Tag: NBA

  • Starting 5: Instant classic Game 7 coming tonight? Spurs & Thunder meet for trip to NBA Finals

    Names are made in the Playoffs, but Game 7s give us icons.

    Who will play their way into the history books and push their team to the NBA Finals?

    Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Tonight at 8 ET on NBC & Peacock.

    The Spurs and Thunder are ready for tonight's Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    May 30, 2026

    Win Or Go Home: Everything to know for tonight’s Western Conference Finals Game 7 between the Spurs and Thunder

    Thunder’s Path: From 8-0 to Game 7, how No. 1 OKC moved within one win of a Finals return

    Spurs’ Mission: How San Antonio forged its own experience and forced the champs to Game 7

    Been Here Before: Shai and OKC face first Game 7 since 2025 Finals clincher

    Tone-Setter: Thriving in big moments, Wemby leads Spurs into his first career Game 7


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Game 7 Saturday…

    Game 7

    It all comes down to this in the West. Forty-eight minutes to decide this chapter in one of the NBA’s hottest rivalries, and set up an NBA Finals matchup with the Knicks. Spurs-Thunder, Game 7, tonight (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch).

    Injury Report: OKC has listed both Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Ajay Mitchell (calf) out for Game 7.

    Game 7 Reads: The Athletic’s Jared Weiss writes about Wemby setting the tone in Game 6 … Tim Reynolds of the AP covers the difference in the two teams heading into Game 7 … Andscape’s Marc Spears profiles Mitch Johnson, who’s earned the ‘full trust’ of the Spurs org.

    Playoff bracket


    1. EVERYTHING TO KNOW FOR GAME 7 IN 3 MINUTES

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama

    Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images

    Tonight marks the 160th Game 7 in NBA history. But few have looked quite like this one.

    It’s the fifth of these 2026 Playoffs, tying the all-time mark for most in any NBA postseason.

    It’s a win-or-go-home showdown between elite rivals, staged by two teams who know each other inside-and-out at this stage.

    And, this isn’t even their first win-or-go-home matchup this season(!)

    Tonight’s Spurs-Thunder finale (8 ET, NBC/Peacock) is adding up to be a Game 7 for the ages. Here’s everything you need to know:

    • Most-Familiar Foes: Tonight represents the 12th meeting between San Antonio and OKC this season, just the second time in 30 years two teams have met that many times in a single season across the regular-season and Playoffs
    • Win-Or-Go-Home, Again: In the short history of the NBA Cup, this is already the second time that two teams who met in a win-or-go-home Knockout Rounds game meet in a Playoff Game 7 later that year
    • Spurs Took Round 1: San Antonio eliminated OKC – just its second loss of the season at that point – in the Cup Semifinal on Dec. 13. It was their first of the 12 meetings, building a rivalry forged in the season’s biggest moments
    • West Parallels: The other two teams to wage two win-or-go-home games in the same season were the 2024-25 Rockets and Warriors, in the Cup Quarterfinals (Rockets win) and their First Round Game 7 in the Playoffs (Warriors win)
    • Houston and Golden State also represent the last time the West Finals went to a Game 7, with the Warriors moving on to claim their second straight NBA title in 2018 – the NBA’s last repeat champion

    Five Game 7s

    The reigning champs are out to rewrite that fact, with a return trip to the Finals on the line tonight, while San Antonio aims to uphold the other end of that trend: A Spurs win would guarantee an eighth different champion in the last eight NBA seasons.

    • Storm’s Edge: The Thunder are 4-2 in Game 7s in the OKC era, and 4-0 at home, where they’ll host tonight. Home teams are 117-42 all-time in Game 7s. The visiting Spurs are 4-7 all-time, and 1-5 on the road
    • “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said Thursday… “It being in your building is nice – it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us – but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to… be the better basketball team.”
    • Pressure Tested: OKC last played a Game 7 in last year’s Finals, topping Indiana to win it all. Chet Holmgren set a Finals Game 7 record with 5 blocks, while Shai (29 pts, 12 ast) claimed series MVP
    • Still Shai: This will be the fourth Game 7 of Gilgeous-Alexander’s career (2-1), where the West’s 2026 postseason scoring leader (27.1 ppg) averages 27.7 ppg
    • Trophy Tussle: This is the second time ever that the season’s Kia MVP and the Kia Defensive Player of the Year will face off in a Game 7. Shai and Wemby are also just the third pair of MVP finalists to meet in a Game 7 in 40 years
    • Two Titans: This is the sixth Conference Finals Game 7 between the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds since 1983, and the first Game 7 in that same span featuring the teams with the two best records from that regular season

    “I think a lot of fans are going to be happy,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, looking ahead. “They say it’s the best line in sports, I believe.”

    Game 7, tonight.


    2. HOW THE NO. 1 THUNDER GOT TO GAME 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks

    Eight wins, zero losses.

    The 2025 NBA Champion Thunder started their title defense undefeated through two rounds, before running into their fast-charging rival Spurs in the West Finals.

    Six games of pure cinema later, and OKC needs one decisive win to return to the championship round. Here’s how the Thunder got to Game 7.

    • The West’s top seed followed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s lead in its First Round series against Phoenix, as the MVP built up from 25 points in the Game 1 win, to 37 with 9 assists in Game 2, to a Playoff career-high 42 in Game 3
    • Next-Man Experts: The return of Jalen Wiliams’ hamstring issues in Game 2 forced the Thunder to utilize the rotation depth they strengthened through injuries in the regular-season. Ajay Mitchell (15 pts) started Game 3’s win
    • Storm Warning: Game 4’s series-clincher showcased Thunder themes still paying off two rounds later, with strong play from SGA (31 pts), Chet Holmgren (24 pts, 56.3 FG%), Mitchell (22 pts), Isaiah Hartenstein (18 pts, 12 reb), and Alex Caruso (4-6 3s)

    “Just confidence-wise, as a group, it’s good to get the Playoff runs started off that way,” Shai said after Game 4… “You never know what can happen.”

