophy with the caption: Knicks to the motherf–king Finals Thats It.”

Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) is greeted by Timothe Chalamet on the floor after the Knicks advance to the 2026 NBA Finals. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Chalamet, who got an Eastern Conference championship hat, was among several Knicks VIPs at Rocket Arena. 

Ben Stiller, Tracy Morgan, Fat Joe, Patrick Ewing and Walt “Clyde” Frazier were on hand for the historic Knicks moment on Monday. 

Chalamet’s girlfriend, Kylie Jenner, also made the trip to Cleveland for the game and the two were photographed having a blast during the game, sitting next to Morgan. 

Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Knicks owner James Dolan was also there and was seen celebrating the victory with Lee. 

The Knicks embarrassed the Cavs on Monday night, holding a 33-9 advantage in fastbreak points and outscoring the Cavaliers 58-24 in bench points. 

Brunson, who was named Eastern Conference finals MVP, finished the night with 15 points on 6-of-14 shooting, while Karl-Anthony Towns had a team-high 19 points. 

Timothée Chalamet, left, Kylie Jenner, center, and Tracy Morgan watch the second half of Game 4 in the Eastern Conference finals. AP Photo/Tim Phillis
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The Knicks will now have some time before they start the NBA Finals, which are not scheduled to begin until June 3. 

The Knicks are also still waiting to find out who they will face, with the Spurs and Thunder series tied at two.

'I think we found something': James Harden wants to stay with Cavs

The Cleveland Cavaliers' season is over. A sweep in the Eastern Conference finals at the hands of the New York Knicks — capped off by a 37-point loss on their home floor, no less — is almost sure to bring a new level of scrutiny to a core that, while talented, has faltered time and time again in the playoffs.

One of the biggest questions facing the Cavs this summer will be James Harden and his impending $42.3 milion player option. But Harden, Cleveland's prized midseason acquisition, has already publicly said he's on board with coming back.

“Yes, 100%, definitely to both,” Harden told reporters after Game 4 when asked if he wants and expects to be in Cleveland next season. “Definitely want to be here. It’s tough ending it not how we wanted to, but I think we found something.”

A slow start to this season led to a blockbuster trade for James Harden from the Los Angeles Clippers at the deadline in February in exchange for point guard Darius Garland and a second-round draft pick. Harden, an 11-time All-Star, averaged 20.5 points, 7.7 assists and 4.8 rebounds in 26 regular season games with the Cavaliers but struggled down the stretch in the playoffs, something that has reared its head before in Harden's career.

In the four games against the Knicks this series, Harden failed to reach 20 points once. His statline in the decisive Game 4 was as flat as the energy the Cavs as a whole played with: 12 points on 2-of-8 shooting, four rebounds, two assists and five turnovers.

The blame didn't solely lie on Harden; the Cavaliers in general were outplayed and outclassed across the board in such a way that's sure to invite questions about this team's roster going forward.

But Harden made it a point to answer one of those questions early. So did Donovan Mitchell.

“I love it here,” Mitchell said after the game. “I don’t know how else to say it. I said it before I signed the other extension: I love it here. I have no doubt this group can get there. But reports are going to be reports and people are going to be people. I’ll say the same thing: we have unfinished business."

Mitchell's situation is a bit different as he's under contract through next season and has a player option for 2027-28. He is, however, eligible for an extension this offseason and if he doesn't look to re-sign, there's speculation that the Cavs could be open to trading him.

Cleveland has become a home for Mitchell since arriving from the Utah Jazz in the summer of 2022. He's been the face of their post-LeBron era since and after getting the Cavs to their furthest point since 2018, the seven-time All-Star is determined to see it through.

