NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 In the final moments before the Knicks , Yolanda Matos found herself hosting a scrum of anxious New Yorkers on the sidewalk outside her Brooklyn home.
Heads lowered in quiet prayer. Boxes of pizza passed from people in jerseys to people in suits. And Matos 鈥 a retired correctional officer with a strictly enforced policy against premature celebration 鈥 waited until the final buzzer before leading the shrieking, weeping, chest-thumping crowd through the frenzied streets.
鈥淭he camaraderie and craziness is something I鈥檝e never seen in my whole life,鈥 Matos marveled. 鈥淭hese Knicks really got everyone outside.鈥
The team鈥檚 victory Saturday night over the San Antonio Spurs saw , with dozens of arrests and property damage mostly clustered around Madison Square Garden.
But scenes like the one on Matos鈥 block were far more common: neighbors and strangers of every age and background, clustered around a TV or projector as their collective stress gave way to an unusual moment of citywide euphoria.
Impromptu dance parties raged until dawn 鈥 then continued Sunday, as delirious New Yorkers flocked to the Puerto Rican Day parade, also attended by multiple Knicks players, including Brooklyn native Jose Alvarado.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a Knicks fan himself who has popped up at watch parties around the city, announced the team would be honored Thursday by a ticker-tape parade.
By Sunday night, many New Yorkers were struggling to find a historical comparison to what they were experiencing.
鈥淚 was there for the Giants鈥 Super Bowls, the Yankees dynasty, the Mets in 鈥86, which was really special. None of that comes even close to this,鈥 said Marlon Rice, a 51-year-old community advocate. 鈥淭he entire city is on tilt because of the Knicks. I just hope this stays and we can enjoy an entire summer off this vibe.鈥
That joy had been building for weeks, as the Knicks embarked on a historic playoff run marked by one after . For fans long accustomed to last-minute heartbreak, processing this new reality seemed to grow into a communal endeavor 鈥 requiring a new sort of viewing experience.
To meet that need, unofficial watch parties cropped up across the city streets and parks, gas stations and delis, synagogues, mosques and at least 鈥 giving residents the chance to watch shoulder to shoulder with fellow fans, without shelling out a month鈥檚 rent or more for a ticket.
Hours before tipoff on Saturday, lawn chairs and sound systems were already set up on a street corner facing the facade of a building where a of each game had reliably drawn thousands of people. By then, the phrase 鈥淜nicks in 5鈥 had become both standard greeting and farewell among New Yorkers.
The ensuing delirium has upended schedules, added to milestones and bred a strange sense of civic pride. Newborns at Lenox Hill Hospital received Knicks-embroidered hats. The cast of Hamilton ended their performance Sunday with a rendition of Frank Sinatra’s 鈥淣ew York, New York.鈥 Bus drivers, firefighters and subway workers are greeted as celebrities, sometimes breaking from their duties to join the celebration.
In one of many , a pair of sanitation workers allow private citizens to toss bags of trash into their truck, prompting cheers from bystanders.
Rabbi Yakov Bankhalter, the leader of an Orthodox Jewish community space near Madison Square Garden, said his own hastily-scheduled watch party had ended with fans of every faith spinning joyously in the Manhattan streets.
鈥淲herever you are in New York, it feels like there is nothing but the Knicks,鈥 Bankhalter said on Monday morning. 鈥淲e鈥檙e still in the euphoria. It鈥檚 unbelievable. It鈥檚 still unbelievable.鈥
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