When Sport Becomes Art: Knicks Title And World Cup Send Searches Surging On TeePublic

Articore

Key Facts:

- Knicks' first NBA championship and FIFA World Cup driving demand for personalised artwork across t-shirts, hoodies, stickers and phone cases

The Knicks' first NBA championship and the FIFA World Cup are driving measurable search spikes on TeePublic. Each World Cup match is giving fans a new reason to search.

New York, 10 July 2026 — When the New York Knicks won their first NBA championship since 1973 on June 13, fans rushed to TeePublic, the marketplace owned by Articore, the global leader for connecting digital artists and creators with their customers.

Search interest had already been building steadily through the playoffs as the Knicks and San Antonio Spurs battled toward the Finals, with weekly user searches topping 15,000 as the series progressed. The championship win supercharged that momentum as searches more than doubled within the week to 35,000.

Interest kept building. In the week following the championship, TeePublic recorded more than 43,000 Knicks-related searches for artwork inspired by the win and championship slogans, across t-shirts, hoodies, stickers and phone cases.

The Knicks championship win generated the single largest sports-driven search surge on TeePublic this year.

Soccer Searches Rise With World Cup Fever and the Story Isn't Finished

The FIFA World Cup is demonstrating how global sporting moments translate into sustained user searches for fan-created artwork.

In the three weeks since the tournament kicked off on June 11, TeePublic has recorded more than 22,000 World Cup-related searches by users. Where the Knicks' win created a single search spike, the World Cup is generating a rolling sequence of them. As the tournament evolves, search interest shifts rapidly between countries, reflecting each team's performance and giving soccer fan communities their moment.

Scotland is the clearest example of a spike. 'No Scotland No Party' was the single most-searched term on TeePublic in the tournament's second week, part of a Scotland-related cluster that ranked among the platform's top trends. It's a fitting pattern for a nation of approximately 5.5 million known for outsized footballing passion, embracing their team's first World Cup appearance since 1998.

Search interest then moved to other emerging tournament storylines as new teams and players captured fans' attention. Messi has been a constant presence in the search data throughout the tournament, fitting for a player who has defined the sport for over two decades.

More search surges are coming, possibly the tournament's largest, as each knockout match produces its own search spike for the team that advances.

The Community Behind the Trend

"The search trends on TeePublic show something more specific than enthusiasm, it's personal expression. Fans want to celebrate on their own terms, wearing a design that speaks to them. They're searching, creating, and buying artwork within minutes of the cultural moment. That's what TeePublic exists for."

— Vivek Kumar, Group CEO and Managing Director, Articore

About us:

About Articore

Founded as Redbubble in 2006, ASX-listed Articore Group Limited (Articore or the Group) owns and operates the leading global online marketplaces Redbubble, TeePublic and Frankly Wearing and an emerging creator storefront platform, Dashery.

Powered by more than three million independent creators, Articore's community of passionate creatives sell uncommon designs on high-quality, everyday products such as apparel, stationery, housewares, bags, wall art and more.

Through Redbubble, TeePublic, Frankly Wearing and Dashery, independent artists are able to profit from their creativity and connect with customers looking for original and meaningful ways to express themselves.

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