    • What happened next, in Round 2, was a concerted defensive effort by the No. 4 Lakers on SGA. After netting 135 total points on 55.1 FG% against Phoenix, L.A. held Shai to 98 points in four games on 47.1 FG%
    • In his place, OKC got lead scoring efforts from Holmgren (20.0 ppg) and Mitchell (22.5 ppg), with Ajay logging his two highest-scoring Playoff games in Games 3 (24 pts) and 4 (28 pts). Jared McCain (11.5 ppg, 12-19 3s) also broke through
    • Taking the first three games, OKC faced its first 4th-quarter deficit of these Playoffs in Game 4, as late as the final minute. But Holmgren slammed home the go-ahead dunk with 33 ticks left, to put away LeBron’s (24 pts) Lakers
    Thunder bench

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    “Hats off to my teammates,” Shai said. “Obviously, their goal was to make my teammates beat them in the first three games, and my teammates did exactly that…”

    “In the Playoffs, no two games are the same,” he continued. “Especially when you change opponents. The challenges are all coming up.”

    • The Thunder’s greatest challenge this year returned in the form of the No. 2 Spurs, who took Game 1 of the West Finals in OKC. The champs responded to take Games 2 and 3
    • SGA rallied from Game 1 (7-23 FG) for 30 and 26-point outings in the two straight wins. OKC went back to Hartenstein (10 pts, 13 reb) in Game 2 vs. Wemby, and the Thunder bench scored 76 points in Game 3, headlined by 24 from McCain
    • Game 5 put the champs within a win of a Finals return after they took the lead for good as the 1st quarter ended. 32 from Shai, 22 from Caruso and 20 from McCain in his first-career Playoff start helped put the Spurs’ season on the line

    But after San Antonio sent the series to a final, deciding game, Caruso said the defending champs still control their own fate.

    “They make it challenging but, for the most part, Game 7’s got to be about us… making sure we’re doing the stuff we need to do at a high level.”


    3. HOW THE NO. 2 SPURS GOT TO GAME 7

    Victor Wembanyama flexes and yells.

    Ronald Cortes/NBAE via Getty Images

    Seven players making their NBA Playoff debuts.

    Multiple games without their MVP finalist Victor Wembanyama and All-Star floor general De’Aaron Fox.

    It’s been an up-and-down first venture into the postseason for this young Spurs core. Here’s how the West’s No. 2 seed has learned and applied in real-time to come within a game of the NBA Finals.

    • “The atmosphere was different,” noted Victor Wembanyama in his first Playoff action, where he paced a Game 1 win over the Trail Blazers with a Spurs’ debut-record 35 points, including an NBA-record 21-point debut half
    • Game 2 saw Wembanyama enter concussion protocol after a fall. San Antonio lost its lead at home in the 4th, but responded in Game 3, with Wemby out. Stephon Castle (33 pts) and Dylan Harper (27 pts) provided Playoff career-highs
    • Wemby returned for Game 4 with San Antonio up 2-1, posting a monster line (27 pts, 11 reb, 4 stl, 7 blk) for his first road Playoff win. He then fueled the Game 5 closeout (17 pts, 14 reb, 6 blk), as his Spurs claimed their first elimination game
    • “We gained experience and I’m still hungry for even better matchups,” Wemby said. “Definitely a different feeling to win against somebody and think that their season’s over.”

    Anthony Edwards and the No. 6 Wolves were hungry too, coming to town as San Antonio’s next matchup. Minnesota was out to return to its third consecutive West Finals.

    Anthony Edwards drives to the rim against Victor Wembanyama.

    Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ant’s Surprise: Returning early from injury, Edwards’ (18 pts) 11-point 4th quarter stole the show in Game 1, despite Wemby’s (11 pts, 15 reb) historic 12-block triple-double
    • “Offensively, I used too much energy on things that didn’t really help our team, so that’s on me,” Wembanyama said postgame
    • The Spurs bounced back to hand the Wolves their largest-ever Playoff loss (133-95) in Game 2, and Wemby (39 pts, 15 reb) soared to his highest-scoring Playoff game at the time to grab the series lead in Game 3
    • Following his first-career ejection in Game 4, Wembanyama returned on a mission in Game 5 (27 pts, 17 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk), and Castle (32 pts, 11 reb) led the charge in Game 6, where San Antonio led by as many as 37 to eliminate Minnesota

    Overcoming the physical series with the Wolves, Castle looked ahead to a West Finals matchup with a Thunder squad San Antonio went 4-1 against in the regular-season.

    “We know it’s going to be tough to knock them off, but we’re pretty confident we could do it,” said Castle.

    • That confidence was on full display in Game 1, a double-OT thriller on OKC’s home floor, with an electric 41-point, 24-rebound performance from Wemby and a Spurs’ Playoff-record seven steals from Harper (24 pts)
    • Clamps: After the champs won two straight, San Antonio rallied in Game 4 behind Wemby’s complete performance (33 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk) and a defensive showing that held OKC to a season-low 38-point 1st half
    • Facing elimination after dropping Game 5, the young Spurs forced Game 7 on the strength of their 32-13 3rd-quarter takeover, where they held OKC scoreless for over 7 minutes in a 20-0 run. Wemby (28 pts, 10 reb, 3 blk) set the tone

    So what will it take for San Antonio to unseat the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7?

    “First thing is: listening to the experienced people, whether it’s on our team, on our staff, or outside,” Wemby said. “We got the chance to have plenty of those [people] around.”


    4. SGA, OKC FACE FIRST GAME 7 SINCE 2025 FINALS CLINCHER

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

    After San Antonio took Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was asked about fatigue.

    “Oh I’m good, I’m ready to go. Biggest game of my career… and if I lose, my season’s over.”

    Put that way, the situation sounds daunting. But for SGA, the biggest games of his career have been some of his best.

    • Mountain Climb: In the first of two Game 7s for the Thunder in last year’s title run, Shai (35 pts, 3 stl) outscored Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray to help put away the Nuggets in the West Semis
    • “Every night’s an opportunity to learn and get better, and we’re gonna do so,” Shai said at the time of his young Thunder team gaining the big-game experience they lacked, in real-time
    • Crash Course: That OKC squad was the 2nd-youngest team ever to win a championship, with an average age weighted by playing time of 25.36
    • Completing that final step took one more Game 7, OKC’s most recent before tonight. SGA (29 pts, 12 ast, 2 blk) rose up again in that deciding game of the Finals against Indy, claiming the series’ MVP honors

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Almost a year later, the champs now know exactly what it takes to win in these moments.

