Back in mid-April, the NBA playoffs were beginning, and we looked at the potential legacy boosts (or declines) of several NBA players.What would a second title mean for guys such as Jaylen Brown, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander or Nikola Jokić?Or even a third, Stephen Curry-less ring for Kevin Durant?What about a first ring for the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Anthony Edwards or the Cleveland Cavaliers’ backcourt duo of Donovan Mitchell and James Harden?Of course, none of those players are in position to answer those questions in June. There are only two players (three technically) from that story in April who have a chance to add to their legacies by winning this season’s championship.Karl-Anthony Towns, Jalen Brunson (mentioned but not fully dissected) and Victor Wembanyama are still fighting for their first rings. With two wins under their belts so far in the NBA Finals, Brunson and Towns have a huge head start and advantage over Wemby. The Knicks enter Monday’s Game 3 with history behind them. Only a handful of teams have ever come back from losing the first two games in the NBA Finals. None of them started down two at home. History is pointing toward Towns and Brunson getting the New York Knicks’ first ring since 1973.What does a title this year do for their legacies? Let’s update the conversation.Karl-Anthony TownsThe turnaround on the Towns career trope has been as dramatic a 180 as we’ve ever seen.I remember in 2011, when Dirk Nowitzki won his championship with the Dallas Mavericks. Before that, his 2007 collapse against the Golden State Warriors had tarnished his legacy. He was one of the best shooters we’ve ever seen, but the idea that Nowitzki could lead a team to a championship had been severely diminished. At the time, he wasn’t considered clutch or tough.Then Nowitzki led the Mavs on an incredible, improbable run to the NBA Finals and took down the villainous Miami Heat to an upset win for the title. Suddenly, he was a universally accepted all-timer, one of the most clutch players we’ve seen and someone who would never again be doubted to such great lengths. His legacy had been cemented, and a lot of people changed the way they talked about him.Towns isn’t in the Nowitzki realm in terms of historic superstars. While his outside shooting rivals Nowitzki’s in accuracy and volume, Towns has never been an MVP or led a team to the No. 1 seed in its conference. He’s a three-time All-NBA selection three times (all third team) and a six-time All-Star.However, Towns’ career trajectory has been a disappointment despite his accolades. Towns has been one of the most ridiculed players on the internet for the last several years. Ideas that he’s soft or not good enough or not someone you can win a title with have saturated conversation after conversation about his place in the NBA. There’s the infamous meme of him not being able to budge DeMarcus Cousins. Or we can go to the time people thought he tapped out against Ben Simmons after Towns stood up for himself in his continuous battles with Joel Embiid. Who could forget KAT being a target on defense in big playoff moments?Those moments and the convos about him have overshadowed Towns’ talent and accomplishments. But after two wins in the 2026 finals, Towns has all but erased the scrutiny. He has been the best player through the first two games. Not just for the Knicks but in the finals overall. His defense on Wembanyama and against the rest of the Spurs has been inspirational. His scoring has been consistent, and it’s also presenting issues for Wembanyama, the unanimous Defensive Player of the Year.KAT has shown the toughness so many people believed he lacked. He’s neutralized the guy coming for ownership of the NBA in the same way other all-time greats all did at some point. Towns’ legacy has received a boost that many people long denied could ever happen. If the Knicks close out this championship within the next week or so, Towns will be one of the top two reasons it happens. He’ll have eliminated anything bad that could be said about him. Towns will have validated being the No. 1 pick in 2015 and the expectations that came from his very special rookie campaign. This is the player we were promised to witness in his career, and it comes after being written off for so long in such inflammatory and harsh ways.I’m not sure any secondary star player has ever turned things around in this manner. Maybe it feels more dramatic because it’s the social media age and these conversations are so prominent and searchable. Regardless, Towns is on the precipice of the ultimate redemption.Jalen BrunsonOne of the running jokes during the Knicks’ historic playoff run is about Brunson never having to buy another meal in New York if he delivers a championship to this town. The Knicks haven’t won a title since 1973, and their two championship banners are essentially newspaper clippings. Maybe your parents or your grandparents saw it happen. Maybe you’ve seen some highlights of Walt Frazier leading the Knicks or Willis Reed’s heroic effort in Game 7 despite a torn thigh muscle in Game 5 of the 1970 finals. Knicks fans are a couple of generations removed from those moments. And the idea of seeing it in 4K and being able to loop it around social media videos for the foreseeable future is almost too good to imagine.Brunson is the reason for the Knicks’ turnaround in recent years. He is the Disney story in the making of bringing realistic championship expectations and realities to this