This is the deepest Knicks team of the century. It should win the East
The common sense and dollars and cents agree with ownership on the 2025-26 Knicks: This year is the year for the best team constructed in the franchise’s recent history.
It’s been at least 25 years — dating back to the Knicks’ failed 1999 NBA Finals run — since Madison Square Garden has housed as stacked, as complete, of a basketball team as the one tasked with an NBA Finals or bust mandate from above.
Because it’s hard to find a star with as many weapons at his disposal as Jalen Brunson, the all-world guard whose boom-or-bust task is striking the right balance between scoring and distributing.
The Knicks have given Brunson a six-time All-Star co-captain in Karl-Anthony Towns. They’ve given him his friends from Villanova, including one who cost five draft picks plus a $150 million extension. They’ve given him two of the most impactful two-way wings in the sport, a Defensive Player of the Year candidate off the bench, plus a second unit — with trade deadline acquisitions — stretching 10 to 11 real rotation players deep.
Leon Rose and his front office did that.
They identified a less rigid, more collaborative and modern head coach (albeit a backup option). They maximized limited roster-building resources. They drafted Mohamed Diawara, re-signed Landry Shamet, and swapped Guerschon Yabusele out for Jose Alvarado and Jeremy Sochan.
The Knicks have gotten tougher. They’ve gotten deeper. They’re more talented at all five positions than possibly any team in the Eastern Conference.
Which means they are out of excuses. This team has to win — and win big — or else the front office will return to the questions they had as the Knicks spiraled out of control, losing nine of an 11-game stretch before finally getting their act together ahead of the trade deadline.
Or, as James Dolan said in a Jan. 5 interview on WFAN: “I’d say we want to get to the Finals and we should win the Finals. This is sports, anything can happen. Getting to the Finals, we absolutely have to do. Winning the Finals, we should do.”
If the Knicks don’t. If they don’t at least make it to the Finals, you can bet they will return to the Giannis Antetokounmpo discourse. To the discourse that deems the roster as currently constructed unworthy of ownership’s championship mandate.
Yet it’ll be hard to break these Knicks up if they run the table in the East and make the Finals for the first time in more than a quarter century.
“Look how far we got with our group last year and look at who was playing and who wasn’t,” Dolan continued. “We’re going into the second half of the season, Josh [Hart] is still out and Landry [Shamet] is coming back. We got depth.
“We stay healthy, we’ll go into the playoffs in much better condition than last year.”
The Knicks have $201 million in guaranteed player salaries for the 2026-27 NBA season. The second apron is only expected to increase by 7% to $223 million, which will leave the Knicks just $22 million in space before encroaching over into restricted territory.
That $201 million payroll for 2026-27 does not include Jose Alvarado, who — as someone with career earnings of less than $12 million — can decline his $4.5 million player option for next season to sign a more lucrative deal elsewhere (or in New York). It doesn’t include Mitchell Robinson, who will be an unrestricted free agent seeking a pay raise, potentially north of $20 million annually alone. It doesn’t include Shamet, Jordan Clarkson or Jeremy Sochan, all in New York on one-year deals. Nor does it include Mohamed Diawara, Ariel Hukporti or Kevin McCullar Jr., each of whom will enter restricted free agency this summer.
The payroll for next season includes only Brunson, Towns, Bridges, Hart and OG Anunoby plus Miles McBride, who will be eligible for a contract extension, Pacome Dadiet and Tyler Kolek. The Knicks will need to go into the second apron to build a complete roster, let alone re-sign Robinson. They will be under even more pressure to trade a piece of their core in hopes of improving their roster elsewhere.
Or they can double down. They can bite the bullet associated with the second apron because the taste of victory could far outweigh the bitter tax bill at the end of a season.
This Knicks team has the goods. They’ve got stars on both ends of the floor, proper spacing, a deep bench and a coach prioritizing a free-flowing style of basketball.
It’s time to turn the goods into hardware. Into results. Into this franchise’s most successful season of the century. This team is constructed to run the wide-open Eastern Conference.
If it doesn’t, the second apron will force the front office to answer questions the roster couldn’t.