    • “It’s going to take more than just Shai to beat [the Spurs], to beat any team at this point,” Alex Caruso said… “It’s just about being confident in each other and going out there and playing.”
    • Responding Thunder: Over the last two Playoff runs, OKC is a perfect 9-0 following a postseason loss, including Games 2 and 5 of this West Finals

    Can the Thunder again avoid consecutive losses tonight in Game 7 to return to the NBA Finals?


    5. WEMBY LEADS SPURS INTO HIS FIRST CAREER GAME 7

    Spurs huddle

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    He’s done it with his play.

    He can do it with his words.

    And sometimes, Victor Wembanyama can set the tone for the Spurs with just his presence.

    “He felt… an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways,” coach Mitch Johnson said of Wemby during these West Finals.

    Tonight, the 22-year-old is set to play the biggest game of his young career, in the series’ deciding game. Fortunately for the Spurs, their tone-setter’s never shied away from big moments.

    • Alien Unwrapped: All eyes were on Wemby for his Christmas Day debut at MSG in 2024, where he set the Spurs’ record for most points on the Holiday with 42
    • Emirates NBA Cup: Wemby (22 pts, 9 reb, 21 min) returned from a calf injury to fuel the Spurs’ knockout of OKC in this season’s Semifinals, before adding 18 points in the Cup championship against the Knicks
    • “Wemby set the tone,” said All-Star Game MVP Anthony Edwards of first-time starter Wembanyama, who led Team World with 33 points on the day

    “That’s kind of what Vic does,” Dylan Harper said in the West Finals. “He kind of steps into big moments. He’s never afraid of it. He loves that moment.”

    Spurs huddle

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Embracing the moment in his first-career Playoffs has set Wembanyama apart as the first player ever to total 50+ blocks and 25+ made threes in one postseason run
    • No Nerves: He’s also set a Spurs’ franchise record for most total points (350+) in a player’s first Playoffs
    • “I think he has shown in his three years – in a lot of different situations, with a lot of different circumstances – that he’s gonna attack those moments,” coach Johnson said

    Wemby’s Spurs will look to attack Game 7 tonight.

  • Starting 5: Instant classic Game 7 coming tonight? Spurs & Thunder meet for trip to NBA Finals

    Names are made in the Playoffs, but Game 7s give us icons.

    Who will play their way into the history books and push their team to the NBA Finals?

    Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Tonight at 8 ET on NBC & Peacock.

    The Spurs and Thunder are ready for tonight's Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    May 30, 2026

    Win Or Go Home: Everything to know for tonight’s Western Conference Finals Game 7 between the Spurs and Thunder

    Thunder’s Path: From 8-0 to Game 7, how No. 1 OKC moved within one win of a Finals return

    Spurs’ Mission: How San Antonio forged its own experience and forced the champs to Game 7

    Been Here Before: Shai and OKC face first Game 7 since 2025 Finals clincher

    Tone-Setter: Thriving in big moments, Wemby leads Spurs into his first career Game 7


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Game 7 Saturday…

    Game 7

    It all comes down to this in the West. Forty-eight minutes to decide this chapter in one of the NBA’s hottest rivalries, and set up an NBA Finals matchup with the Knicks. Spurs-Thunder, Game 7, tonight (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch).

    Injury Report: OKC has listed both Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Ajay Mitchell (calf) out for Game 7.

    Game 7 Reads: The Athletic’s Jared Weiss writes about Wemby setting the tone in Game 6 … Tim Reynolds of the AP covers the difference in the two teams heading into Game 7 … Andscape’s Marc Spears profiles Mitch Johnson, who’s earned the ‘full trust’ of the Spurs org.

    Playoff bracket


    1. EVERYTHING TO KNOW FOR GAME 7 IN 3 MINUTES

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama

    Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images

    Tonight marks the 160th Game 7 in NBA history. But few have looked quite like this one.

    It’s the fifth of these 2026 Playoffs, tying the all-time mark for most in any NBA postseason.

    It’s a win-or-go-home showdown between elite rivals, staged by two teams who know each other inside-and-out at this stage.

    And, this isn’t even their first win-or-go-home matchup this season(!)

    Tonight’s Spurs-Thunder finale (8 ET, NBC/Peacock) is adding up to be a Game 7 for the ages. Here’s everything you need to know:

    • Most-Familiar Foes: Tonight represents the 12th meeting between San Antonio and OKC this season, just the second time in 30 years two teams have met that many times in a single season across the regular-season and Playoffs
    • Win-Or-Go-Home, Again: In the short history of the NBA Cup, this is already the second time that two teams who met in a win-or-go-home Knockout Rounds game meet in a Playoff Game 7 later that year
    • Spurs Took Round 1: San Antonio eliminated OKC – just its second loss of the season at that point – in the Cup Semifinal on Dec. 13. It was their first of the 12 meetings, building a rivalry forged in the season’s biggest moments
    • West Parallels: The other two teams to wage two win-or-go-home games in the same season were the 2024-25 Rockets and Warriors, in the Cup Quarterfinals (Rockets win) and their First Round Game 7 in the Playoffs (Warriors win)
    • Houston and Golden State also represent the last time the West Finals went to a Game 7, with the Warriors moving on to claim their second straight NBA title in 2018 – the NBA’s last repeat champion

    Five Game 7s

    The reigning champs are out to rewrite that fact, with a return trip to the Finals on the line tonight, while San Antonio aims to uphold the other end of that trend: A Spurs win would guarantee an eighth different champion in the last eight NBA seasons.

