Former President Donald Trump took the stage at Madison Square Garden for a barn-burning homestretch rally before a capacity crowd that erupted with an intensity typically reserved for pro athletes or rock stars.

On Sunday, he stood where Joe Frazier defeated Muhammad Ali in “The Fight of the Century” before an adoring crowd of some 20,000 supporters — thousands of whom braved chilly NYC streets for up to two days to secure a spot in line.

Tens of thousands more were turned away after the venue filled up, cops said.

Trump’s rally in the heart of the Big Apple was a homecoming to a city that has come to reject him and everything he stands for, tearing his names off buildings, putting him on trial and even barring him from doing business in the state.

The enthusiastic turnout of die-hard supporters in the deepest-blue city in one of the bluest states in the nation flew in the face of the constant drumbeat from the left that he was unfit for office or will bring about the end of democracy as we know it — which continue even after two attempts on his life.

Polls say the election is neck-and-neck, but it almost feels like the wind is at Trump’s back with Election Day just around the corner.

He just pulled off a number of successful campaign incursions, including a wildly popular stint as a Pennsylvania McDonald’s fry cook and an appearance on the “Joe Rogan Experience” podcast viewed more than 30 million times in less than 24 hours.

Thousands of supporters stuffed into pens in Midtown Manhattan ahead of the rally, despite heavy security and a complete lack of toilet facilities — around 2,000 camping out overnight as long as 48 hours before the event.

By 10 a.m., there were more than 10,000 waiting for blocks and blocks around the Midtown venue. By 3 p.m., the Garden was at at least 85% capacity with only nosebleed seats still available, and by 4:30 p.m. the NYPD started turning people away.

Cops estimated that some 20,000 more were turned away. They spread out across Midtown, flooding into the bars and rallying outside the arena.

The crescendo of energy in MSG was palpable as each Republican speaker – including several former bitter Trump rivals – took the stage one by one to a jubilant crowd to tout the former president as the obvious choice Nov. 5.

“Billy Joel never got this kind of love,” observed a Post reporter on the inside.

They took turns jabbing the Harris-Walz ticket, or hitting key campaign talking points as a united front. 

House Speaker Mike Johnson says people are “fed up” with the Biden-Harris administration — and “fired up” to vote for former President Donald Trump, while Trump primary rival Vivek Ramaswamy boasted “New York is a swing state” during his remarks, in which he said of the energy in the room to raucous applause, “this does not feel like second-place energy.”

Former Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard came out on stage and slammed former Vice President Dick Cheney, telling the crowd that “a vote for Kamala Harris is a vote for Dick Cheney.”

Former Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson got a true rockstar’s welcome as he walked to the stage with an enormous grin plastered on his face. His enthusiasm nearly brought the house down as he touted the ongoing “realignment” happening in American politics. “Donald Trump’s gonna win,” he said as the crowd erupted. “I know he is.”

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. came out on stage to enthusiastic applause and railed about how the Democratic Party has changed during his lifetime, leading to him leaving the party last year. “This is not the party anymore of Martin Luther King, of Robert Kennedy or John Kennedy. That was the party of peace.”

Then Hulk Hogan, reprising his show-stopping appearance at the RNC in July, danced on stage to his theme song “Real American” while waving a huge American flag. The former WWE star slammed Kamala Harris, claiming she “acts like the victim.”

Hogan proclaimed “I don’t see any stinkin’ Nazis in here” in reference to claims by Democrats – including Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz – saying the rally was a repeat of Nazis gathering at MSG in the 1930s. 

Republican vice presidential hopeful JD Vance hailed Trump as one of the great champions who visited Madison Square Garden.

“For more than a century, America’s most celebrated heroes and legends have made history inside this iconic arena. This, where we stand, is where the greatest of all time, Muhammad Ali, faced Joe Frazier in the fight of the century,” Vance said,  rattling off a list of other examples of performers in The Garden such as Elvis Presley.

“Now, on the eve of the most important election in our history, the greatest champion of them all, Donald J. Trump, has come to Madison Square Garden.”

The crowd was continually on its feet as speeches from star speakers like Elon Musk, RFK, Jr., House Speaker Mike Johnson, Rudy Giuliani and more blared on the arena’s enormous array of GardenVision screens.

Trump and Harris are near-deadlocked in most national polls with just eight days to go until the Nov. 5 contest. The Harris-Walz ticket has lost considerable steam since the summer while team Trump-Vance has clawed their way back in dramatic fashion.

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