Knicks (NBA basketball team)

The New York professional basketball team is called the Knickerbockers, or Knicks. "Knickerbocker" was formally adopted in the summer of 1946, but "Knicks" was quickly applied by sportswriters.

http://www.nba.com/knicks/history/why_knickerbockers.html
The term "Knickerbockers" traces its origin back to the Dutch settlers who came to the New World -- and especially to what is now New York -- in the 1600s. Specifically, it refers to the style of pants the settlers wore ... pants that rolled up just below the knee, which became known as "Knickerbockers," or "knickers".

Through history, the Dutch settler "Knickerbocker" character became synonymous with New York City. The city's most popular symbol of the late 19th and early 20th centuries was "Father Knickerbocker," complete with cotton wig, three-cornered hat, buckled shoes, and, of course, knickered pants.

The Knickerbocker name had its first use in the world of sports in 1845, when Alexander Cartwright's Manhattan-based baseball team -- the first organized team in baseball history -- was named the "New York Knickerbockers" or the "Knickerbocker Nine." The Knickerbocker name stayed with the team even after it moved its base of operations to Elysian Fields at Hoboken, N.J. in 1846. (The baseball link may have prompted Casey Stengel to joyously exclaim, "It's great to be back as the manager of the Knickerbockers!" when he was named pilot of the newborn Mets in 1961.)

Thus, the Knickerbocker name was an integral part of the New York scene when the Basketball Association of America granted a charter franchise to the city in the summer of 1946. As can best be determined, the final decision to call the team the "Knickerbockers" was made by the club's founder, the legendary Ned Irish.

"The name came out of a hat," recalled Fred Podesta, the longtime Garden executive who passed away at age 86 in 1999. "We were all sitting in the office one day -- Irish, (public relations director) Lester Scott and a few others on the staff. We each put a name in the hat, and when we pulled them out, most of them said Knickerbockers, after Father Knickerbocker, the symbol of New York City. It soon was shortened to Knicks."

In keeping with another New York tradition, the team's colors have always (except for the years from 1980-81 through 1982-83) been orange, blue and white. . .the official colors of New York City.

Why "Knickerbockers"? Why not??

24 July 1946, New York Times, pg. 31:
N. Y. 5 Named Knickerbockers
New York's entry in the newly formed Basketball Association of America will be known as the Knickerbockers and will wear this city's official colors of orange and blue when play in the twelve-city professional circuit gets under way next winter.

14 August 1946, New York Times, pg. 38:
For the coming campaign, however, the Knicks will have to scramble for the few dates left over by the collegians and play the majority of their games elsewhere.

(Trademark)
Word Mark KNICKERBOCKERS
Goods and Services IC 041. US 107. G & S: PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL CONTESTS. FIRST USE: 19460000. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 19460000
Mark Drawing Code (1) TYPED DRAWING
Serial Number 72299636
Filing Date June 4, 1968
Current Filing Basis 1A
Original Filing Basis 1A
Registration Number 0866661
Registration Date March 11, 1969
Owner (REGISTRANT) MADISON SQUARE GARDEN CORPORATION CORPORATION MICHIGAN 410 PARK AVE. NEW YORK NEW YORK 10022
(LAST LISTED OWNER) MADISON SQUARE GARDEN CORPORATION CORPORATION BY CHANGE OF NAME FROM DELAWARE TWO PENNSYLVANIA PLAZA NEW YORK NEW YORK 100210091
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