Sunday, June 14, 2026

New York Knicks Stage Another Dramatic Comeback Win Over the San Antonio Spurs to Capture NBA Title, Ending Championship Drought of 53 Years

 


2026 NBA Champions: New York Knickerbockers

NY Knicks 94, San Antonio Spurs 90



Okay Knicks fans, you can breathe now. The Knicks sure did it in the most suspenseful way possible. You could almost say that they should be referred to as the Cardiac Knicks. Every single game that they won in this NBA Finals series went down to the end, being decided in the final seconds. They overcame double-digit leads by San Antonio in every single one of their victories in this series.

Indeed as a result, a moment that surely many Knicks fans believed might never happen finally came to fruition last night in San Antonio at the end of Game 5. Once again, the Knicks had to come from behind - they were behind by 16 points at one point in the first half - in order to secure a 94-90 win on the road over the San Antonio Spurs to capture the first NBA title for the franchise in 53 years. During last night's broadcast, they put into perspective just how long ago that was. Richard Nixon was the sitting president. The Soviet Union still existed, the Berlin Wall still stood, and the Cold War was still going on. The Vietnam War had not yet fully ended. The Beatles had broken up just a few years earlier, but fans still held out hope for a reunion at some point in time. Post-it notes and the Rubik's cube had yet to be invented. Shaq was just a year old. And I had not been born yet. 

That was the world the last time that the Knicks won an NBA championship. Bill Bradley, now a former Senator and even a former presidential candidate, was on that roster. So was now legendary head coach Phil Jackson. Earl Monroe was a part of that title run. And of course, Walt Frazier was the leader and star of that team. 

Now, the Knicks have won the NBA title in an entirely different era, obviously with an entirely different cast. But this Knicks team managed to do what no other Knicks team since the '73 team did: bring an NBA championship back home to the Big Apple.

Jalen Brunson, undeniably the team leader for New York, scored 45 points, which now stands as a Knicks franchise record for most points in a playoff game. The 29-year-old native of New Brunswick, New Jersey (home to, Rutgers University, my alma mater) also had three rebounds and three assists. He clearly rose to the occasion, stepping up in a huge way once again, helping the Knicks to finally seal the deal and win the NBA title that had eluded the franchise for over half a century.

Brunson is the kind of rare guy who gets more and more impressive the more you hear about him. At least that was the case with me. He originally was drafted 33rd overall in 2018 by the Dallas Mavericks. He played for them until 2022, when he was traded to the Knicks, after his father became an assistant coach for New York. It was his dream to bring an NBA Championship to New York, a franchise that notoriously had a history of coming close for many years, but not quite being able to win one. I will get into that in more detail in a little bit. In order to help this dream come to fruition, Brunson sacrificed a ton of money - over $100 million - in order to help the Knicks build the kind of talent around him that could help deliver that championship. In the postgame interviews last night, Brunson came across as humble and intelligent, as well as truly grateful to be in the position he now finds himself in. A generally and genuinely decent guy, in other words. Someone you can cheer for with a good conscience, which itself seems increasingly rare in sports. 

That made it a bit easier for me to root for the Knicks throughout these playoffs, and especially during this NBA Finals series. You see, my own personal history with the Knicks is a bit...well, strange. I was a fan of the team back in the 1980's. In fact, they were probably my second favorite sports franchise overall, or at least third. The New York Football Giants were my favorite, and possibly the Jets my second favorite (I never saw a problem or dilemma pulling for both teams). Then the Knicks. They were terrible when I first got into them sometime in the early to mid-eighties. But they got better, started making the playoffs every year.

Then Pat Riley, the successful coach of the dynasty Lakers of the eighties, came to Madison Square Garden. The Knicks then had one superstar, Patrick Ewing. Riley seemed a strange fit. I regarded him as very much a product of the 1980's, with his slicked back hair and image of success in sunny southern California. Admittedly, I was not sure that I liked him. But once he came to New York, I began rooting for him, hoping that he could bring a title (or more than one, I even hoped) to the Big Apple. 

For the first few years, he looked on pace to do exactly that. They were decent in his first year in 1991-92 and qualified for the postseason. Advanced to the Eastern Conference Semifinals, where they met the reigning NBA champion Chicago Bulls, of course led by Michael Jordan. Pushed the Bulls to a Game 7, which was not expected. Granted, they did not win that one, but it seemed to bode well for the Knicks franchise that they had gotten that far that fast under Riley. The future looked bright. As a fan, I was excited for the 1992-93 season. 

By all rights, it was a successful season for the franchise. They finished with an overall record of 62-20, tying a franchise record set in the 1969-70 season. That was good enough for them to be the top overall seed. They got past Reggie Miller and the Indiana Pacers (a little more on them shortly) in four, then got past the Charlotte Hornets in five. The Knicks were in the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in my life, and they raced off to a 2-0 series lead against the Chicago Bulls. Everything looked great, and I was tremendously excited.

Now here's the thing: all season long, the Knicks had been talking. I heard Patrick Ewing talking about how the Knicks were poling the NBA. Some other players talked openly about how they rejected the label some had given them as the team of the future, because they believed that their time was now. Why wait another year, one asked during an interview session, when we feel we can win it all this year? And certainly, all of that looked justified when the Knicks took that 2-0 series lead into Chicago in the 1993 Eastern Conference Finals. 

But all of that talk felt almost like a betrayal to me once the winning stopped. And it stopped abruptly that year once the series shifted to Chicago. The Bulls scored decisive wins in Game 3 and Game 4, drawing even. Then the Knicks and Bulls played an intense and close Game 5. There was the Charles Smith, getting his layups rejected four times within seconds with the clock winding down, preserving the Bulls lead (Chicago actually scored just before the clock sounded). Suddenly, the Knicks, who had looked unstoppable just days before, were down 3-2 in the series, with Game 6 to be played in Chicago, a place which the Knicks clearly did not want to play. I held out hope, and the Knicks actually took an early lead. But once the Bulls got going, they were the ones who actually proved to be unstoppable. Chicago won the game fairly convincingly, then went on to complete their first three-peat.

