The Knicks winning the championship is so ridiculous that Josh Hart and Jalen Brunson got Leon Rose to sit with them at the stage of their Roommates Show.
If that’s not crazy enough for you to believe, you tell me what is.
Here’s the latest from Rose and elsewhere.
Leon Rose
On firing Tom Thibodeau and hiring Mike Brown:
“It was tough. Thibs is a great coach. Did so much for the organization. We were right on the doorstep. Just felt that, just needed a change in voice, a change in philosophy. It was a tough move.
Mike is a guy that really fit what we were looking for. He’s somebody that I’ve known for a long time. I represented LeBron [James] when he coached him in Cleveland. Knew him and kind of followed him through his career. Didn’t know him that well, but he always was a guy that was a good guy, that you could talk to, that you really felt good about. That was just your gut. Then you go through the process, and you’re looking for certain things. We had built out a criteria of certain things that were very important, we do research, and we brought in, I think it was five candidates, and really graded them in the different areas and things like that and made the decision that we made.”
On what stood out about Mike Brown:
“First of all, just his openness and his willingness to share ideas. And share ideas with the front office, his staff and the inclusion of everyone. I think you guys probably saw that. He really was open to things, open to people’s suggestions, open to ideas. I believe that’s what led to some of the changes that were made throughout the season. We started out a certain way, he may have had an idea about how something was gonna work and how he wanted it to work, but he kind of evolved throughout the season, as did our team. I think that all went into the fact that we went into another gear in the playoffs.”
On the criticism of the Mikal Bridges trade:
“Believe me, it bothered the heck out of me, because it had nothing to do with Mikal. It was the price I was willing to pay or we were willing to pay in order to get that deal done because of how important we thought it was to get that piece to solidify this group.”
On the criticism after signing Jalen Brunson:
“I got killed about Jalen, and now everyone thinks I’m a genius. It’s about what we did in order to get you. Clearing space, at the time people thinking that it was so much money that we were paying you. … This was the first major move and I had all the conviction in the world. I’ve known him since he was born, I know what he’s all about, I know what a winner he is, I know that I was willing to ride with him.”
On the lessons learned from the ECF loss to Indiana in 2025:
“I think going through what we went through with Indiana, the full-court pressure wearing us down, injuries, even going back two years, but last year the way we saw that, and that was something we wanted to fortify and solidify.”
On the acquisition of Jose Alvarado being his savviest move:
“What went into getting Jose was [Guerschon] Yabusele had to give up his second year in order for us to make a deal with Chicago so we could get a player that had an expiring contract and then send that on to New Orleans in order to get him. So there were a lot of things that went into doing that. And that was huge, because we did need another ball handler, we needed another person that could put it on the floor and take some of the pressure off.”
On keeping the Knicks’ front office quiet:
“To me, there’s no benefit in things being out there. I’ve always just operated like that. Until you’ve got something you don’t have anything. You don’t want to affect the guys on the team either. There’s talk all the time, there’s behind the scenes talk about players and who you like, but it doesn’t mean anything unless you get something there.”
Jalen Brunson
On missing Lionel Messi’s World Cup hat trick:
“I was pissed.”
On the first-round series against Atlanta:
“I don’t think it was a situation where we were nervous. I think it was just a wake-up call like, ‘This team is good. We can’t overlook them. We know that we need to play better. How can we do that?’ And then as a group, we realized that our attention to detail wasn’t where it needed to be. So did we flip a switch or did we just kind of refocus? I don’t really know, but whatever we did, it worked.”
On winning the championship in New York:
“I haven’t internalized it yet. But I know that down the line, I’ll feel the effects of it.”
On his growing fame:
“I don’t like to think of myself as a certain somebody.”
On no longer blending in:
“I feel like I used to be able to be kind of low-key and blend in. I don’t know if it’ll happen around here anymore, at least for now. But it’s a good problem to have.”
On deserving to celebrate with teammates at the Canyon of Heroes:
“Everyone worked so hard for that moment, and being able to enjoy that with everyone right after the fact, just us, was awesome.”
On returning to NYC with the trophy:
“It was awesome. It wasn’t overwhelming at all, which is why I love where I live. We did everything we could to bring something back here. The character and then everything that this team embodies, it means a lot to me. It means a lot to the city, and obviously having a championship puts the cherry on top.”
On finally understanding the Knicks’ importance to New York:
“Everyone gravitates to the Knicks, and I’ve seen that since I got here. Now I see it.”
On Becky Hammon’s comments:
“I don’t want to say it drove me. She definitely wasn’t the only person that said anything, so I’m not even going to single her out by giving her an answer. I said I didn’t care about it then. I’m not going to answer it now. I feel like I don’t really have to at this point anymore. I did what I was supposed to do.”
On the potential White House visit:
“We haven’t discussed it. But as a team, we’ll discuss it and we’ll cross that bridge when we get to it.”
