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The Knicks reached the Finals without drafting a single one of their stars

The Knicks reached the Finals without drafting a single one of their stars
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The Knicks’ trip to the NBA Finals is a roster-construction case study: a contender built on trades, free agency and second-round value, with a rotation that barely resembles the usual homegrown template.

NBA.com’s Finals preview highlighted Shaun Powell’s breakdown of how New York was assembled, noting that none of the top players in the Knicks’ rotation were first-round picks by the Knicks. Mitchell Robinson, a second-round pick in 2018, is the only rotation piece New York drafted at all.

The blueprint, transaction by transaction

The detail that makes this team unusual is that every starter arrived from somewhere else. Jalen Brunson signed as a free agent in 2022, on a four-year deal worth around $100 million, after Dallas let him reach unrestricted free agency. OG Anunoby came from Toronto in a 2023 trade for RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley. Karl-Anthony Towns arrived from Minnesota in October 2024 for Julius Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a first-round pick. Josh Hart was a 2023 trade with Portland.

The boldest move was Mikal Bridges. New York sent five first-round picks and a swap to Brooklyn in 2024 to get him, a price widely called an overpay at the time. When word later leaked that Giannis Antetokounmpo had interest in New York, the trade looked worse, because those picks would have been the currency. A Finals run quiets that second-guessing.

Brunson is the cleanest example

Brunson is just the fourth second-round pick in the last 45 years to lead his team in scoring entering the Finals, following Nikola Jokić, Goran Dragić and Jerome Kersey. New York’s offensive engine came from evaluation and fit rather than draft-slot certainty. The signing even cost the Knicks their 2025 second-round pick as a tampering penalty, a bill the franchise would happily pay again given what followed.

Leon Rose turned the pieces into a team

Owner James Dolan hired Rose, a former power agent with no prior front-office experience, and Rose built a Finals roster without a No. 1 pick, a homegrown superstar or years of lottery patience. The Villanova connection between Brunson, Bridges and Hart could have stayed a soft storyline. Instead it produced a team with defined creators, defensive wings, a spacing big and enough role clarity to sweep Cleveland in the Eastern Conference finals.

Mike Brown is the newest variable

Brown is in his first season running the Knicks, and Powell’s preview credited him with pushing the right buttons. The specifics are sharper than the phrase. Brown convinced Brunson to alter his game, and his strategic changes after a pair of first-round losses to Atlanta have the Knicks undefeated since.

The roles fit together. Brunson organizes late-clock possessions. Towns, one of the best shooting centers in league history, bends spacing. Bridges and Anunoby give New York two elite perimeter defenders who do not need the ball every trip, and Anunoby is one of the few players in the league who can credibly check Victor Wembanyama. Hart rebounds like a big from the guard spot. Robinson gives them a traditional interior option when the matchup calls for it.

The Finals will stress the construction

San Antonio is a different test. Wembanyama changes the value of New York’s paint touches and protects the rim behind everything, and the Spurs’ young depth can make rotation choices uncomfortable. The Knicks need the full mix to hold. If Towns has to pull Wembanyama away from the basket, the wings have to make shots. If Brunson draws extra help, the role players have to punish the next pass.

New York’s build runs on acquired players given clean jobs that match their strengths. Four wins would make that the loudest argument in the sport for fit over origin. The Finals decide whether this roster is impressive or sturdy enough to survive the league’s most unusual opponent.

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