NBA Finals: Knicks clawed back from 29-point deficit to defeat Spurs with Anunoby’s magic winner

OG Anunoby’s late game-winner will go down as the greatest play in New York Knicks history, coach Mike Brown said, as the home team clinched the ​biggest comeback ever in the NBA Finals to beat the San Antonio Spurs 107-106 in Game ‌4 on Wednesday.

The Knicks clawed their way back from a 29-point deficit as the once-demoralized Madison Square Garden crowd erupted with deafening joy when the London-born Anunoby tipped in All-Star point guard Jalen Brunson’s missed three-point attempt with 1.2 seconds left on the clock.

“That ​has to be the most iconic shot in the history of New York basketball,” Brown said. “It was just ​unbelievable.”

The Knicks will travel to San Antonio for Game 5 and are just one win ⁠away from ending a title drought that dates back to 1973, with even the jaded New York fans ​ready to believe.

“I don’t know if there was a play bigger than any other play in the history in Knicks ​basketball,” Brown said.

Few could have predicted the outcome at halftime, as the Spurs put on a boastful display of their prowess with an NBA Finals record 14 three-pointers made in the first two quarters and their towering French superstar Victor Wembanyama having shaken off ​the nerves he showed at moments in the first two games of the series.

With pop sensation Taylor Swift on ​the sidelines, kicking the Knicks’ already formidable “Celebrity Row” into another stratosphere of fame, New York began to blossom under the Garden’s bright ‌lights, ⁠with Anunoby and Brunson leading the charge with the lead trimmed to 15 points after the third.

“We know it’s a game of runs. We’re a resilient group. We’ve been through a lot. We’ve come back plenty of times when we’re behind. Just staying with it, weathering the storm, not being too down or angry or frustrated,” Anunoby said. “Just staying ​with it, cut down to ​18, cut it down ⁠to 6, push it through. It’s a 48-minute game, just play till the end.”

Back-to-back threes from Brunson and Jose Alvarado late in the fourth put the Knicks just one ​point behind, as the New York fans who shelled out top-dollar for the eye-poppingly expensive ​tickets got their ⁠money’s worth.

“I challenged a lot of our guys today and OG was one of the guys I challenged,” Brown said, marveling at the athleticism that clinched the game. “I told OG, as big, as strong, as athletic as he is, he’s got ⁠to be ​a monster on the offensive glass tonight.”

“That was a huge offensive ​rebound. Huge offensive rebound. He took on the challenge, and he went and won the game for us.”

The Knicks play the Spurs in Game ​5 of the NBA Finals on Saturday in San Antonio.

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