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Knicks–Nets rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Basketball Association cross-town rivalry in New York City

Knicks–Nets rivalry
Nets'D'Angelo Russell shooting over Knicks'Tim Hardaway Jr. in a preseason game atBarclays Center in 2018
Other namesBattle of New York
Battle of the Boroughs
Clash of the Boroughs
LocationNew York City
First meetingNovember 30, 1976
Nets 104, Knicks 103
Latest meetingNovember 24, 2025
Knicks 113, Nets 100
Next meetingJanuary 21, 2026
Statistics
Meetings total230
All-time series118–112 (NYK)
Regular season series113–107 (NYK)
Postseason results5–5 (tied)
Longest win streakNYK W12
Current win streakNYK W12
Postseason history

TheKnicks–Nets rivalry is acrosstown rivalry betweenNew York City's twoNational Basketball Association (NBA) teams: theNew York Knicks andBrooklyn Nets. Both teams compete inAtlantic Division of theEastern Conference. The New York Knicks were established in 1946 as one of the charter franchises of the NBA, and have been based atMadison Square Garden inMidtown Manhattan since 1968. The Nets were established in 1967 as a member of the now-defunctAmerican Basketball Association, and joined the NBA in 1976. They have been based atBarclays Center inBrooklyn since 2012, though have played in theNew York metropolitan area their entire existence.

The rivalry began in 1976 when the Nets joined the NBA as part of theABA–NBA merger. At the time, the team was known as the New York Nets and played atNassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in suburbanLong Island. The team became the New Jersey Nets the following season when they relocated to suburban New Jersey, playing temporarily inPiscataway atRutgers University before moving toBrendan Byrne Arena inEast Rutherford in 1981, their home until 2010. The Nets played their final two seasons in New Jersey atPrudential Center indowntown Newark. The rivalry became an intra-city series when the Nets relocated to Brooklyn in 2012.

When the Nets played in New Jersey, the rivalry had several nicknames, including theTurnpike Classic,The Function at the Junction,Battle of the Hudson River, andThe War Between the States.[1]

After the Nets' move to Brooklyn, due to the close proximity of the two teams and the overall histories of Brooklyn and Manhattan, media outlets have dubbed the rivalry theBattle of New York,[2]Battle of the Boroughs,[3] orClash of the Boroughs.[4][5] The two teams have met in the playoffs three times over the course of their history, with the most recent meeting in 2004.

History

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1966–1977: Beginnings

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The Knicks and Nets have generally been antagonistic to each other since the beginnings of the Nets franchise. The Nets were originally established in 1966 as a founding member of theAmerican Basketball Association (ABA), to be named the New York Americans, and league had intended for the team to play at the69th Regiment Armory in Manhattan. The Knicks of the older NBA forced the Armory to back out three months before opening day, forcing the Nets to be left scrambling for a venue with opening day approaching, and it finally settled on theTeaneck Armory inTeaneck, New Jersey. The Nets would continue to be a transient franchise for the remainder of their time in the ABA, unable to establish a permanent home in theTri-State area until 1972, when they became the basketball tenant of theNassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum inUniondale, New York.[6]

Upon their transfer to the NBA from the ABA due to theABA–NBA merger in 1976, the then New York Nets, were cited for "encroaching" on the Knicks' New York City territory at the Nassau Coliseum, and were forced to pay an encroachment fee ofUS$4.8 million to the Knicks. This fee, along with the NBA expansion fee, made it financially impossible for the Nets, who were the ABA champions in 1976, to retain superstarJulius Erving. The Nets were forced to sell Erving to thePhiladelphia 76ers in order to meet their financial obligations, and this move sent the team to a period of mediocrity that took them years to recover from.[7]

When the Nets decided to move back to the state of New Jersey in 1977, the Knicks once again became an obstacle and threatened to block the move because it would infringe on their exclusive territorial rights to New Jersey. The Nets responded by suing the Knicks on the basis that their actions violated anti-trust laws.[8] The lawsuit was settled between the teams after the league and the state of New Jersey intervened, and the Nets agreed to pay another $4 million to the Knicks for the rights to move.[9]

1977–2012: New York vs. New Jersey

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Courtney Lee defendingTracy McGrady during a game atMadison Square Garden in 2010.

