OG Anunoby’s Last-Second Heroics Put the Knicks on the Brink of NBA Glory
For decades, New York Knicks fans have lived on hope.
They have endured rebuilding years, playoff disappointments, and countless seasons that ended far too soon. Through it all, one dream remained constant: bringing an NBA championship back to New York.
On Wednesday night, that dream moved one giant step closer to becoming reality.
In a game that looked completely out of reach at halftime, the Knicks produced one of the most remarkable comebacks in NBA Finals history, defeating the San Antonio Spurs 107-106 in Game 4. The victory gave New York a commanding 3-1 lead in the series and left them just one win away from their first NBA championship since 1973.
The hero of the night was OG Anunoby, whose last-second tip-in sent Madison Square Garden into absolute chaos and created a moment that Knicks fans will remember for generations.

A First Half to Forget
For much of the evening, it appeared that the Spurs were about to level the series.
San Antonio came out firing from the opening tip. Their offense was sharp, their defense was aggressive, and everything seemed to be working in their favor. The Knicks, meanwhile, struggled to find any rhythm. Shots weren’t falling, defensive rotations were slow, and the crowd that had arrived full of excitement grew increasingly nervous.
By halftime, the scoreboard told a painful story.
The Spurs led 76-49.
A 27-point deficit in an NBA Finals game is usually a death sentence. Most teams would have accepted defeat and focused on the next game. Even some of the most optimistic Knicks supporters were beginning to think Game 4 was over.
But this Knicks team has spent the entire season proving people wrong.
Refusing to Quit
Whatever was said in the Knicks’ locker room during halftime clearly worked.
The team returned to the court with a completely different energy. Every possession suddenly mattered. Every defensive stop felt significant. The intensity that had been missing in the first half was now impossible to ignore.
The Knicks began forcing turnovers and pushing the pace. The Spurs, who had looked comfortable and confident earlier, started making mistakes. The huge lead slowly began to shrink.
At first, it was only a few points.
Then it became ten.
Then single digits.
As the comeback gained momentum, Madison Square Garden transformed into one of the loudest arenas in sports. The crowd sensed something special was happening, and the players fed off that energy.
Brunson Leads the Charge
As he has done so many times during New York’s playoff run, Jalen Brunson took control when his team needed him most.
Brunson attacked the basket relentlessly, created opportunities for teammates, and kept the Knicks focused even when the mountain still seemed enormous. More importantly, he never looked discouraged by the score.
Great leaders have a way of making teammates believe, and Brunson did exactly that.
Every basket gave the Knicks a little more confidence. Every successful defensive possession increased the pressure on San Antonio.
By the start of the fourth quarter, what once seemed impossible suddenly felt realistic.
The Knicks weren’t just competing anymore.
They were threatening to steal the game.
The Night Belonged to OG Anunoby
While Brunson guided the comeback, OG Anunoby delivered one of the best performances of his career.
The forward was sensational throughout the game, finishing with 33 points and knocking down seven three-pointers. Whenever the Knicks needed a big basket, Anunoby seemed ready to provide it.
His impact went beyond scoring.
He defended aggressively, battled for loose balls, and played with the type of determination that championship teams require. Every time the Spurs appeared ready to regain control, Anunoby found a way to keep New York alive.
As the final minutes approached, it became clear that he was having one of those rare nights where everything seemed possible.
No one, however, could have predicted how the game would end.
A Finish Straight Out of Hollywood
The final moments were pure basketball drama.
After spending most of the evening chasing San Antonio, the Knicks finally found themselves within striking distance. The Spurs still had opportunities to close out the game, but their composure began to crack under New York’s relentless pressure.
With only seconds remaining, the Knicks trailed by one point and had one final possession.
The entire season seemed to hang in the balance.
Jalen Brunson launched a difficult three-point attempt. As the ball sailed through the air, thousands of fans held their breath.
The shot missed.
For a split second, it looked like the comeback had fallen just short.
Then OG Anunoby appeared.
Crashing toward the basket, he fought through traffic, reached the rebound before anyone else, and tipped the ball into the hoop with only 1.2 seconds left on the clock.
Madison Square Garden exploded.
Players jumped off the bench. Fans screamed, hugged strangers, and celebrated as if the championship had already been won. The Knicks had somehow completed a comeback that seemed impossible only two hours earlier.
It was the kind of sports moment that cannot be scripted.
More Than Just a Win
This victory was about more than taking a 3-1 series lead.
It was about belief.
For years, Knicks fans have waited for a team capable of creating unforgettable moments. Wednesday night delivered one of the greatest moments in franchise history.
Coming back from nearly 30 points down in an NBA Finals game requires more than talent. It requires resilience, trust, and a refusal to quit when everything appears lost.
The Knicks displayed all three qualities.
Even when the scoreboard suggested defeat was inevitable, they continued fighting. That determination turned a disappointing night into a historic victory.
One Win Away
Now the Knicks stand on the doorstep of history.
They need just one more victory to capture their first NBA championship in more than five decades. The Spurs remain a dangerous opponent, led by one of the league’s brightest young stars, Victor Wembanyama, and they will undoubtedly respond with desperation in Game 5.
But the pressure has shifted.
The momentum belongs to New York.
The confidence belongs to New York.
And thanks to OG Anunoby’s unforgettable tip-in, the dream of ending a 53-year championship drought suddenly feels closer than ever.
Years from now, Knicks fans may not remember every statistic from Game 4. They may not remember every possession or every timeout.
But they will remember where they were when OG Anunoby tipped in that shot.
They will remember the roar inside Madison Square Garden.
And they will remember the night the Knicks moved within one win of basketball immortality.