    • Storm’s Edge: The Thunder are 4-2 in Game 7s in the OKC era, and 4-0 at home, where they’ll host tonight. Home teams are 117-42 all-time in Game 7s. The visiting Spurs are 4-7 all-time, and 1-5 on the road
    • “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said Thursday… “It being in your building is nice – it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us – but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to… be the better basketball team.”
    • Pressure Tested: OKC last played a Game 7 in last year’s Finals, topping Indiana to win it all. Chet Holmgren set a Finals Game 7 record with 5 blocks, while Shai (29 pts, 12 ast) claimed series MVP
    • Still Shai: This will be the fourth Game 7 of Gilgeous-Alexander’s career (2-1), where the West’s 2026 postseason scoring leader (27.1 ppg) averages 27.7 ppg
    • Trophy Tussle: This is the second time ever that the season’s Kia MVP and the Kia Defensive Player of the Year will face off in a Game 7. Shai and Wemby are also just the third pair of MVP finalists to meet in a Game 7 in 40 years
    • Two Titans: This is the sixth Conference Finals Game 7 between the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds since 1983, and the first Game 7 in that same span featuring the teams with the two best records from that regular season

    “I think a lot of fans are going to be happy,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, looking ahead. “They say it’s the best line in sports, I believe.”

    Game 7, tonight.


    2. HOW THE NO. 1 THUNDER GOT TO GAME 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks

    Eight wins, zero losses.

    The 2025 NBA Champion Thunder started their title defense undefeated through two rounds, before running into their fast-charging rival Spurs in the West Finals.

    Six games of pure cinema later, and OKC needs one decisive win to return to the championship round. Here’s how the Thunder got to Game 7.

    • The West’s top seed followed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s lead in its First Round series against Phoenix, as the MVP built up from 25 points in the Game 1 win, to 37 with 9 assists in Game 2, to a Playoff career-high 42 in Game 3
    • Next-Man Experts: The return of Jalen Wiliams’ hamstring issues in Game 2 forced the Thunder to utilize the rotation depth they strengthened through injuries in the regular-season. Ajay Mitchell (15 pts) started Game 3’s win
    • Storm Warning: Game 4’s series-clincher showcased Thunder themes still paying off two rounds later, with strong play from SGA (31 pts), Chet Holmgren (24 pts, 56.3 FG%), Mitchell (22 pts), Isaiah Hartenstein (18 pts, 12 reb), and Alex Caruso (4-6 3s)

    “Just confidence-wise, as a group, it’s good to get the Playoff runs started off that way,” Shai said after Game 4… “You never know what can happen.”

    • What happened next, in Round 2, was a concerted defensive effort by the No. 4 Lakers on SGA. After netting 135 total points on 55.1 FG% against Phoenix, L.A. held Shai to 98 points in four games on 47.1 FG%
    • In his place, OKC got lead scoring efforts from Holmgren (20.0 ppg) and Mitchell (22.5 ppg), with Ajay logging his two highest-scoring Playoff games in Games 3 (24 pts) and 4 (28 pts). Jared McCain (11.5 ppg, 12-19 3s) also broke through
    • Taking the first three games, OKC faced its first 4th-quarter deficit of these Playoffs in Game 4, as late as the final minute. But Holmgren slammed home the go-ahead dunk with 33 ticks left, to put away LeBron’s (24 pts) Lakers
    Thunder bench

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    “Hats off to my teammates,” Shai said. “Obviously, their goal was to make my teammates beat them in the first three games, and my teammates did exactly that…”

    “In the Playoffs, no two games are the same,” he continued. “Especially when you change opponents. The challenges are all coming up.”

    • The Thunder’s greatest challenge this year returned in the form of the No. 2 Spurs, who took Game 1 of the West Finals in OKC. The champs responded to take Games 2 and 3
    • SGA rallied from Game 1 (7-23 FG) for 30 and 26-point outings in the two straight wins. OKC went back to Hartenstein (10 pts, 13 reb) in Game 2 vs. Wemby, and the Thunder bench scored 76 points in Game 3, headlined by 24 from McCain
    • Game 5 put the champs within a win of a Finals return after they took the lead for good as the 1st quarter ended. 32 from Shai, 22 from Caruso and 20 from McCain in his first-career Playoff start helped put the Spurs’ season on the line

    But after San Antonio sent the series to a final, deciding game, Caruso said the defending champs still control their own fate.

    “They make it challenging but, for the most part, Game 7’s got to be about us… making sure we’re doing the stuff we need to do at a high level.”


    3. HOW THE NO. 2 SPURS GOT TO GAME 7

    Victor Wembanyama flexes and yells.

    Ronald Cortes/NBAE via Getty Images

    Seven players making their NBA Playoff debuts.

    Multiple games without their MVP finalist Victor Wembanyama and All-Star floor general De’Aaron Fox.

    It’s been an up-and-down first venture into the postseason for this young Spurs core. Here’s how the West’s No. 2 seed has learned and applied in real-time to come within a game of the NBA Finals.

    • “The atmosphere was different,” noted Victor Wembanyama in his first Playoff action, where he paced a Game 1 win over the Trail Blazers with a Spurs’ debut-record 35 points, including an NBA-record 21-point debut half
    • Game 2 saw Wembanyama enter concussion protocol after a fall. San Antonio lost its lead at home in the 4th, but responded in Game 3, with Wemby out. Stephon Castle (33 pts) and Dylan Harper (27 pts) provided Playoff career-highs
    • Wemby returned for Game 4 with San Antonio up 2-1, posting a monster line (27 pts, 11 reb, 4 stl, 7 blk) for his first road Playoff win. He then fueled the Game 5 closeout (17 pts, 14 reb, 6 blk), as his Spurs claimed their first elimination game
    • “We gained experience and I’m still hungry for even better matchups,” Wemby said. “Definitely a different feeling to win against somebody and think that their season’s over.”

    Anthony Edwards and the No. 6 Wolves were hungry too, coming to town as San Antonio’s next matchup. Minnesota was out to return to its third consecutive West Finals.

    Anthony Edwards drives to the rim against Victor Wembanyama.

    Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ant’s Surprise: Returning early from injury, Edwards’ (18 pts) 11-point 4th quarter stole the show in Game 1, despite Wemby’s (11 pts, 15 reb) historic 12-block triple-double
    • “Offensively, I used too much energy on things that didn’t really help our team, so that’s on me,” Wembanyama said postgame
    • The Spurs bounced back to hand the Wolves their largest-ever Playoff loss (133-95) in Game 2, and Wemby (39 pts, 15 reb) soared to his highest-scoring Playoff game at the time to grab the series lead in Game 3
    • Following his first-career ejection in Game 4, Wembanyama returned on a mission in Game 5 (27 pts, 17 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk), and Castle (32 pts, 11 reb) led the charge in Game 6, where San Antonio led by as many as 37 to eliminate Minnesota

    Overcoming the physical series with the Wolves, Castle looked ahead to a West Finals matchup with a Thunder squad San Antonio went 4-1 against in the regular-season.