“It was great energy to see in the city when we got to the conference finals. Just to feel that, it was amazing," Mitchell said. "That’s why getting swept like this sucks because even driving in, people were going crazy. I love that. I love that about this place. The city deserves a ring and we just got to keep going.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: James Harden says he wants to stay with Cleveland Cavaliers

MLB Injury Report: Dylan Cease sidelined with hamstring strain, Cole Ragans pauses his return after setback

In this week’s Injury Report, the Blue Jays lose Dylan Cease for at least the next two weeks with a hamstring strain. Cole Ragans will shut things down after suffering a setback in his last rehab outing. And Logan Webb appears on track to return by this weekend. All that and more as we look into all the latest relevant injury news around baseball.

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Dylan Cease (hamstring)

Cease’s start against the Pirates was cut short on Sunday as he departed in the fifth inning with left hamstring discomfort. The team placed him on the 15-day injured list on Monday with a left hamstring strain, sidelining him for at least the next two weeks. There’s no clear timeline yet, but the hope is that Cease will be ready to return when first eligible in early June.

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Cole Ragans (elbow)

Ragans made a rehab start with Triple-A Omaha on Saturday, giving up one run over 4 1/3 innings while reaching 68 pitches. While he pitched well, manager Matt Quatraro told reporters he “didn’t bounce back well” following the outing. Ragans is apparently feeling the same elbow discomfort that landed him on the injured list. He’ll be shut down from throwing for a few days before he’s reevaluated. It’s not the most promising development, but we hope to learn more about Ragans’ status by the end of the week.

Hunter Brown (shoulder)

We got more encouraging news regarding Brown, who responded well enough in his last batting practice session to begin a rehab assignment. He made a start with Double-A Corpus Cristi on Sunday, striking out five over two scoreless innings. Brown reached 35 pitches and reportedly hit 98 mph on the fastball. The 27-year-old right-hander needs a couple more rehab outings to build up his pitch count, the next of which will come with Triple-A Sugar Land. Barring any setbacks, he appears on track to return in early to mid June.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. (hamstring)

Gurriel was removed from Friday’s game against the Rockies with left hamstring tightness and was initially considered day-to-day. The team opted to give him a full ten days to recover, putting him on the 10-day injured list. Manager Torey Lovullo stated the hope is to get him back after the minimum stay. The 32-year-old outfielder is slashing .228/.284/.304 with one homer, seven runs scored, 11 RBI, and one steal across 102 plate appearances. Tommy Troy was recalled to take his place on the roster. Troy is one of the team’s top prospects. He’ll have a week and a half to make an impression after posting an .846 OPS with three homers and six steals over 44 games at Triple-A Reno.

Max Muncy (wrist)

Muncy was removed from Friday’s game against the Brewers after he was hit by a pitch on the right wrist. X-rays came back negative for any fractures, but he’s sat out the three games since. The 35-year-old slugger avoided serious injury, but the team is giving him the extra time off as a precaution. Expect him back in the lineup by Wednesday’s game against the Rockies.

Wyatt Langford (forearm)

Langford was cleared to resume hitting on Monday and took batting practice before the team’s game against the Astros. The hope is that he’ll take live at-bats on Friday and begin a minor league rehab assignment over the weekend. Langford indicated on Monday that he is feeling better now than he did the last time he ramped up baseball activities. An optimistic timeline probably puts him back in the Rangers’ lineup at the start of June.

Spencer Schwellenbach (elbow)

Schwellenbach has finally been cleared to begin a throwing progression, starting with tossing from flat ground for a couple of weeks before moving on to bullpen sessions. It’s the early stages of the ramp-up process following surgery in mid-February to remove bone spurs from his pitching elbow. The 25-year-old right-hander is expected to be an option for the Braves’ rotation in the second half of the season.

Garrett Crochet (shoulder)

Crochet is scheduled to face hitters in a live batting practice session on Tuesday after checking out fine following a couple of bullpen sessions. As long as there aren’t any setbacks, the next step would likely be a minor league rehab start before rejoining the Red Sox rotation. Crochet has been out since April 29 with left shoulder inflammation.

