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Dolan under fire: The high-stakes moves that could save or sink the Knicks

Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images
Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images
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NBA champion New York Knicks are not willing to cross the second apron this offseason

The Knicks finally broke a 53-year title drought last season, and the buzz around the team hasn’t slowed down one bit since. As they head into the 2026 offseason, they’re in a spot most franchises only dream about.

The NBA’s salary cap system is designed to stop teams from simply buying their way to dominance by adding superstar after superstar. New York has no intention of going over that line for now, even if it limits what they can do.

Dolan’s recent comments about steering clear of the second apron got the league talking. On its face it sounds strange. Why wouldn’t a defending champ just spend whatever it takes to keep the band together?

US director and executive producer Spike Lee attends a championship ticker-tape parade celebrating the team's NBA Finals victory in New York on June 18, 2026.
Photo by DAVID DEE DELGADO / AFP via Getty Images

James Dolan may have just revealed the Knicks’ biggest offseason challenge

The answer is buried in the NBA’s new collective bargaining agreement. The second apron is way more than another luxury tax line. It’s basically a roster-building penalty box.

Teams that cross it lose a ton of flexibility in free agency and trades, with restrictions on combining salaries, limits on how they can add players, and long-term hits to their future draft picks. So this was never really about writing bigger checks. It’s about handcuffing yourself for years, and Dolan doesn’t seem willing to do that.

The Nuggets ran into that same issue after their 2023 title, losing Bruce Brown because of cost. The Warriors had similar decisions to make around Jordan Poole, and the Celtics found themselves backed into a corner financially after assembling one of the most expensive squads in NBA history.

This isn’t by accident either. The new collective bargaining agreement was designed specifically to create these types of challenges. It’s working as planned—teams are finding it harder and more costly to stay together, and championship windows aren’t staying open as long as they used to. Now it’s the Knicks’ turn to figure it out.

Mitchell Robinson’s future is a key question for the Knicks

Mitchell Robinson stands out as one of the most important decisions New York has to make this offseason. The veteran centre played a key role during the title run, anchoring the defence and providing rebounding and rim protection. He’s exactly the type of player championship teams often struggle to replace.

The challenge, though, comes down to how strict ownership plans to be with that second apron line. Once Dolan made it clear he wasn’t willing to cross it, attention quickly turned to Robinson’s status. The Knicks would like him back, but keeping him without sacrificing depth elsewhere could be tough.

One thing recent NBA history makes obvious is that star power gets you into the mix, but depth is usually what wins the whole thing. The Knicks know that as well as anybody. Their run wasn’t just Brunson going off or Towns scoring. It was wave after wave of contributors, bench scoring, defensive versatility and guys who bought into specific roles.

Those are the first players to go when cap pressure shows up, and once they’re gone, replacing them is way harder than fans tend to think, especially under this CBA. Dolan’s remarks essentially leave the entire situation in the hands of the front office. He’s willing to spend, but not at any price.

The second apron is all risk and no reward

So Rose now has to find a way to hold onto enough of the championship core, stay below the second apron, maintain future flexibility, and still strengthen a team that every contender will be targeting next season. That’s a tough job and one every recent champion has faced under these new rules.

Dolan’s recent comments about steering clear of the second apron got the league talking. On its face it sounds strange. Why wouldn’t a defending champ just spend whatever it takes to keep the band together?

The answer is buried in the NBA’s new collective bargaining agreement. The second apron is way more than another luxury tax line. It’s basically a roster-building penalty box.

Teams that cross it lose a ton of flexibility in free agency and trades, with restrictions on combining salaries, limits on how they can add players, and long-term hits to their future draft picks. So this was never really about writing bigger checks. It’s about handcuffing yourself for years.

The good news for New York is that they don’t have to worry about losing any star power from last season. Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges are all signed through at least next year.