You’re going to find this hard to believe, I know. But somehow, they played professional basketball games before the evening of Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2017.
Somehow, the NBA had become a genuine global phenomenon in the 69 years before that night, when the NBA’s 70th season began with the defending-champion Warriors dropping a 122-121 nail-biter to the Rockets in Oakland, and the defending runner-up Cavaliers squeaking past old fried Kyrie Irving and the Celtics, 102-99, in Cleveland.
Maybe you were otherwise occupied that night, so you missed the revolution. The Yankees were playing the Astros in Game 4 of the 2017 ALCS that night, after all, and it was a rollicking celebration at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees spotting the Astros a 4-0 lead and then roaring back to win 6-4 thanks to a couple of clutch eighth-inning doubles by Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez. This was before we realized it was a civic duty to loathe the Astros, but the 48,804 filled the Bronx sky with thunder that night anyway.
If you were a Knicks fan, maybe you were fully engaged in getting ready for the next night’s season opener in Oklahoma City, where the Knicks would greet the recently departed Carmelo Anthony as an ex-teammate for the first time (and it might’ve been the last day of that 29-53 tire fire of a season you actually paid attention to).
In any event, the world likely changed without you.
