Donald Trump is set to turn Game 3 of the NBA Finals into a presidential first at Madison Square Garden.
The New York Knicks host the San Antonio Spurs on Monday, June 8, 2026, in Game 3 of the NBA Finals in New York.
That timing matters because this is not just another courtside appearance. It puts Trump beside Barack Obama and George W. Bush in a tiny presidential Finals group, with one major difference.

Donald Trump NBA Finals plan creates presidential history
As New York Post showed, Trump confirmed James Dolan’s invitation and made clear he intends to attend the Knicks’ Finals game at Madison Square Garden.
“The answer is yes,” Trump said. “[Dolan] has invited me, and I’m going. I’ll be there. It could be Monday. Maybe I’ll do both [Game 3 and Game 4].”
That answer gives the moment weight. Trump did not frame it as a soft maybe, but as a clear plan to attend at least one Finals game.
The sharper historical point is that Trump is expected to become the first sitting U.S. president to attend an NBA Finals game. Obama and Bush are part of the broader Finals conversation, but neither was president when they attended.
Obama and Bush show why Trump’s Knicks visit is different
Obama attended Game 2 of the 2019 NBA Finals in Toronto, when the Raptors hosted the Golden State Warriors. He was already out of office, which made the appearance notable but not presidential in the active White House sense.
Bush also has a Finals connection through 1999, when the Knicks and Spurs met for the title. He was Texas governor then, not president.
That distinction is the story. Trump is not merely joining two famous political names at NBA Finals games. He is joining them while carrying the office into the building.
Knicks vs Spurs Game 3 now carries more than basketball stakes
The game already had enough weight. The Knicks are hosting their first NBA Finals game since 1999, and the Spurs are back with Victor Wembanyama as their central force.
Game 3 is scheduled for Monday at Madison Square Garden, with Game 4 set for Wednesday, June 10, also in New York. Trump’s comment that he could attend both turns the two-game stretch into a bigger civic and security event.
For Knicks fans, the basketball still comes first. Yet Trump’s attendance changes the atmosphere around the series, because a Finals game is now also a White House moment.
Receive exclusive football transfer news and updates twice a week to your mailbox