    “We know it’s going to be tough to knock them off, but we’re pretty confident we could do it,” said Castle.

    • That confidence was on full display in Game 1, a double-OT thriller on OKC’s home floor, with an electric 41-point, 24-rebound performance from Wemby and a Spurs’ Playoff-record seven steals from Harper (24 pts)
    • Clamps: After the champs won two straight, San Antonio rallied in Game 4 behind Wemby’s complete performance (33 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk) and a defensive showing that held OKC to a season-low 38-point 1st half
    • Facing elimination after dropping Game 5, the young Spurs forced Game 7 on the strength of their 32-13 3rd-quarter takeover, where they held OKC scoreless for over 7 minutes in a 20-0 run. Wemby (28 pts, 10 reb, 3 blk) set the tone

    So what will it take for San Antonio to unseat the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7?

    “First thing is: listening to the experienced people, whether it’s on our team, on our staff, or outside,” Wemby said. “We got the chance to have plenty of those [people] around.”


    4. SGA, OKC FACE FIRST GAME 7 SINCE 2025 FINALS CLINCHER

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

    After San Antonio took Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was asked about fatigue.

    “Oh I’m good, I’m ready to go. Biggest game of my career… and if I lose, my season’s over.”

    Put that way, the situation sounds daunting. But for SGA, the biggest games of his career have been some of his best.

    • Mountain Climb: In the first of two Game 7s for the Thunder in last year’s title run, Shai (35 pts, 3 stl) outscored Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray to help put away the Nuggets in the West Semis
    • “Every night’s an opportunity to learn and get better, and we’re gonna do so,” Shai said at the time of his young Thunder team gaining the big-game experience they lacked, in real-time
    • Crash Course: That OKC squad was the 2nd-youngest team ever to win a championship, with an average age weighted by playing time of 25.36
    • Completing that final step took one more Game 7, OKC’s most recent before tonight. SGA (29 pts, 12 ast, 2 blk) rose up again in that deciding game of the Finals against Indy, claiming the series’ MVP honors

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Almost a year later, the champs now know exactly what it takes to win in these moments.

    • “It’s going to take more than just Shai to beat [the Spurs], to beat any team at this point,” Alex Caruso said… “It’s just about being confident in each other and going out there and playing.”
    • Responding Thunder: Over the last two Playoff runs, OKC is a perfect 9-0 following a postseason loss, including Games 2 and 5 of this West Finals

    Can the Thunder again avoid consecutive losses tonight in Game 7 to return to the NBA Finals?


    5. WEMBY LEADS SPURS INTO HIS FIRST CAREER GAME 7

    Spurs huddle

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    He’s done it with his play.

    He can do it with his words.

    And sometimes, Victor Wembanyama can set the tone for the Spurs with just his presence.

    “He felt… an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways,” coach Mitch Johnson said of Wemby during these West Finals.

    Tonight, the 22-year-old is set to play the biggest game of his young career, in the series’ deciding game. Fortunately for the Spurs, their tone-setter’s never shied away from big moments.

    • Alien Unwrapped: All eyes were on Wemby for his Christmas Day debut at MSG in 2024, where he set the Spurs’ record for most points on the Holiday with 42
    • Emirates NBA Cup: Wemby (22 pts, 9 reb, 21 min) returned from a calf injury to fuel the Spurs’ knockout of OKC in this season’s Semifinals, before adding 18 points in the Cup championship against the Knicks
    • “Wemby set the tone,” said All-Star Game MVP Anthony Edwards of first-time starter Wembanyama, who led Team World with 33 points on the day

    “That’s kind of what Vic does,” Dylan Harper said in the West Finals. “He kind of steps into big moments. He’s never afraid of it. He loves that moment.”

    Spurs huddle

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Embracing the moment in his first-career Playoffs has set Wembanyama apart as the first player ever to total 50+ blocks and 25+ made threes in one postseason run
    • No Nerves: He’s also set a Spurs’ franchise record for most total points (350+) in a player’s first Playoffs
    • “I think he has shown in his three years – in a lot of different situations, with a lot of different circumstances – that he’s gonna attack those moments,” coach Johnson said

    Wemby’s Spurs will look to attack Game 7 tonight.

  • Starting 5: Instant classic Game 7 coming tonight? Spurs & Thunder meet for trip to NBA Finals

    Names are made in the Playoffs, but Game 7s give us icons.

    Who will play their way into the history books and push their team to the NBA Finals?

    Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Tonight at 8 ET on NBC & Peacock.

    The Spurs and Thunder are ready for tonight's Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    May 30, 2026

    Win Or Go Home: Everything to know for tonight’s Western Conference Finals Game 7 between the Spurs and Thunder

    Thunder’s Path: From 8-0 to Game 7, how No. 1 OKC moved within one win of a Finals return

    Spurs’ Mission: How San Antonio forged its own experience and forced the champs to Game 7

    Been Here Before: Shai and OKC face first Game 7 since 2025 Finals clincher

    Tone-Setter: Thriving in big moments, Wemby leads Spurs into his first career Game 7


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Game 7 Saturday…

    Game 7

    It all comes down to this in the West. Forty-eight minutes to decide this chapter in one of the NBA’s hottest rivalries, and set up an NBA Finals matchup with the Knicks. Spurs-Thunder, Game 7, tonight (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch).

    Injury Report: OKC has listed both Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Ajay Mitchell (calf) out for Game 7.

    Game 7 Reads: The Athletic’s Jared Weiss writes about Wemby setting the tone in Game 6 … Tim Reynolds of the AP covers the difference in the two teams heading into Game 7 … Andscape’s Marc Spears profiles Mitch Johnson, who’s earned the ‘full trust’ of the Spurs org.

    Playoff bracket


    1. EVERYTHING TO KNOW FOR GAME 7 IN 3 MINUTES

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama

    Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images

    Tonight marks the 160th Game 7 in NBA history. But few have looked quite like this one.

