Larry O'Brien Trophy likeness, script logo back on court for NBA Finals

The Larry O'Brien Trophy image will be back on the court for the 2026 NBA Finals. So will the classic script logo.

It became a social media controversy during last year's NBA Finals when there was no image of the NBA's championship trophy on the court. The NBA has special courts made by all 30 teams for the NBA Cup to make them stand out, but here was the league's biggest stage and the court itself looked like it would for a Tuesday night game in January. It sent the league scrambling during the Finals.

This year, the logo will be at center court for both teams.

This is the first time the large trophy decal will be on the court since 2009. It went away because previously it had been applied as a sticker back in the day, and that sticker got slippery and endangered player safety. Now, it will be painted on the court (with a laminate over it), so there is no issue.

Draymond Green takes profane shot at Knicks, ‘doubles down’ on Jalen Brunson worry

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jalen Brunson dribbles the ball past a Cleveland Cavaliers player, Image 2 shows Draymond Green on The Draymond Green Show with text overlay
Jalen Brunson; Draymond Green

Draymond Green is standing with Becky Hammon and challenging Jalen Brunson to “prove me wrong” during the NBA Finals.

The Warriors star and opinionated basketball observer was revisiting some old Knicks takes on the latest episode of his eponymous podcast now that they Knicks have reached the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999. Among those opinions was one about the Knicks’ lack of a “1A” player and how that makes it harder to win a championship. 

Green’s mind hasn’t changed one bit since he first voiced that opinion, he said during the segment. 

Jalen Brunson is not a 1A player, accoring to Draymond Green. NBAE via Getty Images

“And I double down on this. Just like Becky Hammon said, prove me wrong,”  he said. “Prove me wrong, double down, absolutely double down. Getting out of the East has never been a surefire way at a championship.

“What are ya’ll talking about? You get out of the East cause you’re supposed to get out of the East. It’s the f–king East, of course, you’re supposed to get out of the East. That just don’t mean you win a championship because you get out of the East. It’s the f–king East.” 

Green ended the thought by saying that he was “happy for Mike Brown.” 

The Western Conference player was referencing comments made by Hammon — the former Spurs assistant coach and current Las Vegas Aces coach — who had said in 2023, during an appearance on “NBA Today” on ESPN, that the Knicks were a “pretty good team” but lacked a “1A” dude and that Jalen Brunson was “too small.” 

Brunson has helped lead the Knicks back to the NBA Finals this season, but Hammon seemed to be unwavering from that opinion when it was recently brought up. 

Becky Hammon has previously said that Brunson is not a player that can lead a team to an NBA Championship. NBAE via Getty Images

“I speak from experience,” Hammon said earlier this month. “Allen Iverson got MVP, and he lost in the finals. I think the two best teams are probably in the West, but I’m up for being proven wrong. That’s the other thing, I think Jalen Brunson’s a hell of a player, a hell of a player. I’m speaking historically on the NBA with what I said. I don’t know why everybody’s so stuck on that. I said it two years ago.

 “I said what I said. If he proves me wrong, he proves me wrong.”

Game 1 of the NBA Finals begins on Wednesday between the Knicks and Spurs, and Brunson’s first chance to prove Green and Hammon both wrong. 

What We Learned from the Spurs GAME SEVEN WIN OVER THE THUNDER LET’S GOOOOOOOOOOO

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - MAY 30: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs reacts after defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game Seven of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Paycom Center on May 30, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’ll never forget Tim Duncan leaving the floor for the last time in Oklahoma City. A talented, interesting, and ultimately lacking Spurs team had just lost to the Thunder in Game 6 of the Western Conference Semifinals. Timmy slipped off the court, raised his hand briefly, and disappeared into the tunnel. Blink and you miss it. The Spurs as we knew them were done.

I remember panicking in that moment because you could tangibly sense that something bigger than basketball was leaving with him. I wasn’t sure what things were going to look like moving forward, but I knew I’d never experience anything like it again.

Sure enough, I spent the next ten years settling into that feeling. Understanding how the rest of the world lived and just exactly how scary it is out there. Star players decide they want to leave. The playoffs aren’t some birthright you’re entitled to. You lose a lot. You check out from time to time. That thing I was so scared of when Tim walked off the court did come to pass. It really was over. Sure, it became less scary the more it became our reality, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t still a little sad. Every season felt a little bit more like a cold reminder that not only was what we had singular, it was also finished. We should just be grateful we got to see it at all.

I had fully accepted all of that. Made my peace with it. Spurs fans don’t get to have nice things forever, and that’s fine. That’s basketball. That’s life.

This season has been special though. Frankly, everything has been a little special since that ping pong ball bounced our way three years ago, but this is the season where it really started to click. Where this team stopped feeling like an idea and started feeling like a reality. It was a familiar feeling, even if I think a lot of us were still keeping it at bay. We’d made our peace, right? The other shoe had come. We’d had our golden era. We’d had our time in the sun. Ignoring the evidence piling up in front of us seemed prudent. Necessary. Wise, even.

So yeah, I wasn’t really expecting this game to cleanly close the loop on Duncan’s last dance. It didn’t occur to me that it was even something that was on the menu. The thing about making your peace with something is that you stop looking for it. You can’t recreate what Tim Duncan was. I’d accepted that. What I hadn’t considered was that maybe you don’t have to.

The other night in Oklahoma City didn’t feel like a recreation. It didn’t feel like an echo. It felt like something new that somehow carried the same specific gravity that made those old Spurs teams feel like more than basketball. These kids have never really known a Spurs team that mattered. They’ve heard about it. They’ve seen the highlights. They play under those banners every night and they know what it means. But they carry themselves with the focus and urgency of a group trying to build something of their own. They put on the silver and black and inherited the franchise the same way you might inherit a house. Maybe you didn’t build it, but it’s yours now.

For the rest of our lives, we get to remember guys like Julian Champagnie, who hit six threes in a Game 7 on the road. He didn’t exactly win the game on his own, but he went out of his way to disprove my theory that there can only be one Champagnie Game. In the third quarter alone, off the same Wemby screen run again and again, Champagnie just kept shooting. Kept making them. A guy who by every reasonable measure should not be here and should not be capable of meeting this moment was absolutely owning it.

We get to tell stories about Devin Vassell and Keldon Johnson. These are guys who lived through the other version of this. They absorbed every tough stretch and false start, every early exit, every “we’re building toward something” speech that probably started to feel a little hollow after a while. Every trade rumor too, and there were plenty of those. They took all of it in stride, kept showing up, kept believing in what this thing was becoming. Last night Keldon was out there hitting impossible threes and Devin was throwing down exclamation point dunks as time expired. They celebrated harder. Laughed louder. When it was over they looked like guys who understood exactly what it had taken to get there, because they were there for all of it.

And then there’s Victor Wembanyama, who doesn’t fit neatly into either group. He’s not a veteran carrying the weight of the bad years, but he’s also not some kid unburdened by history. He’s something the league hasn’t quite seen before. Importantly, he’s also not Tim Duncan, something that’s worth saying out loud every once in a while.

They play differently. They carry themselves differently. They almost feel like they come from different planets entirely. Tim seemed to float above everything, a silent pillar, steadfast and consistent. Victor crashes into it, a wild and extraordinary talent bursting at the seams, always pushing against the edges of what’s possible. The contrast is almost remarkable. And yet somehow, in this moment, the feeling was the same. Twenty-two points. Seven rebounds. Western Conference Finals MVP. Quiet in result if not in method, and without any apparent concern for how impossible this was all supposed to be.

Tim Duncan raised his hand and walked into that tunnel ten years ago and left something hanging in the air that I eventually stopped looking for. Saturday night, in that same building, down that same tunnel, Victor Wembanyama walked off the court, and I felt something I hadn’t felt in a long time. Not relief, not joy, but something closer to recognition. Like the answer had been coming all along and I had just stopped asking the question.

Whatever is happening right now might feel familiar but, rest assured, it’s something else entirely. The Wembanyama era isn’t going to look like the Duncan era. They probably aren’t going to win five titles over the next decade. They probably aren’t going to set the standard for professionalism. They certainly aren’t going to do it quite so quietly. What they are going to do is make it their own. The possibilities are endless.

We’re not going back and we never were. What we are doing is moving forward. This isn’t a return at all.

It’s an arrival.

How amazing is that?


