Sunday Night Basketball on NBC starts with a bang with MSG debut
- - Sunday Night Basketball on NBC starts with a bang with MSG debut
Scooby Axson, USA TODAYFebruary 2, 2026 at 4:06 AM
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Sunday Night Basketball on NBC starts with a bang with MSG debut
NEW YORK â Almost three hours before Sundayâs nationally televised game between the Knicks and the Los Angeles Lakers at Madison Square Garden, about 50 huddled fans gathered outside the âworldâs famous arena,â eagerly awaiting entry.
The chants of âLetâs Go Knicksâ were loud enough to give people who were walking by in midtown Manhattan bundled up because of the frigid temperatures a sarcastic side-eye.
But the frenzy outside the arena isnât for a playoff game, because it was only Feb 1. The anticipation hit a fever pitch, even though the mercury hit a balmy 15 degrees. For an average ticket price of $912, according to TickPick (the highest since Kobe Bryantâs final game in 2016), they better be diehard fans or scalpers.
Those screaming Knicks fans couldn't care less about how they look or sound, and that is great news for NBC, which broadcast the game to kick off its âSunday Night Basketballâ package with a doubleheader. (The defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder and Denver Nuggets capped off the night)
Two of the NBAâs most storied franchises, the gameâs all-time leading scorer, LeBron James, who could be making his last trip to New York unless these teams meet in the Finals, Luka Doncic, this seasonâs leading scorer, and a franchise so championship-starved that any playoff elimination feels like a funeral, are enough storylines to keep any fan tuned in.
Those in attendance got their moneyâs worth, with the Knicks winning their sixth straight overall in a 112-100 victory.
Make no mistake about it, thatâs what NBC wants, and viewers will see that the production and the feel is going to be like that of the networkâs main sports cash cow, âSunday Night Football,â broadcast televisionâs No. 1 rated program for the past decade and a half.
Tracy Morgan was screaming during Luka's free throw. đMike Tirico was sitting right next to him and had to ask him about it. pic.twitter.com/SH6Wmi1HRD
â NBA on NBC and Peacock (@NBAonNBC) February 2, 2026
Mike Tirico, the play-by-play extraordinaire for âSunday Night Footballâ and next weekâs Super Bowl 60, along with his Winter Olympic hosting duties, will call the games, and analysts Reggie Miller and Jamal Crawford are also on board for the ride.
The look and feel of "Sunday Night Basketball" and NBCâs $2.5 billion annual investment make this another showcase for the Peacock network, but during the first installment, it doesnât have the standalone âall eyes on meâ mentality of its football counterparts, as there were four other night games on the Feb. 1 NBA schedule.
âI tell people all the time, if you get a chance to go back in time, some of my best moments were on this network,â Miller told USA TODAY Sports. âObviously, in this building, and to have a chance to do a 360, and wouldn't say end my career. But it looks like it, you know, this would be my last swan song. I was on that other network for 18, 19 years, and now, to be back here, um, it's something that's truly a walk down memory lane for me.â
Miller, a self-proclaimed early bird because of his military brat upbringing, starts his gameday with a workout and then preps his storyboard, which takes about 2.5 hours, and whether the game is a blowout or a close affair, there will be plenty of things to talk about.
âI like to be overprepared that way,â Miller said, acknowledging the fansâ complaints of his perceived bias or that he talks too much during telecasts.
Oct. 26: The Brooklyn Nets' Michael Porter Jr. dunks in front of the San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama at Frost Bank Center.
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Oct. 26: The Brooklyn Nets' Michael Porter Jr. dunks in front of the San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama at Frost Bank Center.
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1 / 8Dribble into this collection of dunk photos as NBA stars posterize opponentsOct. 26: The Dallas Mavericks' Cooper Flagg dunks the ball past the Toronto Raptors' Sandro Mamukelashvili at the American Airlines Center.
The NBA on NBC, during its heyday in the 1990s and ending its run in 2002, set the standard for its production and storytelling, with its iconic opening set to the soundtrack of John Teshâs âRoundball Rock.â
Tesh is back and has been since NBCâs October return to NBA broadcasting, and as Carrie Underwood prepared fans for âSunday Night Football,â Grammy-winning musician Lenny Kravitz handles those opening musical duties for âSunday Night Basketball.â
âWe have a base that's already there. Look, we are great storytellers on this network. I think that's always been the case, whether it's football, basketball, or whatever sport there is,â Miller said. âI think that will continue when you've got one of the best in the business, like Mike Tirico and Jamal and myself, who's, you know, I played 18 years, he played 19, so we have almost 40 years of experience between us. Either you love us, or you hate us, or we're still gonna talk to you as if you're one of us.â
But the quarterback of the entire show is no doubt Tirico, who Frank DiGraci, NBC Sports' coordinating producer, says he is the best, most versatile announcer in the business today.
âTo me, that is the best sports television production out of any sport, on any network in this country. When they came to us to say, we want to do 'Sunday Night Basketball,' I was like, 'let's go,'â DiGraci said. âAnd that's our vision to just transfer 'Sunday Night Football' and the high level, and the quality that that brings, and just keep it going. Okay. And that's our goal, right? Tonight, starting tonight and going forward.â
âSunday Night Basketballâ will also have a feel of importance, with the studio crew on-site for each game.
The pregame crew of "Basketball Night in America" host Maria Taylor, analysts Carmelo Anthony, Vince Carter and Tracy McGrady, with special correspondent Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark and Bob Costas, were on hand for the tilt from New York
But Miller, one of the Knicksâ biggest villains during his playing days, wouldnât have it any other way and says he still enjoys the way fans despise him for something he did 30 years ago.
âPeople think that I've only won in this building. I've lost a lot in here as well,â Miller said, as evidenced by his 33% winning percentage at the Garden. âI've had my heart broken in this building a lot, too. So, it's a two-way street, but I always tell people that Knicks fans, um, are truly a separate breed of what fandom is all about.â
So, it was part nostalgia with Miller, getting booed at every turn pre-game, part moving forward for NBC, and an opening that was a resounding success, with the hopes of dominating Sunday nights for the foreseeable future.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Sunday Night Basketball on NBC starts with a bang with MSG debut
Source: âAOL Sportsâ