    It’s the fifth of these 2026 Playoffs, tying the all-time mark for most in any NBA postseason.

    It’s a win-or-go-home showdown between elite rivals, staged by two teams who know each other inside-and-out at this stage.

    And, this isn’t even their first win-or-go-home matchup this season(!)

    Tonight’s Spurs-Thunder finale (8 ET, NBC/Peacock) is adding up to be a Game 7 for the ages. Here’s everything you need to know:

    • Most-Familiar Foes: Tonight represents the 12th meeting between San Antonio and OKC this season, just the second time in 30 years two teams have met that many times in a single season across the regular-season and Playoffs
    • Win-Or-Go-Home, Again: In the short history of the NBA Cup, this is already the second time that two teams who met in a win-or-go-home Knockout Rounds game meet in a Playoff Game 7 later that year
    • Spurs Took Round 1: San Antonio eliminated OKC – just its second loss of the season at that point – in the Cup Semifinal on Dec. 13. It was their first of the 12 meetings, building a rivalry forged in the season’s biggest moments
    • West Parallels: The other two teams to wage two win-or-go-home games in the same season were the 2024-25 Rockets and Warriors, in the Cup Quarterfinals (Rockets win) and their First Round Game 7 in the Playoffs (Warriors win)
    • Houston and Golden State also represent the last time the West Finals went to a Game 7, with the Warriors moving on to claim their second straight NBA title in 2018 – the NBA’s last repeat champion

    Five Game 7s

    The reigning champs are out to rewrite that fact, with a return trip to the Finals on the line tonight, while San Antonio aims to uphold the other end of that trend: A Spurs win would guarantee an eighth different champion in the last eight NBA seasons.

    • Storm’s Edge: The Thunder are 4-2 in Game 7s in the OKC era, and 4-0 at home, where they’ll host tonight. Home teams are 117-42 all-time in Game 7s. The visiting Spurs are 4-7 all-time, and 1-5 on the road
    • “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said Thursday… “It being in your building is nice – it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us – but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to… be the better basketball team.”
    • Pressure Tested: OKC last played a Game 7 in last year’s Finals, topping Indiana to win it all. Chet Holmgren set a Finals Game 7 record with 5 blocks, while Shai (29 pts, 12 ast) claimed series MVP
    • Still Shai: This will be the fourth Game 7 of Gilgeous-Alexander’s career (2-1), where the West’s 2026 postseason scoring leader (27.1 ppg) averages 27.7 ppg
    • Trophy Tussle: This is the second time ever that the season’s Kia MVP and the Kia Defensive Player of the Year will face off in a Game 7. Shai and Wemby are also just the third pair of MVP finalists to meet in a Game 7 in 40 years
    • Two Titans: This is the sixth Conference Finals Game 7 between the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds since 1983, and the first Game 7 in that same span featuring the teams with the two best records from that regular season

    “I think a lot of fans are going to be happy,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, looking ahead. “They say it’s the best line in sports, I believe.”

    Game 7, tonight.


    2. HOW THE NO. 1 THUNDER GOT TO GAME 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks

    Eight wins, zero losses.

    The 2025 NBA Champion Thunder started their title defense undefeated through two rounds, before running into their fast-charging rival Spurs in the West Finals.

    Six games of pure cinema later, and OKC needs one decisive win to return to the championship round. Here’s how the Thunder got to Game 7.

    • The West’s top seed followed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s lead in its First Round series against Phoenix, as the MVP built up from 25 points in the Game 1 win, to 37 with 9 assists in Game 2, to a Playoff career-high 42 in Game 3
    • Next-Man Experts: The return of Jalen Wiliams’ hamstring issues in Game 2 forced the Thunder to utilize the rotation depth they strengthened through injuries in the regular-season. Ajay Mitchell (15 pts) started Game 3’s win
    • Storm Warning: Game 4’s series-clincher showcased Thunder themes still paying off two rounds later, with strong play from SGA (31 pts), Chet Holmgren (24 pts, 56.3 FG%), Mitchell (22 pts), Isaiah Hartenstein (18 pts, 12 reb), and Alex Caruso (4-6 3s)

    “Just confidence-wise, as a group, it’s good to get the Playoff runs started off that way,” Shai said after Game 4… “You never know what can happen.”

    • What happened next, in Round 2, was a concerted defensive effort by the No. 4 Lakers on SGA. After netting 135 total points on 55.1 FG% against Phoenix, L.A. held Shai to 98 points in four games on 47.1 FG%
    • In his place, OKC got lead scoring efforts from Holmgren (20.0 ppg) and Mitchell (22.5 ppg), with Ajay logging his two highest-scoring Playoff games in Games 3 (24 pts) and 4 (28 pts). Jared McCain (11.5 ppg, 12-19 3s) also broke through
    • Taking the first three games, OKC faced its first 4th-quarter deficit of these Playoffs in Game 4, as late as the final minute. But Holmgren slammed home the go-ahead dunk with 33 ticks left, to put away LeBron’s (24 pts) Lakers
    Thunder bench

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    “Hats off to my teammates,” Shai said. “Obviously, their goal was to make my teammates beat them in the first three games, and my teammates did exactly that…”

    “In the Playoffs, no two games are the same,” he continued. “Especially when you change opponents. The challenges are all coming up.”

    • The Thunder’s greatest challenge this year returned in the form of the No. 2 Spurs, who took Game 1 of the West Finals in OKC. The champs responded to take Games 2 and 3
    • SGA rallied from Game 1 (7-23 FG) for 30 and 26-point outings in the two straight wins. OKC went back to Hartenstein (10 pts, 13 reb) in Game 2 vs. Wemby, and the Thunder bench scored 76 points in Game 3, headlined by 24 from McCain
    • Game 5 put the champs within a win of a Finals return after they took the lead for good as the 1st quarter ended. 32 from Shai, 22 from Caruso and 20 from McCain in his first-career Playoff start helped put the Spurs’ season on the line

    But after San Antonio sent the series to a final, deciding game, Caruso said the defending champs still control their own fate.

    “They make it challenging but, for the most part, Game 7’s got to be about us… making sure we’re doing the stuff we need to do at a high level.”


