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See the Knicks Championship Parade Unfold

In the early hours of Thursday morning, droves of New Yorkers, sports fans and revelers alike poured into the streets of Lower Manhattan to celebrate an extraordinary milestone in the city’s history: the Knicks’ first N.B.A. championship win in two generations.

[See live coverage of the parade here.]

The Knicks’ ticker-tape parade, the first such procession in the team’s 80-year history, is brought players up 17 blocks on Broadway, through Lower Manhattan to City Hall on a route known as the Canyon of Heroes, flanked by hordes of fans and 10,000 police officers, according to the Police Department. After, the team was handed the keys to the city in a ceremony hosted by Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

The team’s victory has unleashed a citywide euphoria on a scale rarely seen before, the reflection of a city that waited years to witness a winning N.B.A. team and one starved for a positive cause to unite behind. And it was a long time coming: 53 years, eight conference wins and, more recently, one long, hard winter.

The city has responded in kind. On Thursday, municipal buildings were illuminated in the Knicks’ signature blue and orange. Forest green trash cans along the parade route were traded in for the team’s colorway, too. And throughout the city, enterprising New Yorkers will continue to hawk T-shirts, hats and other unofficial merchandise to anyone wishing to memorialize this moment in the life of the city and its beloved (and long beleaguered) sports franchise. Even Alicia Keys, the singer whose 2009 hit with the rapper Jay-Z, “Empire State of Mind,” has become synonymous with the city, is set to perform.

“New Yorkers have cheered for our team from packed living rooms in the Bronx to watch parties in Brooklyn,” Mr. Mamdani said in a statement on Saturday, “from bars in Queens to Staten Island to Manhattan, and Madison Square Garden itself. Now it’s time for our city to celebrate together. Bing bong.”

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