The Knicks won on 6/13. Coincidence?

The Knicks won on 6/13. Coincidence?

Knicks coach Red Holzman is on the sidelines during game action against the Philadelphia 76ers on March 5, 1977. (Getty Images)
Knicks coach Red Holzman is on the sidelines during game action against the Philadelphia 76ers on March 5, 1977. (Getty Images)

For some Jewish Knicks fans, the most salient number related to the team’s NBA championship win was not 94, the team’s final score, or 53, the number of years since the last title. It was 613.

The number is meaningful in Jewish tradition because it signifies the number of commandments outlined in the Torah.

For years, the number has hung from the rafters at Madison Square Garden — a reference to the number of lifetime wins notched by Red Holzman, the Jewish coach who led the Knicks during their previous championship runs, in 1970 and 1973.

On Saturday, it also became the date that the Knicks’ championship dry spell was broken: June 13, or 6/13.

For some Jews watching, the confluence of 613s was evidence of divine intervention in the Knicks’ title win.

Moshe Spern, a New York City educator and activist, noted that not only is 613 significant in Jewish tradition, but 26, the rest of the date, also resonated. “And 26 is the gematria of Hashem’s name,” he tweeted, using a Hebrew name for God and referring to the kabbalistic practice of assigning numerical value to letters and their combinations. He concluded, “Today is a miracle!!”

Jewish Knicks diehards were talking about the 613 connections well before the date breaking the championship dry streak was revealed.

Ike Hershkopf, the Manhattan psychologist to the stars, who later was accused of abusing his power in a 2019 podcast, told the New York Jewish Week in 1998 that he had informed Holzman about how meaningful his lifetime achievement was.

“I wrote a letter telling him that 613 is the single most special number in the Jewish religion, signifying the number of commandments that an observant Jew observes,” Herschkopf said. “I told him the highest praise that one could give to a Jew is to say he is a 613 man. … Subsequently he told me that he was so taken with this that he not only framed the letter but sent out copies to his friends.”

Last week, Rabbi Justin Pines, the chief executive officer of the Jewish Broadcasting Service, who grew up in Livingston, noted the Holzman banner in a broadcast. “Coincidence?” he asked. “Or a divine reminder hanging right over the court?” (The championship win unfolded in Texas at the home arena of the San Antonio spurs.)

Jewish Telegraphic Agency 

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