Sports, Black & Silver Ted James Sports, Black & Silver Ted James

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2026 NBA Finals, Game 3

Dream On - Welcome to the 2026 NBA Finals, Spurs basketball. I think I can safely speak for all San Antonio fans in saying we are glad you finally decided to show up. Considering it came on the heels of having just endured three days of all-consuming emotional anguish, that may have been the most satisfying non-series clinching San Antonio Spurs playoff win I have ever experienced (and I have experienced all of them since 1990). Our 115-111 victory over the New York Knicks in the circus that was Madison Square Garden on Monday night was a remarkable demonstration of resiliency. Down 0-2 after squandering both of our first two home games in the series and entering the biggest city in the United States (as it was bursting with more excitement and electricity than it had experienced at any other moment in recent memory) to play in the world’s most famous arena, conventional wisdom suggested that the atmosphere inside MSG was going to be too overwhelming for the second-youngest NBA Finals team in history and we would consequently let go of the proverbial ropes and merely serve as bystanders for the coronation that was going to take place this week in basketball’s Mecca to crown the home team champions for the first time in 53 years. Instead, Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle became the first teammates age 22 or younger to each have at least 20 points, five rebounds, and five assists in an NBA Finals game and the San Antonio Spurs finally hit the necessary clutch shots down the stretch to win the composure battle over the veteran Knicks and send the New York faithful home stunned and spiraling. And what a gutsy display of clutch shot making it was to behold. First, Steph drained a 26-foot dagger three (after Vic threw him the ball with the shot clock running down) while we were nursing a four point lead with 1:53 left to play. After Castle’s triple extended our lead to seven, the two teams traded empty possessions before Mikal Bridges got fouled with 59.6 seconds left. Bridges went 1-2 from the line to cut the lead to six but we came up empty again after that which led to another clutch shot by Jalen Brunson in the final minute of the third consecutive Finals game when he drilled his own three with 33.7 seconds left to cut our lead three at 111-108. This led to our second clutch shot, this one courtesy of De’Aaron Fox. The 2023 clutch player of the year nailed a 15-foot step back “iceman” jumper by De’Aaron Fox to put us back up five with 12.2 seconds left to play. Somehow, New York responded again. OG Anunoby hit a corner three with 9.4 seconds left to chop our lead back down to two. This led to a timeout and a critical inbounds play. We got the ball into Fox who toed the sideline while getting it back over to Steph who received the expected foul with 6.8 seconds left. The 2024 Rookie of the Year calmly walked up to the line and drained two of the most pressure-packed free throws in franchise history to extend our lead back to four at 115-111 and effectively put the game to bed. Game 3 on Monday at MSG was a tough-as-nails gritty road victory that was as impressive (and possibly more given the spectacle) as the Game 7 road closeout victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Paycom Center two Saturdays ago to dethrone the defending champs. While Victor was spectacular (as expected) in bouncing back from his colossal error at the end of Game 2 on Friday and was objectively the best player in the game for the first time during these Finals, the player of the game was Steph because of his season-saving clutch shooting in the guts of game to hold the Knicks at bay. The version of the Spurs that marched through the playoffs to the Western Conference championship finally arrived on basketball’s biggest stage on Monday to the delight of Spurs fans everywhere and I think the consensus on our side heading into Game 4 is we have finally shaken the Finals jitters and also figured out how we need to play the Knicks and as a result, we are cautiously optimistic we can dig out of the hole we created for ourselves as soon as tonight.

