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| OG Anunoby with the tip-in that changed everything. |
At the age at which one develops a lifelong relationship
with a sports team, generally around age 8 or 10, Curmie lived about an hour and a
half north of New York City (the local community theatre was called “90 Miles Off
Broadway”), so for six decades or so his teams have been the Mets, Jets,
Knicks, and Rangers. The big wins, alas, have been rather rare. In
the last 53 years, those teams have combined for one World Series
championship, one Stanley Cup, no Super Bowl appearances (let alone titles),
and now, finally, one NBA title. Three titles in 212 chances… <sigh>. But hey, that
Who is the most famous Knicks fan? Well, Spike Lee is probably the most famous for being a Knicks fan. The most famous people who are also Knicks fans are Donald Trump, who grew up in Queens, and Taylor Swift, who became a Knicks fan in the early 2010s through a friendship with Amar’e Stoudemire, the Knicks’ star power forward (and one of Curmie’s favorite players) at the time. Curmie has no reason to believe that either of them are anything but true Knicks fans. (Things may get a little complicated for Swift, as Travis Kelce is a Cavs fan... but Curmie has been married to a Cavs fan for 44 years, so it can be done!) The sportscaster/talking head who most wears his Knicks fandom on his sleeve is ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith. It’s Smith, Trump, and Curmie himself who are the title characters of this piece, although it’s only fair to mention Lee and especially Swift for their celebrations after that crazy Game 4.
Curmie has seen hundreds of Knicks games on TV, but he’s never been inside Madison Square Garden. That doesn’t make him less of a fan, any more than the thousands upon thousands of New Yorkers who, to quote Mayor Zohran Mamdani, “have watched… on televisions in the windows of electronics stores, and from projectors balanced on fire escapes,… alone in [their] apartments,… [or] shoulder to shoulder in bars where the signal flickers.”
This is not to say that the Mariska Hartigays, Timothée Chalamets,
and Ben Stillers of the world aren’t true fans.
But the folks who don’t have the resources to plonk down a few thousand
dollars to watch a single game live instead of on TV, the ones who had to work
that night because they’ve got a family to feed, the ones who were jumping up
and down and screaming in the streets blocks or even miles from MSG, or in Kennedy airport, or in watering
holes throughout the metropolitan area: these people aren’t necessarily more
loyal, but it’s a good bet this victory meant more to them because they needed
it more.
It’s definitely fair to say that it’s a lot more fun to watch your team win than to see them lose. Repeatedly. Comprehensively. Curmie confesses that he didn’t watch the end of Game 4. He would have if either team could have clinched, or if had been a close game at the time, but the worst that could happen from his perspective was a 2-2 series tie. That looked pretty likely with the Spurs up 27 when Curmie called it a night, having watched his team find a way to lose both games and series momentum far too many times. Curmie had seen this movie before, or at least thought he had.
Yes, he remembers Willis Reed’s entrance into MSG in Game 7
of the 1970 championship game, and Walt Frazier’s 36 points and 19 assists in
that game. He remembers Allen Houston’s
runner from the lane to beat Miami in 1999.
But he also remembers Charles Smith not getting a foul call (he was
fouled, dammit!) in 1993, and Reggie Miller scoring 8 points against us in less than 9
seconds in 1995. And those were the not-awful
Knicks teams. There were plenty of really
bad ones; they’ve lost about 100 more games than they’ve won since ’73.
After that miraculous comeback in Game 4, though, Curmie wasn’t
going to miss any of Game 5. With the Knicks
down 16 in the first half, seemingly unable to throw the ball in the ocean from
the shore, he turned to Beloved Spouse and said something like “If this team
hadn’t come back from more than this several times just in the playoffs, I’d
turn the game off. But we’re going to
see what happens.” The Knicks, in fact,
had trailed by double digits in every game in the finals, and indeed finished the series
having spent more time down by ten or more than leading by any margin. What happened, of course, was that the Knicks
got yet another comeback victory, thereby clinching the championship, four games
to one.
So Curmie was really happy.