Between 1977 and 2012, the Nets played in the state of New Jersey as the New Jersey Nets. During that time, the Knicks generally received more media coverage regardless of team records, despite both teams playing in the New York market. When the Knicks traveled to New Jersey to play the Nets, the arena was often evenly split between fan bases. This was partly because the two teams were separated by only the Hudson River; however, a contributing factor was that tickets in New Jersey were comparatively cheaper than those sold at Madison Square Garden. The atmosphere was often tense amongst fan bases trying to establish control ofhome court advantage.

For most of their respective histories during this period, the Nets and Knicks had traded dominance in the New York area, with the Nets' most successful years occurring in the early 1980s and early 2000s, while the Knicks' biggest success mostly occurring from the late 80s to the late 90s. The teams would meet in the first round of the1983 NBA playoffs and1994 NBA playoffs, with the Knicks easily defeating the Nets in both cases.

The rivalry began to heat up in the early 2000s. With the trade of Stephon Marbury to the Suns for Jason Kidd, the Nets became the class of the Eastern Conference in 2001. Due to the long-noted discrepancy in media coverage between the New York and New Jersey ball clubs, upon being signed, Kidd promised the Nets would no longer play second fiddle to the Knicks.[10]

The rivalry was again turned up a notch, when New York native Stephon Marbury, the once-vilified point guard in New Jersey who was traded for Kidd, was traded to the Knicks in 2004. Marbury and Kidd had their own rivalry, with Kidd being the consensus best-point-guard-in-the-league[11] and Marbury declaring himself the league's best point guard.[12] The two stars who had once been traded for one another now found each other on opposite sides of an intense rivalry and their respective teams were motivated to prove their supremacy in the metropolitan area. Some members of the Knicks went so far as to say that they wanted to face New Jersey (the reigning two-time Eastern Conference champion at the time) in the playoffs.[13] The Nets swept the Knicks in the first round of the 2004 playoffs. The series included a highly publicized spat between the Knicks'Tim Thomas and Nets'Kenyon Martin, in which Thomas all but challenged Martin to a fight and called him "fugazi."[14]

2012–present: New York vs. Brooklyn

[edit]

After buying the Nets in 2010,Mikhail Prokhorov took frequent jabs at the Knicks and their ownership. He stated that he wished to "turn Knicks fans into Nets fans"[15] when the team relocated, and that he was happy the Nets caused the Knicks to "overpay" forCarmelo Anthony (by increasing their own offers in the "Carmelo Sweepstakes").[16]

Both sides have begun marketing in earnest throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, often proclaiming they are the sole "team of the borough" with billboards displaying their newly acquired superstars, Carmelo Anthony andDeron Williams.[17] One of the first moves of Prokhorov's ownership of the Nets in 2010 was to purchase a large 225-by-99-foot (69 m × 30 m) painted billboard, featuring himself, then Nets part-ownerJay-Z and the words "Blueprint for Greatness" on the side of a building at 34th Street and Eighth Avenue facingMadison Square Garden, home of the Knicks.[18] The Knicks responded to the Nets' marketing push with a television commercial stating, "You can walk like us, you can talk like us, but you ain't never gonna be like us." This prompted Prokhorov to respond: "I think we'd more like to be like the Lakers [winners of 16 NBA championships]."[19]Marty Markowitz, the formerborough president of Brooklyn, has derisively called the Knicks the "Manhattan Knicks" and claimed that any Brooklynite who supported the Knicks was committing "treason".[20]

The trash talking between the two teams, including personal insults such as the 6-foot-8 Prokhorov calling Knicks owner James Dolan "that little man",[21] reached a point where NBA commissionerDavid Stern felt the need to arrange a meeting between Knicks owner James Dolan and Brooklyn Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov to lessen the tensions between the two.[22]