    3. HOW THE NO. 2 SPURS GOT TO GAME 7

    Victor Wembanyama flexes and yells.

    Ronald Cortes/NBAE via Getty Images

    Seven players making their NBA Playoff debuts.

    Multiple games without their MVP finalist Victor Wembanyama and All-Star floor general De’Aaron Fox.

    It’s been an up-and-down first venture into the postseason for this young Spurs core. Here’s how the West’s No. 2 seed has learned and applied in real-time to come within a game of the NBA Finals.

    • “The atmosphere was different,” noted Victor Wembanyama in his first Playoff action, where he paced a Game 1 win over the Trail Blazers with a Spurs’ debut-record 35 points, including an NBA-record 21-point debut half
    • Game 2 saw Wembanyama enter concussion protocol after a fall. San Antonio lost its lead at home in the 4th, but responded in Game 3, with Wemby out. Stephon Castle (33 pts) and Dylan Harper (27 pts) provided Playoff career-highs
    • Wemby returned for Game 4 with San Antonio up 2-1, posting a monster line (27 pts, 11 reb, 4 stl, 7 blk) for his first road Playoff win. He then fueled the Game 5 closeout (17 pts, 14 reb, 6 blk), as his Spurs claimed their first elimination game
    • “We gained experience and I’m still hungry for even better matchups,” Wemby said. “Definitely a different feeling to win against somebody and think that their season’s over.”

    Anthony Edwards and the No. 6 Wolves were hungry too, coming to town as San Antonio’s next matchup. Minnesota was out to return to its third consecutive West Finals.

    Anthony Edwards drives to the rim against Victor Wembanyama.

    Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ant’s Surprise: Returning early from injury, Edwards’ (18 pts) 11-point 4th quarter stole the show in Game 1, despite Wemby’s (11 pts, 15 reb) historic 12-block triple-double
    • “Offensively, I used too much energy on things that didn’t really help our team, so that’s on me,” Wembanyama said postgame
    • The Spurs bounced back to hand the Wolves their largest-ever Playoff loss (133-95) in Game 2, and Wemby (39 pts, 15 reb) soared to his highest-scoring Playoff game at the time to grab the series lead in Game 3
    • Following his first-career ejection in Game 4, Wembanyama returned on a mission in Game 5 (27 pts, 17 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk), and Castle (32 pts, 11 reb) led the charge in Game 6, where San Antonio led by as many as 37 to eliminate Minnesota

    Overcoming the physical series with the Wolves, Castle looked ahead to a West Finals matchup with a Thunder squad San Antonio went 4-1 against in the regular-season.

    “We know it’s going to be tough to knock them off, but we’re pretty confident we could do it,” said Castle.

    • That confidence was on full display in Game 1, a double-OT thriller on OKC’s home floor, with an electric 41-point, 24-rebound performance from Wemby and a Spurs’ Playoff-record seven steals from Harper (24 pts)
    • Clamps: After the champs won two straight, San Antonio rallied in Game 4 behind Wemby’s complete performance (33 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk) and a defensive showing that held OKC to a season-low 38-point 1st half
    • Facing elimination after dropping Game 5, the young Spurs forced Game 7 on the strength of their 32-13 3rd-quarter takeover, where they held OKC scoreless for over 7 minutes in a 20-0 run. Wemby (28 pts, 10 reb, 3 blk) set the tone

    So what will it take for San Antonio to unseat the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7?

    “First thing is: listening to the experienced people, whether it’s on our team, on our staff, or outside,” Wemby said. “We got the chance to have plenty of those [people] around.”


    4. SGA, OKC FACE FIRST GAME 7 SINCE 2025 FINALS CLINCHER

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

    After San Antonio took Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was asked about fatigue.

    “Oh I’m good, I’m ready to go. Biggest game of my career… and if I lose, my season’s over.”

    Put that way, the situation sounds daunting. But for SGA, the biggest games of his career have been some of his best.

    • Mountain Climb: In the first of two Game 7s for the Thunder in last year’s title run, Shai (35 pts, 3 stl) outscored Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray to help put away the Nuggets in the West Semis
    • “Every night’s an opportunity to learn and get better, and we’re gonna do so,” Shai said at the time of his young Thunder team gaining the big-game experience they lacked, in real-time
    • Crash Course: That OKC squad was the 2nd-youngest team ever to win a championship, with an average age weighted by playing time of 25.36
    • Completing that final step took one more Game 7, OKC’s most recent before tonight. SGA (29 pts, 12 ast, 2 blk) rose up again in that deciding game of the Finals against Indy, claiming the series’ MVP honors

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Almost a year later, the champs now know exactly what it takes to win in these moments.

    • “It’s going to take more than just Shai to beat [the Spurs], to beat any team at this point,” Alex Caruso said… “It’s just about being confident in each other and going out there and playing.”
    • Responding Thunder: Over the last two Playoff runs, OKC is a perfect 9-0 following a postseason loss, including Games 2 and 5 of this West Finals

    Can the Thunder again avoid consecutive losses tonight in Game 7 to return to the NBA Finals?


    5. WEMBY LEADS SPURS INTO HIS FIRST CAREER GAME 7

    Spurs huddle

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    He’s done it with his play.

    He can do it with his words.

    And sometimes, Victor Wembanyama can set the tone for the Spurs with just his presence.

    “He felt… an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways,” coach Mitch Johnson said of Wemby during these West Finals.

    Tonight, the 22-year-old is set to play the biggest game of his young career, in the series’ deciding game. Fortunately for the Spurs, their tone-setter’s never shied away from big moments.

    • Alien Unwrapped: All eyes were on Wemby for his Christmas Day debut at MSG in 2024, where he set the Spurs’ record for most points on the Holiday with 42
    • Emirates NBA Cup: Wemby (22 pts, 9 reb, 21 min) returned from a calf injury to fuel the Spurs’ knockout of OKC in this season’s Semifinals, before adding 18 points in the Cup championship against the Knicks
    • “Wemby set the tone,” said All-Star Game MVP Anthony Edwards of first-time starter Wembanyama, who led Team World with 33 points on the day

    “That’s kind of what Vic does,” Dylan Harper said in the West Finals. “He kind of steps into big moments. He’s never afraid of it. He loves that moment.”