Takeaways:
  • I can’t believe we got our LeBron James chase down block moment and that Luke Kornet was the one who did it. Or should I call him by his full official title, “The Much Maligned Luke Kornet”? Lost in the sauce of how crazy that play was is that I think my body almost had a full blown panic attack at the turnover that preceded it. Harper, God love him, trying to force that pass into Luke, and Hartenstien screaming in front of it and then racing down the court. Can you imagine a seven footer trying to run a fast break? Where does he even get these ideas? Anyway, the idea of I-Hart of all people being the one to make this amazing play and draw the score back to a four point game almost ended me. The crowd was going to erupt and my insides were going to leak out of my ears. I don’t know how Kornet got there so fast. I don’t know how he got it so clean. I don’t think I want to know. Some miracles don’t need to be explained.
  • I can’t believe the Thunder led twice in this game. Excluding Game 1, it felt like in this series that shifting momentum back once you lost it was almost impossible. Like we were only allotted one big swing, and if you let the other team regain the upper hand it was over. When Shai caught fire in the second quarter, every alarm bell in my head went off, blaring about how we’d seen this movie before. The craziest part is that I didn’t even really have time to have a panic attack. The Spurs calmly just regained control. Fox hit a three. KJ scored. Fox hit another three. They just shut it down. The half ended and I was out of breath, like, what just happened?
  • Same thing when Caruso put them up in the second half. 61-60. Before I could even recognize the icy dread closing around my throat, Jules banged in a few threes and we were off. I think it was like a 16-2 run directly from that moment. It was like the Thunder put everything they had into clawing back that lead and all the Spurs had to do was outlast them. Y’all, Game 7s are insane.
  • I’ve been steadfastly avoiding even thinking about the concept of playing the Knicks in the Finals because, obviously, that would’ve been a death blow to the Spurs chances here (yeah, I guess in a way it is like I’m on the team, thanks for asking). But now, oh my god, I can’t believe we’re about to play the Knicks in the Finals. This is going to be insane. The dirtiest basketball secret I hold in my heart is that I kind of love watching playoff games at MSG because it’s fun watching that crowd go insane and the arena is so old school and all the celebrities, etc. It’s very fun! The concept of our sweet boys rolling into that cauldron as the enemy sort of hurts my heart. Please allow me like 10 more minutes to grieve before I put my game face back on.
  • WE’RE GOING TO THE FINALS CAN YOU BELIEVE IT?????

WWL Post Game Press Conference

Have you inquired yet about getting a press pass for the Finals?

No, look, as much as I think it’d be swell to go cover these in person, I think it would go against the integrity of what I do here to actually be in the building for one of these.

You think so?

Yeah, I mean, what I do here is raw. Right? Like, this is pure, uncut fandom over here. I’m not out there hobnobbing with the big shots on media row acting like some capital J journalist. I’m over here getting real. I’m writing notes on the back of a Moana coloring book with a red crayon about disliking Chet Holmgren’s face. I’m spinning up charming anecdotes about my dogs perking up whenever they see Carter Bryant on screen because “Real recognizes Real.” Plus, I think if I ever saw Tim Bontemps in person I’d need to be escorted out by security.

So, on the record, if you were offered a press pass to one of these finals games, you would politely decline?

Hello?

It’s gone quiet on your end, everything ok?



Hi, sorry, the connection got choppy, didn’t hear that last question.

You would turn down a press pass and a chance to cover the Finals in person?

Look, pal, you’re breaking up, let’s pick this up later, GO SPURS GO!

The Path, Part I: Projecting a summer of ‘small tweaks' for Celtics

The Path, Part I: Projecting a summer of ‘small tweaks' for Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

If at any point between, let’s say, March 6 and April 26, you had asked us to forecast what the summer of 2026 might look like for the Boston Celtics, we might have suggested a rather quiet offseason could be looming. 

From the moment Jayson Tatum returned to parquet in early March until the night Boston took a 3-1 series lead over the Philadelphia 76ers, even the immediate future felt limitless. Drunk on Green Kool-Aid from an expectation-shattering regular season, we wondered out loud about Boston’s title chances this year, especially given Tatum’s absurd recovery, Jaylen Brown’s MVP-caliber season and the internal development of young talent thrust into bigger roles. 

Then the Sixers won three straight games. Boston got bounced in Round 1. If that alone didn’t kill our buzz, watching the Knicks rip off 11 straight wins while Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs arrived at the Finals waaaaaaay ahead of schedule sure did. 

Now, instead of that quiet summer, we’ve had basically a full month of pundits screaming about whether the Celtics should trade Brown for Giannis Antetokounmpo. That’s just the way things go in the NBA. 

The playoffs have a way of thrusting teams into a harsher spotlight. And in the span of just 10 bad quarters, it became fair to wonder if more drastic measures are needed to get Boston back on the level of the league’s elite.

While we believe all options should be on the table for the Celtics this offseason, is there still a case for a quieter summer? For Part 1 of our annual “The Path” series, we’re examining an offseason where the Celtics don’t overreact to an early playoff demise and how that might give the team the best long-term chance to get back to the title stage.

We tiptoed into these small-tweak waters in late May, outlining how some financial responsibility this offseason could position the Celtics to take some much bigger swings in the summer of 2027.

That doesn’t mean punting on the 2026-27 campaign. What it means is banking heavily on the idea that the experience the Celtics gained this past season — combined with some upgrades at key spots — might be enough to position Boston as an East favorite without having to shake up the core. A chance to be a bit more aggressive with roster upgrades would loom next summer. 

So what might a small-tweak summer look like? Let’s break it down:

Mission statement

Commit to bringing back the entire core of the 2025-26 team while hunting upgrades at key spots.

The Celtics could utilize exceptions to add talent, potentially scaling above the luxury tax line to start the season, but with an expectation that they would evaluate the roster in advance of February’s NBA trade deadline and dip back below the tax at that point in order to reset repeater penalties. 

The path

The small-tweak summer leaves the Celtics banking that … 

  1. A healthier Tatum, further removed from the Achilles injury that sidelined him for the first 62 games of the 2025-26 season, will reemerge as an MVP candidate, particularly given the strong numbers he posted throughout his return. 
  2. Brown, fresh off a Top-six finish in MVP voting, will rebuild his chemistry with Tatum, combining to provide maybe the best 1-2 punch in the NBA if both are willing to sacrifice in small ways for the betterment of the team as a whole.
  3. Soon-to-be 32-year-old Derrick White shakes off this season’s shooting woes and finds the offensive consistency to match his sustained defensive dominance.
  4. Neemias Queta, hindered by foul trouble throughout Boston’s first-round fumble, finds motivation to make yet another leap and continues to be an analytical darling as one of the top bigs on this team. 
  5. Payton Pritchard, before he puts pen to paper on a lucrative three-year contract extension, pledges again to embrace whatever role the Celtics need to be the best version of themselves.
  6. Boston identifies the young players it plans to lean heaviest into from the group of Hugo Gonzalez, Baylor Scheierman, Jordan Walsh, and Ron Harper Jr., and ensures consistent playing time to further accelerate their development. 

From there, the Celtics would make a series of moves. Our wish list would include: 

1. Sign center Robert Williams III utilizing the $15.1 million non-taxpayer midlevel exception.

Williams III played in 59 games last season, even as Portland delicately managed his minutes. He showed well in the postseason, even while jousting with Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs in the first round.

The combo of Queta and Williams III gives you a legitimate 1-2 punch at the center spot with Luka Garza there to eat up leftover minutes.

2. Trade up in the 2026 NBA Draft to select Santa Clara forward Allen Graves.

Utilize available assets to navigate the draft board with the goal of adding Allen Graves with a first-round pick and home-growing the next power forward on your roster.

We were already intrigued by the Draymond Green comps, then Graves said he’s been crushing tape of Naz Reid and Al Horford. Wow we’re sold this is the guy for Boston. 

3. Consider high-upside trades utilizing a portion of the Anfernee Simons traded player exception.

The Celtics likely would be hard-capped at the first apron if they use the non-taxpayer MLE and can’t spend too richly if that is utilized. But they should be ambitious hunting a big guard or an established power forward to beef up the roster.

We’re calling Orlando to check on Wendell Carter Jr. given the Magic’s bloated cap sheet (though that would likely mean sitting out a full midlevel splurge). Can you tempt Detroit with some shooting in a quest to trade for Isaiah Stewart? 

What it looks like

Instead of introducing elevated risk by moving on from championship-proven pieces, the Celtics give this core a chance to see what’s possible with a healthier Tatum and kick bolder decisions further down the road.

