{"id":393,"date":"2024-05-04T14:01:14","date_gmt":"2024-05-04T14:01:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kzser.com\/knicks-vs-pacers-and-reminiscing-about-a-classic-playoff-rivalry\/"},"modified":"2024-05-04T14:01:14","modified_gmt":"2024-05-04T14:01:14","slug":"knicks-vs-pacers-and-reminiscing-about-a-classic-playoff-rivalry","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/kzser.com\/knicks-vs-pacers-and-reminiscing-about-a-classic-playoff-rivalry\/","title":{"rendered":"Knicks vs. Pacers and reminiscing about a classic playoff rivalry"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Young Knicks fans, those in their 20s and older, are like all sports fans their age: They think the good days are now, especially because of the days and nights their team just had against the 76ers.<\/p>\n
Oh, they’ve heard what it was like here in the 90s against the Knicks Michael Jordan<\/a> and against Reggie Miller<\/a> and his pacers; Pat Riley vs. the Heat Once Riley skipped town after the Knicks-Pacers series in 1995. They heard Larry Johnson’s 4-point game against the Pacers as the Knicks were returning to the NBA Finals in 1999, especially after Tyree Max. He made his own 4-pointer against them in Game 5.<\/p>\n And anyone who follows the NBA, of any age, knows about the Sunday afternoon almost 29 years ago to be exact \u2014 May 7, 1995 \u2014 when Reggie scored eight points in 8.9 seconds late in Game 1. That was the day Reggie looked back. Spike Lee (now friends if you’re keeping score at home) and Chock were signed and immediately bought prime real estate on the front and back pages of our tabloids.<\/p>\n After Maxie made a 4-pointer and then a 3-pointer in overtime in Game 5, I called Spike the next morning to see if he might be suffering from PTSD.<\/p>\n Spike laughed because he didn’t attend the game, he was in the Bronx shooting the second movie with Denzel Washington, his fifth.<\/p>\n “They can’t blame me for that!” Spike said. “I wasn’t sitting in my seat this time, I was just downtown listening to the radio.”<\/p>\n There was a pause, and then he said quietly, “Twenty-nine years since Reggie did this to us, and it’s still too early.”<\/p>\n Those were the days. And nights, here and in India. It was Reggie vs. Spike and Reggie vs. Nyx, and the back page of that paper read, “Nyx vs. Hicks.” It was Reggie’s 8 and Larry Johnson’s 4. It was Patrick who missed the finger roll that would have tied Game 7 in ’95, and his old teammate, Mark Jackson, said in the Pacers locker room after the game, \u201cPatrick could never do it. Twisting a finger to save his life.’<\/p>\n It’s all been legend, both good and bad, and you better believe that legend informs the Eastern Conference semifinal series between the Knicks and Pacers that begins Monday night at the Garden. It’s basketball time in New York, and it’s time to make things right for those of us in the ’90s \u2014 and I was lucky enough to literally have a front row seat to it all \u2014 say this:<\/p>\n “You really should have been there.”<\/p>\n Miller wasn’t just one of the great shooters in NBA history, he was a dream leader for his team in every way. He wasn’t afraid of Nix, he wasn’t afraid of the Garden, he really wasn’t afraid of the moment.<\/p>\n And it was always a fair fight. The Knicks acquired him in ’93, in a series in which John Starks famously nodded to the Pacers star. Then came the ’94 Eastern Conference Finals as the Knicks attempted to return to the NBA Finals for the first time since the 70’s. This was the series when Reggie really got involved with Spike, en route to scoring 25 points in the fourth quarter of Game 5. The next day, the front page of the Daily News read:<\/p>\n “Thank you so much, Spike.”<\/p>\n “Can I let you in on a secret?” Reggie once said to me as we were walking down Madison Ave, “I liked it all.”<\/p>\n