Knicks Roll Into 2026 Finals: Hart Proves the Garden Travels with Them

The Knicks are going to the 2026 NBA Finals.
For the first time in 27 years, since a team led by Patrick Ewing fell short in the 1999 championship round, New York will play for the league's top prize. The clincher came in Game 7 against the Indiana Pacers on May 26, 2026 — a 112-107 victory at Madison Square Garden that ended a conference final series New York won four games to three.
The Knicks will face whichever team survives the ongoing Western Conference showdown between the San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder. Both series opponents carry serious firepower; a rematch with either franchise would pit the Knicks against a roster constructed to win now.
Hart's Minutes and a Locker Room Joke That Isn't One
Lisa Salters caught up with guard Josh Hart courtside after the clincher. Her question to Hart was direct: "He plays too much, right?"
Hart's reply, delivered with a grin: "Yeah, always."
The exchange, relayed by NBA Live on May 26, captured something Knicks observers have noted all postseason. Jalen Brunson's workload — consistently exceeding 40 minutes in close elimination games — has been the subject of league-wide commentary. Teammates jokingly acknowledge it. The coaching staff defends it. The numbers, quietly, do not contradict either side of the苦笑.
Hart has logged heavy minutes himself. Across eleven playoff appearances entering the Finals, his average minutes per game sit just under 39. He is not the headline name on any given night, but the Knicks' two-way versatility at the guard spot — Hart's ability to defend multiple positions, crash the offensive glass, and initiate offense when Brunson draws pressure — has become structural rather than situational.
Road Warriors: The Knicks Fans Who Follow the Bus
"Everywhere we go, it's like the Garden."
Hart said that on May 26, speaking about the Knicks' traveling fan base before the team had even left for the next round. Broadcast and social footage from earlier playoff rounds showed Knicks-rooted sections in Boston, in Indianapolis, in Cleveland — courtside fans who had clearly paid well above face value for seats on short notice.
The dynamic is not entirely new: New York sports fandom reliably travels when the teams are good. What has changed is the scale and age profile of the fans making the trip. Knicks fans in their twenties and thirties — many of whom were not yet born when the franchise last reached a Finals — have been the most visible contingent in arena after arena. Social media amplification has turned every road game into a contingent home game, with fan organized charter flights and coordinated ticket purchasing surfacing as a documented phenomenon across X and fan forums since the opening round.
What the Western Conference Opponent Changes
The identity of New York's opponent matters beyond typical Finals narrative-building. The San Antonio Spurs, if they advance, would offer a series against a franchise with its own storied Finals history and a roster built around a former Rookie of the Year with postseason experience gained abroad. The Thunder present a younger, athleticism-heavy model that has been the subject of league analytics discussions throughout the spring.
Both matchups would require the Knicks to adapt styles they developed throughout the east. New York's half-court offensive system, heavy on Brunson isolation and Hart's secondary creation, has room to function against either opponent. What remains untested is how Tom Thibodeau's rotation depth — tested in stretches during the Pacers series — responds to the heightened pace a Western Conference Finals winner typically brings.
Brunson's conditioning will be the central question in the weeks ahead. A 2024 contract extension locked him into New York's core through the decade; this Finals run, and what it proves about his ability to carry playoff-heavy minutes without meaningful dropoff, will shape how that core is evaluated going forward.
What Remains Uncertain
The Pacers series was physically costly. Several Knicks rotation pieces logged heavy minutes across seven games against a well-coached Indiana team that refused to concede the series until the final buzzer. Whether New York's depth is sufficient for a Finals opponent with two weeks of additional rest will not be answered until the ball goes up.
The fan-travel phenomenon, meanwhile, captures something real about the franchise's cultural moment — but it does not win games. The Knicks' first Finals since 1999 await. The Garden, in some sense, will travel with them. Whether that is enough depends on what Brunson and Hart produce on the floor, not in the postgame locker room.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/12471
- https://t.me/NBALive/12463