If it’s clear the Celtics remain a tier below the league’s elite, there are pathways to start a transition before February’s trade deadline. Regardless of how it plays out, the Celtics are well positioned in the aftermath to make some far bolder swings in the summer of 2027. 

Is MarJon Beauchamp worth a longer look for the Sixers?

PHILADELPHIA, PA - MARCH 23: Marjon Beauchamp #16 of the Philadelphia 76ers arrives to the arena before the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on March 23, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

MarJon Beauchamp was the last player the Sixers acquired before the 2025-26 season began. After the final preseason game, the team waived Emoni Bates and signed Beauchamp to an Exhibit 10 contract. 

He spent the majority of the season in the G League playing for the Delaware Blue Coats. In 19 games for the Coats he averaged 25.2 points shooting 47% from the field and 35% from three-point range. 

The Sixers rewarded his strong play there, cutting undrafted free agent Hunter Sallis to give Beauchamp their final two-way roster spot. Beauchamp wouldn’t appear in a game for the Sixers until Feb. 9, helping fill in on a night the team was decimated by injuries, illnesses, suspensions and the trade deadline. 

His appearances continued to be sporadic, but he shot it well in the time he was given. In the first nine games Beauchamp appeared for the Sixers, he shot 49% from the field and 38% from three. 

That was good enough to earn a start, albeit in a game the Sixers were so injured they were basically punting it to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Beauchamp went 5-of-18 from the floor in his 31 minutes against the defending champs. He would only appear in garbage time the rest of the season as the Sixers’ wings got healthy to end the campaign. 

It’s a shame Beauchamp’s production came when the team was so depleted. Not that it would have led to any huge impact, but the random 3-of-4 three-point nights he had can swing a regular season game. It’s just the type of fun, random end-of-bench production the Sixers haven’t had since… Corey Brewer? 

Of course, there’s a reason those were the only times Beauchamp got the opportunity. His struggles to translate his success in the G League to meaningful minutes is catapulting him towards “4A player” territory. 

That type of 4A player, one that does have the ability to hit some shots on any given night, is a pretty good use of a two-way contract. Unfortunately for Beauchamp, he is running out of two-way eligibility; only players with four years of experience or less can be signed to them. If he’s able to find a team next season, it would be his fifth year in the league. 

Beauchamp’s fate looks destined to be lighting up the G-League or somewhere in Europe. As a wing-sized player who possesses at the very least, the idea of a jump shot, that could be enough for someone to take another flyer on him.

The NBA Couldn’t Have Asked for Better Finals Than Knicks-Spurs

NBA
The NBA Couldn’t Have Asked for Better Finals Than Knicks-Spurs
Wemby's coming-out party. New York's lightning-in-a-bottle opportunity. Spurs-Knicks is the NBA Finals the league needed, and why the Knicks have to win it.

The NBA couldn't have drawn this up better if it tried.

On one side, you have the New York Knicks, a franchise that hasn't won a championship since 1973, that spent the better part of two decades being the punchline of the league, and that is somehow, improbably, four wins away from ending one of the longest droughts in North American professional sports. On the other, you have the San Antonio Spurs, a team that won just 34 games last season and hasn't exceeded that mark since 2018, that wasn't supposed to be here for another two or three years, and that is being carried to the NBA Finals on the back of a 22-year-old alien from France who just won the Western Conference Finals MVP.

Spurs vs. Knicks. The NBA Finals tip off Wednesday night. And full stop: This is the best possible outcome for the league. And it's not even close.

Let's start with Victor Wembanyama, because, well, you have to. In seven games against the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder, he averaged 27.3 points, 10.9 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 1.4 steals, and 2.7 blocks. He helped keep two-time MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander mostly in check throughout the series, and then went on the road for Game 7 and delivered 22 points and seven rebounds to close it out. When it was over, he was in tears. This is his coming-out party, not just for the casual fan, but for the world. The numbers have always been there. The moments are arriving right on schedule.

Here's the thing about Wembanyama that gets lost in the highlight reel. This isn't a flash in the pan. He's 22 years old, in just his third season, and he just led a franchise that missed the playoffs for six straight years all the way to the NBA Finals. The Spurs are going to be here again. And again after that. The dynasty machinery in San Antonio — the culture, the coaching, the front office discipline — doesn't go away just because Tim Duncan retired. It went dormant; Wembanyama just woke it back up. The rest of the league has a decade-long problem on its hands, and most of them are just starting to realize it.

Which is exactly why, if you're thinking about what's best for the NBA, the Knicks need to win this series.

That's not a popular opinion in many markets. But it's the right one. The Spurs will be back. Wembanyama will have his moment, probably multiple moments, a dynasty's worth of them. He doesn't need this particular trophy to cement what he already is. The window for what's happening in New York right now is a different conversation entirely.

The Knicks are seeking their first championship in 53 years. Madison Square Garden hasn't hosted a Finals game since 1999. Jalen Brunson took a $113 million pay cut to build this team. Karl-Anthony Towns was traded here and immediately bought in after coming home. OG Anunoby had every reason to test the market and chose to stay. Mikal Bridges absorbed every criticism thrown at him and is now playing some of the best basketball of his life when it matters most. This roster was assembled with intention, with sacrifice, and with a belief that this window was worth betting everything on.

And while the window is real, windows close. Brunson turns 30 next year and is due for an extension in 2028 after giving the Knicks a massive discount in 2024. KAT's contract also gets complicated with a $61 million-plus player option set for 2027-28. The picks are spent. The margins get tighter. This specific version of this specific team, riding this specific momentum, in this specific city that has been starving for this moment for half a century; this doesn't come back around on demand.

That's what makes this matchup so perfect and so urgent at the same time. The Spurs losing this series costs them nothing in the long run. They just knocked out the defending champions in seven games with a roster full of guys who are 22 years old. They have Wembanyama, Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper (who has looked like an absolute future star in this league in his first playoffs as a rookie), and Devin Vassell all locked in together for the foreseeable future. San Antonio is going to be a problem for a long time. One Finals loss doesn't change that math at all.

But for New York? This is lightning in a bottle. The kind of run that a city talks about forever -- win or lose -- but that means something entirely different if it ends with a parade down the Canyon of Heroes. You can feel it in the way the city has leaned into this. The Knicks haven't just won games in this playoff run; they've won back a fanbase that had genuinely given up. Brunson hit a game-winner against Detroit. They swept Cleveland. Brunson won the Eastern Conference Finals MVP. The narrative is writing itself. The only question is whether it gets the ending it deserves.

And just to illustrate the point further, imagine if the Thunder had won Game 7 instead. Oklahoma City is a great basketball city. Gilgeous-Alexander is a legitimate superstar. But the rest of the world has already made up its mind about the Thunder. They were the favorites all year. They won the championship last season. A repeat run was the expected outcome, not the compelling one. Nobody outside of Oklahoma wants to watch the predetermined winner collect another trophy, and that fatigue was real heading into Game 7. The Spurs saved the league from that storyline. Now it's on the Knicks to finish the job.

That's what New York brings to this that nobody else can. The MSG effect is real, and it is measurable. When the Knicks are relevant, the entire sports conversation shifts. Every national broadcast becomes an event. Every highlight gets three times the engagement. Every casual fan who grew up watching the league in the '90s -- when the Knicks were appointment television -- suddenly has a reason to tune back in.

And then there's the room itself. Spike Lee in his courtside seat. Timothée Chalamet losing his mind on every big shot. Ben Stiller on his feet in the fourth quarter. The Garden celebrity row during a playoff run is its own cultural moment, the kind of organic star power that no other arena in the country can replicate. The Knicks are seeking their first championship in over half a century, and that storyline alone is worth more to the NBA's bottom line than almost anything else the league could put on the floor.

The sport needs New York the way Broadway needs an audience. When the Garden is loud, everybody's watching.

The NBA has spent years searching for its next great story. It found two of them at the same time. A generational talent arriving on the biggest stage for the first time, and a city that has waited longer than most fanbases can even comprehend. One of them is going to win, and one of them is going to go home. The Spurs will get their moment. They have all the time in the world.

New York doesn't.

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Knicks vs. Spurs: 3 keys for New York in Game 1 of NBA Finals

After 27 years, the Knicks are back in the NBA Finals, with a real shot to win a championship for the first time in 53 years.

Standing in New York’s way are the 62-20 San Antonio Spurs and 7-foot-4 superstar Victor Wembanyama. Both teams have some familiarity with each other, as the Knicks defeated the Spurs in the NBA Cup championship game in December. 

