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Knicks fans detail security errors outside of Madison Square Garden ahead of Donald Trump’s Game 3 attendance

Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images
Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images
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New York Knicks fans arrived at Madison Square Garden for Game 3 expecting NBA Finals chaos, but some found the security process outside the arena confusing before they even got near the doors.

Donald Trump’s attendance was always going to change the rhythm of the night. Extra screening, barricades, street closures, and Secret Service involvement were all part of the plan as the Knicks hosted the San Antonio Spurs with a 2-0 series lead.

The problem, according to first-person accounts outside MSG, was not just that the security was heavy. It was that fans were being moved from one checkpoint to another without clear answers on where they were actually supposed to enter.

A New York Knicks fan is seen outside Madison Square Garden ahead of the NBA Finals game 3 between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs.
Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images

New York Knicks fans describe Madison Square Garden security confusion before Donald Trump arrival

Darren Rovell on X shared a first-person account from outside Madison Square Garden, where fans had reportedly waited around an hour while trying to get inside before Game 3.

The account described people being routed to 34th and 8th, sent through barricades and metal detectors, then told officials were confused and that fans needed to leave that area and head toward 34th and 7th instead.

From there, another group of police reportedly directed people to 32nd and 6th, creating large crowds moving around Midtown without a clear entry point. The account claimed hundreds, possibly close to a thousand people, were left wandering in groups as police said they did not know the protocol.

That is the kind of breakdown that turns a strict security plan into a fan-experience problem. Nobody expected easy access with a sitting president attending, but unclear directions can make long lines feel even more chaotic.

Secret Service checks add another layer to New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs Game 3

Matt Guzman on X then described the security as intense before Knicks vs Spurs, noting that Secret Service was handling entry for fans and media at Madison Square Garden.

His account said officials made him plug in a dead iPad to prove it worked, opened his AirPods cases, and flipped through a book to check between the pages. That detail showed how far the screening went beyond a typical arena check.

The measures were tied to Trump’s Game 3 attendance, which also brought a no-bag policy, TSA-style screening, restricted pedestrian access, and canceled outdoor watch-party plans near MSG.

Security that tight may be understandable for a presidential visit, but fans still need clear instructions. On a historic Knicks Finals night, the scene outside the Garden became almost as complicated as the matchup inside it.