Regular events Sports Madison Square Garden hosts approximately 320 events a year. It is the home to the
New York Rangers of the National Hockey League, and the
New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association. Before 2020, the New York Rangers, New York Knicks, and the Madison Square Garden arena itself were all owned by the Madison Square Garden Company. The MSG Company split into two entities in 2020, with the Garden arena and other non-sports assets spun off into
Madison Square Garden Entertainment and the Rangers and Knicks remaining with the original company, renamed
Madison Square Garden Sports. Both entities remain under the voting control of
James Dolan and his family. The arena is also host to the
Big East men's basketball tournament and was home to the finals of the
National Invitation Tournament from the beginning of its existence up until 2022. It also hosts select home games for the
St. John's Red Storm, representing
St. John's University in men's
college basketball, and almost any other kind of indoor activity that draws large audiences, such as the
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show and the
2004 Republican National Convention. The Garden was home of the
NBA draft and
NIT Season Tip-Off, as well as the former New York City home of the
Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus and
Disney on Ice; all four events are now held at the
Barclays Center in
Brooklyn. It served the
New York Cosmos for half of their home games during the
1983–84 NASL Indoor season. Many of
boxing's biggest fights were held at Madison Square Garden, including the
Roberto Durán–
Ken Buchanan affair,
the first Muhammad Ali –
Joe Frazier bout and the US debut of
Anthony Joshua that ended in a huge upset when he was beaten by
Andy Ruiz. Before promoters such as
Don King and
Bob Arum moved boxing to
Las Vegas, Nevada, Madison Square Garden was a popular location for boxing. The original ring, which was brought from the second and third generation of the Garden, was officially retired on September 19, 2007, and donated to the
International Boxing Hall of Fame after 82 years of service. A ring replaced it beginning on October 6 of that same year. The
UFC has hosted many events at Madison Square Garden in recent years and has put on some of the highest grossing PPV events in history.
Professional wrestling Madison Square Garden has hosted many notable
WWE (formerly WWF and WWWF) events, and it's affectionally known as WWE's "home office". The Garden has hosted three
WrestleMania events, including the
first edition of the annual marquee event for WWE, as well as the
10th and
20th editions. Madison Square Garden is also one of two venues (the other being
Allstate Arena) to host WrestleMania three times. (right) and close friend
Chris Benoit (left) celebrating as reigning World Champions at
WrestleMania XX at Madison Square Garden It also hosted the
Royal Rumble in
2000 and
2008;
SummerSlam in
1988,
1991 and
1998; as well as
Survivor Series in
1996,
2002 and
2011. Multiple episodes of WWE's weekly shows,
Raw and
SmackDown have been broadcast from the Arena as well.
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) and
Ring of Honor (ROH) hosted their
G1 Supercard supershow at the venue on April 6, 2019. A year later it was announced that
New Japan Pro-Wrestling would return to Madison Square Garden alone on August 22, 2020, for NJPW Wrestle Dynasty. In May 2020, NJPW announced that the Wrestle Dynasty show would be postponed to 2021 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Concerts , who currently dominates Madison Square Garden's concert performance records and who in 2013 was recognized as a Madison Square Garden "franchise." guitarist
Jimmy Page performing at Madison Square Garden in 1973 Madison Square Garden hosts more high-profile concert events than any other venue in New York City. It has been the venue for
Michael Jackson's
Bad World Tour in 1988,
George Harrison's
The Concert for Bangladesh,
The Concert for New York City following the
September 11 attacks,
John Lennon's final concert appearance during an
Elton John concert on Thanksgiving Night in 1974 before
his murder in 1980, and
Elvis Presley, who gave four sold-out performances in 1972, his first and last ever in New York City.
Parliament-Funkadelic headlined numerous sold-out shows in 1977 and 1978.
Kiss, who were formed in the arena's city and three of whose members were city-born, did six shows during their second half of the 1970s main attraction peak or "heyday": four sold out winter shows at the arena in 1977 (February 18 and December 14–16), and another two shows only this time in summer for a decade-ender in 1979 (July 24–25). They played their final two shows at the venue on the December 1 and 2, 2023, the 50th anniversary year of their formation.
Billy Joel, another city-born and fellow 1970's pop star, played his first Garden show on December 14, 1978, with that month's follow ups on the 15th, 16th and 18th. Joel would eventually dominate the record for most concerts performed at Madison Square Garden.
Led Zeppelin's three-night stand in July 1973 was recorded and released as both a
film and
album titled
The Song Remains The Same.
The Police played their final show of their reunion tour at the Garden in 2008. In the summer of 2017,
Phish held a 13-night series of concerts called "
The Bakers' Dozen", during which the band played 237 unique songs, repeating none during the entire run. The Garden commemorated "The Bakers' Dozen" by adding a Phish-themed banner to the rafters. With their first MSG show taking place on December 30, 1994, Phish has regularly played annual multi-night runs, typically around New Year's Eve. As of January 2025, Phish has performed 87 times at MSG. at the Garden in 2015; Clapton has played 45 concerts at the venue since 1968.