The Spurs are coming off a highly competitive seven-game series against the Oklahoma City Thunder. New York has cruised through much of the playoffs, entering the Finals with an 11-game winning streak. 

As we’ve seen in the NBA, these opportunities don’t happen often. Last year’s NBA finalists, the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder, did not repeat, continuing a recent trend of teams unable to get back to the finals. That adds more pressure for the Knicks and Spurs to make the most of the moment.

Let’s dive into three keys to the NBA Finals opener on Wednesday night in San Antonio...

Forcing turnovers

The Spurs are a young team, and from time to time, that youth shows up in the form of turnovers. One of San Antonio's weaknesses exposed during the Conference Finals was a tendency to cough up the rock. The Spurs had at least 15 turnovers in four of the seven games played against the Thunder. In the postseason, the Spurs have a turnover rate of 15.2 percent, which is ranked 11th out of 16 playoff teams. 

Specifically, Spurs guard Stephon Castle had some shaky moments, recording 11, nine, and six turnovers in three different games against the Thunder. 

Forcing miscues from San Antonio will also help New York’s offense, since the Knicks can create transition scoring opportunities. New York thrived in the Conference Finals, scoring on misses and makes against the Cleveland Cavaliers. In the postseason, New York is averaging 1.32 points per possession on transition opportunities, per NBA Stats, the No. 1 scoring rate among all playoff teams. That would put less pressure on having to consistently create great looks in the halfcourt.

Paint touches

There’s no better rim protector in the NBA than Wembanyama. He led the NBA in blocks per game during the regular season and is tops in the category during the postseason. 

But the most meaningful indicator of Wembanyama’s impact is how little teams attack the paint when facing the Spurs. In the first two playoff rounds, 41.4 percent of the Thunder’s points were scored in the paint, per NBA Stats. That number dipped to 34.9 percent against San Antonio, which would be last in the NBA during the regular season.

New York has relied heavily on attacking the paint in the playoffs, with 44.4 percent of its points coming near the basket, fourth among all playoff teams. 

Wembanyama and the Spurs will look to limit the interior scoring opportunities, with him defending Josh Hart for much of this series and lurking on the backline to disrupt any drives. Jalen Brunson's ability to pull up from three and midrange is valuable in a series like this.

Can the Knicks pull the 7-footer away from the basket? There’s some possible solutions, such as using Hart as a screener more often, or going to five-out lineups with Landry Shamet or Miles McBride in Hart’s place. 

Paint points in the halfcourt will be a challenge the Knicks have to figure out.

Going to Towns

With Wembanyama expected to be guarding Hart, San Antonio will have a smaller defender on Karl-Anthony Towns for a lot of this series. In New York’s most recent game against the Spurs in early March, Castle defended Towns at the start of the game, and other defenders like Harrison Barnes and Keldon Johnson checked the big man. 

Towns doesn’t have to score relentlessly like he has in the past. During this playoff run, he’s averaging a modest 16.9 points, the second-lowest scoring numbers of his career. Some of that can be attributed to the high number of blowouts where the Knicks have been able to rest their starters. But Towns has also become more of a distributor, averaging 5.9 assists in 14 playoff contests.

A second-year pro, Castle is a great defender, but he’s listed at 6-foot-6. Towns should be able to find windows to make plays both for himself and his teammates. His scoring, playmaking, and offensive rebounding will be important in this series. 

Victor Wembanyama’s unstoppable ascension

“Winning the Larry O’Brien is a childhood dream and having a real shot at it, having a chance, a tangible chance at winning it, realizing a dream, it’s a lifetime chance,” Wembanyama said to the NBC crew at the end of Game 7 against the OKC Thunder.

“You never know what’s going to happen again. The day we win it, it’s going to be an amazing day of realization of a dream. It’s almost like the meaning of my life.”

For the past 3 years I have watched almost all Victor Wembanyama’s games in a Spurs uniform. For the most part, and despite the gravity of last year’s DVT, a possibly career-ending condition, Victor’s ascension has matched my wildest dreams. I started to watch his games when he was just 15 and got a silver medal at the U16 Euro Championship with France. This was the beginning of a trend resembling a curse… “the eternal second”. Silver at U16 Euro, silver at U19 Worlds, silver at Paris 2024 Olympics. 

Basketball - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 15

A curse?

In French sports lore, Raymond Poulidor, “The Cycling Legend Who Never Won” was also called the “Eternal Second”. Over a 17-year career, he finished on the podium of the Tour de France an incredible eight times, yet he never once wore the coveted yellow jersey. Despite missing the top step at the Tour, he was a great champion with 189 professional wins, but so often finishing second in major races.

French racing cyclist Raymond Poulidor during the 1963 Tour de France. (Photo by Roger Viollet via Getty Images) | Roger Viollet via Getty Images

Internally I started to develop a superstition, a fear, that Victor could become the next Poulidor.

This season a shift happened. Despite his calf injury in November, Victor’s ascension started to accelerate. My pre-season predictions for this team, a play-in at worst, and a 6th seed in the stacked West at best, were blown apart entirely by the team’s run starting February 1st.  But superstition is a hard thing to shake. With Vic’s obvious rise, I was tempted to write my thoughts, share some basketball analytics with Pounding The Rock, but I was also scared I would be wrong, that I was counting my chickens before they had hatched. So, I kept my thoughts for myself.

Pilgrimage to the Alamo

In February, I finally made the trip to San Antonio. Almost a “childhood dream” of mine. My first time in Texas. I absolutely loved the vibrancy of the city and its people. I was there for the 2026 Western Heritage Parade & Cattle Drive, watching in awe longhorn bulls ridden by local cowboys and cowgirls in San Antonio streets, singing along both TexMex-inspired music and the Scottish marching band. 

That morning, up early due to the jetlag, I also enjoyed a beautiful wander by the River Walk, all by myself, under a winter blue sky. Finally, 2 hours before tip-off, I made my way to the Frost Bank Center, checking numerous times that the ticket I had bought online 5 months before was still in my Ticketmaster app, that it wasn’t a scam and pinching myself that I would, finally, see the Championships banners hanging up in the rafters, see the Spurs homecourt, the Spurs players and Victor Wembanyama.

As I arrived early, I was almost first in line for the security check, and made my way to the main glass doors, upfront, where I could see the Spurs dancing squad warming up and rehearsing. When the doors finally opened, I made my way to section 101, row 9, and the seat closest to the tunnel!

Some players were on the court doing shooting drills with their respective trainer. DeAaron Fox was very impressive from the 3-point line, so fluid. Then Devin Vassell walked just past me, emerging from the tunnel, on his way to the Spurs bench. He is so much thinner in real life than I expected. His muscles are super lean, and he walks with a mix of regal demeanor and nonchalance. Quite the combination!

Finally, Vic arrived and started shooting free throws, a mere 10 meters from me, towering everything around him. Felix Wembanyama arrived too and sat courtside opposite to the bench players. 

This was the second game against the Mavs in 2 days. The Spurs had won in Dallas where both Vic and Cooper were sensational. Although this time was not Cooper Flagg’s best game, I was nonetheless impressed. Very competitive, fluid, good handles and a much better shooting stroke, especially from 3, than I anticipated. 

The star of the night, though, was our very “Stephan WOW Castle”, to qu0te Floyd. A 40-12-12 triple-double masterpiece. You had to be there to feel his energy. His will power. Absolutely incredible. The whole crowd was just pumped up, feeding off Steph’s energy.

Close Encounter Of The Third Kind – Wemby the Alien

During the game, Vic went to one of the gym bikes under the tunnel to keep warm, with Guillaume Alquier by his side. We exchanged a couple of words, in French, but he quickly stopped there and just smiled back, clenched his fist in appreciation of my mentioning of Nanterre, his youth club, but that was it. Vic is Vic. Always 100% focused during a game.

The San Antonio Spurs legacy

After the game, I went back to Downtown San Antonio, enjoyed a nighttime River Walk perambulation. The atmosphere was just so friendly. I was just on cloud nine.

Visiting San Antonio, attending a Spurs game had been a dream of mine for almost 30 years, since Timmy was drafted to play alongside my favorite – at the time – player, David Robinson. Growing up, I had posters of the Admiral covering the wall above my bed. Since then, French players had started to play for the Spurs: Tony Parker, Ian Mahinmi, Nando De Colo (all selected via draft picks) and of course Boris Diaw… making my passion for the Spurs even stronger, more personal. 

