
By TERRY LYONS, Editor of Digital Sports Desk
CHESTNUT HILL – There’s been a lot of talk about the secondary ticket market for New York Knicks home games at Madison Square Garden. Those ticket prices are peaking for Games 3 and 4 of The NBA Finals with Game 3 being played Monday night.
Should the Knicks win Monday night and go up 3-0 in their best-of-seven series against the upstart San Antonio Spurs, the prices for Game 4 will sky-rocket. Should the Knicks lose Game 3, the ticket prices for a potential clinching Game 6 at Madison Square Garden will set new high marks for the toughest and most expensive ticket in New York sports history.
On the eve of Game 3, the highest price ticket listed for sale on Ticketmaster, the official online ticket sale and secondary market partner of the NBA, was selling a pair of Courtside seats for $180,187.20 in Row A (not Row AA). Some of the seats in the same area are going for the bargain basement price of $82,000+ and some others, with a few of the back of TV commentator Richard Jefferson’s (6-foot-7) head.
The proverbial “Get In Price” for Game 3 is running between $8,800 per seat (400 level) to $9,100 for some soul looking to dump 200-level seats.
That’s all fine and good.
In this day and age with legal secondary ticket sales online, the ticket is worth whatever price someone is stupid enough to pay for it. Like the NBA’s official ticket sales commercial spot says, “the game is never sold out.”
This columnist harkens back to buying tickets for the 1974 and 1976 ABA Championship Series. The New York Nets sold tickets in strips for all games, but more commonly, on a night-by-night basis. When the Nets won in the semi-finals, young ticket buyers would sprint from their seats to the Nassau Coliseum ticket office window where a line would form to purchase tickets for the next two home games.
The best value at The Coliseum was a Row A (front row seat) in any of Sections 306, 320, 326 and 340. They were all mirror images. The ideal seats were on the aisle, closest to the court. No obstructions. Great seats.
The price tag?
Not $180,187.20 or even $82,000 but a hefty $3.25.
A lower bowl seat in the 200s was something like $6.00 and a seat (in the 100s was an obscene $12.00.
We never missed a game, and the games would eventually sell out.
HERE NOW, THE NOTES: All this ticket mayhem in New York made me think of the “toughest” tickets to get in New York sports history. The list I’ve compiled is a modern day listing, and doesn’t include real old time boxing, or Murderer’s Row Yankees World Series games from the 1920s.
As always, the column is quite open to additions, suggestions, criticisms, whatever. Just keep it clean as this is a family publication with plenty of children, students and the like.
For the most part, the list is geared to the magnitude of the event not the ticket scalping price. Here’s one man’s look at tough tickets in New York, and that means at a New York City venue, not in Buffalo.
- The Beatles Play Shea Stadium – (August 15, 1965) – The Beatles changed rock music forever when they played in front of a raging, screaming 55,600 fans at Shea Stadium, former home of the New York Mets. “At Shea Stadium, I saw the top of the mountain,” said The Beatles’ lead guitarist and joint vocalist, John Lennon of the show.
- New York Rangers – (June 14, 1994) – The Rangers broke the spell and won the NHL Stanley Cup, ending a 54-year drought (1942).
- New York Mets – (Oct 16, 1969) – After losing Game 1 at Baltimore, the Mets took four straight to clinch MLB’s 1969 World Series, the franchise’s first ever title.
- New York Knicks – (May 8, 1970) – Forever to be known as the “Willis Reed game,” the Knicks took the 1970 NBA title with a Game 7 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. The injured Reed limped out from the locker to join his team in warm-ups, then proceeded to hit the first two jump shots of the game. Knicks all-star guard Walt Frazier had 38 points and 19 assists.
- Ali vs. Frazier – (March 8, 1971) – Billed as “The Fight of the Century,” Muhammad Ali and Smokin’ Joe Frazier battled for the heavyweight championship of the world at Madison Square Garden. The fight is considered the biggest boxing match in history, and arguably the single most anticipated and publicized sporting event of all time. It was the first time ever that two undefeated boxers who held the world heavyweight title fought each other. Frazier won in a 15-round unanimous decision.
