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CommentaryLeadership

What leaders can learn from the Knicks ending their 53-year championship drought

By
Melissa Dawn Simkins
Melissa Dawn Simkins
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By
Melissa Dawn Simkins
Melissa Dawn Simkins
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June 22, 2026, 2:40 PM ET
jalen
Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks celebrates with the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy during the New York Knicks Championship ticker tape parade and victory rally celebrating winning the 2026 NBA Finals on June 18, 2026 in New York City. The New York Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs in five games to win their first NBA Championship in 53 years. Angelina Katsanis/Getty Images
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The New York Knicks’ first championship in 53 years is more than a triumphant sports story. It is a masterclass in resilience, conditioning for the moment and the often-overlooked truth that meaningful success is rarely built overnight. While most coverage has focused on the ecstatic celebrations, the thrilling comeback moments, and the historic significance of breaking a five-decade drought, a deeper narrative lies beneath the surface.

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What can leaders learn from a Knicks team that carried the burden of ending a half-century championship drought? As the founder of Athleadership, a framework for leadership inspired by the elite athlete mindset, I often remind executives of a foundational principle: pressure does not create greatness. It reveals the conditioning that already exists beneath the surface. In a culture obsessed with quick wins, the Knicks’ historic victory proves the power of persistence, showing us why the best leaders need to think more like champions.

Overestimating the Sprint, Undervaluing the Marathon

We live in a society deeply addicted to instant gratification. Our business culture glorifies the “overnight success” — from tech startup unicorns reaching billion-dollar valuations in months, to viral social media influencers, to the relentless, short-sighted pressure of quarterly earnings. Careers are increasingly viewed as a series of fast-paced sprints where immediate results are the only metrics that matter.

Contrast this impatient climate with the reality of the New York Knicks organization. This championship wasn’t won in a single, defining season. It was painstakingly built through years of disappointing seasons, failed rebuilds, high-profile leadership changes, structural overhauls and grueling strategic adjustments. In business, we often underestimate what I call the Transformation Tax, the emotional, cultural, and organizational toll paid between the decision to change and the results that eventually follow.

The executive takeaway is clear: the most meaningful, sustainable accomplishments take far longer than we expect. True competitive advantage belongs to leaders who refuse to sacrifice long-term development for short-term applause.

Resilience Is Not a Trait, It Is a Practice

Resilience is one of the most misunderstood concepts in modern leadership. Many assume it is an innate trait, that certain individuals simply “have it” while others do not. In reality, resilience is not a fixed characteristic; it is a daily muscle developed through repeated exposure to adversity, failure, and recovery. Neuroscience reinforces this principle: under pressure, we don’t rise to our aspirations; we default to our conditioning.

Look at the individual human stories that powered the Knicks’ roster:

Jalen Brunson: Constantly told he was too small to become a dominant NBA player, he transformed doubt into fuel, leading his team to a championship, earning NBA Finals MVP, and scoring 45 points in the deciding game.

OG Anunoby: Battled severe injury setbacks throughout his career, including appendicitis during a previous Finals run, yet continuously conditioned his body and mind to return and delivered in one of the highest-pressure moments — scoring the go-ahead shot in Game 4.

Karl-Anthony Towns: Endured profound personal tragedy, losing his mother and multiple family members to COVID-19, yet returned to the highest level of performance after navigating deep grief and unimaginable loss.

Coach Mike Brown: Suffered multiple public coaching dismissals throughout his career, viewing those moments not as definitive ends, but as opportunities for reinvention and leadership growth before finally guiding New York to the title.

These leaders didn’t achieve greatness by avoiding disappointment; they achieved it by moving forward despite it. Resilience is built during losing seasons, not winning ones.

Culture Is a Financial Asset 

Research from McKinsey & Company consistently shows organizations with strong organizational health significantly outperform peers in long-term shareholder returns. Likewise, studies from Gallup have found highly engaged teams deliver higher profitability, stronger productivity, and lower turnover.

Championship teams, whether in the NBA or the Fortune 500, are rarely built on raw talent alone. While talent may create initial opportunities, it is culture that sustains success over time. A high-performing culture is anchored by trust, shared purpose, mutual accountability, and unwavering consistency.

Consider the famed “Villanova core” of Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges. Years before wearing the orange and blue, these men built an unshakeable foundation of trust and accountability as college teammates and NCAA champions. When reunited in New York, that existing chemistry became the cultural bedrock of the entire locker room. It allowed the team to survive injuries, media scrutiny, and high-pressure moments that would dissolve less unified groups.

For companies navigating volatile markets and economic uncertainty, the lesson is paramount. When the storm hits, strategy can break, but a culture anchored in deep trust will remain intact.

Conditioning Over Outcomes

The final shift from contender to champion requires prioritizing conditioning over outcomes.

Most leaders are entirely outcome-focused, obsessing over KPIs, revenue targets, and final scores. Elite performers, however, obsess over their conditioning — the daily habits, mindset shifts, emotional regulation, recovery protocols, and unglamorous disciplines that happen when no one is watching. You cannot control every external outcome, market shift, or referee’s whistle. You can, however, completely control how you prepare.

Perhaps no one exemplified this ethos more than Jalen Brunson. In an era where players maximize every immediate dollar, Brunson chose to prioritize the organization’s long-term success by signing a team-friendly contract extension. This selflessness wasn’t just a financial sacrifice; it was a leadership discipline. It gave the front office the flexibility to build and retain a deep, championship-caliber roster. It was a leadership decision that prioritized collective success over individual gain.

The Real Achievement

When the final buzzer sounded and millions of Knicks fans celebrated a victory 53 years in the making, the world witnessed the outcome. But the real story was the process. Success rarely arrives on our preferred timeline. The challenge for leaders and organizations that ultimately leave a legacy are those that remain deeply committed to their vision through long stretches of uncertainty and invisible progress.

In Athleadership, I explore how leaders can develop the mindset and conditioning required to sustain performance through both setbacks and success

If this Knicks team taught us anything, it’s that the process of becoming championship-caliber may be the truest victory of all.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

About the Author
By Melissa Dawn Simkins
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Melissa Dawn Simkins is the founder of Athleadership® and author of Athleadership: The Elite Athletic Mindset: How to Lead Under Pressure and Perform When It Counts, a leadership conditioning framework inspired by elite athletic performance and grounded in neuroscience. She advises organizations on how to build resilient, adaptable leaders capable of performing under pressure in an AI-driven world.


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