New York Knicks
Series Flow
4
Wins
3
Losses
Regular Season
60–22
Win–Loss
Playoff Record
12–7
Win–Loss
Finals
4–3
vs Los Angeles Lakers
Finals MVP
Reed
Willis
New York Knicks
60–22Los Angeles Lakers
46–36The 1970 Lakers were led by the incomparable Jerry West — who hit a half-court buzzer-beater in regulation of Game 3 that the NBA later declared did not count — and the dominant Wilt Chamberlain. This was a star-studded team that simply ran into a better-built, deeper, more cohesive New York squad. The loss haunted West for years, cementing his association with near-misses that would define his playing legacy.
Finals MVP
Willis Reed
#19 · C
18.7
PPG
12.3
RPG
Willis Reed, born June 25, 1942, in Bernice, Louisiana, was the captain and cornerstone of the championship Knicks. A powerful 6'9" center who combined post scoring, rebounding, and physical toughness, Reed had already been named NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1970 before delivering the most famous moment in Madison Square Garden history — limping onto the court before Game 7 on a torn thigh muscle, scoring the game's first two baskets, and igniting a 113–99 victory that gave New York its first NBA title. He was named Finals MVP and All-Star Game MVP in the same season, a testament to a year unlike any other.
Named Finals MVP for his iconic return in Game 7
Played through a torn thigh muscle to inspire the championship run
His first two baskets in Game 7 set the emotional tone for a 113–99 victory
112
NYK
124
LAL
The Knicks opened the Finals at home with a dominant 124–112 victory, showcasing the balanced attack that had made them the NBA's finest team all season. Walt Frazier controlled the tempo throughout, and the Garden crowd provided a wall of sound that rattled the Lakers from the opening tip.
New York Knicks
Walt Frazier
28 pts · 8 astDictated pace all night, turning Jets into scoring opportunities for the Knicks' big men.
Willis Reed
24 pts · 12 rebDominated Jerry West's supporting cast and controlled the paint on both ends.
LAL
Jerry West
31 ptsBrilliant in defeat but couldn't carry the Lakers alone against New York's cohesive defense.
105
NYK
103
LAL
The Lakers evened the series at MSG in a back-and-forth battle decided in the final seconds. Jerry West hit a critical shot to give Los Angeles a narrow 105–103 victory and steal home-court advantage back. The Knicks' normally reliable defense cracked at the critical moment.
New York Knicks
Willis Reed
21 pts · 15 rebDominated the glass but the Knicks couldn't convert when it mattered most.
LAL
Jerry West
34 pts · 6 astClutch down the stretch, hitting the decisive basket to seal the series-tying win.
108
NYK
111
LAL
New York won a grueling overtime thriller in Los Angeles, 111–108, to retake the series lead. Dave DeBusschere's defense on Elgin Baylor and Walt Frazier's late-game composure were the difference in a contest that pushed both teams to the limit.
New York Knicks
Walt Frazier
36 pts · 7 astOutplayed West in a heavyweight clash, providing the winning margin in overtime.
LAL
Elgin Baylor
30 ptsMagnificent but contained by DeBusschere in the overtime session when it mattered most.
121
NYK
115
LAL
The Lakers forced overtime and won 121–115 at home to even the series at two games apiece. Wilt Chamberlain asserted himself as a dominant force, neutralizing Willis Reed's interior advantage and giving Los Angeles the momentum heading back to New York.
LAL
Wilt Chamberlain
18 pts · 25 rebA colossus on the boards, canceling Reed's usually decisive interior advantage.
Jerry West
37 ptsAnother signature clutch performance from the man they called "Mr. Clutch."
100
NYK
107
LAL
The most iconic game in Knicks history. Willis Reed tore his thigh muscle in the first half and left the court — seemingly ending New York's championship chances. But Frazier stepped into superhuman mode, carrying the offense. Then, before Game 5 tip-off... wait — this was Game 5 with Reed's injury occurring during the game, but the team fought on. The Knicks won 107–100 in a gritty team effort. The stage was set for the most famous moment yet to come.
New York Knicks
Walt Frazier
30 pts · 12 astCarried the Knicks offensively after Reed's injury, demonstrating the team depth Holzman had built.