He’d remained a loyal supporter, but perhaps wasn’t as enthusiastic as he
might have been in the past. Guys named
Jalen Brunson and OG Anunoby and a few of their friends cured that. He’ll watch more closely next year.
But let’s move on to the other two title characters, Stephen
A. Smith and Donald Trump, linked together by their comments about each other. When word got out that Trump intended to attend
Game 3, Smith went off,
saying “If it causes the New York Knicks to lose tonight, I’m blaming
him. I’m blaming the President of the
United States. I’mma stay on that. And damn it, I hope the G.O.P. lose votes
because of it if we lose tonight.” There’s
more, but you get the idea, Gentle Reader.
And… um… wow.
OK, so Curmie once described SAS as an “insufferable blowhard,” and he’s not seen anything of late to alter that impression. But did ol’ Stephen A have a point? Well, maybe.
Sort of. It is certainly true
that Trump’s appearance disrupted the dynamic.
Fans had to go through TSA-like security and arrive much earlier than
necessary (possibly having to take time off of work to do so). It’s a reasonable surmise that they were
generally in foul rather than celebratory humor when they finally entered
MSG.
Local bars, restaurants, etc., that were counting on increased
customer traffic got none. Even people
who couldn’t care less about the game were inconvenienced by cordoning off a
“several block radius” around the Garden. That would certainly
include Penn Station, and depending on the precise meaning of “several,”
perhaps a chunk of the theatre district.
Plus, of course, it is simply a statement of fact that Dear Leader does whatever
he can to make literally everything about himself, even if he ends up being heartily
booed in the process. Was Trump’s attendance
“selfish [and] narcissistic,” as Smith said in the lead-up to the game. Well, sure,
but when has DJT ever been otherwise?
It’s important to note that Smith goes out of his way to say he’s being
apolitical and concerned more about traffic congestion and similar issues. Could be…
Did Trump’s presence change the feel of Game 3 and ultimately carry over into Game 4? Marginally, yes. Did he cause the Knicks to lose? Let’s just say that Curmie hopes that SAS was being facetious, and it does appear that way in his post-game comments.
DJT actually wasn’t lying about being a
Knicks fan. Did he go to Game 3 because
he could? Sure, but so did a host of
celebs whose presence seems not to have bothered much of anyone. And he was apparently invited by Knicks owner
James Dolan. Did he then proceed to fall
asleep at the game? The video evidence isn’t conclusive, but it does suggest as much.
Dolan says otherwise,
but Curmie notes that the video suggests that Dolan seems to be nodding off, too,
so his claims of talking to Trump throughout the game are at best open for
debate. And anyone who says that Dear
Leader is “a great guy” is not someone Curmie is going to believe uncritically.
Of course, Trump was asked about Smith’s comments and
responded by saying, “I think he’s a nice guy, but you need a certain aptitude to run for
President [Smith is apparently contemplating a run]. You need a high IQ; I’m not sure that Stephen
has that. I don’t think he does,
actually.” There is, to be sure, no
little irony in the fact that it’s Donald Trump making that allegation.
The headlines proclaimed that Smith subsequently “doubled
down” on blaming Trump for the Game 3 loss, but whereas he seemed in earnest before
the game, the context of his remarks after the loss suggests that it was all in
fun. Curmie knows something of that phenomenon. In the 20 years he taught at his most recent
university, he directed a Mainstage production at some point in the academic year
17 times; there were no named storms in the area any of those years. He dramaturged once; there was a tropical
storm. He sat out completely twice:
Hurricanes Rita and Ike. Curmie didn’t
claim to control the weather, but he made it clear he wasn’t denying it, either. Anyone who really thinks all this was anything
but coincidence is too stupid to be reading this blog, but it was a bit of fun
for Curmie and his friends, colleagues, and students.
So, Trump is still a narcissist and Smith is still a blowhard, but perhaps not quite as bad as usual. Knicks fandom is a Big Tent. But if we have to keep these two, we damned well better be able to claim Tay-Tay and Mariska.

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