Beau Dure 

NBA finals 2026 Game 4: San Antonio Spurs v New York Knicks – live updates

Live report: The New York Knicks host the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 of the NBA finals at Madison Square Garden. Follow all the action with Beau Dure
  
  

NBA finals fever has taken over New York with the Knicks two wins from their first championship since 1973.
NBA finals fever has taken over New York with the Knicks two wins from their first championship since 1973. Photograph: Adam Gray/Getty Images

The call is overturned. I await an explanation.

Spurs 5-2 Knicks, 10:55, 1st qtr: Definitely not what the Knicks wanted at the outset – a foul on Karl-Anthony Towns, the big man who battled Wemby to a standstill in the first two games of the series. De’Aaron Fox hits both free throws.

Towns hits a nice floater at the other end to equalize. Darius Vassell smoothly hits a 3-pointer to restore the Spurs lead.

And now we have a talking point. Wemby mauls Towns as his nemesis drives to the hoop. Foul Wemby, right? Well, we’re getting a challenge.

Spurs 0-0 Knicks, 11:59, 1st qtr: After Taylor Swift blows a kiss to the camera, we have tipoff. Referee Zach Zarba is in his 23rd season. Spurs win the tip.

I’m a connoisseur of pregame hype videos, and I missed Game 3, so I’m interested in seeing what happens here.

The announcer paused when announcing Julian Champagnie in the Spurs’ starting lineup, as if trying to remember who he was.

Looks like the theme is to mix game highlights with images of Knicks players being as tall as buildings in Manhattan. It’s not bad, but someone should really tell pregame producers that just because you can do something with your video editing software doesn’t mean you should.

Performing at halftime: Wu-Tang Clan.

We have a correct answer on the trivia quiz from Neon Thotsky at Bluesky, who illustrates the point with a dramatic photo.

In mere words: Cleveland Cavaliers over Golden State Warriors, 2016. That was the Cleveland team with LeBron James and Kyrie Irving co-existing while Kevin Love gathered rebounds.

Have we ever seen a year with so many close games in both the NBA and NHL finals?

Last year, four of the seven games were decided by double digits. The year before that, the Celtics won three games in resounding fashion, lost Game 4 by 38 points, then won Game 5 by 18.

This year, the 10-point margin in Game 1 is deceptive. The Knicks barely eked out the lead late and then padded the margin in the last minute. Game 2 came down to a potential buzzer-beater that missed. Game 3 was still in doubt in the final seconds.

Over in the NHL, the first three games were decided by one goal, two of them in overtime. Last night, Jordan Staal’s belly-flop backhand put the Hurricanes up by one with 6:32 left, and Carolina didn’t put the game away until getting an empty-netter with 55 seconds left.

Trivia quiz …

How many teams have faced a 3-1 deficit in the NBA Finals and gone on to win?

How am I supposed to follow Chuck D? Or, as he was called in his memorable appearance on NewsRadio, “Mr. D.”

Will we see yet another game that goes down to the wire? Will a home team win any of these games? Which new celebrities will be courtside? Let’s find out …

Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s Public Enemy frontman Chuck D’s take on what’s becoming one of the more compelling NBA finals in recent memory.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*