But nothing compares to what was coming. In my wildest dreams, I wanted Victor Wembanyama to join the Spurs. The 16th of May 2023, I was in a meeting, with my cellphone next to me, waiting for the results of the lottery. First. Pick. San. Antonio. Spurs.

I knew then and there. I would have to visit San Antonio. Victor Wembanyama was about to join the best organization possible, not only on paper, but for him, as he is unique and needs to be free to grow and maximize his potential. 

NBA: Draft Lottery

The 2026 NBA Finals

It took only 3 years… And to quote Vic again “You never know what’s going to happen again. The day we win it, it’s going to be an amazing day of realization of a dream. It’s almost like the meaning of my life.” 

And for me, I had to make it happen. I had to visit San Antonio. That’s how you make your dreams come true. You control what is in your control. I planned it, saved some money, and did it.

And these young Spurs, they are going to the 2026 NBA Finals knowing that “You never know what’s going to happen again”, thus you never squander an opportunity in front of you.

I can now go back to my analytics, thinking about every match ups the Finals have to offer.

Vic and the Spurs have won the Western Conference Finals, he is the WCF MVP. 

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK – MAY 30: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs dunks the ball during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Game Seven of the Western Conference Finals on May 30, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

He is on a path to realization.

Knicks vs. Spurs: Preview and prediction for 2026 NBA Finals

The 2026 NBA Finals are set, and in their first return in 27 years, the Knicks seek to get revenge for their last appearance, a five-game loss in 1999 to the San Antonio Spurs. It won’t be the walk in the park the Eastern Conference was, so let’s break down the strategies and adjustments we’re likely to see and predict this year’s eventual champions.

Any series including San Antonio will center around the team's defense, and especially its anchor and star, Victor Wembanyama. The third-year player is living up to the most optimistic fans’ hype, leading his team to the Finals behind 23.2 points, 10.8 rebounds, and 4.4 stocks per game.

It’s his presence in the paint that fundamentally changes how teams approach their offense. Players are either too timid to attack the rim around his otherworldly length, or they test it to mixed results, with Wembanyama sometimes even baiting guys by pretending to not see a driver before quickly turning and swatting the ball into the eighth row.

New York has a built-in advantage with its ability to spread the floor with five shooters, but the Spurs will challenge that early by letting Wembanyama hover off Josh Hart. The Knicks have had to switch lineups or hope Hart connects on threes to punish this adjustment, and they’ll have to again.

Until then, Karl-Anthony Towns’ pinch-post creation and flex-action fun won’t be so effective. He’ll get lots of one-on-one opportunities and similar looks he got against Cleveland, and will have to take advantage that way. 

Of course, Jalen Brunson will be pivotal as the Knicks' captain and leader of their offense. His ability to kill teams from the mid-range and pulling up from three will need to be leveraged specifically against Wembanyama, so he has to actively work and cover ground vs. wait in the paint. 

Drop conservatively and Brunson can hurt you with his jumper, play more aggressive coverage and the Spurs get in rotation, Wembanyama gets fatigued. Expect lots of switching and random traps when Wembanyama isn’t guarding the action directly. 

The good news is Brunson will get opportunities to matchup hunt. San Antonio is stocked with positive defenders, but few perimeter standouts and some real targets for Brunson. 

De’Aaron Fox, Dylan Harper, Julian Champagnie and Carter Bryant will be tested in isolation. Stephon Castle likely gets the initial matchup and is the best defender Brunson’s had to face since Dyson Daniels, so how he fares will be crucial, especially if Wembanyama’s mucking up the off-ball stuff.

Mar 1, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) reacts during the third quarter against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.
Mar 1, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) reacts during the third quarter against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The other big edge for New York here is its wings. Mikal Bridges and OG Anunoby outsize and out-talent San Antonio’s swingmen, each recording a 25+ point game against them this season, and both are playing exceptional offensive ball these Playoffs, so the Knicks will need them to aggressively attack mismatches and the paint.

One concern for the Knicks is getting enough out of their bench. The Spurs aren’t especially deep with their current rotation, but do boast the Sixth Man of the Year plus the explosive Harper.

Meanwhile, New York’s bench was quietly comatose for much of the Cleveland and Philadelphia series outside of Landry Shamet. The Knicks will need big performances out of him, Miles McBride and Mitchell Robinson (who appears to be playing through a broken pinky) to take advantage of the non-Wembanyama minutes.

Surprisingly the Spurs haven’t been dominant on either side of the glass this postseason, opening the door for the Knicks to win extra possessions here, especially from their wings and guards. Both teams are pretty careful with the ball, so the first to get sloppy with it will be fighting an uphill battle.

It’s not a big edge to bank on, but the Knicks should have the experience and fatigue factors in their corner here. San Antonio has played a couple full-length, physical series now while New York’s coasted, and frankly carried a “do or die” business-only attitude while the young Spurs look genuinely thrilled just to be here.

But those don’t impact the court like the actual basketball does, and San Antonio will need a strong plan of attack for its offense against this stifling New York playoff defense. The Spurs want to get Wembanyama going in the paint to open up their three-point shooters, and the Knicks will try to shut them down like they did their previous postseason foes.

It’s possible Anunoby gets the start on Wembanyama to try to make post positioning difficult, and put Towns on Castle so he can roam and clog the paint. Options to “hide” Brunson are scant, so it’ll likely be Champagnie or Castle if the Hart treatment isn’t working.

Bridges and Hart will likely get the Fox and Devin Vassell assignments. Bridges has been instrumental in shutting down opposing guard play, so if he can cut off many of Fox’s and Harper’s pick-and-rolls it would do wonders to muck up the Spurs offense.

The Knicks can win the series on this end by continually getting stops and getting out in transition, not allowing the Spurs defense to ever get set or get a rhythm. They’ve played with terrific pace thus far, but their opponent likes to go up-and-down too, so it may not be a big advantage like in past series.

Towns and Robinson will get their one-on-one opportunities to guard Wemby and will have to step up. He’s shown he can get muscled out of comfortable positions, but other guys have stepped up, so it will need to be a top-to-bottom effort.

All of San Antonio’s guards have strong creation ability and the shooters to space the floor for them, so they’ll need to be guarded closely and run off the line. They’re also incredibly effective at getting out in transition, so New York will need to control the ball, crash the offensive boards and, most importantly, convert its shots to avoid this.

The last two Spurs series were grind-it-out defensive battles, and this Finals falling into that pattern could be beneficial to them. But it’s hard to shake the feeling the Knicks will have a better chance as the series goes to six and seven games. It’s possible this all comes down to 2-3 close games, but San Antonio’s only 1-3 these playoffs in crunch time, though New York hasn’t had many convincing reps either.

After three grueling rounds, there isn’t much left to discover about either of these teams. We know what they want to do, we know the counters they might employ, we just don't know the ultimate result.

Prediction: Knicks in 6.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander looks inward after OKC's painful playoff exit

Given a day to reflect on how a potential repeat NBA championship got away, league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was still feeling the pain of a Game 7 loss.

His top-seeded Oklahoma City Thundersuffered a stunning 111-103 defeat at home in the Western Conference finals as the San Antonio Spurs advanced to face the New York Knicks for the title.

"I failed at my goal," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "I didn't achieve what I wanted to achieve. But I learn the most about myself and make the greatest amount of increases in my career when I fail and don't get what I want. I look at this no different."

Gilgeous-Alexander scored 35 points in the season-ending defeat, but the Spurs' defense on him was a key factor in his reduced efficiency in the series. His scoring average and shooting percentages in the series were considerably lower than they were in the regular season, when he won his second consecutive MVP award.

The Thunder, however, weren't completely at full strength during the series. Second-leading scorer Jalen Williams reinjured his hamstring in Game 2 and was limited to just 54 minutes the entire series. And semifinal round star Ajay Mitchell suffered a calf strain in Game 3 that ended his season.

Those losses, combined with the imposing presence of Spurs big man Victor Wembanyama, made things much more difficult for SGA and the Thunder to return to the Finals.

"I didn't get where I wanted to go this season. There's a reason for that," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "Now I have to look at that reason and try to make sure it never happens again."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander calls MVP season failure after loss to Spurs

James Dolan: 25 years of chaos running the New York Knicks

Few owners in professional sports have generated more controversy with less winning than James Dolan.

