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A New York night: the World Cup may be in town but the Knicks rule in Manhattan

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When the NBA championship parade rolled through Manhattan after the Knicks' first title in 53 years, the crowds that flooded into bars dwarfed those watching World Cup matches on television. At John Doe's bar on 28th and Fifth Avenue, the split-screen moment captured New York's sporting priorities: even with the World Cup in town, locals chose to celebrate their basketball heroes. The Knicks' championship drought, longer than most fans' lifetimes, had created a pent-up enthusiasm that overshadowed the global football tournament happening simultaneously in the city.

The bar may have been busy for the football but it was nothing compared with the crowd that surged in as team ended 53-year wait for the NBA title

At John Doe’s bar on 28th and 5th in Manhattan, the crowd was already heaving energetically by early evening, as a multitude of TV screens beamed Vinícius Júnior’s equaliser for Brazil, responding to Ismael Saibari’s opener for Morocco. With competing nations’ flags as bunting and inflatable footballs, the correct, round kind, hanging from the roof, there was no lack of World Cup visibility. Football shirts abounded, with Brazilians here and the odd Moroccan shirt there, as well as a Manchester United and Casemiro fan somewhat aghast at the mobility of his hero.

Yet there could be no doubting the main event in town. Despite the fact that New York’s mayor Zohran Mamdani was at MetLife Stadium for the football, a subdued groan met his appearance on the TV screen, followed by loud, defiant Democrat cheers, this was a mere curtain-raiser for the real show. The New York Knicks were bidding to end a 53-year wait to win the NBA title and were playing the San Antonio Spurs in Texas.

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