Meanwhile, New York fans have spent the past two days losing their collective minds over the refs and calling for Wemby to get a retroactive flagrant foul for dislodging the fist-full of jersey that Jalen Brunson had with 4:44 remaining in the first quarter. They need to get over that quick and start coming to acceptance that they never were the superior team and as a consequence there never was going to be a coronation. The championship they’d presumptuously been celebrating for three days prior to Game 3 was never theirs to celebrate. It’s a dangerous game to count your chickens before they hatch. This series was always going to be a dogfight. A dogfight on the court, by the way, Knicks fans. It is one thing to be losing your collective minds over the officiating on social media, it is quite another that some of you are assaulting random strangers in the streets for supporting a different basketball team than you. The city of San Antonio welcomed you with open arms, gave you tips on things to do while in town and great places to eat and in return, we can’t even feel safe to wear a Spurs jersey out in public in NYC without fear that we might encounter physical violence? What an absolute disgrace. Those of you who are blaming the Game 3 loss and the shattering of your seven straight weeks of good vibes solely on Donald Trump need to do some serious soul searching. On our side, we’re just going to be over here cheering on our amazing players, staying confident in our belief that we have to better team, and munching on our popcorn while we watch you meltdown, crash out, and continue to bring more and more bad karma on yourselves with each and every passing hour. I won’t lie, observing your overconfidence and premature celebrations after being gifted Game 2, I knew this is exactly how y’all would react. I predicted it in the last post but thank you, nonetheless 🙏 We need all the luck we can get in order to be the first team in NBA Finals history to comeback from 0-2 at home so keep doing everything you’re doing to self-sabotage the lighting in a bottle you were able to capture during the 13-game win streak. Keep doing all of it and more except stop assaulting Spurs fans on the streets of New York immediately. Seriously, what is the matter with y’all? I know I can’t say act like you’ve been here before when you haven’t since the Clinton Administration but start learning how to take your losses with some class because, and I hate to be the one to break it to you, there’s almost certainly more of them coming before this series is over. /advice-to-Knicks-fans

In other news, we have a plot twist. Guess which one of our favorite conniving characters from earlier in the postseason is back to make a cameo in the Finals, y’all? Apparently after getting eliminated by the Spurs on May 15th, The Sniveler (Chris Grinch—err, I mean Chris Finch) has been busy behind the scenes training a fellow NBA head coach (and a former Jedi Padawan of Gregg Popovich) in the Sith dark arts of working the refs in the postgame news conference. New York Knicks head coach (and assistant to Coach Pop on the 2003 Spurs title team) Mike Brown has officially been recruited and converted to the dark side by our reigning ref-working world champion. There has been a lot of ridiculous noise for Spurs fans to be annoyed with coming out of the camp of the Eastern Conference Champions as well as and especially from their fanbase during these Finals but Mike Brown taking a page directly out of the Sniveler’s playbook by having a 5-minute temper tantrum during his Game 3 postgame presser about the 24-8 San Antonio second half free throw advantage may very well take the cake. Come on, Mike. You’re so much better than this. You know damn well the only hope you have to slow down the greatest player in the world is to foul Wemby 75 times a game and when you know damn well that is your strategy, you cannot complain that the refs called more fouls on you than they did on us in the second half. Just like OKC and Minnesota in the past two series, you are mostly being allowed to guard Wemby by playing football. If the officials were calling these Finals games by the letter of the law (or even giving Wemby the same whistle as Brunson), you would lose every game by disqualification because your entire team would foul out. If you don’t want us to shoot more free throws than you in the second half, go ahead and try to guard Wemby straight up without fouling him constantly and let’s see what happens By the way, the level of cherry picking of information the New York Knick’s coach was presenting with this rant was enough to even make the Sniveler blush. I guess the fact that the Knicks were afforded a 16-8 free throw advantage in the first half and used it to help build their seven point halftime lead is irrelevant so long as the aggrieved party gets to be aggrieved. The biggest shame of it all is that Mike Brown knows better than anyone that the reason we won the game is because our defense was spectacular in the second half. We were the more aggressive team throughout the night (the more aggressive team almost always gets the better whistle) and we flat-out outplayed New York full stop. For Mike Brown to attempt to tarnish that rather than tipping his cap to the organization that helped him make his mark in this league is classless and a real shame but at least he made his Sith Lord Chris Finch proud. By contrast, I’m really pleased with the way that San Antonio Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson has represented the Pop coaching tree well throughout these playoffs (and especially after our two brutal Finals losses at home). Coach Mitch has never once complained about the refs after a loss and has consistently given due credit every time the opponent has outplayed us. We always have and always will consider Mike Brown to be a part of our Spurs family but I guess somewhere in between Sacramento and New York (perhaps on a pit stop in Minnesota) he lost sight of our Spurs values and gave into the temptation of the dark side. Drats! The Sniveler strikes again!

To end on a more positive note, as we start getting mentally prepared for another super intense emotional clash tonight in Game 4, I just want to acknowledge how super fun it was to watch the Spurs play an NBA Finals game again in Madison Square Garden on Monday and how much of a privilege it is that we have gotten to be the road team each of the last two times that basketball’s Mecca has hosted the NBA Finals. There is nothing else quite like watching basketball at MSG. I can attest to this from personal experience. On December 12th, 2017, I checked off one of my bucket list items when my partner Jenn and I attended an NBA basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden during a vacation trip to the Big Apple. The Knicks defeated the Lakers in overtime that night 113-109 behind a 37 point, 11 rebound effort by Kristaps Porzingis (aka The Unicorn). It was an awesome game between two of the league’s most prestigious franchises but as you can see in the headline image for this post, I was in the world’s most famous arena for the first time (and only time so far) of my life supporting the San Antonio Spurs even though we weren’t even playing in that night’s contest. (Jenn, a native New Yorker but is also a Spurs fan took more of a “when in Rome” approach.) Even though that experience happened eight and a half years ago, I’ve been holding this nice thought in my mind that the aftershocks of my Spurs fandom energy being in that special building are still reverberating to this day and as a result, I was there in spirit cheering on San Antonio on Monday and I’ll be there in spirit cheering on San Antonio again tonight. We face another stiff test in as hostile but also as special an environment as we’re ever going to find but if we play our brand of basketball the right way again tonight in Game 4, we will put ourselves in position to even this series heading back home for Game 5. If that happens, look out. I will likely never in my life be able to afford to purchase tickets to watch the San Antonio Spurs play an NBA Finals game in Madison Square Garden but my Spurs fandom energy is going to be in the building tonight for free. And I’ll be rooting on the #BlackAndSilver to win Game 4 tonight with everything I’ve got watching from my living room at home while visualizing the sights, sounds, and smells of that sacred place like I’m right there sitting court side with the tv off.

#GoSpursGo


Featured Image Source: Aerosmith.com

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2026 NBA Finals, Game 2

I Am a Rock - The 2025-26 San Antonio Spurs have made a lot of history during this magical journey that has taken us from thirteenth place in the West last season to Western Conference Champions and playing in The Finals right now. On Friday night, we squandered a second consecutive opportunity to end New York’s double-digit playoff winning streak by losing Game 2 to the Knicks in heartbreaking-fashion 105-104 at Frost Bank Center. If you’re reading this you already know what went spectacularly wrong (by our own making) at the end of Game 2 and as a result of our inexplicable loss of composure in the biggest moment of the season so far, we are down 0-2 and now face our biggest series deficit of this entire postseason. As a consequence, in order to redeem what is (in it’s immediate aftermath) one of our four most gut-wrenching playoff defeats of all-time (and get Friday’s loss erased from that infamous list), we are now going to have to make some more history by becoming the first team to win a championship after dropping the first two games of the NBA Finals at home. (If you’re curious about the other three most gut-wrenching playoff defeats in Spurs history they are: 1) “The Ray Allen shot” in Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals against the Miami Heat 2) “Manu Fouls Dirk” in Game 7 of the 2006 Western Conference Semifinals against the Dallas Mavericks 3) “Point Four” in Game 5 of the 2004 Western Conference Semifinals against the Los Angeles Lakers.) I remain steadfast in my conviction that coming back to win this series after blowing the first two games at home is exactly what we are about to do. We have no choice. It cannot be written in the annals of league history that the New York Knicks were the best team in the year of our basketball gods 2026 because it’s simply not the case. Give Jalen Brunson credit, he has made clutch shots down the stretch in both games in San Antonio which has allowed the Knicks to earn this 2-0 series lead + three opportunities at home to get the two remaining wins they need to secure the title. That being said, neither of these games would have been close enough for Brunson’s clutch shooting to be decisive if we hadn’t been consistently beating ourselves for too many of the minutes leading up to crunch time in both games. We should have won both of those games by double digits. The only reason why we didn’t is because our collective youth has still not fully adjusted to the pressure of playing on this stage. Our collective youth is yet to shake loose from its Finals jitters. Obviously, part of being the best team in the league is having more composure on basketball’s biggest stage than your opponent and the more experienced Knicks have outperformed us in that regard by a wide margin during the first two games. If they continue to outperform us in having more composure on the Finals stage, they will indeed win this series and if that were to happen, I will tip my cap and acquiesce that the New York Knicks were the best team in 2025-26. But we aren’t even close to that scenario becoming reality. This is not a series that feels like one team is heading home for a coronation. This feels like a series where the other team has taken some tough home losses but is finally getting comfortable on this stage and is on the verge of figuring out the first team and figuring them out for good.