In more than 25 years running the New York Knicks, he has fired coaches, feuded with legends, lost a sexual harassment verdict, banned lawyers with facial recognition software, ejected a beloved former player in front of a national audience and sued a rival franchise in a move the rest of the NBA largely viewed as bizarre.

Through it all, he has refused to sell, refused to step back and refused to stop inserting himself into decisions that have repeatedly damaged one of the most valuable franchises in sports.

Here's a look at his time with the team:

1994: The purchase

 Cablevision founder Charles Dolan bought out ITT’s half of Madison Square Garden and the Knicks for $650 million in 1997, the family had full control. His son James got the job of running the teams.

2000: Patrick Ewing gone

Patrick Ewing gave the franchise 15 years and never got a ring. When he requested a trade, the Knicks sent him to Seattle in a 12-player deal without a proper sendoff. He spent two decades outside before the current front office brought him back as a basketball ambassador.

2003: Isiah Thomas

Dolan hired Isiah Thomas, freshly fired by Indiana with no front office experience, as president of basketball operations.

2005-2006: Larry Brown

Thomas hired Hall of Fame coach Larry Brown on a five-year, $50 million deal, which was the richest coaching contract in NBA history. It fell apart quickly as Brown openly feuded with Stephon Marbury, the team went 23-59 and Brown was gone after one season.

2007: Sexual harassment verdict

Former Knicks executive Anucha Brown Sanders sued Thomas, MSG and Dolan, alleging Thomas called her a “bitch” and a “ho” and made unwanted advances. A jury believed her and awarded her a settlement worth approximately $11.6 million.

Then NBA Commissioner David Stern said that going to trial rather than settling “was not a model of intelligent management.”

Eight years later, on HBO, James Dolan said he still thought Brown made it up.

2008: End of the Thomas error

Four-plus seasons, zero playoff wins, one big sexual harassment settlement and Thomas was fired.

Dolan, however, shockingly re-hired Thomas to run the WNBA’s Liberty.

2011: Carmelo Anthony trade

Dolan pushed to acquire Carmelo Anthony from Denver in February, surrendering multiple players and draft picks in a deal widely criticized as too costly because Dolan was too eager not to miss out on another star. Donnie Walsh, who had built the Knicks for three years for that kind of big move, was let go in June after pulling off the deal the owner demanded.

2014-17: Phil Jackson

Dolan hired 11-time champion Phil Jackson as president on a five-year, $60 million deal, but it never worked out. Jackson tried to install the triangle offense in a league that had evolved past it. The Knicks missed the playoffs every season and Jackson clashed with Anthony

After giving up so much to bring him to the Garden, Carmelo was gone in 2017.

Feb. 8, 2017: Charles Oakley

One of the most beloved Knicks of all time, Charles Oakley was sitting courtside when security dragged him out of his seat, arrested him and banned him from the building. It was reportedly on Dolan’s direct orders. The franchise then issued a statement implying Oakley had a drinking problem. NBA Commissioner and legend Michael Jordan had to call Dolan to get the ban lifted.

Oakley sued and eight years later the case is on-going.

2017: The sidewalk incident

Before a game against the Bulls, a season ticket holder outside MSG yelled “Sell the team!” at Dolan. Rather than keep walking, Dolan turned around got in the man’s face and screamed at him,

He confirmed it to Deadspin, adding: “I did call him an a------ because he is an a------.”

2022: The lawyers

Dolan began using facial recognition technology to bar attorneys from MSG venues, which also include Radio City Music Hall, if their firms were suing the company. Thousands of lawyers at roughly 90 firms were affected. When the New York State attorney general warned the practice may violate anti-discrimination laws and the State Liquor Authority threatened to pull the Garden’s liquor license, Dolan went on live television and defiantly defended his decision. He also threatened to shut down liquor sales at Rangers games himself and then held up a picture of the SLA director that included his personal phone number and email address live on air for fans to flood him with complaints.

New York Knicks executive chairman James Dolan (center) sits courtside during the first quarter against the Houston Rockets at Madison Square Garden.

2023: War with the league

Dolan sued the Toronto Raptors for $10 million over an analytics staffer he claimed had stolen confidential files. Dolan simultaneously resigned from his league committee positions and wrote to commissioner Adam Silver that “the NBA neither needs nor wants my opinion,” accusing Silver of bias. The suit was quietly dropped in October 2025.

January 2024: The Weinstein lawsuit

Massage therapist Kellye Croft filed a federal lawsuit alleging Dolan sexually assaulted her in 2013 while his band, JD & The Straight Shot, toured with the Eagles, then arranged a meeting that led to Harvey Weinstein assaulting her. Dolan denied everything. A federal judge dismissed the case in September 2024 on technical grounds, without ruling on the underlying allegations.

2024: Thibodeau fired

The Knicks were in the middle of their best run in two decades. Thibodeau was fired anyway, over the reported objections of Jalen Brunson and Leon Rose. Dolan had reportedly sat in on player exit interviews during the process, which people around the league said they had never seen an owner do.

January 2026: Dolan speaks

Dolan broke a two-year media silence with a WFAN radio appearance and declared the Knicks “absolutely” had to reach the NBA Finals and should win it.

Hours later, the Knicks lost to the Detroit Pistons by 31 points.

Into the Finals

Maybe he's a prophet. Dolan’s firing of Thibodeau and hiring of Mike Brown has seemingly worked. The Knicks are in the NBA Finals and will face the San Antonio Spurs, looking for their first title since 1973.

Some fans say winning cures all, but other say 25 years of losing, embarrassment and controversy doesn’t wash off that easily. Dolan has said he has no plans to sell. Someone in the family, he said, will own the team. For now, the most controversial owner in New York City sports is one championship series win away from the most unlikely redemption story in New York history.

.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: James Dolan Knicks ownership has been feuds and 25 years of chaos

Lakers need to learn these lessons from 2026 Western Conference finals

When the buzzer sounded on the Spurs’ 111-103 Western Conference finals Game 7 victory over the Thunder, a new king of the conference was crowned.

And the series, which was the first Western Conference finals to go seven games in eight years, showcased how far behind the Lakers and the rest of the conference teams are in competing against the Spurs and Thunder.

For the Lakers, the gap was already evident. 

The Lakers didn’t have Luka Doncic (77) available in the postseason, but LA still needs more depth to compete with the Thunder and Spurs. NBAE via Getty Images

They lost all four regular-season matchups to the Thunder with an average margin of defeat of 29.3 points per game. And in the playoffs, albeit without superstar guard Luka Doncic, they suffered a four-game sweep with an average margin of defeat of 16 points per game.

The Lakers went 1-3 against the Spurs during the regular season with an average margin of defeat of 13.8 in those matchups. The gap between the teams widened as the Spurs improved throughout the season. 

Those are the teams the Lakers will need to overcome if they’re going to compete in the West and contend for an NBA title.

What lessons can the Lakers learn from the Western Conference finals to help close the gap?

It starts with adding more depth to the roster. 

Many circumstances determine the success of a season for players and teams. 

Nothing should be taken away from the Spurs, who earned their spot in the NBA Finals for a matchup against the Knicks. 

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his Thunder teammates were eliminated by the Spurs in seven games during the Western Conference finals. NBAE via Getty Images

The Thunder played without Jalen Williams, a 2025 All-NBA third-team honoree and All-Star, and Ajay Mitchell, Oklahoma City’s fourth-leading scorer during the regular season and second-leading scorer during the playoffs, for most of the Western Conference finals. 

Despite those absences, the Thunder pushed the series to seven games behind the strength of their depth. Even with Williams and Mitchell injured, OKC was competitive and trusted eight to nine players to consistently contribute in a deep playoff run. 

And that’s not even counting Aaron Wiggins and Isaiah Joe, both of whom were in the Thunder’s rotation during their run to the 2025 NBA Finals.

The Spurs don’t have the same depth as the Thunder but still could go 10 or 11 deep regularly depending on the matchup.

Even with the context of Doncic being sidelined for all of the playoffs, the Lakers usually had seven or eight players who could be relied upon to contribute.

The Thunder and Spurs have their own unique advantages that’ve allowed them to be as deep as they are. 

Williams and Chet Holmgren are All-NBA players on the final seasons of their rookie-scale deals. 

Victor Wembanyama holding up his MVP trophy after the Western Conference finals win. AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez

Three of the Spurs’ top scorers during the playoffs (Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper) are also on rookie-scale contracts and will be for next season, too. 