On my end, I probably overreacted, in retrospect. When I said that all of that trash talk felt like a betrayal, I meant it. It seemed to me that if the Knicks had focused their energy on actually producing results on the court, rather than simply talking smack, they might actually have won that series against the Bulls, and likely winning the NBA title (although Phoenix should not be overlooked that season, as they had a fine team also). The Knicks kept on talking, too. Every year, one Knick or another seemed to guarantee that this would be the year. And every year, there was some major disappointment or another in the end. 

For all intents and purposes, I almost started to hate the Knicks. I felt that a team that focused so much on talking, and not as much on winning, did not deserve to capture the NBA title. For the most part, I simply wanted them to display some moderation and maturity, but it seemed to me that they never did. So I actually rejoiced when the Knicks began to experience their misfortunes. While the Charles Smith layup incident had broken my heart as a fan, Reggie Miller catching fire in Game 5 of the 1994 Eastern Conference Finals felt thrilling. The Knicks still won the series, but I was happy when the Houston Rockets outlasted the Knicks in the 1994 NBA Finals, which was one of the very best NBA Finals I can remember. Every single game was competitive, decided by less than ten points. New York had some real chances. But in the end, they fell short. I can still remember all of those missed three-pointers by John Starks. 

More talk again for the 94-95 season. Once again, the Knicks met the Indiana Pacers, this time in the Eastern Semis. Miller again burned the Knicks in memorable fashion, this time scoring eight points in the final 18 seconds or so of Game 1, including two three-pointers. It was a stunning result, and again I rejoiced. By that point, the Knicks may actually have been my least favorite NBA franchise, or at least second behind the Lakers. I could not tell, but I did not care, so long as neither team won the title. And the Knicks lost that series to the Pacers in seven. Pat Riley, the man I had been on the fence about, supposedly walked off the court after the loss and right out of Madison Square Garden. Out of the Knicks franchise altogether. No, I was not a Knicks fan at that point, but that move seemed to lack any kind of class. 

By 1996, the Knicks and all of their talk felt like an afterthought. The big rivalry in basketball seemed to be the Bulls and the Orlando Magic, who had also lost to the Houston Rockets in the NBA Finals the year before. When the Knicks met that historically dominant 1996 Bulls team in the playoffs, they managed to earn one win. That qualified them as the only team in the Eastern Conference that managed to even take a single game from Chicago that year, although the Seattle Supersonics would win two consecutive games in the NBA Finals. But the Bulls won the title, their fourth in six years, and their dynasty was clearly back on. Meanwhile, the Knicks seemed largely to fall into almost irrelevance. They were good enough to qualify for the postseason every year (I think), but they never went too far anymore. Nobody was talking about championships by that point. 

There would be more, however. The Knicks started to be a factor again in the late-nineties. They got burned again by an incredible three by Reggie Miller in the finals seconds of Game 1 in 1998 against the Pacers, and lost the series in five. But in 1999, with the Chicago Bulls dynasty having just been dismantled following their second three-peat of the decade, the Knicks suddenly caught fire again. They became only the second eighth seeded team to beat the number one seed in the first round. And that team was the Miami Heat, coached by none other than Pat Riley. I was not celebrating wildly, but it felt like Riley got his just desserts against the team he had literally abandoned. The Knicks had a new cast of characters, including Allan Houston and Larry Johnson and Marcus Camby and Letrell Sprewell. Ewing was still on the team, but he was no longer a force, largely sidelined due to injuries and age. That team had serious speed, and they became the first NBA franchise to reach the NBA Finals as an eighth seed. However, they lost the NBA Finals once again, this time to the San Antonio Spurs in five. 

The Knicks reached the Eastern Conference Finals once again in 2000, but they again lost to Reggie Miller and the Pacers. And that was pretty much it. They did not seem to compete on that level for a long, long time. Meanwhile, the hated Lakers had obtained Shaq and Kobe, and had themselves a dynasty. I forgot my hatred of the Knicks and began loathing the Lakers come playoff time. The Lakers had their own three-peat, then fell away for a few years, only to return with Pau Gasol, qualifying for three straight NBA Finals and winning two straight in 2009 and 2010. By then, the Lakers had become the only team that I absolutely, positively did not want to see win an NBA crown anymore. The Knicks had gotten bad, and no longer even seemed worth hating. 

Déjà vu came when there was yet another playoff series between the Pacers and Knicks in 2013. I rooted for the Pacers, mostly for old time sake. Sure enough, they won. Those two teams met again in both 2024 and 2025, and the Pacers won again, both times. I still was pulling for the Pacers, but no longer hated the Knicks. Overall, the Knicks and Pacers have met often dating back to their first series in 1993. The Pacers have won six of those series, while the Knicks have won three. But remember that the Knicks won in 1993 and again in 1994. Since 1995, the Pacers won all but one of the series between these two franchise, taking six of the seven.

Which brings us to this year. The Pacers went absolutely nowhere this year. They were competitive in 2025, forcing the Oklahoma City Thunder to outlast them in a seven-game series to win the NBA Championship. I thought that they might be a serious contender for the title this year, but injuries plagued them all season. Instead, they were one of the worst teams. But the Knicks were one of the best. And in these playoffs, I found myself actually pulling for the Knicks during playoff time for the first time since the early nineties. 

It just so happens that this time around, they actually won it all. The Knicks are the NBA champions for the first time since 1973. Since before I was even born, in other words.

So I realize that some can accuse me of jumping on the bandwagon. Indeed on some level, I guess I did, and will accept any criticism. 