The Spurs have won at least one of the first two road games in every series so far this postseason. If we can keep that streak going for a fourth consecutive series, I like our chances to flip the composure edge the deeper this series gets. New York hasn’t played under any real pressure since the first week of the postseason back in April. We’ve been swimming in pressure for over a month. Anyone who believes it’s a foregone conclusion that just because the Knicks were able to get both of the first two games in our building they are going to sweep us now that they will have home court advantage for the next two in Madison Square Garden is severely underestimating our ability to perform under pressure on the road. We have proven for seven weeks now that we have a resilience as a group and hostile road environments have not been a barrier to us reaching our highest possible level of play, a level that I have yet to see evidence that our Finals opponent is capable of matching. If I am correct and the Spurs are finally comfortable on the Finals stage and I’m also correct we have figured some things out about how play New York, it doesn’t matter how much the Big Apple wants to celebrate in the world’s most famous arena this week, the Knicks are going to have to come back to San Antonio on Saturday with more work to do and while experiencing pressure for the first time since late April after going down 2-1 in the first round to the Atlanta Hawks. Give them credit, winning 13 playoff games in a row means you don’t have to face adversity but it also means it’s that much more unpredictable how you will respond when you finally end up facing some. The Knicks have been riding this incredible wave of momentum and good vibes that has them projecting as world beaters but keep in mind, they were a very erratic team over the course of the season. New York had a stretch in January where they went 2-8. It may only take the simple act of the Spurs winning one road game to snap New York’s winning streak and the Knick’s unfamiliarity with experiencing adversity could unleash the Mr. Hyde undisciplined, disconnected, uninspired version of this team (you know, the version of the team that lost to the lowly Dallas Mavericks 114-97 at home on January 19th) that deep down, every Knicks fan knows is still inside their shiny seemingly infallible Dr. Jekyll.

