Essay / June 9, 2026
The Employee Who Taught The Knicks How to Win: A Case Study in Organizational Culture
Go Knicks!? Go Team.
I study organizations and how they work, all day. To me, the most interesting story about the New York Knicks is not that they reached the NBA Finals. It is that they reached the NBA Finals despite the organizational culture of Madison Square Garden.
For most franchises, success and organizational culture reinforce one another. Strong leadership creates trust. Trust creates alignment. Alignment creates winning. But the Knicks present a different case study. As a labor economist and corporate ethnographer, I spend my time studying how incentives shape behavior inside organizations and how cultures emerge, reproduce themselves, and sometimes undermine institutional performance. Through that lens, the Knicks are fascinating not because they finally reached the NBA Finals, but because they appear to have done so after nearly three decades of organizational dysfunction under one of the most structurally advantaged ownership groups in professional sports.
James Dolan assumed operational control of the Knicks in 1999. The Knicks reached the NBA Finals that same year. Then they spent the next twenty-seven years trying to return. Basketball outcomes are never reducible to a single individual, but twenty-seven years is no longer a basketball statistic. It is an organizational fact. It represents multiple coaches, multiple front offices, multiple superstar players, multiple strategic visions, and one constant: ownership.
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The Knicks occupy perhaps the most privileged position in American sports. Madison Square Garden is not merely an arena. It is a cultural monument. It hosts the biggest fights, the biggest concerts, the biggest events in the biggest city Americans can imagine. The franchise sits atop one of the most valuable brands in professional athletics. Unlike most organizations, the Knicks have never had to earn relevance through excellence because relevance was guaranteed by geography, mythology, and monopoly. The building prints money whether banners hang from the rafters or not.
This is important because incentives shape culture. Organizations that face consequences for failure learn. Organizations that profit despite failure often do not. Most businesses cannot survive decades of underperformance. The Knicks could. Their valuation climbed. The arena remained full. The television ratings held. The merchandise sold. The institution became insulated from the corrective pressures that force organizations to evolve. In economic terms, Madison Square Garden developed the rare luxury of being able to mistake permanence for competence.
The public record of the Dolan era reflects this reality. Over the years, the Knicks have repeatedly found themselves in conflict with people who should have been treated as institutional assets. Charles Oakley, one of the most beloved players in franchise history, was publicly removed from Madison Square Garden and arrested following a dispute with ownership. Spike Lee, arguably the most recognizable Knicks fan on earth and a man who has spent decades serving as an unofficial ambassador for the franchise, found himself publicly feuding with the organization over arena access. The fact that both men became adversaries of the institution tells us something deeper than the details of either incident. Healthy organizations know how to honor loyalty. Dysfunctional organizations often perceive loyalty as a threat.
The tragedy of the Dolan era is that these incidents were never isolated. They formed a pattern. Former players became critics. Fans became skeptics. Coaches came and went. Executives came and went. Strategies changed. Rebuilds began and ended. Yet the organization itself seemed incapable of asking the most important question any institution can ask: why does this keep happening?
The Carmelo Anthony era should have forced that reckoning. Carmelo arrived in New York as one of the most gifted offensive players of his generation and one of the few superstars willing to embrace the pressure, scrutiny, and expectations that come with playing in New York. Yet the Knicks never built the kind of stable institutional environment that championship organizations routinely construct around their stars. The years became a carousel of competing visions, shifting priorities, and organizational instability. Carmelo was often blamed for not delivering a championship. Less frequently discussed is whether the organization delivered championship conditions.
This distinction matters because talent and culture are not substitutes for one another. Great organizations do not simply acquire talent. They create environments where talent compounds. Weak organizations consume talent. They force exceptional individuals to compensate for structural deficiencies. The Knicks spent much of the Dolan era asking stars to overcome problems that ownership itself had helped create.
Which brings us to Jalen Brunson.
The significance of Jalen Brunson’s leadership becomes even clearer when measured in economic terms. In 2024, Brunson signed a four-year extension worth approximately $156.5 million. Had he waited and pursued free agency under the league’s maximum salary structure, analysts estimated he could have earned roughly $269 million over five years. The difference—more than $100 million in potential earnings—represented one of the most consequential financial sacrifices by a superstar in modern NBA history. Whether every dollar of that theoretical gap would ultimately have materialized is beside the point. The signal was unmistakable. Brunson voluntarily surrendered a level of personal compensation that most workers, executives, athletes, and owners would never consider relinquishing.
What did that money buy? It bought organizational flexibility. It helped create the financial space necessary for the Knicks to retain and acquire the depth that transformed them from a good team into a championship contender. It helped support a roster featuring players such as OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, Josh Hart, Karl-Anthony Towns, and a deep supporting cast capable of sustaining a Finals run. In effect, Brunson redirected resources that could have flowed to himself and made them available to the organization. Economists spend their careers studying incentives, but few examples are this clear. Jalen Brunson altered the incentive structure of the Knicks by personally absorbing a cost that ownership otherwise would have been forced to bear.
The story of Brunson is not simply the story of a great point guard. It is the story of an employee who built a culture that leadership could not.
What Brunson understood is something every organizational scholar understands: culture is ultimately a system of incentives. People do what organizations reward. They emulate what leaders model. They sacrifice when sacrifice is reciprocated. Brunson created a social contract within the locker room. He demonstrated that winning required shared investment and shared accountability. He made collective success more important than individual extraction.
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As a corporate ethnographer, I recognize this phenomenon immediately. In dysfunctional institutions, high-performing employees often create what sociologists call subcultures and what managers call high-performance teams. These are islands of excellence that emerge inside larger environments of dysfunction. They develop their own norms because the broader organization cannot provide them. They create trust where trust is absent. They create accountability where accountability is inconsistent. They become successful not because of the institution surrounding them but because they learn how to protect themselves from it.
That is what makes this Knicks team so remarkable. The values fans celebrate most enthusiastically—sacrifice, toughness, professionalism, resilience, accountability—are not values commonly associated with Madison Square Garden’s corporate reputation over the past quarter century. They are values associated with Jalen Brunson and the culture he helped create inside the basketball operation itself.
The irony is impossible to ignore. The most successful Knicks team in a generation emerged not when ownership finally discovered the secret to organizational excellence, but when a player created the kind of organizational culture that ownership had spent decades failing to build. The Knicks succeeded when leadership emerged from below instead of above.
That is why Brunson deserves far more recognition than he receives. Fans often celebrate him as a star player. They should also celebrate him as an organizational architect. He built trust where fans had learned skepticism. He built accountability where excuses had become routine. He built solidarity inside an institution long associated with fragmentation. Most importantly, he demonstrated that culture is not a slogan printed on a wall or a mission statement written by executives. Culture is the collection of incentives, norms, and behaviors that govern how people treat one another when nobody is watching.
The Knicks’ return to the NBA Finals is therefore not simply a basketball achievement. It is an organizational case study. It is a lesson in what happens when an institution with every structural advantage in the world fails for decades to create the conditions for sustained excellence. And it is a reminder that sometimes the people who save organizations are not the people at the top of the organizational chart.
Sometimes they are the employees.
The most remarkable thing about the New York Knicks is not that they finally reached the NBA Finals. After twenty-seven years of organizational drift, the most important leadership decision in the history of James Dolan’s Knicks was made not by the owner, not by the executives, and not by the boardroom. It was made by an employee who willingly left more than $100 million on the table because he understood something the institution had forgotten: winning is built through shared sacrifice.