Cammi Aimonetti posted an Instagram photo on June 7 showing herself at Game 2 in San Antonio wearing a blue top with "Knicks" across the front, white pants, an orange bag and white shoes — a public, visible show of support in the hours before Game 3 of the NBA Finals. Aimonetti, a New York realtor who has been a regular at Madison Square Garden through the playoffs and the Finals, captioned the image with the short line: "Another succe."
The timing matters. The New York Knicks have won 13 straight postseason games and sit two wins from the franchise’s first NBA championship in more than 50 years. Aimonetti’s post arrived on a night when the team’s next game would either push the run deeper or hand the series a new tenor; fans and followers in New York and on the road saw a Knicks supporter who travels with the moment.
The photo itself was specific: Game 2 in San Antonio, taken before the Knicks returned to New York for Game 3. The outfit read like a deliberate color play — blue top, white pants, orange bag and white shoes — and it reinforced a pattern: Aimonetti has been a mainstay at Madison Square Garden throughout the playoffs and during the Finals. Her page first showed Landry Shamet in September of 2024, and she has posted images from Knicks games since, but when the pair officially began dating remains unclear.
The public endorsement of the blue and orange comes against a quieter story on the court. Landry Shamet has averaged 6.6 points per game this postseason, down from a 9.3 points per game average during the Knicks’ regular season. That gap does not erase his presence; contributions from rotation players often slip past the box score, and role adjustments are common when a team runs a 13‑game streak into the Finals. Still, the numbers underline a friction point: Shamet’s scoring has dipped at the exact time the team has needed depth from every bench spot.
What to watch next is simple and immediate. Game 3 will be the next confirmed public moment for both Aimonetti and Shamet — another night when the framing of a fan’s post meets the realities of a title chase. The unanswered, sharper question is personal: the timeline of their relationship has public breadcrumbs — the September 2024 social‑media appearance — but no clear start date. For now, Aimonetti’s June 7 photo is the most recent, visible piece of that story as the Knicks press toward history and as Shamet’s role continues to be judged against the postseason numbers.





