Three nights after throwing away the end of Game 2, Victor Wembanyama walked into the loudest building in basketball and delivered the best game of his Finals. The Spurs beat the Knicks 115-111 to climb back into the series at 2-1, and Wembanyama looked exactly like the player San Antonio built around.
Wembanyama finished with 32 points on 11-of-18 shooting, eight rebounds, six assists and three blocks with a single turnover, and afterward framed the night as a referendum on togetherness. “Here, it feels like five against six,” he said. “It really shows what teams are made of.”
The redemption was total
The Game 2 ending will follow him regardless, the tied-game outlet pass fired into a teammate’s back. Game 3 was the rebuttal: 72.9% true shooting, a plus-7 in a four-point win, and the late rim protection that decided it.
Spurs coach Mitch Johnson pointed to one block in the final minutes, saying “Victor was there to do what he does best, clean it up at the rim. It was a huge stop. We needed it at the time.” Johnson added that a strong response was never in doubt: “I’m sure Victor has numerous sources of motivation. I don’t think any of us are surprised.”
The streak that finally broke
New York hadn’t lost in 46 days, since an April 23 defeat to Atlanta, a 13-game playoff winning streak that was the second-longest in postseason history. The Knicks missed their chance to go up 3-0, a hole no NBA team has ever escaped.
Instead San Antonio guaranteed the series returns to Texas and gave itself a path to the first Finals comeback ever from an 0-2 start with both losses at home.
What changes now
The Knicks still lead and still have Game 4 at home Wednesday. But the air in the series shifted. A Wembanyama who plays with this much control changes every defensive calculation New York has, and the Spurs’ supporting cast followed his lead.
Karl-Anthony Towns, so good in the first two games, was held to 11 points in foul trouble. The team that looked overwhelmed by the moment for two games suddenly looked like the one that belonged.
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