The New York Knicks open the NBA finals on Wednesday, taking on the San Antonio Spurs. It’s their first trip to the finals since 1999.

But this year’s dominant playoff run has anxious fans eying something bigger – a prize that’s eluded the team for decades.

The last time the Knicks were crowned NBA champions was 1973. That was 53 years ago — more than half a century and nearly a fifth of the time the United States has existed.

In 1973, the team’s current star player, Jalen Brunson, was 23 years away from being born. His father, current Knicks Assistant Coach Rick Brunson, was only a year old.

Were baby Rick to have watched the 1973 NBA finals, he would have seen Knicks star center Willis Reed, one of the team’s greatest players of all time, score an average of 16 points per game and go on to be named finals MVP. He’d have watched Walt Frazier and Bill Bradley decimate the Los Angeles Lakers in five games, with the Knicks winning four in a row after losing the first in the series. It was an amazing time to be a New York City basketball fan.

A lot has happened to the Knicks in the decades since. Like Patrick Ewing's entire career, for example. Carmelo Anthony. Linsanity. The “Go New York Go” song that you can’t get out of your head. Superfan Spike Lee. Timothée Chalamet. The fans have been through a lot.

So has New York itself. Fifty-three years is several lifetimes in the cycle of this fast-paced city. To give you an idea of how long it’s been since we tasted glory, here’s a look at the very bygone state of New York the last time the Knicks won the NBA championship.

Real estate

Reports vary, but the average New York City rent in 1973 was around $100. That’s about $750 after adjusting for inflation, quite a bit less than the current median of about $2500. A two-bedroom luxury apartment in Manhattan could be had for $51,750, or $404,000 after inflation. We’ll spare you the average price in today’s dollars.

Subway fare

One ride costs 35 cents. Adjusted for inflation, that is $2.67, which is still less than the current cost of $3. You paid that fee with a token. Tokens themselves still had 30 years to go before their elimination in 2003.

Grand openings

Many culinary trends have come and gone, but hot dogs at Gray’s Papaya have been going strong since 1973. Only one location of the once ubiquitous spot remains. CBGB, originally standing for “country, bluegrass and blues,” opens, soon to become a punk petri dish. The club closed in 2006. The Nuyorican Poets Cafe opens in the Lower East Side, where it still stands, though it has been closed for renovations for several years. And the world’s largest co-op complex, Co-Op City in the Bronx, opens. The World Trade Center also opened, after seven years of construction. At the time, the Twin Towers were the tallest buildings in the world.

John Lindsay in Gracie Mansion

John Lindsay ended his second term as mayor in 1973. His tenure included oversight of the city in the midst of the Vietnam War, which was the cause of the so-called Hard Hat Riots, where construction workers attacked antiwar protesters. He was also the mayor during a sanitation worker strike. Lindsay, who switched his party affiliation from Republican to Democrat while in office, was succeeded by Abe Beame, elected late in 1973. Beame presided over the city’s budget crisis, which almost led to bankruptcy. Most famously, he was mayor during the city’s 1977 blackout. Four years after their championship win, the Knicks had 40 wins and 42 losses that year.

A very Trump introduction

The New York Times ran the first of many, many quotes from future Donald J. Trump, in a story titled “Major Landlord Accused of Antiblack Bias in New York City.” The piece outlined a lawsuit filed against Trump and his father. Trump denied the charges. “They are absolutely ridiculous,” he said. The suit was eventually settled with no admission of guilt.

Hip-hop is born

At a party in the Bronx, a teenager named Kool Herc, using two turntables, elongates the drum breaks on soul records and makes calls to the audience to dance. The sound is a precursor to hip-hop. On “Rapper’s Delight,” the first rap commercial successful rap record released a few years later in 1979, Sugarhill Gang shout out the Knicks, saying, “I got a color TV so I can see the Knicks play basketball.” It will be another four decades until one-time Knick Iman Shumpert begins his own short-lived career as a rapper.

New York on film

New York featured in several films, including “Serpico,” a fictionalization of police whistleblower Frank Serpico’s uphill battle to expose corruption. Star Al Pacino was 33 years old. “Mean Streets,” about the mafia in Little Italy, was released. It was directed by Martin Scorsese, who, at the time, was 31. In the years since, he’s directed 23 feature films. “Soylent Green” was also released, featuring a dystopian, cannibalistic New York City set far in the future: 2022.