Logan Webb (knee)

Webb, out since May 6 with right knee bursitis, made a rehab start with Triple-A Sacramento on Friday. He tossed 62 pitches over 3 1/3 scoreless innings. Manager Tony Vitello said the 29-year-old right-hander could return to the Giants’ rotation sometime this weekend against the Rockies in Colorado. His activation from the injured list likely boots Trevor McDonald from the rotation.

Shane Bieber (elbow)

Bieber has been sidelined all season with elbow inflammation that delayed his ramp up process in spring training. He’s been brought along slowly, finally making his first rehab start in the Rookie-level Florida Complex League on Monday. Bieber struck out three over two scoreless innings. The 30-year-old right-hander will need at least a few more weeks of rehab outings to build up before he’s ready to join the Blue Jays' rotation in the next month.

Francisco Alvarez (knee)

Alvarez underwent surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee just two weeks ago, with a 6-8 week timeline to return. He’s apparently well ahead of schedule as manager Carlos Mendoza reported on Monday that the 24-year-old backstop has already resumed hitting. It seems there’s a chance Alvarez could at least meet the short end of his timeline and return before the end of June.

Francisco Lindor (calf)

The Alvarez update wasn’t the only good news for the Mets. Mendoza told reporters on Monday that Lindor has begun a running program and resumed baseball activities. He’s been sidelined for over a month with a left calf strain. While Monday’s update was the most positive news yet, he’ll likely also need a rehab assignment once he’s ready for game action after his lengthy absence.

Athletics Drop Series Opener to Mariners 9-2

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 25: Aaron Civale #45 of the Athletics pitches in the top of the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Sutter Health Park on May 25, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The A’s had no answers for the Mariners tonight as the team came up helpless on their Holiday evening, dropping the first game of the series. Time to get back to winning.

More to come…

These Knicks are historic. Can they actually win the NBA Finals?

You can make the case that no team in NBA history has played better basketball over an 11-game stretch than the New York Knicks are playing right now.

They are just the fifth team to win 11 consecutive games in a single postseason, and their point differential of +262 is the highest for over any 11-game span, regular season or playoffs.

And now, with their 130-93 demolition of the Cavaliers on Monday, May 25 to sweep the Eastern Conference finals, the Knicks are back in the NBA Finals for the first time in 27 years. Awaiting them is the winner of the Western Conference finals between the San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder.

All that said: can they actually win the NBA Finals?

The Spurs and Thunder are each formidable, yes, and popular convention is that the winner of the West will be the eventual champion. But do not overlook this Knicks team; it can absolutely win a title.

New York can score, defend and has plenty of depth, all of which are necessary in an NBA Finals.

New York has been bulldozing through its opponents, and can kindle on offense. From asking captain Jalen Brunson to anchor scoring, to playing through Karl-Anthony Towns as a point-center, to sprinting out in transition, the malleable Knicks are built to compete with San Antonio and Oklahoma City and can adjust on the fly to either.

“Our group, they’re playing good basketball, and they’re doing it in different ways,” Knicks coach Mike Brown told reporters after Game 4. “They’re doing it differently, depending on who our opponent is. When you show that type of versatility on both ends of the floor, it just adds to your belief.”

Throughout the Eastern Conference finals, the Knicks shot 38.1% from 3-point range, sinking 53 made triples.

Eastern Conference finals MVP Jalen Brunson dropped 38 points in Game 1, sparking an improbable 22-point fourth quarter comeback. Against the Cavs, Brunson averaged 25.5 points on 47.8% shooting.

Against the defenses of the Spurs or Thunder, that offensive versatility will be crucial because either opponent would easily be the toughest test New York will face this postseason.

New York, on the other end of the floor, is smothering opponents with its defense, led by the trio of OG Anunoby, Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges. The group allows for flexibility, since New York can switch pick-and-rolls with all three.

Similarly, the versatile trio can alter their assignments to be matchup-dependent. Hart is comfortable guarding Hawks All-NBA third-team forward Jalen Johnson just like he is Cavs center Jarrett Allen. Bridges can clamp down Sixers All-NBA third-team guard Tyrese Maxey and Anunoby, an NBA All-Defensive second-team selection, is the best of the bunch.

