Larry Johnson · The 1999 New York Knicks were an eight-seed that had no interest in what history said about how eight-seeds were supposed to fare. After beating Miami and Atlanta on the way to the Eastern Conference Finals, they arrived in a Game 3 showdown against the Indiana Pacers needing a defining statement from someone capable of making it. Larry Johnson provided the one no one expected: a three-pointer drawn plus a foul, releasing the shot with the kind of physical confidence that had defined him since his days as a top pick out of UNLV. He connected, absorbed the contact, and finished the free throw, four points on one possession, sending Madison Square Garden past delirium and swinging a tied series in New York's favor. The Knicks went on to win in six games and punch their ticket to the NBA Finals, becoming the first eighth-seed in league history to reach the championship round. Johnson had always been a load at the physical edge of the game; in this moment, he was also the most important player on the floor. His performance on June 5, 1999 closed a night that rewrote the possibilities of playoff basketball. · State of Mint · State of Mint