The New York Knicks are now one win away from their first NBA championship since 1973, and they got there in a fashion that will be talked about for decades.
Down by 30 points on their home floor in Game 4 of the NBA Finals, the Knicks looked finished. The San Antonio Spurs were in complete control. Victor Wembanyama was imposing his will, the Spurs were knocking down shots, and Madison Square Garden had gone from electric to stunned.
Then Jalen Brunson happened.
The Knicks superstar put together one of the greatest Finals performances in franchise history, pouring in 36 points and leading an unforgettable comeback that ended with New York escaping with a dramatic 107-106 victory. Just like that, the Knicks grabbed a commanding 3-1 series lead and pushed San Antonio to the brink of elimination.
Jalen Brunson Refuses to Let the Knicks Lose
Ladies and gentlemen, this is why Jalen Brunson belongs in every conversation about the elite players in the NBA.
When the Knicks were staring at a 30-point deficit, Brunson never looked rattled. He attacked the paint, got to his spots in the midrange, and knocked down timely shots whenever New York needed a spark.
More importantly, he gave the Knicks belief.
Championship teams do not panic. Championship players do not quit. Brunson’s leadership became contagious as the deficit slowly disappeared possession by possession.
What started as a blowout turned into a heavyweight fight.
OG Anunoby Changes the Game
As brilliant as Brunson was offensively, this comeback does not happen without OG Anunoby.
The Knicks forward was everywhere defensively during the second half. He disrupted passing lanes, forced difficult shots, and brought a level of physicality that completely changed the momentum of the game. Every time San Antonio looked ready to stop the bleeding, Anunoby seemed to come up with another defensive stop.
Then came the defining moment.
With the Spurs holding a one-point lead in the closing seconds, Anunoby delivered the biggest play of the night. His game-winning basket completed the comeback and sent Madison Square Garden into absolute chaos. It was the type of play that becomes part of Knicks playoff history.
Superstars often get the headlines, but championship teams need players willing to do the dirty work. In Game 4, Anunoby was the heartbeat of New York’s defense and the hero who finished the job.
Spurs Let a Golden Opportunity Slip Away
This loss is going to haunt San Antonio.
The Spurs controlled most of the game and looked poised to even the series at two games apiece. Wembanyama continued to showcase why he is one of the league’s brightest stars, and the young Spurs played with confidence for nearly three quarters.
Then the pressure arrived.
Turnovers increased. Shot selection became questionable. The Knicks became more aggressive defensively. Suddenly, a comfortable lead vanished.
Championship basketball is often decided by how teams respond when momentum shifts, and the Spurs simply could not stop the avalanche once it started.
A Comeback for the Ages
The NBA Finals have delivered plenty of memorable moments throughout history, but overcoming a 30-point deficit on this stage belongs in a category of its own.
For Knicks fans, this felt like destiny. For Spurs fans, it felt like a nightmare.
Now the series heads back to San Antonio with New York holding a 3-1 advantage and needing just one more victory to bring the Larry O’Brien Trophy back to Madison Square Garden.
If Brunson continues playing at this level and Anunoby keeps making game-changing plays on both ends of the floor, the basketball world may be witnessing the birth of a championship team.
One thing is certain.
Game 4 will be remembered as the night the Knicks refused to die, Jalen Brunson carried the offense, and OG Anunoby delivered the defensive and game-winning heroics that may have changed the course of the 2026 NBA Finals.
