Knicks swag has spattered all over New York City as the team’s miraculous run toward the championship has captivated an entire city. Everywhere merch is sold, there is a line: at SoHo streetwear shops, at a pop-up van selling retro gear in Harlem, at the official N.B.A. Store on Fifth Avenue.
Yet strangely, right next to Madison Square Garden, the home of the New York Knickerbockers, an open-air bazaar of bootleg merch has blossomed.
On Thursday afternoon, a day after the Knicks’ already-legendary Game 4 comeback, more than a dozen black-market salesmen, who more typically can be found there hawking concert tees, agreed that the volume of merchandise they have moved since the Knicks made it to the N.B.A. finals has been incredible — maybe more than five times what they sell out front at a Billy Joel or Bad Bunny concert.
“This is New York hustle,” Mervin Brown, 58, said, as he made change for three buyers at once. They pawed his collection of Knicks shirts, some featuring three Knicks, others with a swirling basketball, before selecting a $20 shirt each, one in black, one in gray, one in white. He carried on down West 32nd Street, towing his wares in a handcart. “Go Knicks!” he hollered.
Some independent designers have tried to get a piece of the action. Lingua Franca, which trades in $300 custom-embroidered cashmere sweaters, debuted a version with a ubiquitous piece of Knicks poetry.
In front of an Eighth Avenue subway stop painted orange and blue in the Knicks’ honor, Melisse Martineau, a handbag designer, posed for pictures on Thursday with a Knicks-themed clutch she had just pieced together in her studio two blocks away. “This morning I woke up, and we all are like, what can we do? Make a Knicks bag!” she said. The bag would be for sale later that afternoon, for $106. But was she a fan? “I am now,” Ms. Martineau said.
Down the street, the bootleg T-shirt salesmen worked side by side, each with slightly different designs. Though such sales are illegal, the police patrolling the area appeared to let the informal commerce go on mostly uninterrupted.
Richard Ortiz, 35, from Brooklyn, said salesmen like him tried to keep mobile. Setting up a table attracted trouble, the bootleggers agreed, though some have received tickets for being unlicensed vendors. Later that afternoon, in fact, a vendor on West 40th Street was handcuffed as rush-hour workers streamed past his table of T-shirts. The police were not able to provide arrest or ticketing data as it pertained to unlicensed sales by publication time.
Mr. Ortiz, who goes by Richie, likened his hardscrabble vocation to what the Knicks have been demonstrating on the hardwood. “Right now New York City has that momentum built,” he said as a group of men searched through his shirts for any double XLs. “This is that momentum. When you play basketball, you’ve got to hustle.”
In interviews with a half-dozen sellers outside M.S.G., most said they bought their goods from a Bronx-based wholesaler — a man they all referred to only as “Frenchie.”
Shirts are typically purchased by the sellers by the dozen, at about $5 a piece, several said. They sell on the street for $20. But as Knicks fever has risen, Frenchie’s wholesale prices have gone up, to about $9 apiece, according to Mr. Brown. He could still make a profit, but he didn’t like it. “The hustlers are getting hustled.”
The level of mania for swag has taken even the official retailers by surprise. Sales were so intense that a few days into the finals, Fanatics, the dominant force in sports merchandising, decided to retrofit a food truck as a mobile store for its Mitchell & Ness brand of retro sports gear. A second truck full of back stock follows wherever it goes. Lines have routinely stretched 150 people long at each stop, said Sam Archibald, the chief merchandising officer of Fanatics Commerce.
“New Yorkers are not patient,” Mr. Archibald said. “So to wait around a block in New York in an orderly fashion to buy a piece of this historic team was not something that we probably initially anticipated.”
On Lafayette Street in SoHo, Alexa Lazarou bided her time on a 39-person line to get into the New York or Nowhere boutique. Items from its Finals or Nowhere collection (T-shirts start at $60, hoodies are $155) are frequently seen on Celebrity Row at Madison Square Garden.
Wearing a Knicks shirt she had gotten as a party favor, Ms. Lazarou, 25, from Queens, pointed out a measure of absurdity in the craze. “All the shirts, all the tees, they are probably made in the same factory,” she said. “But when you work hard and you want something, you’re going to go out and get it.”
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