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Victor Wembanyama’s early threes changed the geometry of Spurs-Thunder Game 7

Victor Wembanyama’s early threes changed the geometry of Spurs-Thunder Game 7
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Victor Wembanyama checked Mitch Johnson’s Game 6 threshold before halftime, and the location of his early offense did the rest. Three first-quarter threes turned San Antonio’s 118-91 win into a spacing problem before it ever became a scoreboard one.

Johnson asked for volume and got it early

Johnson said before Game 6 that Wembanyama needed more than 15 shots and more than 20 points for the Spurs to survive. He hit both numbers in the first half, then finished with 28 points on 10-of-21 shooting, 10 rebounds, three blocks, four threes, two steals and two assists.

Game 5 produced 20 points and a 4-of-15 night as Oklahoma City crowded him at the rim. Game 6 reversed that map. Wembanyama got the Thunder defenders out of the paint by making them honor his shot above the arc.

The first-quarter threes set the geometry

San Antonio’s opening punch came from outside. Wembanyama hit three triples in the first quarter to pull Isaiah Hartenstein and Chet Holmgren off the rim. With Oklahoma City unable to sit on Wembanyama’s catches, the driving lanes opened for Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper and Devin Vassell.

The Spurs went 11-of-25 from deep in the first half and outscored the Thunder 33-18 from three before the break.

San Antonio’s passing kept the looks connected

The threes weren’t generated in isolation. San Antonio finished with 14 assists on its 15 made threes, six different Spurs knocked one down, and ball movement found open shooters across the lineup.

San Antonio finished 15-of-41 from deep. The Spurs missed 10 of their last 12 and went 2-of-8 in a fourth quarter that played out entirely in garbage time. The damage was done.

The third quarter ended it

San Antonio’s defense closed the game in the third. Oklahoma City missed 13 straight field goals and went 7:30 without a point as the Spurs ran off a 32-13 quarter, including an 0-for-8 stretch from three. The starters watched the fourth from the bench on both sides.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander finished with 15 points on 6-of-18 shooting and 0-of-5 from deep, his roughest scoring game of the series. Alex Caruso, who entered Game 6 with 18 made threes on 58.1% shooting, went 1-of-3. Harper added 18 off the bench on 6-of-7, and Castle’s 17-5-9 was his eighth 15/5/5 game of these playoffs, a mark only Magic Johnson and Larry Bird have topped among rookies and sophomores on a postseason run.

What Game 7 asks Oklahoma City

The Game 7 question for the Thunder is how high to meet Wembanyama on his catches. Pressing up risks opening the floor behind the rotation. Dropping back gives him the runway he found Thursday.

“They were the aggressors, start to finish,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. That aggression started with the first two Wembanyama threes. Oklahoma City has one day to decide whether to treat them as an outlier or the coverage problem that decides the series.

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