
The parade routes were still sticky with confetti when the next wave started forming. Not a literal wave—though there was plenty of that in the stands—but the kind that builds when underdogs remember they've got teeth.
Let's start where the noise started: Madison Square Garden, March through May, when the New York Knicks turned grit into gospel.
The Garden Gets Its Groove Back
Here's what you need to know about this Knicks season: they weren't supposed to be here. Analysts had them pegged as a play-in team at best—scrappy, sure, but lacking the firepower to go deep. Then Jalen Brunson decided to author a different narrative, one that involved fourth-quarter daggers and the kind of clutch play that makes highlight reels look like documentaries.
The playoffs weren't just basketball—they were a referendum on effort versus expectation. Down 3-1 to Miami in the first round, the Knicks clawed back. They didn't win that series, but they won something else: the city's heart, again. The Garden shook the way it used to shake. Fans who'd grown cynical remembered why they bought season tickets in the first place.
Josh Hart dove for loose balls like they contained the cure for common sense. RJ Barrett played through everything except excuses. And when it was over, when the confetti didn't fall for them, the standing ovation lasted longer than some teams' playoff runs.
Southern Ice, Northern Respect
While New York was rediscovering its basketball soul, Raleigh was having a reckoning of its own.
The Carolina Hurricanes—a franchise that's spent two decades convincing northerners that yes, people in the South actually care about hockey—delivered a season for the archives. They didn't just make the playoffs; they dominated their way there. The Metropolitan Division crown came with a swagger that would make a penguin nervous (that's a Pittsburgh reference, for those keeping score at home).
Sebastian Aho played like a man possessed by the ghost of every underestimated small-market star. The defense was tighter than a Carolina BBQ recipe. And goaltender Frederik Andersen? He stopped pucks and arguments simultaneously.
The 'Canes didn't win it all—few do—but they proved something more durable: that a team built on chemistry and relentless forechecking can outduel rosters assembled like fantasy football teams. Their playoff run was appointment viewing, the kind that converts casual fans into people who suddenly understand what icing means (the hockey kind, not the cake kind).
And the celebrations. Raleigh knows how to party, it turns out. The post-game Storm Surges—those elaborate, slightly unhinged on-ice celebrations—weren't just fun. They were a middle finger to the "hockey is serious business" gatekeepers. Sports should be joyful. The Hurricanes remembered.
Enter the Pitch: A New Underdog Emerges
Which brings us to now. To soccer. To the U.S. Men's National Team, fresh off winning Group D and punching their ticket to the knockout rounds.
The Americans weren't favored. They rarely are—at least not in the sports the rest of the world actually cares about. But there they were: clinical against Wales, resilient against Iran, and downright dominant in the group finale. Christian Pulisic took a knee to the gut scoring the winning goal against Iran—literally bled for the cause—and became the kind of symbol nations rally around.
Now comes the question everyone's asking, the one I'm asking too: How far can they go?
Let's be clear-eyed here. This isn't 1980. The Miracle on Ice was lightning in a bottle—a collection of college kids toppling a Soviet juggernaut in a sport where upsets are rarer than honest politicians. That was geopolitical theater dressed in hockey pads.
This U.S. soccer team? They're talented, well-coached, and playing with house money. But they're also young, occasionally naive, and facing a bracket that includes teams who've been winning World Cups since before electricity reached certain American states.
That said—and here's where my inner optimist peeks through—they've got something. Call it belief, call it momentum, call it the same underdog energy that carried the Knicks and Hurricanes further than the spreadsheets predicted. Tyler Adams captains with a maturity beyond his years. Weston McKennie plays with controlled chaos. And Tim Weah—son of a legend—is writing his own story.
The Calculation
Can they win it all? The odds say no—Vegas isn't in the business of charity. But can they make a deep run, maybe the semifinals, maybe further? Can they give us moments we'll remember when we're old and boring?
Absolutely.
The truth is usually hiding in the footnotes, but sometimes it's hiding in plain sight: sports aren't about the analytics alone. They're about the nights when the improbable happens because someone decided "why not us?"
The Knicks asked it. The Hurricanes asked it. Now it's soccer's turn.
This season—across courts, rinks, and pitches—has been about teams that refused to read the script. About cities that remembered how to celebrate. About fans who showed up not because victory was guaranteed, but because the journey was worth the ticket price.
So here's where I land: the U.S. men's team can go as far as their legs, lungs, and collective audacity will carry them. Is that Qatar's final? Probably not. Is it further than most expect? I'm betting yes.
Either way, the parade routes are ready. Confetti is cheap. And we could all use another reason to believe in underdogs.
What about you? How far do you think the USMNT can go—and are you ready to believe again? Drop your predictions, your hot takes, your cautious optimism or reckless hope in the comments. Let's argue about it like fans do.

he Season of Underdogs
Across courts, rinks, and pitches, athletes are rewriting expectations — proving that grit, chemistry, and belief still matter more than odds. From Madison Square Garden to Raleigh to the world stage, this is the year the underdogs refused to read the script.
The World Is Big. The Stories Are Bigger.
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