All I can say is that the early nineties were a different time. Yes, my reaction might actually have been an overreaction. But remember, talking and making hollow predictions was something relatively new in sports at that time. The only times that I could remember high profile athletes guaranteeing glorious wins were from before my time, with Muhammad Ali in boxing and Joe Namath with the New York Jets over the heavily favored Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III. Also, the 1985 Chicago Bears making a Super Bowl video right in the middle of the regular season. But they were likely the most dominant single season team in any North American sports league that I can remember, and crushed their way to a Super Bowl title later that season. One year after the Knicks lost to the Bulls in the 1993 Eastern Conference Finals, Mark Messier guaranteed that the Rangers would beat the Devils in New Jersey after New York had fallen behind in that series, 3 games to 2. But he backed that up as well, scoring a hat trick and leading the Rangers to a comeback win to bring the series back to Madison Square Garden for Game 7, which the Rangers won. They ended up winning the Stanley Cup that year, as well, ending a 54-year championship drought. One year longer than the one the Knicks just ended, actually. In 2000, the Baltimore Ravens did a hell of a lot of talking as well, but they had a historically dominant defense, and won the Super Bowl in convincing fashion (over my Giants, in fact). 

Sports has changed these days. Nowadays, teams and athletes talking smack in very high profile ways and guaranteeing championships has become commonplace. It still annoyed me for a while, until it became so routine that even I stopped paying attention to it. In the early nineties, the Buffalo Bills talked about being the next dynasty, the team of the nineties, but never actually won a Super Bowl. The 1995 Pittsburgh Steelers also made a Super Bowl video, and they did reach the Super Bowl, but lost it. The Green Bay Packers also did a lot of talking after winning their first Super Bowl in 29 years, proclaiming themselves a dynasty. One player even predicted an undefeated season for them in 1997. They got back to the Super Bowl, but lost in a big upset, and largely fell into irrelevance. The Orlando Magic of the mid-nineties seemed to think that they were going to be a dynasty, but they never won a single NBA title, either. There were a lot of teams and individual athletes who began to talk smack and predict grand things for themselves, only to fall flat on their face more often than not. Back when I was younger, it felt like that would be an almost unspeakable disgrace. Such hubris, and then to be humiliated by failing to produce results to back up all of that talking. Teams and players with a false sense of entitlement, tempting fate, then failing spectacularly. The 2007 New England Patriots were the greatest franchise in NFL history, right up until they lost to the Giants in the final seconds of Super Bowl XLII. The 2015-2016 Golden State Warriors were possibly even better than the Chicago Bulls, dashing off to a historic 24-0 start en route to a 73-9 record, the best regular season that any franchise had ever experienced. But then they lost the NBA Finals to Cleveland. The 1996 Detroit Red Wings set all new records never before seen in NHL history, but lost to the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Finals. The 2019 Tampa Bay Lightning were the new greatest hockey team ever in 2019, but then they got swept by the Columbus Blue Jackets in the first round. The Boston Bruins also looked historically dominant in 2023, winning a record 65 games in the regular season and earning 135 points, both easily records. But they also lost in the first round. 

So many teams with a lot of hype surrounding them, who fell from those lofty heights to become objects of scorn and ridicule. You would think that they would learn.

A lot of individual athletes also seem to be taken by their own greatness. How many NFL wide receivers have we seen talking about how great they are, and how their team would surely win all of the time if they only had the sense to throw them the damn ball? Some high-profile baseball players not only eclipsed the old home run record by Roger Maris, but left it in the dust, only to later be disgraced for having used illegal, performance enhancing substances. Lance Armstrong was the inspirational story of all time, overcoming cancer and becoming the greatest cyclist ever, winning seven straight Tour de France titles. Then he admitted to using performance enhancing drugs and far from being a source of inspiration, came to be known as a disgrace. Aaron Rodgers came to the New York Jets and kept insisting that they were going to the Super Bowl, assuring fans to abandon their doubts and enjoy the ride. They never even got close to reaching the playoffs with him as their quarterback. 

Even when some athletes are, arguably, possibly the best we have ever seen, their own sense of entitlement often is a major turnoff. LeBron James is undeniably one of the greatest players in basketball history. But I got turned off when I learned that he had a tattoo proclaiming himself to be "The Chosen One" on his back, and by his constant insistence that he is the greatest basketball player in history.

How about a little bit of modesty, of humility? 

It became virtually impossible to simply like sports anymore. At least for me. Everywhere you turned, sports no longer felt strictly fun anymore. It became not a break from the real world, but too often a reminder of it. Athletes taking themselves way too seriously became the norm. Some of them actually committed serious crimes. Some former NFL players like Ben Roethlisberger, Brett Favre, Michael Vick, and Ray Rice come to mind. Surely I am forgetting some prominent names. Other high-profile athletes very publicly and loudly - and with straight faces - claimed to be underpaid, with some even claiming that they need to feed their families. It's a little like an elected leader born into enormous privilege and who never had to seriously worry about anything at all complaining about how poorly he is treated. Only in America in the 21st century.

These athletes make millions every year effectively to play a game, and they tell their fans, many of whom often make modest if not poor salaries, that they need more money to stay with their team. Back when I was a kid, you heard specifics about contract details and just how much athletes on your team actually made only every once in a while. Now, in this era of 24/7 sports news channels, you get all of the details for seemingly every player. Sports leagues seem like major corporations. Franchises leaving their former cities in the dust for greener pastures, often in every sense of that word. That has happened in all four of the biggest sports leagues in North America, and it is never a good look. The naked and transparent greed of these franchise owners makes the often more publicized greed of the players look modest by way of comparison. So with all of the hype, and with too often little to get excited about, and often seeing athletes you once rooted for suddenly being disgraced (some I already named, others I have not, and perhaps am forgetting), you almost get used to being disappointed and disillusioned with sports. Yet another athlete claiming to be the greatest of all time, or complaining about not being paid enough, even though he "earns" obscene amounts of money for playing a game professionally. Yet another team or athlete billed as the GOAT, as absolutely, without a doubt, the greatest of all time, at least until they suffer some final defeat and the hype ends. Or selfish players who are great for the highlight reels, or who foster their own very impressive statistics, but do not actually help their team much. In fact, they often seem to hurt their teams. Stephon Marbury, Odell Beckham, and Terrell Owens come to mind. Guys who seem quite taken by their own greatness and feel entitled to make just obscene amounts of money and often seem not to care about the fans at all. When these guys become the face of sports, it becomes difficult to still turn to sports as just a fun way to take a break from the world. 