One way for the Lakers to make progress closing the gap this offseason between them and the top conference teams is by adding quality depth to their roster. 

Rob Pelinka, Lakers president of basketball operations and general manager, addressed this need after his team’s season ended.

“If you look around the playoffs right now, depth is really important — athleticism and youth,” Pelinka said. “We have a lot of components of that on our roster, but we need to add to it.”

The Spurs were led by Victor Wembanyama, who will play on his rookie-scale contract next season. NBAE via Getty Images

The athleticism and youth components were advantages the Spurs had, and took advantage of, against the Thunder. 

The Spurs averaged 10 more fast-break points than the Thunder during the Western Conference finals. 

Pace naturally slows during the playoffs, but being opportunistic with easier scoring opportunities was key for the Spurs.

Just as impressive, the Spurs held the Thunder to 7.2 fast-break points per game after OKC averaged 15 fast-break points in the second-round series against the Lakers, who averaged eight per game. 

Some of this goes back to the Spurs taking better care of the ball against the Thunder compared with the Lakers, which limited OKC’s transition opportunities. But the Spurs’ athleticism and youth made it easier for them to keep up with the Thunder.

These are the types of margins that gave the Spurs the edge over the Thunder.

And the same ones the Lakers need to improve on to have any shot of competing for a title in 2026-27.

Knicks vs. Spurs instant prediction for 2026 NBA Finals

NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 1: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs plays defense during the game against the New York Knicks on March 1, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The NBA will have a unique champion for the eighth straight year. The San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks are squaring off in a 2026 NBA Finals matchup no one could have seen coming. Before this stretch, the league had never had more than six consecutive unique champions, which happened from 1975-1980. No team has won multiple titles over the last eight years, and no team has even repeated as a conference champion since the 2019 Golden State Warriors.

Why is there so much parity in the NBA right now? It’s mostly a combination of salary cap changes and injuries. The Oklahoma City Thunder seemed primed for a dynasty when they won the championship a year ago, but the Spurs beat them in a fantastic Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals with their second and third best creators out in Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell.

The NBA is left with a rematch of the 1999 Finals, which the Spurs won in five games over New York. It’s going to be incredible watching Victor Wembanyama chase his first championship in Madison Square Garden against a Knicks fanbase desperate for their first championship since 1973. Let’s preview the series from both sides and make a championship pick.

The case for the Knicks

The Knicks just played the best 11-game stretch in league history — and somehow that’s not an exaggeration. This team is red hot right now, and they’re playing with full belief that they can deliver New York its first NBA championship since 1973.

The Spurs haven’t faced a true stretch five who can pull Wembanyama away from the basket on this playoff run. Enter Karl-Anthony Towns, the best three-point shooting center of all-time, who has suddenly been unlocked as the best version of himself over the last six weeks. Towns feels like the most important player in the series for New York. He’s a threat to score 25+ feet away from the basket, and that could potentially take Wemby away from defending the paint. The Spurs can try to stick Wembanyama on Josh Hart or another Knick, but that will create some problems for San Antonio, too.

It’s easy to discount Jalen Brunson, but he’s led his team to championships in high school and in college, and consistently rises to the occasion in the biggest moments. While the Spurs defended another mid-range shooter in Gilgeous-Alexander well in the West Finals, it’s worth noting that Brunson has a much higher three-point volume, taking 35.8 percent of his field goals from deep, compared to 22.6 for SGA. Brunson’s pull-up three ball will have to be a weapon in this series. The fact that he’s not much of a rim attacker means Wembanyama needs to come out higher on the floor when he’s not getting spaced out of the play by Towns. For as good as the Spurs’ defense is, Brunson has shown that he has so many counters to effectively get off his offense.

I’m fascinated to see how often and how effectively Anunoby defends Wembanyama. It feels like the best Wemby defenders are long and strong wings who are quick enough to neutralize him off the bounce, and Anunoby might be the best example of such a defender. Turning Wemby into a shooter is in the Knicks’ best interest, so if Anunoby and Mitchell Robinson can keep him out of deep post position, that’s a good start for a winning recipe.

The Knicks are also the much fresher team. While San Antonio just played a physically and emotionally draining 7-game series in the West, the Knicks have been chilling at home after consecutive sweeps. Sure the Knicks might be a little rusty at the start of Game 1, but that rest advantage will carry over through the remainder of the series.

It certainly feels like the Knicks have more offensive firepower than San Antonio. Brunson and Towns is an elite scoring duo, and Mikal Bridges and Anunoby can each carry the offense for a game or two themselves. De’Aaron Fox hasn’t been at his best for the Spurs basically the whole season, and asking Dylan Harper to immediately ascend to a true No. 2 option as a 20-year-old is a lot. The Knicks just have so much scoring punch in their eight-man rotation, and it’s conceivable that not even Wembanyama can slow them down.

Madison Square Garden is about to turn into one of the greatest environments in NBA Finals history. Knicks fans are craving a championship, and the team will be ready.

The case for the Spurs

It feels like Victor Wembanyama ascended to best player in the world status during the Western Conference Finals, which is a terrifying thought considering he’s only 22 years old and still has plenty of room to grow as a player. When he’s really locked in, Wemby looks like a 7’5 Kevin Durant capable of self-creating step-back threes while also being a dominant a rim runner and arguably the most impactful defender in NBA history.

How will the Knicks guard Wembanyama? It’s a question that could define the series. New York only has two 7-footers on the roster with Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson, but Robinson recently suffered a broken pinky that should linger into the Finals. New York can also use OG Anunoby to guard Wembanyama, and that might be their best matchup. For as long and strong as Anunoby is, Wemby is still going to be able to shoot over the top of him whenever he wants to. If the French superstar gets hot as a jump shooter or from floater range, the Spurs will immediately have an advantage New York can’t neuter. Even if Anunoby is effective for stretches, the Knicks will still need other defenders to soak up minutes against him, and their options are pretty limited.

Wemby’s impact is even bigger on defense, especially with so many good perimeter defenders in front of him. Stephon Castle did an outstanding job on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander with Wemby lurking behind him, and that same duo will cause plenty of problems for Jalen Brunson. Like SGA, Brunson takes a lot of his shots from mid-range, which Wemby’s length can help evaporate. Brunson took 51% percent of his field goal attempts from mid-range this season, per Cleaning the Glass. The Spurs feel uniquely equipped to defend that kind of superstar shot profile.

The Spurs’ role players are also fully locked in right now. Julian Champagnie had a breakout conference finals series with multiple 20-point games and consistently good rebounding. Devin Vassell is playing the best ball of his career. Dylan Harper is already taking over playoff games at times at 20 years old. Luke Kornet is one of the league’s better backup centers, and could rebound from a tough matchup vs. the Thunder.

San Antonio’s defense will really be in the spotlight for this matchup. The Knicks’ offensive rating has jumped from 118.7 in the regular season to 123.3 in the playoffs, by far the best mark in the postseason. Meanwhile, San Antonio’s defensive rating has gone from 110.4 in the regular season (No. 3 overall) to 104.4 in the playoffs (second-best behind the Knicks). The Spurs’ defense feels built for the playoffs with more contact allowed on the perimeter and Wembanyama being almost adjustment-proof. If the Spurs can limit New York’s three-point attempts, Wemby can take care of the rest inside.

In what feels like a pretty even matchup, the tiebreaker should go to the team with the best player. That’s Wembanyama.

Prediction: Spurs in 7

This truly feels like a toss up to me, but I’m going with San Antonio in seven for a few reasons.

The Knicks’ romp through the East has been incredibly impressive, but they haven’t seen anything like the Spurs. The Atlanta Hawks, Philadelphia 76ers, and Cleveland Cavaliers are all two steps below San Antonio at least. I’m not sure if the Knicks’ hot three-point shooting is sustainable. Landry Shamet just shot 91.7 percent from three in the Eastern Conference Finals (not a typo). Is that really going to happen again? The Knicks have plenty of shooters on the floor at all times, but the windows disappear a lot quicker when someone like Wembanyama is closing out on you.

I was tempted to go Knicks in six here. New York clearly has a path to victory, and I wouldn’t be too surprised if they routed the Spurs the same way they’ve routed everyone else in their way on this playoff run.

If the Spurs can extend the series to seven, they will get the final game on their home floor. Weird things can happen in a Game 7, and I typically prefer the team with the best overall player. Wembanyama already slayed the biggest challenger in the league in his first playoff run. I think he’s ready to win a championship.