- New York Giants vs. Baltimore Colts – (December 28, 1958) – The 1958 NFL Championship, widely known as “The Greatest Game Ever Played,” was a thrilling overtime victory for the Baltimore Colts over the New York Giants, 23-17, at Yankee Stadium. It was the first NFL playoff game to go into sudden-death overtime, nationally televised, and is credited with skyrocketing the NFL’s popularity, featuring legendary performances by quarterback Johnny Unitas and the late Raymond Berry, who passed away May 15, 2026.
- The 1973 Belmont Stakes – (June 9, 1973) – It was the 105th running of the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York, Running in a field of only five horses, Secretariat won by 31 lengths going away, the largest margin of victory in Belmont history. A crowd of 69,138 spectators came out to see the Triple Crown finale and most never cashed their $2.00 betting stubs. Secretariat’s winning time of 2 minutes and 24 seconds still stands as the American record for a mile and a half on dirt.
- Michael Jackson’s 30th Anniversary Celebration Concerts – (Friday, September 7, 2001, and Monday, September 10, 2001) marked Michael Jackson’s shows at Madison Square Garden – arguably the toughest concert tickets in world history. Whitney Houston, Britney Spears, and Destiny’s Child all performed along with Michael and five of his brothers, marking the last time they performed together on one stage. The shame of it all was the fact the attacks on the USA on September 11, 2001 came only hours after the Jackson concert on the Monday night concluded.
- Derek Jeter’s final baseball game at Yankee Stadium – September 25, 2014 – In the bottom of the 9th of a game against the Baltimore Orioles, the game was tied 5–5, and the Yankees had Antoan Richardson on second base. On the first pitch he faced, Derek Jeter lined a single to right field that scored Richardson and the Yankees won, 6–5, on a walk-off single in Jeter’s final game in front of 48,613 fans who had somehow secured tickets.
- Barbra Streisand’s Concert at The Garden – (June 23, 1994) – Less than two weeks after the New York Rangers won the Stanley Cup and the New York Knicks lost a hard-fought seven game series to the Houston Rockets, the biggest show in modern day history graced the Garden’s stage.

TIDBITS & NUGGETS: For those who tune-in to The Memorial on CBS on Sunday (today), you’ll see the greatest golfer of all-time, Jack Nicklaus, greeting the current players as they finish on the 18th hole, and then congratulating the tournament winner. For most golfers, it is the greatest honor of their careers. Jack will be wearing his tradition Sunday yellow or gold golf shirt, a signature of his Golden Bear look, along with his golden locks and burly build that won 18 Majors and 73 PGA Tour events during his illustrious career.
The Yellow Sunday has another meaning and the players all join in, as the tournament benefits children’s hospitals fighting cancer. Back at the 1986 Masters, Nicklaus chose his famous yellow shirt in memory of a young boy who had died from cancer a short time before the tournament. Nicklaus said, “The boy’s name was Craig Smith, and before he passed away, he told me he loved watching me play on Sundays and how he liked it when I wore a yellow shirt because it always seemed to bring me luck.” … “I remember Barbara (Nicklaus, Jack’s wife) telling me to wear yellow that Sunday morning, that it would bring me good luck because of Craig,”
Players, caddies and fans will all be wearing yellow or gold at Muirfield Village.
GIDDY-UP: Kentucky Derby champ Golden Tempo won the 158th running of the Belmont Stakes on Saturday, capturing the third leg of the Triple Crown five weeks after winning the ‘Derby and making more history for trainer Cherie DeVaux.
Jockey Jose Ortiz was aboard, as Golden Tempo went from last to first down the stretch at Saratoga Race Course, the track pinch-hitting for Belmont Park which is in the final year of renovations.
DeVaux, after becoming the first woman to train a Kentucky Derby winner, is the second in four years to do so at the Belmont. DeVaux is the first woman to win multiple Triple Crown races.