Which is why I was so impressed by Jalen Brunson and this year's New York Knicks team. They were just fun to watch. It felt, at least for a little while, like sports could be like they were for me in the old days of my childhood. Just a fun distraction from the world. I did not hear any Knicks players talking about this being the year or being the team of destiny, even though it felt like that is exactly what they were from probably the Eastern Conference Finals on. That seemed especially true after this team took a 2-0 series lead after sweeping the first two in San Antonio. It seemed undeniable after they produced the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history, overcoming a 29-point deficit to stun the Spurs in Game 4 to take a commanding 3-1 series lead. It felt true even when they fell behind by 16 early in last night's game.

Jalen Brunson, for his part, showed some humor about it all. He joked that the Knicks don't always show up on time for games, usually deciding to actually play at 9 pm for a game that started at 8:30. He did not seem entirely taken by his own greatness. He did not complain about being underpaid, as some very high-profile, and very well-paid, athletes tend to do. In fact, he took a massive pay cut, sacrificing $100 million so that the Knicks franchise might have a chance at exactly what they managed to do last night. Namely, lifting the Larry O'Brien NBA Championship trophy at season's end. All he did was quietly go about his business, and he did exactly what he needed to do to finally lift the New York Knicks franchise to that higher level that had eluded them for so long. He in particular made it easy to root for this Knicks team.

Now finally, after more than 50 years of waiting, the New York Knicks are NBA champions. And whether it is debatable whether I deserve to have enjoyed rooting for them or not, seeing this particular Knicks team rise to the top was both memorable and very enjoyable. It reminded me of how much fun sports can be. 

What a team! What champions!
 
The Big Apple should be proud. Finally, after 53 years, its time to celebrate. 

June 14th: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


On this day in 1276, while taking exile in Fuzhou in southern China, away from the advancing Mongol invaders, the remnants of the Song Dynasty court held the coronation ceremony for the young Prince Zhao Shi, making him Emperor Duanzong of Song. In 1381 on this day, Richard II in England met with the leaders of the Peasants' Revolt on Blackheath. The Tower of London was stormed by rebels who entered without resistance. In 1777 on this day, the Continental Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag, replacing the Grand Union flag. Captain William Bligh reached Timor on this day in 1789. Napoleon formed the Ligurian Republic on this day in 1797. In 1800 on this day, the Battle of Marengo (Alessandria) was fought, pitting Bonaparte's forces against Austria. On this day in 1807, Emperor Napoleon I's French Grande Armee defeated the Russian Army at the Battle of Friedland in Prussia (modern Russian Kaliningrad Oblast) ending the War of the Fourth Coalition. Sandpaper was patented by Isaac Fischer Jr, of Springfield, Vermont, on this day in 1834. In 1846 on this day, the California Republic, with the distinctive Bear Flag, was proclaimed in Sonoma, after declaring independence from Mexico. On this day in 1861 during the American Civil War, Harpers Ferry was evacuated by rebels in the face of Union General McClellan's advance. Trade unions became legal on this day in 1872 in Canada. France signed the Niger Convention on this day in 1898. In 1900 on this day, the Reichstag approved a second law that allowed for the expansion of the German navy. On this day in 1907, the government of Transvaal (in modern day South Africa) sent home 50,000 Chinese day workers. The Chaco War between Bolivia & Paraguay came to an end on this day in 1935. On this day in 1940 during World War II, the German Army entered Paris, marking the start of four years of the German occupation of France. General Charles de Gaulle landed at Courselles, France, on this day in 1944, during World War II. On this day in 1982, the Falkland Islands War between Argentina and Great Britain ended. On this day in 1998, Michael Jordan led the Chicago Bulls dynasty to their sixth and final NBA title of the 1990's. In 2001 on this day, China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan formed the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

On this day in 1276, while taking exile in Fuzhou in southern China, away from the advancing Mongol invaders, the remnants of the Song Dynasty court held the coronation ceremony for the young Prince Zhao Shi, making him Emperor Duanzong of Song.



The Tower of London

In 1381 on this day, Richard II in England met with the leaders of the Peasants' Revolt on Blackheath. The Tower of London was stormed by rebels who entered without resistance.




1535 - Karel V's fleet sails under Andrea Doria to Tunis
1565 - Catharina de Medici & Duke of Alva discuss Calvinism
1597 - At 4:30 AM Willem Barents leaves Novaya Zemlya for Netherlands
1615 - Jacques Le Maire sail to Zuidland/Terra Australis
1623 - 1st breach-of-promise lawsuit: Rev Gerville Pooley, Va files against Cicely Jordan, he loses
1634 - Russia & Poland sign Peace treaty of Polianov
1642 - 1st compulsory education law in America passed by Massachusetts
1645 - Battle at Naseby Leicester: New Model army under Oliver Cromwell & Thomas Fairfax beats royalists
1647 - English New Model-army installed
1658 - Battle at Dunes: English & French fleet beat Spanish
1673 - Battle at Schooneveld: Michiel de Ruyter beats French/English fleet
1775 - US Army founded


Early version of the American flag used during the Revolutionary War for Independence

