What if the try-block returns early or throws an exception that you don't handle? You would still want to free the resources you have allocated, right?
EDIT:
The answers to the question seem almost philosphical, there is some 'guessing' and basically 'we believe it should be useful, because it is there, so it should have a use', and 'even Oracle says so'. Or maybe it is there to help the programmer not 'to forget something' or 'accidently exit and not realize it'.
These are almost all valid reasons, but there is also a technical reason.
It helps avoiding code duplication in the cases mentioned, where (a) either the try or one of the catch blocks returns or (b) if within the catch block a second exception is thrown.
In these cases, if some cleanup code or any other code that still needs to be executed after the return and after the second exception, could be placed into the finally block, if it is to be executed both after the try and after the catch block.
You could still do it without the finally block, but the code would have to be duplicated, which the finally block allows you to avoid. This is where you really need it.
So if you are sure you do not miss it as a case of (a) or (b) you could still put the 'finally' code after the try/catch block and omit the finally clause.
But what if the situation changes? When you or another person change the code at some later point it could be forgotten to check if the cleanup code is now skipped in some situation.
So why not always put the cleanup code inside the finally block? And this is what is recommended and what many JavaScript programmers do.
tryblock completes successfully and when it throws.