Knicks End 27-Year Wait as Dylan Harper Puts Spurs on Brink of Conference Finals

The New York Knicks are heading to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2001. Across the Western Conference, the San Antonio Spurs — anchored by guard Dylan Harper's historically efficient postseason scoring — are one win away from completing their own improbable run. Both stories are unfolding simultaneously as the conference finals reach their climax on the penultimate day of May 2026.
The Knicks' advancement marks the end of a 27-year drought, one of the longest title-window absences for any franchise in modern professional basketball. For a franchise that has navigated rebuild after rebuild, the milestone represents both a validation of the current roster's construction and a moment of genuine catharsis for a fanbase accustomed to near-misses. The Western Conference picture, meanwhile, has sharpened into a tense Game 5 scenario between the Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder, with San Antonio holding a 3-1 series lead as of May 26.
Harper's Historic Efficiency in the Paint
The Spurs' surge toward a potential Finals berth runs through Dylan Harper's dominance in the restricted area. According to data cited by NBALive on May 26, Harper converted at a 67.9 percent clip from the restricted area on 53 made field goals — the highest such rate among all guards remaining in the postseason. That volume combined with that accuracy is unusual for a perimeter player; most high-efficiency scorers at that position operate from mid-range or three-point distance, where shot difficulty is structurally lower. Harper's ability to get to the rim and finish through contact under playoff defensive pressure is the core engine of San Antonio's half-court offense.
The Spurs seek a 3-2 series lead when they face the Thunder on Tuesday, with Game 5 scheduled for 8:30pm Eastern on NBC and Peacock. If they win, they advance to their first NBA Finals since 2019, when they were swept by the Golden State Warriors in a series that marked the effective end of the LaMarcus Aldridge–era Spurs. A Harper-led Finals run would reframe the franchise's trajectory entirely.
Coach of the Year: The Unannounced Variable
Before the Spurs and Thunder take the court Tuesday evening, Peacock will announce the NBA Coach of the Year award during pregame coverage at 7:30pm Eastern. The timing places the announcement directly in front of a nationally televised Game 5 audience, ensuring maximum exposure regardless of who wins the award. The league's decision to stage the announcement during conference finals pregame — rather than at the conclusion of the regular season, as has been customary — is unusual. It either signals that the award carries implications for the ongoing series, or that the league believes the announcement will drive viewership for the game that follows.
The sources do not indicate who the frontrunner is. The award typically recognizes regular-season achievement, but the staging this year creates a subplot that bleeds into the playoff narrative. Whether the winner has any connection to the Spurs, Thunder, or Knicks — or comes from a team that exited the postseason earlier — is not specified in available reporting.
Knicks' 27-Year Arc Reaches a New Chapter
The Knicks' passage to the Finals completes a franchise arc that has run longer than most players currently in the league have been alive. New York last appeared in the NBA's championship series in 2001, losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in four games during Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant's first championship together. The intervening years included a brief resurgence in the early 2010s that ended in Conference Finals heartbreak against the Miami Heat, and a lengthy rebuilding phase that produced high draft picks but limited postseason traction until the current core began to coalesce.
The Knicks' advancement also resets expectations for the franchise's immediate future. A Finals appearance changes the calculus around roster construction, free-agent recruitment, and the long-term contracts already on the books. It also places pressure on the coaching staff and front office to translate the moment into sustained success rather than a single anomalous run.
What Remains Unresolved
Several questions sit beneath the surface of these parallel storylines. Whether Harper's restricted-area efficiency will hold under the heightened defensive intensity of a potential Finals matchup — against either the Knicks or a team that could yet emerge from the West — remains untested at that stage of the postseason. The Coach of the Year recipient's identity and whether their award carries any narrative weight for the ongoing series is still unknown. And the broader implications for each franchise's competitive window — what a Finals appearance or elimination means for roster architecture, coaching contracts, and the strategic direction of two organizations at different stages of their respective timelines — will only become legible after the season concludes.
What is clear is that May 26, 2026 has delivered two significant data points on the NBA calendar: a Knicks team finally through to the championship series, and a Spurs team one game from joining them. The week ahead will determine whether either team can convert their current position into a title.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/8473
- https://t.me/NBALive/8471
- https://t.me/NBALive/8466