In 1777 on this day, the Continental Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag, replacing the Grand Union flag.   On this day in 1777, during the American Revolution, the Continental Congress adopts a resolution stating that "the flag of the United States be thirteen alternate stripes red and white" and that "the Union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new Constellation."    The national flag, which became known as the "stars and stripes," was based on the "Grand Union" flag, a banner carried by the Continental Army in 1776 that also consisted of 13 red and white stripes. According to legend, Philadelphia seamstress Betsy Ross designed the new canton for the flag, which consisted of a circle of 13 stars and a blue background, at the request of General George Washington. Historians have been unable to conclusively prove or disprove this legend.    With the entrance of new states into the United States after independence, new stripes and stars were added to represent new additions to the Union. In 1818, however, Congress enacted a law stipulating that the 13 original stripes be restored and that only stars be added to represent new states.    On June 14, 1877, the first Flag Day observance was held on the 100th anniversary of the adoption of the American flag. As instructed by Congress, the U.S. flag was flown from all public buildings across the country. In the years after the first Flag Day, several states continued to observe the anniversary, and in 1949 Congress officially designated June 14 as Flag Day, a national day of observance.





Captain William Bligh reached Timor on this day in 1789.

Napoleon formed the Ligurian Republic on this day in 1797.

In 1800 on this day, the Battle of Marengo (Alessandria) was fought, pitting Bonaparte's forces against Austria.





French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte




On this day in 1807, Emperor Napoleon I's French Grande Armee defeated the Russian Army at the Battle of Friedland in Prussia (modern Russian Kaliningrad Oblast) ending the War of the Fourth Coalition.



1821 - Badi VII, king of Sennar, surrenders his throne and realm to Ismail Pasha, general of the Ottoman Empire, ending the existence of that Sudanese kingdom.

1822 - Charles Babbage proposes a difference engine in a paper to the Royal Astronomical Society entitled "Note on the application of machinery to the computation of astronomical and mathematical tables".

1834 - Hardhat diving suit patented by Leonard Norcross, Dixfield, Maine
1834 - Isaac Fischer Jr patents sandpaper

Sandpaper was patented by Isaac Fischer Jr, of Springfield, Vermont, on this day in 1834.

1839 - First Henley Regatta held (it became the Henley Royal Regatta in 1851)
1841 - 1st Canadian parliament opens in Kingston, Ontario
1846 - Belgian Liberal Party forms



The "Bear Flag" is still the official state flag of California

In 1846 on this day, the California Republic, with the distinctive Bear Flag, was proclaimed in Sonoma, after declaring independence from Mexico.





1847 - Robert von Bunsen invents the Bunsen burner
1850 - Fire destroys part of San Francisco


On this day in 1861 during the American Civil War, Harpers Ferry was evacuated by rebels in the face of Union General McClellan's advance.

1863 - Battle of 2nd Winchester, Virginia
1864 - US Union warship USS Kearsarge appears at Cherbourg
1870 - All-pro Cincinnati Red Stockings suffer 1st loss in 130 games
Inventor Charles BabbageInventor Charles Babbage 

Trade unions became legal on this day in 1872 in Canada.


1876 - 1st player to hit for cycle (George Hall, Phila Athletics)
1876 - California Street Cable Car Railroad Co gets its franchise
1880 - 14th Belmont: L Hughes aboard Grenada wins in 2:47
1881 - Player piano patented by John McTammany Jr (Cambridge, Mass)

France signed the Niger Convention on this day in 1898.

1900 - Hawaiian Territorial Government begins


In 1900 on this day, the Reichstag approved a second law that allowed for the expansion of the German navy.

1904 - Dutch troops occupies Kuto Reh, Sumatra, killing all inhabitants
1906 - Pogrom against Jews in Bialystok, Polish Russia

On this day in 1907, the government of Transvaal (in modern day South Africa) sent home 50,000 Chinese day workers.

1907 - Norway adopts female suffrage for middle class women only in parliamentary elections
1908 - Fourth German Navy Bill is passed authorising the financing the building of another four major warships.
1917 - 1st German air attack on England, 100+ killed in East London
1917 - Gen Pershing & his HQ staff arrived in Paris during WW I
1919 - 1st nonstop air crossing of Atlantic (Alcock & Brown) leaves Newfoundland

1922 - Charles Hoffner wins PGA golf tournament
1922 - Pres Harding is 1st US president to use radio, dedicating the Francis Scott Key memorial in Baltimore
1928 - Republican Natl Convention, meeting in KC, nominates Herbert Hoover for President
1929 - Prussia & Vatican sign Concord
1930 - VVGZ soccer team forms in Zwijndrecht
1931 - French "St Philbert" overturns off St Nazaire France, drowns 450
1931 - Reinhard Heydrichs 1st meeting with Himmler
1932 - German government of von Papen forms
1933 - Lou Gehrig & Joe McCarthy thrown out of game, McCarthy suspended 3 games but Gehrig isn't, so he continues his streak at 1,249 games
1934 - Hitler & Benito Mussolini meet in Vienna
1934 - Max Baer KO's Primo Carnera in 11 for HW box champ in Long Island City
1934 - WOQ-AM in KC Missouri goes off the air

The Chaco War between Bolivia & Paraguay came to an end on this day in 1935.

