Posted in

Victor Wembanyama called his own team “spoiled kids” and he has a point

Victor Wembanyama called his own team “spoiled kids” and he has a point
Add as preferred source on Google

Down 0-2 in his first Finals, Victor Wembanyama didn’t reach for a cliché. He compared his young Spurs unfavorably to the Knicks and called his own group “spoiled kids.” The numbers behind the series say it’s less an insult than a diagnosis.

Speaking after the Game 2 loss, Wembanyama said the Spurs are “like spoiled kids,” contrasting them with a Knicks team “who are experienced, who understand how lucky they are to be in the Finals, and who know it’s not guaranteed to happen again.”

The age gap is the whole series

San Antonio’s rotation averages 24.4 years old; New York’s sits at 28.8. Wembanyama, De’Aaron Fox and Stephon Castle make up a scoring trio that ties last year’s Thunder as the youngest top-three in the last 11 Finals.

That youth has been a strength all postseason, but it shows up in exactly the moments that have decided two games: late-clock decisions, clock and game management, knowing when a possession is worth gold. The Knicks have won both games by a combined three points without leading for most of either.

The mistakes are young-team mistakes

Game 1 was six Wembanyama turnovers. Game 2 was the killer: with the score tied and under 15 seconds left, he grabbed a rebound and fired an outlet pass into the back of a teammate who wasn’t looking, then fouled Brunson, who won it at the line. Those aren’t talent failures. They’re reps-and-poise failures, the kind a 22-year-old in his first Finals makes, and a veteran has long since burned out of his game. Wembanyama’s own words afterward, that he needs “more poise, more control over the game,” matched the film.

Why the self-criticism is the right instinct

A young star deflecting blame would be the worrying sign. Instead Wembanyama named the problem out loud, which is how young teams stop being young. The catch is that there’s no shortcut: experience is the one thing San Antonio can’t add before Game 3 at Madison Square Garden. They either grow up three games faster than anyone expects, or this ends the way 0-2 Finals holes almost always end.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *