Knicks’ mop celebration after 1989 76ers sweep is bold statement current team wouldn’t dare try (2024)

PHILADELPHIA — We know how these cities feel about each other. And sometimes, a little of that rancor actually bleeds out from the participants, too. Chase Utley was California. David Wright was from Virginia. They weren’t exactly born into the geographic sporting blood feud between these warring factions of the northeast corridor.

But they were never shy about talking about it.

“When we beat them, it’s a little sweeter,” Wright said in 2015.

“We respect each other,” Utley said in 2008. “But we don’t like each other.”

Chuck Bednarik took great delight in flattening Frank Gifford on a cold Yankee Stadium field in 1960. DeSean Jackson seemed to enjoy himself a little extra at the end of that punt return in 2009. Asrdubal Cabrera once took so long to round the bases after a walk-off home run against the Phillies in 2016, you could’ve watched most of “The Irishman” before he touched home plate.

But never was there anything quite so audacious as what happened a week shy of 35 years ago, which was also the last time the Knicks played the Sixers in a playoff game in this city. Then — May 2, 1989 — the building was the Spectrum, still a decade away from a date with a wrecking ball.

The Knicks won a heart-thumping game that night, beating the 76ers 116-115 when Charles Barkley missed a shot at the buzzer. It clinched that first-round series — then a best-of-five — although the games had been razor thin, the Knicks winning twice by one point and winning all three by a combined eight points.

“These were the three best games I’ve ever been a part of,” Barkley said after he’d finally been peeled off the Spectrum floor, where he’d slumped after his potential game-winner had bounded away.

It was shortly after the buzzer when it happened.

Five Knicks — Sidney Green, Johnny Newman, Mark Jackson, Eddie Lee Wilkins and Charles Oakley — spotted a janitor’s mop under one of the baskets. Giddy at the sweep they’d just completed and no doubt overcome by the overwhelming symbolism, they began to mop the floor. It lasted, maybe, 10 seconds. Patrick Ewing joined for a bit.

Knicks’ mop celebration after 1989 76ers sweep is bold statement current team wouldn’t dare try (1)

It was just long enough for a photographer to snap the picture.

And the next morning both The Post and the Philadelphia Daily News splashed it on their respective back pages. The dichotomy of public reaction was as you’d imagine it would be, although not nearly what it would be if something similar happened today.

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“They talked trash, talked junk, all series long and they didn’t win even one game,” Ewing said with a satisfied smile a few minutes after leaving the broom behind that night. “So we decided we’d do a little talking after all was said and done.”

Thirty-five years later, there’s no telling the hysteria this would cause. There was a fairly prolonged discussion on Philly talk radio Wednesday about whether the three Villanova championship banners should be temporarily taken down in Wells Fargo Center because Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and Donte DiVinvenzo now play for the Knicks.

Knicks’ mop celebration after 1989 76ers sweep is bold statement current team wouldn’t dare try (2)

Well, that would explain the 2016 and ’18 banners, anyway. Apparently, Harold Jensen and Easy Eddie Pinckney and the rest of the ’85 Wildcats must have enjoyed a steak or two at Gallagher’s or Bobby Van’s and thus were also deemed enemies of the state.

In the moment, the Knicks didn’t believe they were gloating so much as celebrating. And even Barkley, who in those days didn’t exactly need a lot to get his furnace boiling on overdrive, wasn’t as bothered as you’d think.

“When you win,” he said, “you can do whatever you want to win. If we don’t like it we should’ve done something about it.”

Even if things go perfectly for the Knicks on Thursday and Sunday, even if they do take a metaphorical broom to the Sixers, there is exactly a zero percent chance any of the Knicks would ever think to recreate the ’89 Knicks’ victory lap. The team isn’t wired that way, and the times dictate that they’d not only be putting themselves in danger by strutting in front of angry Philly fans, they’d also risk angering the basketball gods.

Which makes sense. The next game those ’89 Knicks played, they lost at home to Michael Jordan’s Bulls. They lost that series in six. They never did beat Jordan’s Bulls in the playoffs. Maybe the broom dance had nothing to do with that. Prove it.

Knicks’ mop celebration after 1989 76ers sweep is bold statement current team wouldn’t dare try (2024)

FAQs

Who is the Knicks biggest rival? ›

The Knicks–Nets rivalry is a crosstown rivalry between New York City's two National Basketball Association (NBA) teams: the New York Knicks and Brooklyn Nets. Both teams compete in Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference.

What team is most likely to win NBA? ›

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Who did the Knicks beat in 69? ›

After defeating the Bullets in the Eastern Division semifinals and the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern Division finals, the Knicks defeated the Los Angeles Lakers in seven games to capture their first NBA title.

Has the 76ers won a ring? ›

The 76ers have won three NBA championships. Their first came under their previous name, the Syracuse Nationals, in 1955. The second title came in 1967, a team which was led by Chamberlain. The third title came in 1983, won by a team led by Erving and Malone.

Who wears number 6 for the Knicks? ›

This decision not only marks the end of an era for the Knicks but also extends league-wide, with Quentin Grimes being the final player to ever sport the #6, as no players are grandfathered into the number this year.

How often does the favored NBA team win? ›

Over the past five seasons, 67.01% of favorites have been successful in the NBA regular season. Home favorites have a slightly higher success rate than those on the road, with 68.66% of home favorites winning compared to 64.27% of those on the road.

Which team is favored in a spread? ›

The point spread is the expected final score difference between two teams. It is represented as both a negative and positive number; if the spread is 3 points, you'll see that as both -3 and +3. The team that is the favorite to win gets the minus-number (-3); the underdog gets the plus-number (+3).

Who is favored to win the Knicks vs. Pacers? ›

The Knicks are currently 5.5-point favorites over the Pacers. The game's over/under is 218. Here's everything you need to know about the Knicks-Pacers game, from the point spread, moneyline, total Over/Under and expert picks, as well as TV channel and streaming information.

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