1936 - Oranienburg Concentration Camp opens

1938 - Bradman scores 144* in 1st Test Cricket at Trent Bridge
1938 - Chlorophyll patented by Benjamin Grushkin
1938 - Dorothy Lathrop wins 1st Caldecott Medal (kid books author)
Dictator of Nazi Germany Adolf HitlerDictator of Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler 1940 - Auschwitz concentration camp opens (3 million killed there)




On this day in 1940 during World War II, the German Army entered Paris, marking the start of four years of the German occupation of France.  On this day in 1940, Parisians awaken to the sound of a German-accented voice announcing via loudspeakers that a curfew was being imposed for 8 p.m. that evening-as German troops enter and occupy Paris.    British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had tried for days to convince the French government to hang on, not to sue for peace, that America would enter the war and come to its aid. French premier Paul Reynaud telegrammed President Franklin Roosevelt, asking for just such aid-a declaration of war, and if not that, any and all help possible. Roosevelt replied that the United States was prepared to send material aid—and was willing to have that promise published—but Secretary of State Cordell Hull opposed such a publication, knowing that Hitler, as well as the Allies, would take such a public declaration of help as but a prelude to a formal declaration of war. While the material aid would be forthcoming, no such commitment would be made formal and public.    By the time German tanks rolled into Paris, 2 million Parisians had already fled, with good reason. In short order, the German Gestapo went to work: arrests, interrogations, and spying were the order of the day, as a gigantic swastika flew beneath the Arc de Triomphe.    While Parisians who remained trapped in their capital despaired, French men and women in the west cheered-as Canadian troops rolled through their region, offering hope for a free France yet.    The United States did not remain completely idle, though. On this day, President Roosevelt froze the American assets of the Axis powers, Germany and Italy. 



1940 - German U-47 sinks airship Balmoral



1940 - German forces occupied Paris during WW II



Auschwitz




On this day in 1940 during World War II, the Nazis opened the Auschwitz concentration camp in German occupied Poland, not far from Krakow. 




1941 - Ground broken for Boeing Plant II (ex-AFLC Plant 13) Wichita KS
1941 - Estonia loses 11,000 inhabitants as a consequence of mass deportations into Siberia
1942 - 1st bazooka rocket gun produced Bridgeport Ct
1942 - Anne Frank begins her diary
1942 - French government of Reynaud resigns
1942 - Walt Disney's "Bambi" animated movie is released Thumper's 1st job
1944 - 1st B-29 raid against mainland Japan



French President Charles De Gaulle


General Charles de Gaulle landed at Courselles, France, on this day in 1944, during World War II.



1946 - Canadian Library Association established
1948 - Klemens Gottwald becomes president of Czechoslovakia

1949 - State of Vietnam forms, Bao Dai installed as Emperor


French President Charles de GaulleFrench President Charles de Gaulle 1951 - "Courtin' Time" opens at National Theater NYC for 37 performances
1951 - 1st commercial computer, UNIVAC 1, enters service at Census Bureau

1952 - General strike in Tunisia
1952 - Jim Peters runs world record marathon (2:20:42.2)
1952 - Keel laid for 1st nuclear powered sub USS Nautilus (4th to be named Nautilus)
1952 - Braves Warren Spahn ties NL record of Jim Whitney with 18 strikeouts against the Cubs in 15-inning, 3-1 loss




General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States

1953 - Eisenhower condemns McCarthy's book burning proposal



1953 - Elvis Presley graduates from LC Humes High School in Memphis Tenn
1953 - Military coup by general Gustavo Rojas Pinilla in Colombia
1953 - Yanks sweep Indians 6-2, 3-0 before 74,708 win streak at 18 straight
1954 - Pres Eisenhower signs order adding words "under God" to the Pledge

1955 - Chile becomes a signatory to the Buenos Aires copyright treaty.


Singer & Cultural Icon Elvis PresleySinger & Cultural Icon Elvis Presley 1957 - 42.0 cm rain falls on East St Louis, Illinois (state record)

1958 - British parachutists lands on Cyprus

1961 - 106°F, hottest temperature in SF
1962 - Albert DeSalvo, better known as the Boston Strangler, murders Anna Slesers, his first victim.
1962 - The European Space Research Organisation is established in Paris - later becoming the European Space Agency.

1963 - Valery Bykovsky in Vostok 5 orbits earth 81 times in 5 days






  

    

1965 - Beatles release album "Beatles VI"



1965 - John Lennon's 2nd book "A Spaniard in the Works" is published


1966 - Dutch police beat construction workers, 60 injured
Musician and Beatle John LennonMusician and Beatle John Lennon 1966 - Miami beats St Petersburg (Florida State League) 4-3 in 29 innings longest uninterrupted game in organized baseball
1967 - Mariner 5 Launch (Venus Flyby)

1967 - USSR launches Kosmos 166 for observation of Sun from Earth orbit
1968 - Off duty Dutch military permitted to wear regular clothing
1969 - John & Yoko appear on David Frost's British TV Show

1972 - Hurricane Agnes kills 117

1975 - 45th French Womens Tennis: Chris Evert beats M Navratilova (26 62 61)
1975 - Janis Ian releases "At 17"
1975 - USSR launches Venera 10 for Venus landing