One thing is for sure, if the Knick’s 13-game winning streak has in any way been the result of the basketball gods bestowing good karma on the city that never sleeps, that is reportedly about to come to a screeching halt in Game 3 due to the expected attendance in Madison Square Garden of Knick’s fan Donald Trump. If he does attend, it should be assumed that all of the momentum the president’s favorite basketball team has been riding for the past seven weeks is about to dry up faster than one of his single (and ready to mingle) supporter’s Tinder matches as soon as they make the mistake of adding “maga” to the bio on their profile. An NBA franchise cannot both invite a would-be authoritarian ruler (who is hellbent on eviscerating 250 years of American democracy for his own personal glory and enrichment) to be a guest in their arena so he can cheer on their team and also continue currying favor with the basketball gods. The two things are mutually exclusive. It’s gonna be some sweet poetic justice to watch the gods’ disapproving wrath for the Knick’s decision to host a tyrant rain down on the Big Apple from the basketball heavens like Zeus unloading thunderbolts during the Titanomachy. New York City is about to find out how much damage the “Trump Effect” can have in the basketball deity polls and the court of karmic opinion. When you add on top of it the additional bad karma the Knicks will receive from the record-setting astronomical prices fans are being asked to pay for tickets to attend the first NBA Finals games in Madison Square Garden this millennium—prices that are precluding most real fans from attending the event and rendering entry to these games to be a golden goose accessible only to the rich and famous celebrity bourgeoisie and elbow-rubbing corporate elites or in other words, ensuring that the unfettered late stage racial capitalism of Trump’s America is working spectacularly well at only benefiting those who it is intended to benefit, New York’s karma goose is cooked. When asked by White House correspondents on Air Force One about everyday Americans being priced out of purchasing tickets for Games 3 & 4 this week in Madison Square Garden, our (somehow) sitting president said, “They can watch it on television. It's sort of semi-free to watch it on television, but that's the way life goes. Now if the game wasn't a big, if the team wasn't a big success, you could go very easily. But that's the way life is." What an out-of-touch and heartless comment by a spoiled-rotten despicable excuse for a human being. To make matters worse, Trump’s insistence on making himself a part of the story for the most captivating Finals matchup this decade placed further undue burden on the proletariat by forcing the cancellation of the real Knicks fan’s outdoor MSG watch party due to it being logistically infeasible to accommodate both that and the Secret Service security protocol to get the sitting POTUS in and out of the building. This man’s utter lack of concern for the welfare of the hardworking American people knows no bounds. It is now the duty of every patriotic American to root for the San Antonio Spurs to rally and help ensure that this would-be despot and his fellow elitist Knicks fans experience soul crushing disappointment in the next two weeks. (I guess for Donald himself, it would just be regular disappointment since he has no soul to be crushed but it will be satisfying nonetheless). If you believe in the restoration of democracy and that there should be no kings in America, it is your duty to join the national proletariat in making “Go Spurs Go” ring from sea to shining sea so forcefully it pleases the basketball gods and spurs them (pun intended) to manifest a colossal karmic storm to be unleashed down on Gotham for the next few days in the form of an epic series-evening comeback by the visitors that spoils their party and rains on their parade. Even for those in the Knicks-repping conflicted NYC proletariat, there is still time to put your country first as well as stand in solidarity with the working class (not to mention stick it to the president personally for cancelling your watch party). There’s plenty of room still over here on the right side of history. The New York Knicks are the party of Donald Trump, filthy-rich celebrities and the oligarchs. The San Antonio Spurs are for the people. And Victor Wembanyama is for the children.

