Charles Barkley believes Jalen Brunson can turn a mocked Knicks gamble into the greatest free agent signing the NBA has ever seen.
That sounds extreme until the full New York context is considered. Brunson did not arrive as LeBron James, Kevin Durant, or Shaquille O’Neal.
He arrived as a very good guard whom the Knicks aggressively chased in the 2022 free agency, who then turned himself into the franchise’s defining modern player.
Jalen Brunson made the Knicks’ free agency gamble look historic
Barkley’s argument, which he shared on ESPN, is built on the gap between what Brunson was expected to be and what he has become.
“If Brunson is able to deliver a championship to New York, it’ll be the greatest free agency signing ever. I said that a couple of years ago, and people said, ‘What about LeBron? I said don’t compare him to LeBron or KD. But nobody, even the Knicks, thought Brunson was going to be this great. If he can deliver a championship to the Knicks, it’d be the greatest free agent signing ever.”
The Knicks cleared cap space in 2022 with Brunson clearly in mind, moving draft assets and salary so they could offer four years and $104 million. Dallas had previously passed on a four-year, $55 million extension and reportedly did not value him the way New York did.
That made the Knicks vulnerable to criticism. Many experts panned the deal at the time, including Stephen A. Smith, questioning if Brunson would ever become an All-Star and how this pursuit was overblown at the time.

Instead, Brunson has become the greatest modern Knick since Patrick Ewing. If he delivers the franchise’s first title since 1973, he enters the debate as one of the greatest Knicks players outright.
Jalen Brunson’s title case would challenge NBA free agency legends
The usual free-agent giants all have strong cases. LeBron changed the Miami Heat and later the Cleveland Cavaliers with his 2016 return, Durant made the Golden State Warriors nearly unbeatable, Shaq powered the Lakers’ three-peat, and Steve Nash won two MVPs on the Phoenix Suns.
Brunson’s case would be different. He was not signed as a finished MVP-level player, but became New York’s engine after arriving.
With the Knicks, he has averaged 26.0 points and 6.8 assists this season, earned All-Star and All-NBA recognition, carried multiple playoff runs, won Clutch Player of the Year, and led New York into the 2026 NBA Finals.
Game 1 strengthened the story. Brunson scored 30 as the Knicks beat the Spurs 105-95 and took their first step toward ending five decades of title frustration.
If that ends with a championship, Barkley’s claim stops sounding loud. Brunson would have outgrown the contract, rescued the Knicks’ identity, and delivered something even Ewing never could.
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