Family of young Spurs fan who was declared ‘brain-dead’ after tragic celebration accident reveals he’s ‘fighting for his life’

The family of a young San Antonio Spurs fan declared brain-dead after falling from a truck during a post-game celebration said they aren’t giving up hope yet as the teen is still “fighting for his life.”

Jose Luis Rodriguez III, known to loved ones as Joey, suffered a catastrophic head injury and has been in the hospital since Thursday’s accident following the Spurs’ Conference Finals win over the Oklahoma City Thunder to force a game seven.

“I believe in God, and I believe in miracles. I’m trying to hold on for my son, my daughter-in-law, and the rest of the family,” Rodriguez’s paternal grandmother told KSAT as she asked the city to pray for her grandson.

Jose Luis Rodriguez III was declared brain-dead after falling out a moving car while celebrating the San Antonio Spurs’ playoff win on Thursday, May 28, 2026. Family Handout
Spurs fans gathered in San Antonio to celebrate the team on May 8, 2026. San Antonio Express-News via Getty Images

Rodriguez was declared brain dead by doctors after he landed on his head during wild celebrations following the Spurs’ win, which tied the Western Conference finals with the Thunder at 3-3.

The teenager was sitting on the passenger-side window of the vehicle when it hit the curb, and he fell and struck the sidewalk.

“He left blood all over the street,” Rodriguez’s aunt, Yvonne Hudson, told the San Antonio Express-News.

Initially, his parents hadn’t allowed him to take part in the honking celebration on San Antonio’s south side because of the “nonsense” happening on the streets, Hudson added.

But when Rodriguez said a friend’s parent would go with them, they agreed, although in the end, the teenager went solely with pals, Hudson said.

Jose Luis Rodriguez III suffered catastrophic head injuries after falling from the moving vehicle on Thursday night. GoFundMe

Friends took Rodriguez to a nearby clinic, where he had no pulse for eight minutes before he was transferred to a local trauma center due to the severity of his injuries.

Rodriguez’s family said he is “fighting for his life,” and they are holding out hopes for a recovery.

His grandmother said the teenager’s organs are still functioning despite his critical head injuries.

Hudson said when a family member touched the teen’s foot, his knee twitched, giving them hope, although doctors told them it was just a spinal reflex, not a sign of brain activity.

Police in San Antonio have urged fans to stay safe during celebrations for the playoffs, with rowdy rolling street parties becoming a daily occurrence.

The local tradition dates back to the Spurs’ 1999 NBA title run, and sees thousands of fans routinely fill the streets hanging outside of vehicles, parading on bikes, and even on horses.

“We encourage everyone celebrating to follow traffic laws, stay inside your vehicles, and follow directions from the officers who are there to keep everyone safe,” the San Antonio Police Department said in a statement.

The Spurs went on to complete the turnaround against the Thunder on Saturday, winning the Western Conference title — and setting up an NBA Finals showdown with the Knicks.

Ahead of the start of the finals on Wednesday, even Spurs star Dylan Harper used a news conference to urge fans to behave responsibly.

“I love y’all. Be safe out there in San Antonio,” he said. “I understand y’all are excited, but you got to be safe out there.”

Kingston Flemings is one of the safest lead guards in the top tier of the 2026 NBA Draft

HOUSTON, TEXAS - FEBRUARY 14: Kingston Flemings #4 of the Houston Cougars goes to the basket against David Castillo #10 of the Kansas State Wildcats in the first half at Fertitta Center on February 14, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

As point guards coming out of a Kelvin Sampson-led program tend to do, Kingston Flemings, of the University of Houston, will come into the NBA with more than one trick in his bag. Playing under Sampson in his only year in the college game is perhaps another advantage he has over the bevy of attractive guard prospects invading the NBA in 2026.

Many recent mock drafts have Flemings going off the board at the seventh pick, to the Sacramento Kings. One recent mock, which should interest Dallas Mavericks fans, has Flemings falling all the way past Dallas at No. 9 to the Milwaukee Bucks at the 10th overall pick, with Dallas opting to trade the ninth pick and Kyrie Irving to the Charlotte Hornets for LaMelo Ball and the 14th and 18th overall picks. God, speculation is fun, isn’t it?

Flemings showed himself to be effective in the halfcourt, with an ability to dissect the opposing defense, but he’s also an elite downhill driver of the ball, creating space with both physicality and speed. Then there’s the shooting. Flemings shot nearly 39% from 3-point range for Houston as a freshman, but was much better off the catch than he was off the dribble.

The basics

Flemings was born in Newport News, Va., but was raised in San Antonio. He was named the Gatorade Texas Player of the Year during his senior season at Brennan High School, as well as a Naismith All-American. Despite all that, he wasn’t considered a certain one-and-done prospect entering his freshman season at Houston, but he soon proved to be one.

Among the most notable moments in his short college career was a 42-point explosion against Texas Tech, when he set a new high-scoring mark for a freshman at Houston. He shoots. He creates. He defends. You must if Sampson is going to trust you with the ball in your hands as a freshman, and Sampson did trust Flemings, to the tune of a 26% usage rate.

He creates his best offensive possessions when he gets into ball screens. He’s just a whiz at calculating advantageous matchups and executing as soon as the opportunity presents itself. His first step is lethal.

Strengths

That lethal first step is followed by a will to get to the bucket nearly unrivaled in the college game. He did slow down a bit in terms of efficiency at the rim as the season went along and the competition got tighter and tighter, but don’t discount his own explanation of part of his calculus when getting to the rim.

“We wanted to get the ball on the rim,” Flemings told NBA analyst Kevin O’Connor on a recent appearance on his Kevin O’Connor Show podcast. “Some of that is strategic when you have guys crashing. Some of it may have been a slight lack of focus, but part of it was also wanting to get the ball on the rim for those guys to go get it.”

Flemings actually moves the defense with his dribble, rather than simply trying to get past his man. You have to account for his speed at all times, and the advantages it creates can really fuel an NBA offense. It’s his elite athleticism that makes him special. Flemings jumps out of the gym with a 40.5-inch max vertical, and his sprint speed and agility in the lane separate him from the crowd.

Defensively, Flemings has a better foundation than almost every other freshman lead guard in the college game. He generates steals, pressures the ball, and plays with a high degree of competitiveness. The same cannot be said of all guards floating in the 7-10 range of NBA draft boards.

Concerns

Do his measurements from the NBA Draft Combine change his defensive ceiling in the NBA, though?

Flemings measures just 6-foot-2 and 1/2 without shoes, and his wingspan is just shy of 6-foot-4. He’s slight, at 183 pounds. Will he get pushed around in the NBA?

The question on his way to the rack in the NBA will be contact. The guards he’ll be facing are much bigger now. Will his physicality be enough on this level to make him as effective in getting to the bucket as he was in college?

He told O’Connor, to that end, that he was working hard on developing his floater and runner game in his time off after the college season. He realizes there are things he needs to work on, and above all else, this is a 19-year-old kid who hates losing.

Fit with the Mavericks

I’d be surprised if the Mavericks find themselves in a position where drafting Flemings is an option, but stranger things have happened. I believe he’d be a much better fit with the team than, say Darius Acuff Jr., and even a better fit than Mikel Brown Jr.

Flemings has a level of polish to his game at the tender age of 19 that few prospects possess. Thank Sampson and his rocket-launching legs for that. His live-dribble playmaking and his net-positive status on the defensive end would make him a near-perfect fit.

I also think he’s going to be able to inspire a little more confidence from 3-point range in the NBA than he did in college, which doesn’t mean his shooting was a problem with Houston. He just wasn’t a volume guy and he wasn’t that great shooting off the dribble.

“I’ve been working on getting to the same shot pocket [whether shooting off the dribble or off the catch],” Flemings told O’Connor. “I’m kind of shooting it wherever my dribble is [in film from college], so I’m working on getting to same shot pocket and getting more consistent.

“In the NBA, people want to shoot a lot more threes, so I’m going to shoot more threes. In college, we did what we needed to do to win.”

NBA comparison

In the recent conversation with O’Connor, Flemings listed Tyrese Maxey and De’Aaron Fox as two players he emulates. They’re not the biggest dudes either, but they have a nose for the bucket, and their 3-point shot has come along in the professional game, much like Flemings will look to do as more form the perimeter is asked of him starting next season.

Ajay Mitchell and Coby White may also come to mind. Even if he doesn’t become an elite lead guard, he could still be a microwave scoring engine like one of these guys.