Spike Lee wears autographed Pope Leo XIV Knicks jersey at NBA Finals Game 3
Spike Lee is maybe hoping to give the Knicks an extra blessing on Monday night.

Knicks host Spurs with 2-0 lead in best-of-seven seriesDonald Trump given hostile reception at NBA finalsHow New York Knicks finals fever reached Rikers IslandReach out to Bryan on Bluesky or by emailSpurs 19-9 Knicks, 6.49, 1st quarterFinally, it’s time for basketball. The Spurs rattle off the first seven points behind a couple of Wembayana dunks and a Vassell three, doing their best to take the steam out of a deafening atmosphere. Hart answers with a three-pointer, but another Wembanyama lay-up and a Castle three makes it 14-5 to San Antonio. The Spurs have made six of their first eight shots while New York look quite scattered on the defensive end. Play continues well past the first TV timeout and by the time of the first whistle, San Antonio lead by 10. Continue reading...
Spike Lee is maybe hoping to give the Knicks an extra blessing on Monday night.
Rachel Maddow could hardly contain her glee Monday night as she walked viewers through the frosty reception President Donald Trump received outside Madison Square Garden, where he was loudly booed before Game 3 of the NBA Finals between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs."Do you want to see the warm, warm welcome the president of the United States got tonight when he decided to pretend to be a basketball fan?" Maddow asked before rolling footage of fans greeting Trump's arrival with jeers and raised middle fingers."When they're waving at you with just one finger, it doesn't mean the same as another kind of wave," Maddow quipped.The MS NOW host noted that Trump's visit had real costs for ordinary New Yorkers. Fans faced security waits of two hours or more, and the city's planned free watch party outside the arena was scrapped and relocated by Mayor Zohran Mamdani to Bryant Park to accommodate the heightened security.Maddow played the moment twice, savoring it.Maddow quickly tore apart Trump's claim that New York adores him. "Trump likes to claim that New York loves him. New York does not," she said, pointing out that Trump and JD Vance pulled just 17% of the Manhattan vote in 2024 — "not 70%, 17%."Trump was thunderously booed when shown on the Jumbotron alongside Knicks owner James Dolan during the national anthem, a clip Maddow also played, mocking the president."Gotta smile through it. Maybe they have a nickname for me that has an ooh sound in the middle of it," she joked, mimicking the president trying to spin the jeers as cheers.The Knicks entered the night up 2-0, chasing their first title since 1973.
Monday marks the Knicks' first NBA Finals game in New York in 27 years, and the stars showed up for the historic moment.
Trump’s appearance at the Garden marks the first time a sitting president has attended an NBA Finals game.
A plurality of Americans believe corporate health insurance companies are the primary driver of surging medical care costs, according to a Coalition to Strengthen America’s Healthcare poll […]
President Trump on Monday evening arrived at Madison Square Garden for Game 3 of the NBA Finals. The post “USA! USA! USA!” Chants Erupt at Madison Square Garden as Trump Arrives for Knicks vs Spurs NBA Finals Game 3 (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
President Donald Trump may plan on drawing attention to himself by seeing the New York Knicks in Madison Square Garden for the 2026 NBA Finals, but one former Knicks player and politician says he will never upstage Knicks fans.Trump is “second fiddle” to the main attraction because "the people are there to see these two teams play," former Sen. Bill Bradley (D-NJ) told CBS News on Monday. "And what is compelling about the teams are the values they display like unselfishness, discipline, resilience, the kind of things that we need more of in our world at large."Bradley spent 10 seasons in the NBA playing for the Knicks, winning two titles in the 1969-1970 and 1972-1973, which are also the last championships that the Knicks ever picked up."If you think of your teammate first and yourself second, that's an important thing that the Knicks today and the Knicks in the past demonstrate," Bradley explained when asked what the current Knicks time has in common with the ones for which he played. "If you're disciplined, you're not just flying off but you're playing to plan; that's another thing. So this is not rocket science. It's what a team does if they want to be a champion. And I think this team has the makings of a champion."He also said that Madison Square Garden is a special place to play because of the attitude and behavior of the fans."They applaud the pass that leads to the pass that leads to the basket,” Bradley said. “They applaud boxing out on rebounds. They applaud the subtleties of the game. And they are deeply enthusiastic and loyal and dedicated to their team, and I think you'll see that in the arena tonight, as you have in all the other games."The Knicks are currently ahead of the San Antonio Spurs with