Spring 2026

‘Follower of Christ’ Josh Hart propels New York Knicks to 2nd straight conference finals

Last year at this time, New York erupted as the Knicks advanced to the NBA’s Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in a quarter of a century. The city didn’t have to wait quite as long for its return trip. With a dominant 144-114 win on Sunday in Philadelphia, No. 3-seeded New York capped a convincing four-game sweep of the No. 7-seed 76ers to become the first team to earn a spot in this year’s conference finals.

The Knicks won the four games by an average of 22.25 points per game, and their 144 points on Sunday were the most in Knicks playoff history (besting the 140 they scored in Game 6 against the Atlanta Hawks last week in the opening round). Including its three wins to close out Atlanta, New York has now won a franchise-record seven straight playoff games.

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In Game 4 against the 76ers, New York held a 43-24 advantage after the opening quarter and never looked back as the home crowd inside Philly’s Xfinity Mobile Arena ceded to Knicks faithful.

Much of New York’s advantage was thanks to a record-setting 3-point barrage (25-of-44 for the game, 57%) — 25 tied the NBA postseason record for most threes in a game, 18 tied the postseason record for most threes in a half (first half), and 11 tied the postseason record for most threes in a quarter (first quarter).

A Knick who made four of those 25 was starting guard Josh Hart.

Overall, Hart scored 17 points, grabbed team-leading nine rebounds, and tied for the team lead with 29 minutes played. His 17 points were the most he’d scored so far this postseason.

“No relief, no jubilation,” Hart said after the game via ESPN. “Just another step in the process. … Here, it’s business as normal, and we got to make sure we’re locked in and focused.”

The 31-year-old has been in the playoffs each of his four seasons in New York, and he’s hoping that this year he’ll finally walk off the court in celebration rather than defeat. In order to do that, he knows the Knicks can’t be satisfied with simply a spot in the Eastern Conference Finals. It’s where they faltered last season.

And as many of his younger teammates follow his veteran leadership on their quest for an NBA championship, Hart himself seeks to follow his Lord and Savior. He declares himself a “Follower of Christ” in his Instagram bio, and he often expresses his faith in Jesus on social media platforms.

 

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A post shared by Josh Hart 🏀 (@jhart)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Josh Hart 🏀 (@jhart)

Hart has shared that his favorite music genre is Gospel music, and has celebrated news of a Christian revival across the U.S. He’s also been seen wearing clothing that declares he’s a “Product of Christ” and he’s “Just Here To Give God Glory.”

He seeks to submit all he does to Christ, including his exploits on the basketball court. Two seasons ago, when he managed to play back-to-back complete games in the playoffs, he was asked in the locker room afterward how he did it. He revealed that he relied on Scripture.

“My Lord works in mysterious ways,” he said. “… Today, I felt like I didn’t have it at all. The whole game I was reciting Isaiah 40:29. The weak, He renews strength. That was the biggest thing. He allows you to walk and not faint.”

Hart also prays before games. As the eyes of thousands of fans are on him and his team, he seeks to keep his eyes on his Heavenly Father.

 

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A post shared by Josh Hart 🏀 (@jhart)


With the sweep of the 76ers, Hart and the red-hot Knicks are now headed into an extended break as they await their conference finals opponent. The No. 1-seeded Detroit Pistons lead the No. 4-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers, 2-1, in the other Eastern Conference semifinal series. Game 4 is Monday.

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