Speaking of Wemby, I won’t lie. Watching him make such a massive mistake on Friday night at such a critical moment with the entire world watching was agonizing. I literally shed tears of sadness in reaction to a Spurs loss for the first time since the Ray Allen shot in 2013. Attempting to recover this weekend from the disappointment of climbing all the way back from 14 down in the final six minutes of the game (an extraordinary comeback fueled by player of the game De’Aaron Fox, Devin Vassell, Dylan Harper, and Wemby himself) only to squander it away in the end because of Victor’s ill-timed calamitous error (an error with the potential to be immortalized in infamy for the rest of time in the annals of basketball history) has been emotionally challenging. The extra travel day off to sit with it between games hasn’t helped. Objectively, when I ruminate on the basketball that has been played so far in this series, our situation being in an 0-2 hole is concerning but at the same time, all of the evidence points to us being up against an opponent we can easily handle by just regressing back to the mean with our level of play. We have had crunch time leads in both games after playing some of our worst basketball of the season. Meanwhile, it has taken consistent shot-making under duress (often with the shot clock about to expire) just for New York to force two 50-50 games and even then, it still took clutch shots by Brunson at the end of both games to punish us for our struggles to the tune of two home losses in a series that could easily be 2-0 the other direction and with all things being equal would most likely be tied 1-1. Objectively, I know we are more than capable of walking this thing down and we have proven for this entire playoff run that we have the ability to dig deep to find what we need in order to play our best when our backs are against the wall. I think what has made recovering from our Game 2 loss this weekend so emotional is knowing how costly it can prove to be to throw away a Finals game like that combined with the historical weight of now having to become the first team to ever comeback from losing the first two Finals games at home combined with what a blemish that turnover could prove to be on Wemby’s legacy. It has been a lot to process. The good news is if we come out focused tonight and play our brand of basketball the right way, we will take the first of four steps towards erasing all of that heaviness and replacing it with the sheer joy associated with the realization of what has admittedly become (here on the Monday afternoon before Game 3 as we’re peering up from this 0-2 series hole) a distant and improbable dream. All of the pressure is now squarely on the New York Knicks not to choke this series away. They are expected to win this thing now, especially by their delirious fan base. The #BlackAndSilver have the opportunity to play pressure-free basketball in Games 3 & 4 in the world’s most famous arena and see what happens. Victor Wembanyama, specifically, has the opportunity to make lemonade from the lemons of his massive mistake by asserting himself as the best player in the series moving forward. As I stated earlier, the calamitous error has the potential to to be immortalized in infamy for the rest of time in the annals of basketball history and provide a permanent blemish on Wemby’s legacy but the key word is “potential,” it is not yet set it stone. It also has the potential to be a remarkable part of the origin story for how he became the greatest basketball player of all-time, a seemingly unrecoverable self-inflicted bout with adversity that he accepted as a teaching moment, learned from immediately and persevered through to capture his first NBA championship during his first trip to the playoffs in defiance of the sizable odds and the weight executing a comeback which has no precedent in history. The circumstances over the past six days that have brought us to this moment in time where our dream of winning this series is now distant and improbable are in the past and we can’t change them, for better or worse. But to give my perspective as an eternal optimist, the distance and improbability stands to provide so much depth and enrichment to the realization of this dream and make it substantially more rewarding. In the end, isn’t it the distance and improbability that makes the fulfillment of every child’s hoop dreams so rewarding from the moment they first touch a basketball? The headline image for this post is a photo of me holding a basketball in a shooting position as a two-year-old while looking up at the distance and improbability of making the attempt on a 10-foot regulation basket and defiantly dreaming that I can make it (circa 1980). While that shot was, of course, impossible for me at the time, I stuck with basketball throughout my childhood and eventually got to the point where I could realize my two-year-old self’s original hoop dream very easily as well as realizing many other hoop dreams that came after throughout my basketball journey (see photo circa 1995 below). And while the dream of an NBA title currently feels distant and improbable, Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs still have an opportunity in front of us this season to realize one of the most sacred of all hoop dreams that every child has at some point soon after they first touch a basketball. Starting tonight, I know we are going to apply the lessons provided by the adversity we have faced so far in these Finals and use them to help us stare down that distance and improbability and defiantly dream on.

#GoSpursGo‍‍ ‍


Featured Image Source: MSN

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2026 NBA Finals, Game 1

Still D.R.E. - On June 2nd, 1991, Michael Jordan lost the first NBA Finals game of his career at home. Magic Johnson and the more experienced Los Angeles Lakers defeated Jordan and his Chicago Bulls 93-91 at Chicago Stadium. His Airness scored 13 points in this fourth quarter to erase a seven point deficit to start the frame and take a small lead down the stretch only to blow it in the final moments. The narrative in the media after that game was the Bulls were too overwhelmed by basketball’s biggest stage and experience was going to win out. Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls did not blink and proceeded to win the next four games straight to capture the 1990-91 NBA Championship, their first of six titles. 35 years and one day later, Victor Wembanyama lost the first NBA Finals game of his career at home. Jalen Brunson and the more experienced New York Knicks defeated Wemby and his San Antonio Spurs 105-95 at Frost Bank Center. The Alien scored 11 points in the fourth quarter to erase an eight point deficit with six minutes left in the frame and take a small lead down the stretch only to blow it in the final moments. The narrative in the media after this game will be the Spurs are too overwhelmed by basketball’s biggest stage and experience is going to win out. Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs will not blink and god help every single overconfident spoiled obnoxious rich Knicks fan who is buying up tickets in San Antonio as well as the ones who are spending even more money to secure tickets inside of Madison Square Garden. I’m really going to enjoy watching Victor Wembanyama watching Knicks fans watching history repeat itself.