organization. For years — decades even — the Knicks have been a punchline. Yes, the hiring of Leon Rose and William “World Wide Wes” Wesley technically signaled the beginning of this successful era, but it felt more fleeting than anything. The brief bump with Julius Randle almost seems comical now, but Knicks fans were so desperate for normalcy amongst the contenders that they latched onto anything good in the hopes it would be great.When Brunson signed with the Knicks for $110 million over four years, it was a head-turner for many. I believed in the signing like a few others, even though it was impossible to expect this. With the way Brunson played toward the end of his Mavericks career, you could see there was more to his game. Maybe he had All-Star potential and could become an All-NBA guy. Being someone on the MVP ballot and the new King of New York seemed optimistic at best. And yet, here we are.Brunson was asked over the weekend what talent evaluators missed about his game and his potential when he was the 33rd pick of the 2018 draft, going three selections into the second round. His answer was perfectly succinct.“Everything.”Mic drop.Because he’s 100 percent right. Even those of us who believed in him after a few years in Dallas missed this. The phrase “has that dog in him” is overused so often in player evaluation. Brunson doesn’t have that dog in him. He is the dog. He is the leader of the pack. Brunson is the guy. He’s accepted the responsibility of bucking an historic trend that Becky Hammon echoed years ago when she doubted his ability to lead the Knicks to a championship as a small guard. Brunson has weathered every storm, read every angle and found a counter for everything thrown his way. Resilience pumps through his veins, mixed in with the ice water that keeps him cool in the clutch.When LeBron James was a free agent in 2010, he was highly criticized for teaming up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. The criticism was there for many reasons, but some of it might have been surprise, as well. It was presumed his departure for Cleveland would be to New York to bring the Knicks a title. The thought was he could win half a dozen titles in Miami, but they wouldn’t mean as much as one championship possibly could with the Knicks. Brunson has a different career and distinct expectations, but he’s on the verge of proving that theory. Maybe it’s disrespectful to Frazier to say Brunson would become the greatest Knick of all time. But bringing a championship to this generation of Knicks fans after so many missed out on this feeling will put him in the conversation.Forget meals. Brunson will never have to buy anything ever again in New York City if they complete this series victory.Royalty doesn’t have to buy anything.Victor WembanyamaAs we’ve already mentioned, history is not on Wembanyama’s side right now with this 2-0 series deficit. Wembanyama, at 22 years old, has to figure out a way to make more history for himself and his teammates. And that couldn’t come against a tougher opponent with how perfectly this Knicks team has played for a month and a half. Wemby and the Spurs don’t have the experience to draw on to know how to handle this. Everything has to be learned in real time and applied in an instant.Wembanyama embraces the emotions of what falls at his feet because of the situation he’s put himself in. Expectations are hard to live up to when you’ve been tasked with being one of the greatest players we’ll ever see before you’ve even stepped foot onto a playoff court. As soon as we saw Wemby was the real deal in his rookie campaign, the sky wasn’t even the limit. It beamed far beyond that into galaxies and universes far and away from us. Wembanyama is expected to be perfect and to be historic. Much like other star players in the past learning the ropes, he’s learned that this stuff becomes extremely difficult when you get to this stage.Perhaps it’s true that existing in the wake of a Game 7 victory in Oklahoma City kept him and his teammates from properly preparing for the battle with the Knicks. Or maybe it’s just that the Knicks are this good and have been underestimated this entire time. As Wemby continues to accomplish so much at such a young age, underestimation does not exist for him anymore. He has to deliver or it’s a failure. Such is life for historic phenoms.Wembanyama’s legacy will be immense no matter what. Even if the Knicks sweep San Antonio, Wemby’s expectations will not dwindle. If anything, they’ll mutate. Wembanyama will be expected to enact revenge and make the scrutiny that is sure to come this offseason and next season but a footnote to his legacy. Or if he can lead his team as the first NBA champion to come back from down two games at home, then it just adds to the elitism he was born to exist in. You have to win one before winning four. And you can’t go down three games and be expected to do anything but fold. However, Wemby is still technically in this and therefore capable of making even more history.His legacy would exceed everything we’d already thrown his way with expectations should he complete this comeback. At some point he won’t be doubted again. We just don’t know if he’s capable of making that point now at 22 while down two games headed to Madison Square Garden against a seemingly unbeatable Knicks team.
NBA Finals legacy index: Karl-Anthony Towns, Jalen Brunson and Victor Wembanyama lead way
Karl-Anthony Towns and Jalen Brunson can become Knicks royalty with a title. Can Victor Wembanyama stop that?














