N.Y. Today: Knicks. Monday. The Garden.
What you need to know for Friday.
New York Today
June 5, 2026

By Shauntel Lowe

Good morning. It’s Friday. Today we’ll look at how a couple of the Knicks legends feel about the team’s success. We’ll also find out about which two political leaders have a ticket to one of the finals at Madison Square Garden.

A person in a Knicks jersey walks past a crowd at an N.B.A. finals watch party.
Shuran Huang for The New York Times

The Knicks have been good for a few years. But they haven’t been this good in a generation. And it’s turning New York City upside down.

For the first time since 1999, the Knicks are in the N.B.A. finals, facing off against the San Antonio Spurs. New York won Game 1 on Wednesday night in a thriller that made it hard for one Knicks legend to stay seated.

Bill Bradley, who won two championships with the Knicks in the 1970s, clutched the TV remote, as Jalen Brunson, the team’s electric point guard, took control of the game in the fourth quarter. Bradley was watching the game with my colleague Matt Flegenheimer.

Bradley “edged forward in his chair, running on Fanta and popcorn and Swiss chocolate, extending both arms toward the television like a sixth Knicks defender,” Matt reported.

A black and white photo of Bill Bradley  in a Knicks uniform trying to shoot the ball over a Chicago Bulls player in the 1960s.

Associated Press

n.b.a. Finals

Resilience, Courage, ‘Blah Blah Blah’: A Legend Cheers His Knicks

Watching Game 1 of the Knicks-Spurs series, Bill Bradley, the two-time N.B.A. champion and former U.S. senator, spoke reverently of teamwork — and had a few choice words for the refs.

By Matt Flegenheimer

For another Knicks legend, the team’s success has been bittersweet.

Charles Oakley, who embodied the team’s ’90s toughness, has mostly had to cheer (or jeer) the team from afar for the past decade. He was arrested and escorted out of Madison Square Garden in February 2017 after an altercation with security guards. He sued the team’s owner, James Dolan, and was briefly barred from the arena but is allowed to go to games even as his lawsuit continues. But will he?

“It’s a situation that should have been solved a long time ago from the guy who owns the team,” Oakley said, according to my colleagues Tania Ganguli and Santul Nerkar.

The second game of the best-of-seven finals series is tonight in San Antonio, but Game 3 is set for Monday at the Garden. Oakley said he had no plans to be there.

Charles Oakley goes up for a dunk.

Barton Silverman/The New York Times

N.B.A. Finals

Oakley Can Watch the Knicks at the Garden. That Doesn’t Mean He Will.

Charles Oakley, the 1990s Knicks star, hasn’t been to a game at Madison Square Garden in nearly a decade because of a legal battle.

By Tania Ganguli and Santul Nerkar

But these two people do: Mayor Zohran Mamdani and President Trump.

It’s one of the hottest tickets in the city, and the mayor is planning to pay for one himself, saying he “will be in a very different section” from the president, according to my colleagues Dana Rubinstein, Jonah E. Bromwich and Tyler Pager.

The president is expected to be in a suite, they reported.

Mamdani and Trump have been friendly at times, but there are no known plans for them to meet up at the game.

Article Image

TK

Trump and Mamdani Plan to Be at Monday’s Knicks Game (but Not Together)

President Trump is expected to sit in a luxury box for Game 3 of the N.B.A. finals at Madison Square Garden. Mayor Zohran Mamdani says he will be in a “very different section.”

By Dana Rubinstein, Jonah E. Bromwich and Tyler Pager

WEATHER

It will be a sunny day today with a high near 90. The sky will be cloudy tonight, as temperatures drop near 72.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

In effect until June 19 (Juneteenth).

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“Let me be clear: Absolutely no one is above the law. We will hold law enforcement accountable when they abuse the tremendous position of public trust that they occupy and choose to break the law.” — Jennifer Davenport, New Jersey attorney general, on a sergeant with the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office who is accused of stealing a photojournalist’s camera equipment.

People milling in front of Penn Station.
Options for travel from New York City to World Cup matches at MetLife Stadium will be limited. Todd Heisler/The New York Times

The latest Metro news

  • A $4.5 million scheme: Prosecutors in Manhattan said eight people were indicted in connection to the theft of millions of dollars in goods, including cheese, to sell them on the black market.
  • Men say bravo to Summer House: In the United States, this may be a summer of the World Cup. But it is also, for many, the season of a drama-filled Bravo reunion that has millions of viewers hooked. Especially men.
  • Alice’s adventures in New York: “Another Wonderland: Abram Champanier’s Alice Mural” at the Museum of the City of New York brings together 16 panels of the only surviving W.P.A. mural from a hospital children’s ward.

We hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

METROPOLITAN DIARY

Cab chatter

A black-and-white drawing of a cabby turning to speak to a woman sitting in the back seat of his taxi.

Dear Diary:

In 2015, my then husband and I visited New York City for the first time.

After getting a cab at LaGuardia to go to our hotel, my husband, a loquacious sort, tried to chat up the driver about where he was from, how many fares he picked up in a day and so on.

The driver never answered with more than two or three words.

When we got out at our hotel, I tried to apologize for my husband’s extreme chattiness.

“Don’t worry, Madam,” the driver said. “Texans always talk too much. We never listen.”

— Nancy Burks

Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Tell us your New York story here and read more Metropolitan Diary here.

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