1978 - Sierra Leone adopts constitution


1981 - No Nukes concert at Hollywood Bowl


Flag of Argentina

On this day in 1982, the Falkland Islands War between Argentina and Great Britain ended.      After suffering through six weeks of military defeats against Britain's armed forces, Argentina surrenders to Great Britain, ending the Falkland Islands War.    The Falkland Islands, located about 300 miles off the southern tip of Argentina, had long been claimed by the British. British navigator John Davis may have sighted the islands in 1592, and in 1690 British Navy Captain John Strong made the first recorded landing on the islands. He named them after Viscount Falkland, who was the First Lord of the Admiralty at the time. In 1764, French navigator Louis-Antoine de Bougainville founded the islands' first human settlement, on East Falkland, which was taken over by the Spanish in 1767. In 1765, the British settled West Falkland but left in 1774 for economic reasons. Spain abandoned its settlement in 1811.    In 1816, Argentina declared its independence from Spain and in 1820 proclaimed its sovereignty over the Falklands. The Argentines built a fort on East Falkland, but in 1832 it was destroyed by the USS Lexington in retaliation for the seizure of U.S. seal ships in the area. In 1833, a British force expelled the remaining Argentine officials and began a military occupation. In 1841, a British lieutenant governor was appointed, and by the 1880s a British community of some 1,800 people on the islands was self-supporting. In 1892, the wind-blown Falkland Islands were collectively granted colonial status.    For the next 90 years, life on the Falklands remained much unchanged, despite persistent diplomatic efforts by Argentina to regain control of the islands. In 1981, the 1,800 Falkland Islanders--mostly sheep farmers--voted in a referendum to remain British, and it seemed unlikely that the Falklands would ever revert to Argentine rule. Meanwhile, in Argentina, the military junta led by Lieutenant General Leopoldo Galtieri was suffering criticism for its oppressive rule and economic management and planned the Falklands invasion as a means of promoting patriotic feeling and propping up its regime.    In March 1982, Argentine salvage workers occupied South Georgia Island, and a full-scale invasion of the Falklands began on April 2. Argentine amphibious forces rapidly overcame the small garrison of British marines at the town of Stanley on East Falkland and the next day seized the dependent territories of South Georgia and the South Sandwich group. Under orders from their commanders, the Argentine troops inflicted no British casualties, despite suffering losses to their own units. Nevertheless, Britain was outraged, and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher assembled a naval task force of 30 warships to retake the islands. As Britain is 8,000 miles from the Falklands, it took several weeks for the British warships to arrive. On April 25, South Georgia Island was retaken, and after several intensive naval battles fought around the Falklands, British troops landed on East Falkland on May 21. After several weeks of fighting, the large Argentine garrison at Stanley surrendered on June 14, effectively ending the conflict.    Britain lost five ships and 256 lives in the fight to regain the Falklands, and Argentina lost its only cruiser and 750 lives. Humiliated in the Falklands War, the Argentine military was swept from power in 1983, and civilian rule was restored. In Britain, Margaret Thatcher's popularity soared after the conflict, and her Conservative Party won a landslide victory in 1983 parliamentary elections.





1983 - 5 killed in a fire at a Ramada Inn in Fort Worth, Tx
1984 - Southern Baptist convention decide on no women clergy members
1985 - "Michael Nesmith In Television Parts" premieres on NBC-TV
1985 - Earl Weaver comes out of retirement to manage Balt Orioles
1985 - Lebanese Shiite Muslim extremists hijacked TWA Flight 847

1987 - 4th full-duration test firing of redesigned SRB motor
1987 - Colleen Walker wins LPGA Mayflower Golf Classic
1988 - Woman sues Chuck Berry for $5,000,000 alleges he hit her
1989 - Ground breaking begins in Minn on world's largest mall
1989 - Nolan Ryan becomes 2nd pitcher to defeat all 26 teams
1989 - Ronald Reagan is knighted by Queen Elizabeth II (honorary knighthood)
1989 - Rocker Carol King gets a star in Hollywood's walk of fame
1989 - Zsa Zsa Gabor arrested for slaping Beverly Hills motorcycle patrolman

1990 - Supreme Court rules police check for drunk drivers constitutional

1991 - Space Shuttle STS 40 (Columbia 12) lands

1992 - Mona Van Duyn is named 1st female US poet laureate
1992 - Ozzie Smith breaks Roy McMillan's NL mark by taking part in his 1,305th career double play

1993 - Japanese space probe Sakigake passes Earth

1993 - Tansu Ciller appointed 1st female premier of Turkey
1994 - Stanley Cup: NY Rangers beat Vancouver Canucks, 4 games to 3
1995 - 49th NBA Championship: Houston Rockets sweep Orlando Magic in 4 games
1995 - Giants infielder Mike Benjamin goes 6-for-7 in 13-inning 4-3 win
1996 - "Cable Guy" starring Jim Carrey is released
1996 - Karl Krikken out handled the ball for Derbyshire v Indians



 


On this day in 1998, Michael Jordan led the Chicago Bulls dynasty to their sixth and final NBA title of the 1990's.   On June 14, 1998, Michael Jordan leads the Chicago Bulls to an 87-86 win over the Utah Jazz in Game Six of the NBA Finals to clinch their third consecutive NBA title. Jordan scored 45 points and hit the winning jump shot with 5.2 seconds left on the clock in what seemed a fitting end to a historic career.    The Chicago Bulls won the NBA title every year from 1991 to 1998, except a two-year gap in 1994 and 1995 when Jordan left the NBA to play baseball. In the 1997 and 1998 NBA Finals, the Bulls faced the veteran Utah Jazz, led by point guard and all-time assists leader John Stockton and power forward Karl Malone, second on the career points list. The Bulls, led by Jordan, were a colorful group that included small forward Scottie Pippen, the controversial rebounding champ Dennis Rodman and Phil Jackson, their Zen master coach.    One year earlier, in Game Five of the 1997 NBA Finals, Michael Jordan had staged a performance for the ages. Though suffering from the flu, Jordan willed the Bulls to victory with 38 points, including the winning three-pointer with 25 seconds left. Afterward, the ailing Jordan was helped off the court by teammate Scottie Pippen. The Bulls went on to win the series in six games, with Jordan winning his fifth Finals MVP award.    In the 1998 finals, Utah won Game One 88-85 in overtime, but lost the next three games, including a 96-54 defensive clinic put on by Chicago in Game Three. The Jazz then won Game Five in Chicago 83-81 to send the series back to Utah.    Game Six in Utah was the final installment of the Michael Jordan show. Scottie Pippen, suffering from back spasms, was limited to just 26 minutes. The Jazz led by three in the last minute, but Jordan brought Chicago within one by driving to the basket and laying the ball in with 37.1 seconds left. Utah then brought the ball into their half-court setup, with the reliable veteran Karl Malone on the left post. With 18.9 seconds left, Jordan snuck along the baseline and punched the ball out of Malone’s possession. Jordan then brought the ball up the court, refusing to call a timeout. With 5.2 seconds left Jordan hit an 18-foot jumper from the top of the key after cagily nudging Utah’s Bryon Russell out of the way with his left arm. John Stockton missed a three-pointer near the buzzer to give Jordan and Chicago their third championship in a row and sixth NBA title. Jordan averaged 32.4 points per game in this series for a 33.4 points per game average in the playoffs for his career, an NBA record. He won his sixth Finals MVP after the game, also an NBA record. It was his last game with the Bulls.    In January 2000, Jordan became general manager of the Washington Wizards and returned to play two seasons with the mediocre Wizards in 2001-02 and 2002-03. The Wizards did not make the playoffs in either season.