Elton John once held the all-time record for the greatest number of appearances at the Garden with 64 shows. In a 2009 press release, John was quoted as saying "Madison Square Garden is my favorite venue in the whole world. I chose to have my 60th birthday concert there, because of all the incredible memories I've had playing the venue." A DVD recording was released as
Elton 60—Live at Madison Square Garden. The current record-holder for most appearances is
Billy Joel, who as of July 2024 had played the Garden 150 times. That figure includes a "residency" of monthly concerts that he started in 2014 and played nearly continuously for a decade. Joel has stated that the site "has the best acoustics, the best audiences, the best reputation, and the best history of great artists who have played there. It is the iconic, holy temple of rock and roll for most touring acts." In December 2013, Joel would also be named as Madison Square Garden's first ever music "franchise" with this honor also making it so he would join the
New York Knicks,
New York Rangers and
New York Liberty in being recognized as an original Madison Square Garden franchise. performing at the Garden in 2011 The
Grateful Dead performed in the venue 53 times from 1979 to 1994, with the first show being held on January 7, 1979, and the last being on October 19, 1994; their longest run was in September 1991.
The Who have headlined at the venue 32 times, including a four-night stand in 1974, a five-night stand in 1979, a six-night stand in 1996, and four-night stands in 2000 and 2002. They also performed at
The Concert for New York City in 2001. On March 10, 2020, a 50th-anniversary celebration of
The Allman Brothers Band titled 'The Brothers' took place, featuring the five surviving members of the final Allman Brothers lineup and
Chuck Leavell.
Dickey Betts was invited to participate but his health precluded him from traveling. This was the final concert at the venue before the
COVID-19 pandemic forced its closure. Live shows returned to The Garden when the
Foo Fighters headlined a show there on June 20, 2021. The show was for a vaccinated audience only and was the first 100 percent capacity concert in a New York arena since the start of the pandemic.
Other events " on January 12, 2006 It hosted the
1976 Democratic National Convention and 1980 Democratic National Convention with Clinton, and the
2004 Republican National Convention with Bush, and hosted the
NFL draft for many years (later held at Garden-leased
Radio City Music Hall, now shared between cities of NFL franchises). The
Jeopardy! Teen Tournament and several installments of
Celebrity Jeopardy! were filmed at MSG in 1999, as well as several episodes of
Wheel of Fortune in 1999 and 2013. The
New York City Police Academy,
Baruch College/
CUNY, and
Yeshiva University also hold their annual graduation ceremonies at Madison Square Garden. It hosted the
Grammy Awards in 1972, 1997, 2003, and 2018 (which are normally held in
Los Angeles) as well as the
Latin Grammy Awards of 2006. The group and Best in Show competitions of the
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show have been held at MSG every February since 1877. Its original run at MSG through 2020 was the arena's longest continuous tenancy. In 2021, the event moved to
Tarrytown, and later the
USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The show returned to MSG in 2025 for the first time since 2020.
Notable firsts and significant events The Garden hosted the
Stanley Cup Final and
NBA Finals simultaneously on two occasions: in 1972 and 1994. MSG has hosted the following All-Star Games: •
NHL All-Star Game:
1973,
1994 •
NBA All-Star Game:
1998,
2015 •
WNBA All-Star Game:
1999,
2003,
2006 • All American Karate Championships held in 1968 and 1969, both won by Chuck Norris. The 1970 edition was won by
Mitchell Bobrow. •
UFC held its first event in New York City,
UFC 205: Alvarez vs. McGregor, at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2016. This was the first event the organization held after New York State lifted the ban on
mixed martial arts.
Mike Krzyzewski recorded two notable milestones at the arena. In 2011, he surpassed
Bob Knight as the coach with the most wins in
NCAA Division I men's basketball history when
Duke defeated
Michigan State. Four years later, a Duke victory over St. John's gave Coach K his 1,000th career win.
Stephen Curry broke the NBA's
all-time three-point scoring record at Madison Square Garden, on December 14, 2021. The
Warriors defeated the Knicks 105–96 with Curry recording his 2,977th career three-pointer by the end of the game, eclipsing
Ray Allen's 2,973 career total. On October 27, 2024, then presidential candidate
Donald Trump hosted a
campaign rally at Madison Square Garden. The event was particularly notable for remarks by comedian
Tony Hinchcliffe, who spoke prior to Trump and made jokes widely considered offensive toward
Puerto Ricans, which became a significant talking point going into the
presidential election. The
Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL) held its first ever game at Madison Square Garden on April 4, 2026 between the
New York Sirens and
Seattle Torrent. The Sirens won 2–1 against the Torrent,
in a shootout, in front of 18,006 fans, setting a new attendance record for women's hockey in the United States. That game was actually the first
with fans held at the Garden; one of the
Professional Women's Hockey Players Association "tour" games was held there in February 2021, but due to restrictions related to the
COVID-19 pandemic, no fans were allowed inside to watch that first-ever professional women's hockey game held at MSG. == Security and surveillance ==