What capped Knicks’ 29-point comeback?
Knicks’ comeback hinge: OG Anunoby’s last-second tip-in
The New York Knicks completed a record-setting comeback against the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals, erasing a 29-point deficit and winning 107-106. The decisive moment came late, when OG Anunoby provided a game-winning tip-in off a defensive sequence, sending the Knicks ahead 3-1 in the series.
Multiple play-by-play writeups and reaction pieces frame the final sequence as the defining contrast between New York’s desperation and San Antonio’s collapse. Down to the final seconds, the finishing action was described as more than a clean shot—more like a redirection, fingertip touch, and putback/deflection that turned a Spurs possession into a Knicks scoring play.
Why it mattered
- Franchise impact: The tip-in was consistently portrayed as something that will live in Knicks lore, symbolizing how far the club pushed the improbable run.
- Series swing: The win moved New York to within one victory of its first NBA title since 1973.
- Narrative finale to a collapse: The Spurs had owned the first half of the game with an especially hot shooting stretch, but ultimately could not protect the lead.
Fan and player reaction
The moment also triggered widespread basketball-world recognition—teammates, league voices, and high-profile observers reacted to the shot as iconic. Anunoby’s own postgame messaging emphasized staying steady despite the huge deficit, and coach Mike Brown framed the play as potentially the biggest in Knicks history.
In short, the comeback’s end wasn’t a drawn-out drive or a textbook game-winner—it was a last-second, high-leverage tip-in that captured the Knicks’ resilience and sealed the Spurs’ historic late failure.