Willis Reed
7 pts (limited)Played through pain before being forced from the game — his absence galvanized his teammates.
135
NYK
113
LAL
Without a healthy Willis Reed, the Knicks were overwhelmed in Los Angeles 135–113. Wilt Chamberlain was unstoppable without Reed's defensive presence, and the Lakers cruised to force a decisive Game 7 back at Madison Square Garden.
LAL
Wilt Chamberlain
45 pts · 27 rebOne of the most dominant individual performances in Finals history with Reed absent.
Jerry West
33 ptsWest and Chamberlain were simply too much for a Knicks team missing its captain.
99
NYK
113
LAL
Game 7 of the 1970 NBA Finals is the defining moment in Madison Square Garden history. Before tip-off, a hush fell over the Garden — and then Willis Reed emerged from the tunnel, limping on a torn thigh muscle. The arena erupted. Reed hit the game's first two baskets. Walt Frazier then took over, pouring in 36 points and 19 assists in the most complete Finals performance of the era. New York won 113–99, and the city went delirious.
New York Knicks
Walt Frazier
36 pts · 19 ast · 7 rebThe greatest individual Game 7 performance in Finals history — an all-time masterpiece of basketball.
Willis Reed
4 pts · emotional catalystHis two opening baskets on a torn thigh muscle may be the most important shots in Knicks history.
LAL
Jerry West
28 ptsWest was brilliant as always but the Madison Square Garden crowd and Frazier's brilliance were insurmountable.
Walt Frazier
#10 · PG
23.7
PPG
7.4
APG
Walt "Clyde" Frazier was the engine of the Knicks' halfcourt offense and the most complete guard in the league at the time. While Reed's heroic limp captured the imagination of the country, Frazier's 36-point, 19-assist masterclass in Game 7 was arguably the greatest single-game Finals performance of the era. He controlled every aspect of the game — converting buckets, distributing to teammates, and locking down Jerry West on the other end.
Delivered one of the greatest individual Finals performances: 36 pts + 19 assists in Game 7
Named to the All-NBA Second Team and All-Defensive First Team in 1970
His cool composure under pressure defined "Clyde's" championship legacy
Dave DeBusschere
#22 · SF
15.7
PPG
14.3
RPG
Dave DeBusschere was the defensive anchor who guarded Elgin Baylor throughout the seven-game series. His physical presence, relentless rebounding, and switchable defense gave Red Holzman's scheme the edge it needed to contain the high-powered Lakers offense. DeBusschere averaged double-double numbers through the Finals and was the consummate two-way forward of his generation.
Named to the All-Defensive First Team for the second consecutive season
Guarded Elgin Baylor throughout the series, limiting the Laker legend's effectiveness
His rebounding dominance gave New York second-chance advantage in the series
Bill Bradley
#24 · SF
12.3
PPG
4.5
RPG
Bill Bradley, the Princeton-educated Rhodes Scholar, brought an unmatched intellectual approach to Holzman's motion offense. His precise cutting, screen-setting, and understanding of team concepts complemented the individual brilliance of Frazier and the power of Reed and DeBusschere. Bradley later described the 1970 championship run as the high point of his basketball life — an ensemble achievement unlike anything he'd experienced.
Provided critical spacing and off-ball movement in the Knicks' championship offense
His Princeton-trained basketball IQ made him the perfect fit for Holzman's system
Third-year pro playing his most complete season alongside the championship core
The 1970 Lakers were led by the incomparable Jerry West — who hit a half-court buzzer-beater in regulation of Game 3 that the NBA later declared did not count — and the dominant Wilt Chamberlain. This was a star-studded team that simply ran into a better-built, deeper, more cohesive New York squad. The loss haunted West for years, cementing his association with near-misses that would define his playing legacy.
Jerry West
#44 · Guard
31.3
PPG
7.4
APG
West was the best player on the losing team — his Finals performance earned him the initial MVP vote before it was reversed in favor of Reed.
Wilt Chamberlain
#13 · Center
21.4
PPG
21.1
RPG
Chamberlain dominated the boards throughout the series but was neutralized by Reed's will and the Knicks' collective defensive scheme.
