A celebration outside Madison Square Garden turned into a crime scene after Game 4 of the NBA Finals.
NYPD says a group approached a 17-year-old near 237 W. 35th Street after the Knicks game, got into an argument, and one person punched and kicked the teen.
The department is now asking for help identifying the suspect:
WANTED FOR GANG ASSAULT: On Wednesday night after the Knicks game, a group approached a 17-year-old near 237 W 35th St and got into an argument. This individual punched and kicked the teen. He had a seizure and was in a coma. Any info? DM @NYPDTips or call 800-577-TIPS. pic.twitter.com/DNg0AzIesN
— NYPD NEWS (@NYPDnews) June 12, 2026
The police description is blunt.
The teen suffered a seizure and went into a coma.
Fox News included the NYPD condition line and the family’s recovery update:
“He had a seizure and was in a coma,”
“He’s pulling through. He is responding,”
Fox reported the teen has since come out of the coma and is listed in critical but stable condition.
The New York Post tied the violence to a livestreamed Midtown brawl after someone yelled “Spurs in 7.”
The outlet’s post put that alleged provocation front and center:
Teen beaten into coma by brute bellowing 'Spurs in 7' during livestreamed Game 4 Midtown brawl https://t.co/UIKrzGey4I pic.twitter.com/gsqjByDI5H
— New York Post (@nypost) June 12, 2026
Fox reported the injured teen was not the person who answered the taunt.
A brawl still followed, and the 17-year-old ended up with life-threatening injuries.
New York Post quoted the teen’s mother after the attack:
“I have no words for him,”
“Right now, my son comes first. This person needs to pay for what he’s done.”
ABC7 New York reported authorities said the teen was kicked multiple times in the head and body.
People reported the teen was hospitalized at Bellevue as police continued seeking suspects.
The broader picture is a city struggling to keep postgame chaos under control.
Fox noted the Knicks have a chance to win their first title since 1973 on Saturday night, with Game 5 set for San Antonio.
That should be a sports story.
Instead, a family is praying over a hospitalized teenager while police ask the public to help identify the people responsible.
This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.






