The New York Knicks did not just take Game 2. Their fans took over the sound of the building.
In the final 20 seconds of ESPNâs broadcast, with the Knicks closing out a 109-93 win over the the Cleveland Cavaliers, âKnicks in 4â chants could be heard carrying over the airwaves. It was loud enough to become part of the gameâs ending â not background noise, but the soundtrack to New York moving one win away from a sweep.
The chant landed because the math made it real. The Knicksâ Game 3 victory gave them a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals, putting Cleveland in a desperate situation and giving New York fans every reason to lean into the moment.
Josh Hart led the Knicks with 26 points points. Mikal Bridges and Jalen Brunson each added 19 points to further cement the victory.
But the lasting image â or sound â was the crowd.
Knicks Fans Turned Game 2 Into a Road Celebration
This was supposed to be Cleveland’s chance to change the tone of the series. Instead, by the final possession, the home arena sounded like a Knicks watch party.
The âKnicks in 4â chant was not just a taunt. It was a statement about how far the series had tilted. New York had already protected home court. Then the Knicks went on the road, absorbed an early push and still left with a double-digit win.
That is the kind of result that changes a fanbaseâs posture. Hope turns into expectation. Expectation turns into noise. And in this case, the noise made it onto the national broadcast.
For Knicks fans, that matters. This is a fanbase that has spent years waiting for a team good enough to justify the volume. Now, with Brunson controlling games and the supporting cast giving New York multiple ways to win, the confidence is not forced.
It is earned.
âKnicks in 4â Captured the Mood Around Brunsonâs Team
The best chants are simple because they do not need much explanation. âKnicks in 4â says everything.
It says the Knicks believe this series is over. It says Cleveland has not shown enough answers. It says New York fans are not just hoping to survive the round â they are already thinking about what comes next.
That can be dangerous territory for a team, but there is a difference between fan confidence and player complacency. The Knicks have not played like a group trying to fast-forward. They have played with the edge of a team that knows exactly how valuable a short series can be.
A sweep would mean rest. It would mean fewer injury risks. It would mean more time to prepare for the next matchup. It would also keep the emotional wave rolling around a team that has given Madison Square Garden â and now road arenas â something to roar about.
That is why the chant felt bigger than one clip. It was a playoff fanbase recognizing a moment before the final box score even went official.
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