1998 - "Comic Relief" benefit comedy show
1998 - World Bowl in Frankfurt Germany
1998 - 52nd NBA Championship: Chicago Bulls beat Utah Jazz, 4 games to 2
2000 - 34th Country Weekly Presents the TNN Music Awards: George Strait & Faith Hill wins

In 2001 on this day, China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan formed the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.

2005 - Asafa Powell of Jamaica sets a new Men's 100 meters world record of 9.77 at the Athens Olympic Stadium
2007 - 61st NBA Championship: San Antonio Spurs beat Cleveland Cavaliers, 4 games to 0
2009 - 63rd NBA Championship: Los Angeles Lakers beat Orlando Magic, 4 games to 1
2009 - 55th LPGA Championship won by Anna Nordqvist
2012 - An explosion at an Indian steel plant kills 11 people and severely injures 16
2012 - The world's first stem-cell assisted vein transplant is undertaken by Swedish doctors on a 10 year old girl
2013 - Hassan Rouhani is elected President of Iran

2013 - Massive flooding occurs in northern India killing up to 10,000 people



1775 - The Continental Army was founded by the Second Continental Congress for purposes of common defense. This event is considered to be the birth of the United States Army. On June 15, George Washington was appointed commander-in-chief.   1777 - The Continental Congress in Philadelphia adopted the "Stars and Stripes" as the national flag of the United States. The Flag Resolution stated "Resolved: that the flag of the United States be made of thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new Constellation." On May 20, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson officially proclaimed June 14 "Flag Day" as a commemoration of the "Stars and Stripes."   1789 - Captain William Bligh of the HMS Bounty arrived in Timor in a small boat.   1834 - Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his reaping machine.   1834 - Isaac Fischer Jr. patented sandpaper.   1841 - The first Canadian parliament opened in Kingston.   1846 - A group of U.S. settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the Republic of California.   1893 - Philadelphia observed the first Flag Day.   1900 - Hawaii became a U.S. territory.   1907 - Women in Norway won the right to vote.   1917 - General John Pershing arrived in Paris during World War I.   1919 - The first non-stop trans-Atlantic flight began. Captain John Alcot and Lt. Arthur Brown flew from Newfoundland to Ireland.   1922 - Warren G. Harding became the first U.S. president to be heard on radio. The event was the dedication of the Francis Scott Key memorial at Fort McHenry.   1927 - Nicaraguan President Adolfo Diaz signed a treaty with the U.S. allowing American intervention in his country.   1940 - The Nazis opened their concentration camp at Auschwitz in German-occupied Poland.   1940 - German troops entered Paris. As Paris became occupied loud speakers announced the implementation of a curfew being imposed for 8 p.m.   1943 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that schoolchildren could not be made to salute the U.S. flag if doing so conflicted with their religious beliefs.   1944 - Sixty U.S. B-29 Superfortress' attacked an iron and steel works factory on Honshu Island. It was the first U.S. raid against mainland Japan.   1945 - Burma was liberated by Britain.   1949 - The state of Vietnam was formed.   1951 - "Univac I" was unveiled. It was a computer designed for the U.S. Census Bureau and billed as the world's first commercial computer.   1952 - The Nautilus was dedicated. It was the first nuclear powered submarine.   1954 - U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed an order adding the words "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.   1954 - Americans took part in the first nation-wide civil defense test against atomic attack.   1965 - A military triumvirate took control in Saigon, South Vietnam.   1967 - Mariner 5 was launched from Cape Kennedy, FL. The space probe's flight took it past Venus.   1982 - Argentine forces surrendered to British troops on the Falkland Islands.   1987 - The Los Angeles Lakers won the NBA title by defeating the defending Boston Celtics.   1989 - Former U.S. President Reagan received an honorary knighthood from Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.   1990 - The U.S. Supreme Court upheld police checkpoints that are used to examine drivers for signs of intoxication.   1994 - The New York Rangers won the Stanley Cup by defeating the Vancouver Canucks. It was the first time the Rangers had won the cup in 54 years.   2002 - Actor Kirk Douglas received the UCLA Medal. The award is presented to people for cultural, political and humanitarian achievements.




1775 The United States Army was founded. 1777 The Continental Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes as the official flag of the U.S. 1922 Warren Harding became the first president to be heard on the radio. 1940 German troops entered Paris. The Nazis opened the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. 1951 The first commercial computer, Univac I, was unveiled. 1954 President Eisenhower signed the order inserting the words "under God" into the Pledge of Allegiance. 1982 Argentine forces surrendered to British troops on the Falkland Islands.  


The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/jun14.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Weekend Humor · Batman & High Gas Prices

Man, I have to really start to try to publish these things in a more timely manner.

I noticed this unpublished and, at the time, very unfinished post earlier today. Meant to publish this well over one month ago. Back then, gas prices were extremely high, and their were concerns that with Memorial Day and summer coming up, the price of gas would just keep on going up and up.

Instead, gas prices have, at least for the moment, seemingly gone down just a bit.

Still, it feels like gas prices are quite high, as well as unpredictable. Ever since Trump started this war in Iran, it has felt like that.

So this still feels relevant enough for me to post.

Enjoy.





Emily R. Andrews 8 May at 09:35  ·

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1530391068432115&set=a.113043426833560

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