Welcome to Week in Review: a Monday feature that looks back at the week that was for the San Antonio Spurs, takes a look at the week ahead, and more. Enjoy!
Week 12: The hunt for the Spurs’ 2025 offense continued into the second week of 2026, with them splitting another set of games. Despite only hitting 4 threes, they got their most comfortable win since Christmas against a Lakers squad missing LeBron James and Austin Reeves, followed by upsetting a hot Celtics team in a defensive slugfest in their own building. However, sandwiched around those wins were one-point losses at Memphis and Minnesota, both of which featured the Spurs blowing double-digit leads and losing focus in the fourth quarter.
Week 13: 2-1 (29-13, 2nd in West)
98-119 loss at Oklahoma City Thunder
The joy that came from beating the Thunder three times in less than two weeks — with the climax of the Spurs’ hot December being embarrassing them on their own court on Christmas — was finally gone as they hit rock bottom of their 10-game slump ever since. After a tight first half, OKC returned the favor with a second half offensive thrashing that the Spurs had no answer for, with plenty of trash talk and taunting to let out all their pent up frustration from last month. This is officially a rivalry.
119-101 win vs. Milwaukee Bucks
After going 4-6 across the last 1o games, the Spurs needed a confidence-boosting win, and they finally got one against a Bucks team that is dealing with its own turmoil and had nothing going beyond Giannis Antetokounmpo and a little spurt from Kyle Kuzma. Meanwhile, the Spurs achieved all three points needed to bust out of their slump: they hit their threes (16-37, 43%), the guards all had good games (De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper combined for 47 points and 19 assists in three quarters of work), and the Spurs took their opponent seriously, resulting in a blowout win that wasn’t nearly as close as the final score indicated, with the Spurs leading by as much as 39.
126-123 win vs. Minnesota Timberwolves
The Spurs got revenge against one of the teams who gave them trouble during their slump, but they had to sweat it out first. Similar to their two losses in Minnesota this season, the Spurs got out to a big lead early, leading by 25 at halftime, but took their foot off the gas in the second half. A 55-point outing from Anthony Edwards, including 26 points in fourth quarter, brought his team surging back to take the lead late, but fortunately for the Spurs, Victor Wembanyama was able to match him shot-for-shot in the clutch, and a big three from Keldon Johnson sealed the deal (but not without plenty of free throw drama to give everyone a heart attack first).
Power Rankings
John Schuhmann, NBA.com — 3 (last week: 4)
OffRtg: 116.7 (10) DefRtg: 111.6 (3) NetRtg: +5.0 (5) Pace: 100.7 (15)
The Spurs suffered their first loss to the Thunder last week, but they remain comfortably in the top three in the West after surviving a wild game against fourth-place the Wolves on Saturday.
Three takeaways
1. The Spurs’ loss in Oklahoma City on Tuesday was the end of their worst five-game stretch of offense (103.4 points scored per 100 possessions) this season, with their trio of guards – De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper – combining to shoot just 34% over the five games. San Antonio ranks 26th offensively (111.0 scored per 100) since Christmas.
2. But the offense returned as they returned home to beat the Bucks and Wolves. The three guards scored more efficiently, Castle had 19 assists and just two turnovers over the two games, and Victor Wembanyama scored 39 points against Minnesota. Though he’s first in defensive rebounding percentage, he’s just 61st in offensive rebounding percentage (6.9%) among 289 players who’ve averaged at least 15 minutes per game. But he sealed the win by rebounding Julian Champagnie’s missed free throw in a crowd of Wolves with four seconds left.
3. With that win, the Spurs are 21-1 when they’ve scored at least 116 points per 100 possessions and 6-3 within the top five in the West, set to visit the fifth-place Rockets (1-0) twice in the next 10 days. They’ll be at a rest disadvantage for the first of those two visits (Tuesday).Coming up: The Spurs are 9-1 against the eight teams that have lost at least 60% of their games, with the one loss having come (at home) to the Jazz. They’ll face Utah twice this week and also complete their season series with the Pelicans.
Brett Siegel, Clutch Points — 2 (last week: 1)
The Spurs are tied with the Denver Nuggets for the second-best record in the Western Conference*. What has made this Spurs team so unique throughout the season to this point is their ability to find production from a lot of other players outside of Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle.
Not to mention, San Antonio’s defense has been among the best in the league lately, only surrendering an average of 105.6 points per game over its last seven contests.
(*Note: the Nuggets lost to Charlotte last night, so the Spurs are now a half game ahead of them.)
Coming up: Mon. 1/19 vs. Utah Jazz (14-28); Tues. 1/20 at Houston Rockets (25-15); Thurs. 1/22 at Utah Jazz (14-28); Sun. 1/25 vs. New Orleans Pelicans
Prediction: 4-0 — I predicted a game too early for the Spurs to get out of their slump last week by choosing them to go undefeated, but I’m throwing caution to the wind and predicting the same this week. The Spurs will have zero excuses against two of the three worst teams in the West, and while Houston can sometimes be a house of horrors for them, the Rockets have struggled of late. Granted, this is the second game of a back-t0-back for the Spurs, but its an early tip-off today, and Houston is just a 45-min flight away. (I also just flat out hate the Rockets and want this win!)