* * *

While it is obviously disappointing to drop Game 1 of the 2026 NBA Finals at home (and have a blemish now in what was previously a 6-0 record in opening games of NBA Finals series in franchise history), my confidence is still unwavering that we will win this series. Nothing about what happened on Wednesday night set off any alarm bells for me that the Knickerbockers are the better team. Everything that contributed to us taking an L is correctable. Let’s start with the fact we shot 32-89 from the field (36%). New York is a solid defensive ball club but our horrid shooting night was much more about us than it was about them. Our offense was generating all kinds of good looks the entire night, we were just missing them. Case in point, we underperformed our expected effective field goal percentage by 10.1%, our worst such underperformance of the playoffs and second-worst of the entire season. The play that epitomized our inability to knock down good looks in a nutshell was De’Aaron Fox missing a nine-foot pull up in the paint (a shot he makes in his sleep) after getting himself wide open off the two-man pick and roll game with Wemby down two points with 1:31 left to play in the fourth quarter. This missed opportunity to put the pressure back on New York to regain another lead was the most costly of numerous examples of us just missing good shots we normally make. I chalk this up to “first NBA Finals game ever” jitters affecting multiple players throughout the night. That being said, Fox going 3-13 (0-4 from deep) was unquestionably one of most glaring correctable components of our Game 1 performance and that needs to be fixed immediately. I have complete confidence that it will be fixed immediately and he will silence the naysayers once again in Game 2. He’s a gamer. Every time the chirping has started this postseason he’s had response to silence the noise because that’s what gamers do. Also, I don’t think it’s mentioned enough how commendable it is that De’Aaron has continued to grind these games out one after another without ever once using his high ankle sprain as an excuse in the games like Wednesday night where he hasn’t played up to his normal standards. He just puts his head down and goes back to work the next game. Last time I checked, we have been eliminated from the 2026 playoffs exactly zero times due to our veteran star struggled in a close out game while attempting to perform on one leg. De’Aaron Fox will be ready tonight. He’s gonna ball out in Game 2.

In a game that we lost by 10 but led 95-94 with 2:16 seconds remaining, we gave up 10 offensive rebounds for 23 second-chance points. In fact, on the very next play after Wemby sank a free throw to to give us that 95-94 lead, the Knicks looked discombobulated by our lockdown defense and OG Anunoby was forced to settle for a deep three but we neglected to box out Jalen Brunson who tipped it to Mikal Bridges and then drifted to the corner where Bridges gave it right back to him for a wide-open dagger corner three. That was a needless second-chance opportunity we gave New York’s best player and he capitalized on it to swing the momentum for the last time in the game. We didn’t score again after that. Giving up too many second-chance points in the first five games almost cost us the last series. But in Game 6 & 7 with our backs up against the wall facing elimination, we dug in with our attention to detail and had the discipline to correct that correctable which ultimately played a huge role in us outlasting the champs. The “playing in the NBA Finals for the first time” jitters will be gone tonight. We understand the urgency of every game from here on out so I expect us to play with the discipline to correct that correctable for Game 2 and for the rest of the series. Speaking of something we regressed on in Game 1 of the Finals, an important correctable we can also look to our experience playing OKC for lessons moving forward is we cannot turn the ball over five more times than our opponent again in this series like we did on Wednesday when we lost that battle 13-8. We gave the ‘Bockers five extra possessions and lost by ten. (Damn straight I just gave the Knickerbockers a sardonic nickname, we’ve got to deal with these pestiferous interlopers for another two weeks, after all.) Failing to protect the basketball is a correctable we have corrected more and more the deeper we have gotten into each series. Once again, with the stakes of ever game so heightened in the Finals, I fully expect that timeline to get sped up for Game 2 and for the turnover issue to get corrected this night and stay corrected for the duration. Speaking of turnovers, we obviously still need to talk about Victor’s performance. He had six of them, including one in the guts of the game that all but assured our fate. The play was a microcosm of Wemby’s frantic, sped-up night. There’s no question that the “playing in my first Finals game” jitters affected him more than anyone else on our team. Given that he’s the greatest player in the world, that’s recipe for disaster and it certainly was one. It jumped out of the television screen how amped up The Alien was to showcase his talent for the first time on basketball’s biggest stage and seeing him make so many “I want it so bad” mistakes was adorable but Vic had his worst (full) game of the playoffs and that is the number one correctable that needs to be corrected moving forward. The WCF MVP had decent top line stats with his 26 points, 12 rebounds, three blocks, two assists, and a steal but he shot an abysmal 6-21 from the field including only 2-9 from deep. Combine the terrible shooting with the aforementioned six turnovers and it all adds up to the type of performance where you’ve gift-wrapped Finals victory for your inferior opponent on your own home floor. Based on what I saw from the ‘Bockers on Wednesday night, they are going to need three more performances like that from the best player in the series to have any chance of raising a banner in October. Unfortunately for them, they’re not going to get any more. You can take it to the bank that that correctable is getting corrected. Every single time this postseason that Victor has failed to live up to expectations for a game, he has responded with the fury of a thousand suns. I expect tonight to be no different. I expect The Alien to put on such a dominant performance in Game 2 that it will demoralize a team that had been on a 12-game winning streak to the point that they forget how it will ever be possible to win against him again. I’m so excited to watch the alien abduction tonight of all of the momentum New York has been riding for these past twelve playoff games.

