Stephen A. Smith has pushed back after his Donald Trump and Barack Obama NBA Finals argument was challenged online.
The debate started because Game 3 at Madison Square Garden was never going to be a normal basketball night.
Trump’s attendance brought extra security, canceled outdoor watch-party plans, and a level of attention that made the Knicks’ first home Finals game in 27 years feel even more complicated.
Smith’s point was that any president would create that kind of disruption in this exact setting. When one fan tried to answer with an old image of Obama sitting courtside at an NBA game, Smith made clear that he saw it as the wrong comparison.

Stephen A. Smith fires back over Barack Obama and Donald Trump NBA Finals comparison
Stephen A. Smith on X responded after a fan used a Barack Obama courtside image to challenge his criticism of Donald Trump attending Game 3 of the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden.
“Nice try. Do your homework. I was talking about the NBA Finals in NYC, with Watch-Parties, etc. Not the first week of the regular season,” Smith tweeted.
The veteran NBA analyst added, “Two totally different scenarios. So stop it. Your argument makes zero d___ sense.”
Smith had argued that his concern was not simply Trump being at a basketball game. He said the issue was the security footprint around a sitting president attending a Finals game in New York, especially with fans trying to gather around MSG.
That is why he brought up Obama in the first place. Smith said he would have the same concern if Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, or any other president created the same disruption on this kind of night.
Donald Trump Game 3 visit gives Stephen A. Smith argument extra weight
The regular-season Obama image did not carry the same context Smith was talking about. Trump’s Game 3 visit came with Secret Service involvement, tighter screening, road restrictions, and canceled watch parties outside Madison Square Garden.
That made the comparison easier for Smith to reject. A former president sitting courtside during a different kind of NBA event is not the same as a sitting president attending a Finals game in Midtown Manhattan with the Knicks two wins from a championship.
Smith’s clapback was sharp, but the clarification was simple. His argument was about scale, timing, and location, not just the name of the politician in the seat.
Whether fans agree with his tone or not, Game 3 proved why the topic became so heated. Trump’s visit changed the entire environment around MSG before the Knicks and Spurs even tipped off.
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