New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh admitted the New York Knicks’ NBA Finals run has made him think about what the same kind of breakthrough would mean in East Rutherford.
The Knicks have reminded New York how quickly a city’s mood can change when years of frustration turn into visible progress. Their run has not only brought energy back to Madison Square Garden, it has shown what happens when a team gives its fan base something sturdy enough to believe in.
Harbaugh’s reaction fits that wider feeling because the Giants are trying to create their own version of it. He was not simply applauding a local success story, he was recognizing the emotional standard his team now has to chase.

John Harbaugh turns New York Knicks belief into New York Giants ambition
SNY Giants on X showed Harbaugh explaining why the Knicks’ Finals run has resonated with him, with their surge offering the kind of citywide connection every Giants coach would want to build.
“It’s been exciting because obviously you envision that. Kind of get a little selfish, you want to see that for the Giants. That’s what you want to see,” Harbaugh said.
He added, “It would be something that we’re working for. We’d like to get there, too. That would be our goal.”
The admission worked because Harbaugh did not treat the Knicks’ success as something distant from his own job. He saw it as a live example of how belief gathers around a team when performance finally begins to match ambition.
New York does not stay patient because a coach talks about process, and Harbaugh clearly understands the Giants need more than encouraging language. They need a team identity strong enough for fans to see and feel every week.
John Harbaugh studies New York Knicks unity for New York Giants future
The Knicks’ run has carried weight because it feels bigger than a team getting hot at the right time.
When asked whether he would go and watch the Knicks in the NBA Finals, he first pointed to the difficulty of getting a ticket before shifting toward the larger football lesson he sees in how they play.
“We’ll see,” Harbaugh stated. “I think I might like to. You got to get tickets. It’s a tough ticket. It’s exciting, watching the way they play, it’s fun because I think it’s instructive. You get an opportunity just to see how a team can come together.”
Harbaugh’s comments gave Giants fans a clearer sense of the traits he values most. He focused on cohesion, shared purpose, and the way a team becomes easier to trust when its identity is obvious.
The Giants are still trying to build that kind of clarity, which makes his Knicks comments more meaningful than routine local praise.
Harbaugh saw a team lift a city, and he admitted the Giants want to create their own version of that same feeling.
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