To end on a positive Game 1 performance note, Dylan Harper was the player of the game. Our 20-year-old prodigy rookie guard became the youngest player in history to score in double-figures in the NBA Finals. Dylan had 16 points, eight rebounds, one assist, and one steal in his Finals debut. His electric performance was reminiscent of Magic Johnson’s 16 point, 10 assist and nine rebound performance as a 20-year-old rookie against the Philadelphia 76ers in his debut during the 1980 NBA Finals. Harper may very well have pushed his rebound and assist stats closer to equaling Johnson’s had he played more minutes but San Antonio Spurs coach Mitch Johnson only played Dylan 28 minutes (and had him on the bench with the game in the balance during crunch time) whereas Magic played 40 minutes in his debut in 1980. Mitch’s rationale for keeping his highest performing player of the game on the bench to close was that it had nothing to do with not trusting Dylan in that spot but rather he just felt good about sticking with the group who had walked down the ‘Bockers from eight behind in the fourth to take that one point lead with two and a half minutes left. Who’s to say if having Harper on the floor down the stretch could have changed anything about giving up the offensive rebound and Brunson three that flipped the lead and the momentum for the final time but either way, I have a sneaking suspicion that Coach Johnson will have Dylan Harper in the closing group if/when we have another clutch game down the stretch in these Finals. With all of the formalities out of the way, I’m filled with nothing but excitement to watch Game 2 tonight and confidence that we will win it handedly. Just like Wemby, I’m not worried in the slightest about Wednesday’s setback. Despite us giving that one away in the end + having to deal with the annoyance of the six to eight percent penetration of the New York fans (especially the celebrity ones) celebrating in the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio (our house), there is so much still to remember and celebrate about the pageantry of Game 1 and the accomplishment of having this next generation of Spurs players take that stage for the first time. Fear and anxiety will not be part of the equation for me while watching Game 2 tonight. Also like Victor, I have visualized us rolling this inferior opponent tonight and that’s exactly what I expect to happen. I do not harbor the slightest bit of concern that this good (but not great) New York squad is going to not only ride a six-week hot streak to the Eastern Conference championship but is also going to ride it to snatch away from the #BlackAndSilver what we have earned by defeating the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder eight out of twelve times this season including a Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals on the road in their building—the right to call ourselves the best team in the league at the end of the season. The absurdity of considering the scenario where the 2025-26 San Antonio Spurs slay the dragon that was the OKC juggernaut, the dynasty in the making, the team that prognosticators were saying as recently as December could set a new NBA record for most wins in a season this year only to then blow the championship round against the Knickerbockers (of all teams) provides me complete inoculation from the cognitive state of uncertainty otherwise know as doubt. As Benjamin Franklin said, “When in doubt, don’t.” Indeed, doubt will find no safe harbor in my living room or in my mind tonight while I’m enjoying watching my favorite team in any sport perform in my favorite sporting even around in my favorite city in the world. Just like Victor Wembanyama, I am a rock.

#GoSpursGo


打纸老虎

Too amped from the lights
Gleaming brighter than ever
Time to settle in
And play the game the right way
For our rightful crown awaits

Written June 2026 in Aurora, CO


Featured Image Source: NBA.com

Headline Image Source: Sports Illustrated

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