Knicks fever has overtaken the town. Suburbanites aren’t protected both. Gabrielle, born in New York Metropolis, raised on Lengthy Island, and now elevating her youngsters in Westchester, has a extreme case — and there’s no query she’ll be on the staff’s ticker-tape parade.
To ensure it, she’s paying $750 to have somebody maintain her spot in line forward of Thursday. They’ll be there for her from midnight to eight a.m., the mom of three advised The Metropolis Reporter.
“Clearly I can’t wait in a single day and likewise watch my youngsters,” three boys ages 4, 7, and 10, Gabrielle stated, declining to make use of her final identify because of the delicate nature of her work at a monetary agency.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani has projected the NBA championship celebration could also be New York Metropolis’s largest in historical past; after a 53-year drought, the “Canyon of Heroes” within the Monetary District can be flooded with followers. For the die-hards, they’re saving a spot themselves.
Geraldine Bryant, who lives within the Bronx, was there hours sooner than Gabrielle’s line-sitter. Arriving on the Metropolis Corridor entry level at 4:15 p.m. on Wednesday, she stated she plans to stake out her spot all night time.
“I need the Knicks to see me,” she stated, sitting in a foldable garden chair with a hand-crafted Knicks signal on shiny blue poster board.

Whereas the Knicks have by no means earlier than had a ticker-tape parade, because of former Mayor John Lindsay, their 1973 championship was celebrated with a ceremony at Metropolis Corridor Plaza, drawing about 2,000 followers. Thursday’s parade might see thousands and thousands. The parades for the Giants (2008 and 2012) and the Yankees (1998, 1999 and 2000) all noticed over 1,000,000 followers, with some estimates as excessive as 2 to three million, in response to the Downtown Alliance, an advocacy group servicing Decrease Manhattan.
At a bit of previous 5 p.m. Wednesday — greater than 17 hours earlier than the parade — severe followers like Bryant had already staked out their front-row spots on the bleachers outdoors of Metropolis Corridor, unfolding pillows and rolling out pajamas for an all-night wait.
“Fifty-three years, man, via the ups and downs of the Knicks, and that is my first championship I’ve ever seen,” stated Rob Martel, 53, from Winfield Park, New Jersey. “I wish to be as shut as doable.”
Born the yr of the Knicks’ final title, he had introduced little greater than a chair, a hat and a few Gatorade.
“I got here much less ready than they did,” he stated, nodding towards a pair of brothers close by, with whom he turned quick pals inside minutes of sitting on the bleachers.

These brothers, Eddie and Justin Leiva, had traveled from Philadelphia by NJ Transit and a Lyft from Penn Station. Eddie, 24, stated he has been a fan since start. “We’re born into this blue and orange without end,” he stated, pointing to a Knicks’ hat stitched with the yr 2000.
His older brother Justin, 28, a faculty counselor on summer time break, stated he needed to be right here for the event. “It is a as soon as in a lifetime alternative,” he stated. “We wish to be the primary for all the things, if we are able to.”
Passerbys had been dropping off chips and water for them, he stated. “It’s simply good vibes throughout, man.”
Safety and Sacrifices
With the NYPD placing out a laundry record of safety measures, banned objects, and Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch discussing the opportunity of turning folks away — Gabrielle’s simply hoping for the perfect by the point she will get there Thursday morning.
She requested the line-sitter she employed on Airtasker, an internet market, to avoid wasting three spots, ideally on Broadway and Barclay Avenue.

A Knicks fan virtually since start, she’s shared her love of the sport together with her youngsters. She desires them to make some life-long reminiscences on the parade.
“It’s instances like this the place New York Metropolis shines its brightest,” Gabrielle stated. “It’s one in every of these moments that can be embedded of their reminiscences and final a lifetime.”
At Metropolis Corridor, different campers on the bleachers traveled lots of of miles to be there.
Henry Restrepo, 55, flew in from Miami Wednesday morning along with his 18-year-old son, Alejandro. Born and raised in Queens, Restrepo has adopted the staff since 1984.
“I’ve been via loads of ache and struggling,” he stated, remembering the Knicks’ losses to the Rockets in 1994 and the Spurs in 1999. “I cried. I shed a tear. I ain’t ashamed to say that.”
Tenting was not the plan, he stated, till he noticed others doing it and determined spontaneously to camp out for the night time. With a purpose to see the gamers, in response to Restrepo, he selected his spot on the bleachers, supposedly on the nook the place the gamers’ motorcade turns towards Metropolis Corridor.

“I’m not a VIP or a politician, so I can’t be there,” he stated. “So that is the following neatest thing.”
When requested about whether or not or not he’s involved about being kicked out by legislation enforcement tonight, Restrepo admitted he’s “a bit of frightened,” however hopes “it’s well worth the danger.”
Eddie, along with his brother Justin, stated they don’t seem to be frightened within the slightest — “I’ll line up wherever I’ve to,” they stated. They’re equally undaunted by the lengthy wait forward of them.
“That’s all of the Knicks did this yr was sacrifice to win the championship, so I feel we might sacrifice a bit of bit of cash, a bit of little bit of time, a bit of little bit of sleep,” he stated.