Comparisons

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Media outlets have noted the rivalry's similarity to those of other New York City teams, such asMajor League Baseball'sSubway Series rivalry between theAmerican League'sNew York Yankees andNational League'sNew York Mets due to the teams' proximity through theNew York City Subway. Historically, the boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn competed via theDodgers–Giants rivalry, when the two teams were known as theBrooklyn Dodgers andNew York Giants. Like the Knicks and Nets, the Giants and Dodgers played in Manhattan and Brooklyn, respectively, and were fierce divisional rivals.[23] Therivalry between theNew York Islanders andNew York Rangers of theNational Hockey League shared this crosstown rivalry from 2015 to 2020 when the Islanders played at the Barclays Center.[24][25] TheHudson River Derby ofMajor League Soccer is also similar in terms of being crosstown New York City sporting rivals, however,New York City FC play in the Bronx and theNew York Red Bulls play inHarrison, New Jersey, not Brooklyn or Long Island; although New York City FC has, at some occasions, played at Red Bull Arena in 2020 and 2021 due to scheduling conflicts with Yankee Stadium and even winterization procedures.[26]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Knicks-Nets series... ...a squabble between.... Ron Thomas.USA Today. April 20, 1983
  2. ^Fine, Larry (November 27, 2012)."NBA: Nets win first battle of New York in OT".Reuters. RetrievedNovember 25, 2020.[dead link]
  3. ^"Battle Of The Boroughs IV: Can The Nets Even The Season Series?". The Gothamist. Archived fromthe original on April 27, 2015. RetrievedJanuary 21, 2013.
  4. ^Dell, Chris (November 27, 2011)."Knicks and Nets Rivalry Begins at Barclays".The New York Times. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2012.
  5. ^"Clash of the Boroughs Resounds in Brooklyn". BrooklynNets.com. Archived fromthe original on January 29, 2013. RetrievedNovember 26, 2012.
  6. ^"New York Americans"(PDF). remembertheaba.com. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on December 25, 2010. RetrievedJanuary 2, 2011.
  7. ^Moffie, Jonathan (October 31, 2012)."Nets, Knicks Ignite Crosstown Rivalry".The New York Times. New York. Archived fromthe original on September 29, 2013.
  8. ^Goldaper, Sam."Nets, Seeking to Move to Jersey, Sue Knicks Over Effort to Block It; Nets, Seeking a Move to Jersey, Sue Knicks Over Effort to Block Shift",The New York Times, July 7, 1977. Accessed April 16, 2012.
  9. ^Goldaper, Sam."Nets Will Move To New Jersey; Cost: $4 Million; Nets Will Pay $4 Million for Move to Jersey",The New York Times, July 27, 1977. Accessed April 16, 2012.
  10. ^Youngmisuk, Ohm (December 17, 2002)."Rivalry? It's History, Says The Nets' Kidd – New York Daily News".Daily News. New York. Archived fromthe original on March 8, 2012.
  11. ^Best point guard list begins with Kidd – NBA – ESPN
  12. ^Stephon Marbury : Best Point Guard in the NBA
  13. ^Nets Sweep Knicks Out of the Playoffs – RealGM Wiretap
  14. ^"Thomas: K-Mart's act is phony". ESPN. April 22, 2004.Archived from the original on May 30, 2012. RetrievedJuly 4, 2011.
  15. ^NBA: New Jersey Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov's plan – ESPN New York
  16. ^Mikhail Prokhorov: Happy to Make Knicks Overpay for ‘Melo
  17. ^Knicks/Nets Billboard Rivalry Continues to Rage
  18. ^The Gothamist | » Nets' Huge Billboard Over MSG Gets Under Knicks' Skin
  19. ^Mikhail Prokhorov wants New Jersey Nets to mirror Los Angeles Lakers, not New York Knicks – ESPN New York
  20. ^Blau, Reuven (November 26, 2012)."Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz says locals committing 'treason' cheering for Knicks over Nets".New York Daily News. New York.
  21. ^Young, Royce (August 20, 2012)."Mikhail Prokhorov calls James Dolan 'that little man'".CBS Sports.
  22. ^"Report: League met with Knicks and Nets owners to tone down rivalry".CBS Sports. August 27, 2013.
  23. ^Vecsey, George (November 25, 2012)."A Rivalry to Add to the City's Rich History".The New York Times. New York.
  24. ^Dell, Chris (October 31, 2012)."Islanders Fans React to Barclays Center Move".The New York Times. New York. Archived fromthe original on January 4, 2013.
  25. ^Joyce, Greg (February 29, 2020)."Islanders ditching Barclays Center for Nassau Coliseum full-time".New York Post. RetrievedMarch 2, 2021.
  26. ^"A Q&A with CEO Brad Sims".nycfc.com. March 31, 2021. RetrievedMay 24, 2021.
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