Rick Brunson
On Jalen’s place among Knicks legends:
“You have to understand we strive for perfection. I’ve always pushed him. I’m going to continue to push him. People get caught up in the things he’s done in a short period of time, which is tremendous. I mean, look, I’m a proud father, but you have to do this for a long time to be great. I tell him that all the time. You can’t take away from the great ones — the Walt Fraziers, the Willis Reeds, the Patrick Ewings. They did it for a long period of time. So we still have a long way to go, but we’ll get there.”
On chasing another championship:
“You always think about next season. That’s how his mind works. We want to get back to where we were this season and hopefully have a chance to compete for another championship. You want more.”
On prime Derrick Rose being better than Jalen Brunson:
“I’mma have to sub in and help Jalen. That’s the baddest guy I’ve ever played with, coached. Derrick Rose is the best. My son and Derrick have an unbelievable relationship, but prime Derrick? Ain’t no way. No one was better than prime Derrick. Nobody. I mean, that’s me. Maybe I’m biased, but nobody. How soon do we forget? Because I’ve sat there when Derrick carried the Bulls to Miami. Obviously, we didn’t beat that. We didn’t get to the championship… [but] prime Derrick Rose? No, he’s the best that I’d ever seen as a point guard in this era.”
On Patrick Ewing being the greatest Knick:
“I love my son. Patrick Ewing is the best Knick that I’ve ever witnessed. Patrick Ewing, obviously, [that] I witnessed, is the greatest right now. All-time leading rebounder, points, he has all the stats. But just the type of person Pat was, the type of teammate he was, the work ethic was similar. Pat was the hardest working guy we had and he was the best player. Pat did it for 15 years, Jalen did it for four. I don’t rank these players by championships, although it’s great. Pat’s always been a champion in my book. As of today, Big Fella is my favorite.”
Jack Kayil
On staying with the Knicks instead of returning to Germany:
“My plan is to stay here and get into the organization and keep growing with them.”
On being a fit with the Knicks:
“I think also one of my strengths is that I love winning and I give everything for that. To come to this organization shows that they also want winners. I think it’s a good fit.”
On his overseas experience helping him in the NBA:
“I think I already saw, for a young guy, a lot of places and different things, different plays and different systems and I think it can help me in the future.”
Barack Obama
On OG Anunoby’s historic playoff run:
“I’m trying to think of a better series from somebody who’s never been an All-Star, and it’s hard to think of one, right? Where, through the whole playoffs, he was just a rock.”
On Jalen Brunson:
“It’s the toughness and endurance and mental fortitude of that guy. You just felt like, ‘I’m going to keep coming and I’m not going to doubt myself and not going to let my team doubt myself.’ And for a second-round draft pick, who was a champion, who was a winner, you didn’t see it coming. A cliche, but that dude has the heart of a champion. You can see, just watching him with his dad [Rick Brunson] at the end of the game and kind of what that meant, all the work they must’ve put in. All those years, all that commitment — real proud of him. And I know he’ll never have to pay for a meal again in New York. … He’s the king of New York right now.”
On Victor Wembanyama:
“I think Victor Wembanyama will end up being as good as we are projected. I watched him at the All-Star game. I was sitting there, first time I’d seen him live, and I don’t remember somebody that that big moving like that. He’s got to figure out what his go-to move is. He’s got to put on some weight, he’s got to work on his conditioning. Because he kept, you could tell he got tired, partly because it just looks to me like playing defense today is so much harder because you have to close out everything. So, it used to be, you’re Victor Wembanyama, you just plant yourself in the paint, and you’re a rim protector. But I’m watching him on defense now, the way they’re using him, he is like in the paint and then he’s trying to close out a three-pointer.”
Adam Silver
On the NBA becoming more balanced:
“The goal over time has been, and I’ve said it, to be more NFL-like. Where you believe your team has a shot. Maybe not every single season, but your view is, regardless of the market size, if your team is well-managed, if you have a little bit of luck in there, you have a good chance to be in the playoffs and potentially be the champion. And so I think what we’ve seen is societal changes; I think that nobody’s going to say that Victor Wembanyama in San Antonio can’t get global attention because it’s a smaller market. I love the fact this year, even San Antonio vs. New York, I don’t think the storyline was small market-big market; I think it was Wemby vs. Jalen, or whatever else. So I think the players recognize they can have success regardless of where they are.”
On the second apron:
“We want a better distribution of the players, and we’re seeing that. I just think fans want a sense that it’s not (as) top-heavy as it was historically in the NBA. I don’t think fans are as enthusiastic about them if one team is spending drastically more than any other team.”
Brian Windhorst
On a hypothetical LeBron James sign-and-trade to Cleveland:
“Obviously, LeBron would have to want to sign with the Cavs, but if your pathway to paying LeBron the money is to trade Jarrett Allen for him, the Lakers would kill for Jarrett Allen. Kill for him. They would do that deal in 17-tenths of a second.”