two wins to their zero wins, and the first team to win four games are declared champions."If the Knicks go in 3-0, I mean, I know I'm gonna be there on that fourth game expecting them to be crowned champions that night,” Bradley said. “And there'll be millions of other people who will think the same thing."Bradley clearly hopes that his team will be able to deliver the goods for their longtime fans, who have waited more than half a century for this moment."It gives them something to hope for,” Bradley said. “It gives them something to believe in."When Trump shows up on Monday night, it is widely expected that he will be greeted with a chorus of boos. According to the Washington Post reporter Dan Diamond, Trump is "widely expected to be showered with boos" even though he was invited by Knicks owner James Dolan."Some sports fans and analysts have urged Trump not to attend the game — commentator Stephen A. Smith said it would create an unnecessary spectacle — or pledged to jeer the president," Barrett explains in the Post. "Online betting services also predict Trump will be booed in his visit to deep-blue New York City and the Knicks' arena, Madison Square Garden. The team's fans are famously unforgiving — quick to taunt rival players, the team's own stars and recent New York mayor Eric Adams just days after his inauguration."Barrett concluded, "As an added frustration, Trump's presence will create logistical hurdles for the roughly 20,000 other attendees, who have been told to arrive at least two hours before tip-off because of the enhanced security measures that follow the president."
President Donald Trump may plan on drawing attention to himself by seeing the New York Knicks in Madison Square Garden for the 2026 NBA Finals, but one former Knicks player and politician says he will never upstage Knicks fans.Trump is “second fiddle” to the main attraction because "the people are there to see these two teams play," former Sen. Bill Bradley (D-NJ) told CBS News on Monday. "And what is compelling about the teams are the values they display like unselfishness, discipline, resilience, the kind of things that we need more of in our world at large."Bradley spent 10 seasons in the NBA playing for the Knicks, winning two titles in the 1969-1970 and 1972-1973, which are also the last championships that the Knicks ever picked up."If you think of your teammate first and yourself second, that's an important thing that the Knicks today and the Knicks in the past demonstrate," Bradley explained when asked what the current Knicks time has in common with the ones for which he played. "If you're disciplined, you're not just flying off but you're playing to plan; that's another thing. So this is not rocket science. It's what a team does if they want to be a champion. And I think this team has the makings of a champion."He also said that Madison Square Garden is a special place to play because of the attitude and behavior of the fans."They applaud the pass that leads to the pass that leads to the basket,” Bradley said. “They applaud boxing out on rebounds. They applaud the subtleties of the game. And they are deeply enthusiastic and loyal and dedicated to their team, and I think you'll see that in the arena tonight, as you have in all the other games."The Knicks are currently ahead of the San Antonio Spurs with two wins to their zero wins, and the first team to win four games are declared champions."If the Knicks go in 3-0, I mean, I know I'm gonna be there on that fourth game expecting them to be crowned champions that night,” Bradley said. “And there'll be millions of other people who will think the same thing."Bradley clearly hopes that his team will be able to deliver the goods for their longtime fans, who have waited more than half a century for this moment."It gives them something to hope for,” Bradley said. “It gives them something to believe in."When Trump shows up on Monday night, it is widely expected that he will be greeted with a chorus of boos. According to the Washington Post reporter Dan Diamond, Trump is "widely expected to be showered with boos" even though he was invited by Knicks owner James Dolan."Some sports fans and analysts have urged Trump not to attend the game — commentator Stephen A. Smith said it would create an unnecessary spectacle — or pledged to jeer the president," Barrett explains in the Post. "Online betting services also predict Trump will be booed in his visit to deep-blue New York City and the Knicks' arena, Madison Square Garden. The team's fans are famously unforgiving — quick to taunt rival players, the team's own stars and recent New York mayor Eric Adams just days after his inauguration."Barrett concluded, "As an added frustration, Trump's presence will create logistical hurdles for the roughly 20,000 other attendees, who have been told to arrive at least two hours before tip-off because of the enhanced security measures that follow the president."U.S. President Donald Trump watches a match during the UFC 327 event at Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida, U.S., April 11, 2026.