Elgin Baylor
#22 · Forward
18.6
PPG
9.3
RPG
Playing through the decline of a legendary career, Baylor competed but could not overcome Cleveland's defensive intensity.
New York Knicks
First NBA championship in New York Knicks franchise history — the culmination of Red Holzman's vision of team basketball over individual stardom.
Walt Frazier
36 points and 19 assists in Game 7 — one of the greatest individual Finals performances ever recorded, delivered on the biggest stage in New York sports.
Willis Reed
Reed's limping entrance before Game 7 is considered one of the most iconic moments in sports history — two early baskets set the tone for a 113–99 championship victory.
New York Knicks
Red Holzman's Knicks finished 60–22 in the regular season — the franchise's best record at that time — en route to their first title.
Willis Reed
Willis Reed won Finals MVP, All-Star Game MVP, and regular season MVP in the same 1969–70 season — one of the most decorated individual seasons in NBA history.
The 1969–70 New York Knicks are widely considered one of the most intellectually assembled championship teams in NBA history. Coach Red Holzman built a roster that valued basketball IQ above all else — a Rhodes Scholar in Bill Bradley, an all-time defensive maestro in Walt Frazier, a two-sport professional athlete in Dave DeBusschere, a Caribbean immigrant captain in Willis Reed. The team's "find the open man" philosophy produced the most aesthetically satisfying offense of the era.
The Willis Reed moment transcended basketball. When the 6'9" center emerged from the Garden tunnel before Game 7 — having been unable to practice all week after tearing his thigh muscle — more than 19,500 fans fell into an almost reverent silence before erupting into the loudest roar the old building had heard. Reed's two opening baskets, both mid-range jumpers, effectively won the game before the Lakers could settle their nerves. Walt Frazier did the rest.
Jerry West, the man who hit arguably the most iconic non-counted shot in Finals history (his half-court buzzer in Game 3 that tied the game before overtime, subsequently negated when the NBA ruled it a tie at buzzer), was named Finals MVP despite being on the losing team — the only time the award has been given to a player from the losing side. The decision was reversed before presentation, making Reed the rightful recipient, but West's performance underscored how close the series truly was.
The championship arrived at a pivotal moment for New York City itself — a city struggling with financial difficulty, racial tension, and social upheaval. The Knicks' championship, built on teamwork, intelligence, and inclusion (the roster featured players of different backgrounds united by basketball IQ), was embraced as a civic identity statement. Madison Square Garden became a cultural touchstone for a generation of New Yorkers.
The 1969–70 New York Knicks were built differently. While the NBA's other elite franchises pursued transcendent individual stars, Red Holzman assembled a team of basketball minds — players who could execute, adapt, communicate, and trust one another in ways that more talent-loaded rosters couldn't match. Their 60–22 regular season record was the best in franchise history, earned through a collective intelligence that made every opponent's game plan obsolete.
The NBA Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers was a collision of styles: New York's team-first precision against the individual brilliance of Jerry West, Wilt Chamberlain, and an aging but still dangerous Elgin Baylor. The series seesawed across seven games, each team trading advantages, until Willis Reed's torn thigh muscle in Game 5 seemed to tilt the balance irreversibly toward Los Angeles.
Game 6 proved the point. Without Reed's defensive presence on Chamberlain, the Lakers rolled 135–113 at The Forum. Wilt posted 45 points and 27 rebounds — numbers from another dimension. The Knicks flew home for Game 7 with their captain unable to walk, let alone play.
What happened at Madison Square Garden on May 8, 1970, became the single most celebrated night in New York basketball history. Reed emerged from the tunnel before tip-off, his limp audible in the Garden's sudden silence before the building shook with one of the great roars in sports. He hit New York's first two baskets. The Lakers, shaken, never recovered. Walt Frazier then delivered 36 points and 19 assists — perhaps the finest performance in Finals history — and the Knicks were champions, 113–99.
The 1970 title defined what the Knicks could be: not just a basketball team, but a civic symbol. A championship built on intelligence, selflessness, and the belief that the whole could exceed the sum of its considerable parts. Willis Reed would be carried off the court at the final buzzer, a champion at last, the captain who gave everything he had and then some.
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