The Knicks forced the Cavaliers to commit 66 turnovers in the East finals and posted a +16 in turnover differential across the four games in the series.

During the regular season, the Thunder ranked second in the NBA in turnovers committed per game (12.6) and the Spurs ranked fourth (13.5), so those active hands and deflections will be essential in gaining an edge.

And coming off the bench, Mitchell Robinson, Miles McBride, Landry Shamet and Jose Alvarado have each embraced their roles.

Robinson is a defensive spark. McBride is a 3-point sniper. Shamet does a little bit of everything and Alvarado might be the most annoying defender, aside from Thunder guard Luguentz Dort.

With 7:47 left to play in Game 4 on Monday night, with the lead so lopsided that Knicks coach Mike Brown emptied his bench, New York held a 39-7 edge in bench points.

The Thunder are the deepest team in the NBA. The Spurs aren’t too far behind.

Karl-Anthony Towns lifts the Eastern Conference finals trophy with teammates.

But one area where the Knicks will carry an edge into the Finals is rest and freshness. The Spurs and Thunder are tied at two games apiece and this series, at a minimum, will span two more games and will finish Thursday, May 28, at the earliest. The series, frankly, looks like one that’s headed for seven.

“This team is hungry, and that’s the most important thing,” Towns told reporters after the game. “Even with an amazing, historical win we had tonight, the celebrations were minimal. We really want to get back to work. We asked coach if we could get back to work quick. We knew what happened last time when we had a long layoff, so we already talked after the game about preparing.”

It has been 53 years since the New York Knicks won an NBA championship. This is the mentality it takes to win one.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Knicks in NBA Finals, but both Spurs and Thunder pose huge challenge

Max Fried is throwing again, but Yankees aren’t calling it progress

New York Yankees pitcher Max Fried reacts on the mound during the fifth inning.
Yankees pitcher Max Fried reacts on the mound during a May 3 start.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Max Fried was feeling good enough to start playing catch Monday, the first time he has done so since being shut down with a left elbow bone bruise 10 days ago.

But Aaron Boone pumped the brakes on it being anything more than that, as recent imaging of the left-hander’s elbow evidently did not show enough healing to allow him to begin building back up yet.

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“There’s nothing really that would say he can start the ramp-up process yet,” Boone said before the Yankees beat the Royals 4-3 in the series opener at Kauffman Stadium.

Essentially, Fried is able to keep his arm moving by playing some light catch but is not yet ready to throw with the kind of intensity that would test the injury he is dealing with.

“Don’t read too far into that,” Boone said. “He’s been doing plyos and stuff. He’s had a pretty good week overall as far as symptoms and feeling pretty good and responding to everything pretty well. But he’s not at a point to where we can start ramping him up yet.”

When Fried was originally diagnosed with the injury May 15, the Yankees said he would get more imaging “in a few weeks [or when asymptomatic] to further determine when Fried can resume throwing.”

Yankees pitcher Max Fried reacts on the mound during a May 3 start. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Carlos Rodón is expected to start Friday’s series opener against the Athletics after he was pushed back a few days — after Saturday’s rainout — to allow Gerrit Cole to start on his regular fifth day Wednesday. The Yankees have an off-day Thursday and another Monday, so they wanted Cole to pitch on his fifth day this turn before going on his seventh the next time through. Rodón, who threw a bullpen session Monday, will be starting on his eighth day Friday before going on his sixth day the next time.


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Giancarlo Stanton is set to undergo another round of imaging on his right calf Tuesday to determine whether his strain has healed enough to start a running progression.

“I think he was actually going outside to do some of his agility stuff today,” Boone said. “Hopefully, with the next round of imaging, we’re in a position to start ramping up the running.”


Clarke Schmidt will move his rehab from Tommy John surgery up to New York next week after spending the first two months of the season doing so in Tampa. The right-hander, who could become a factor in the second half, has been throwing bullpen sessions but has not yet faced hitters.