    Spurs huddle

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Embracing the moment in his first-career Playoffs has set Wembanyama apart as the first player ever to total 50+ blocks and 25+ made threes in one postseason run
    • No Nerves: He’s also set a Spurs’ franchise record for most total points (350+) in a player’s first Playoffs
    • “I think he has shown in his three years – in a lot of different situations, with a lot of different circumstances – that he’s gonna attack those moments,” coach Johnson said

    Wemby’s Spurs will look to attack Game 7 tonight.

  • Starting 5: Instant classic Game 7 coming tonight? Spurs & Thunder meet for trip to NBA Finals

    Names are made in the Playoffs, but Game 7s give us icons.

    Who will play their way into the history books and push their team to the NBA Finals?

    Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Tonight at 8 ET on NBC & Peacock.

    The Spurs and Thunder are ready for tonight's Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    May 30, 2026

    Win Or Go Home: Everything to know for tonight’s Western Conference Finals Game 7 between the Spurs and Thunder

    Thunder’s Path: From 8-0 to Game 7, how No. 1 OKC moved within one win of a Finals return

    Spurs’ Mission: How San Antonio forged its own experience and forced the champs to Game 7

    Been Here Before: Shai and OKC face first Game 7 since 2025 Finals clincher

    Tone-Setter: Thriving in big moments, Wemby leads Spurs into his first career Game 7


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Game 7 Saturday…

    Game 7

    It all comes down to this in the West. Forty-eight minutes to decide this chapter in one of the NBA’s hottest rivalries, and set up an NBA Finals matchup with the Knicks. Spurs-Thunder, Game 7, tonight (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch).

    Injury Report: OKC has listed both Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Ajay Mitchell (calf) out for Game 7.

    Game 7 Reads: The Athletic’s Jared Weiss writes about Wemby setting the tone in Game 6 … Tim Reynolds of the AP covers the difference in the two teams heading into Game 7 … Andscape’s Marc Spears profiles Mitch Johnson, who’s earned the ‘full trust’ of the Spurs org.

    Playoff bracket


    1. EVERYTHING TO KNOW FOR GAME 7 IN 3 MINUTES

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama

    Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images

    Tonight marks the 160th Game 7 in NBA history. But few have looked quite like this one.

    It’s the fifth of these 2026 Playoffs, tying the all-time mark for most in any NBA postseason.

    It’s a win-or-go-home showdown between elite rivals, staged by two teams who know each other inside-and-out at this stage.

    And, this isn’t even their first win-or-go-home matchup this season(!)

    Tonight’s Spurs-Thunder finale (8 ET, NBC/Peacock) is adding up to be a Game 7 for the ages. Here’s everything you need to know:

    • Most-Familiar Foes: Tonight represents the 12th meeting between San Antonio and OKC this season, just the second time in 30 years two teams have met that many times in a single season across the regular-season and Playoffs
    • Win-Or-Go-Home, Again: In the short history of the NBA Cup, this is already the second time that two teams who met in a win-or-go-home Knockout Rounds game meet in a Playoff Game 7 later that year
    • Spurs Took Round 1: San Antonio eliminated OKC – just its second loss of the season at that point – in the Cup Semifinal on Dec. 13. It was their first of the 12 meetings, building a rivalry forged in the season’s biggest moments
    • West Parallels: The other two teams to wage two win-or-go-home games in the same season were the 2024-25 Rockets and Warriors, in the Cup Quarterfinals (Rockets win) and their First Round Game 7 in the Playoffs (Warriors win)
    • Houston and Golden State also represent the last time the West Finals went to a Game 7, with the Warriors moving on to claim their second straight NBA title in 2018 – the NBA’s last repeat champion

    Five Game 7s

    The reigning champs are out to rewrite that fact, with a return trip to the Finals on the line tonight, while San Antonio aims to uphold the other end of that trend: A Spurs win would guarantee an eighth different champion in the last eight NBA seasons.

    • Storm’s Edge: The Thunder are 4-2 in Game 7s in the OKC era, and 4-0 at home, where they’ll host tonight. Home teams are 117-42 all-time in Game 7s. The visiting Spurs are 4-7 all-time, and 1-5 on the road
    • “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said Thursday… “It being in your building is nice – it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us – but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to… be the better basketball team.”
    • Pressure Tested: OKC last played a Game 7 in last year’s Finals, topping Indiana to win it all. Chet Holmgren set a Finals Game 7 record with 5 blocks, while Shai (29 pts, 12 ast) claimed series MVP
    • Still Shai: This will be the fourth Game 7 of Gilgeous-Alexander’s career (2-1), where the West’s 2026 postseason scoring leader (27.1 ppg) averages 27.7 ppg
    • Trophy Tussle: This is the second time ever that the season’s Kia MVP and the Kia Defensive Player of the Year will face off in a Game 7. Shai and Wemby are also just the third pair of MVP finalists to meet in a Game 7 in 40 years
    • Two Titans: This is the sixth Conference Finals Game 7 between the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds since 1983, and the first Game 7 in that same span featuring the teams with the two best records from that regular season

    “I think a lot of fans are going to be happy,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, looking ahead. “They say it’s the best line in sports, I believe.”

    Game 7, tonight.


    2. HOW THE NO. 1 THUNDER GOT TO GAME 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks

    Eight wins, zero losses.

    The 2025 NBA Champion Thunder started their title defense undefeated through two rounds, before running into their fast-charging rival Spurs in the West Finals.

    Six games of pure cinema later, and OKC needs one decisive win to return to the championship round. Here’s how the Thunder got to Game 7.

    • The West’s top seed followed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s lead in its First Round series against Phoenix, as the MVP built up from 25 points in the Game 1 win, to 37 with 9 assists in Game 2, to a Playoff career-high 42 in Game 3
    • Next-Man Experts: The return of Jalen Wiliams’ hamstring issues in Game 2 forced the Thunder to utilize the rotation depth they strengthened through injuries in the regular-season. Ajay Mitchell (15 pts) started Game 3’s win
    • Storm Warning: Game 4’s series-clincher showcased Thunder themes still paying off two rounds later, with strong play from SGA (31 pts), Chet Holmgren (24 pts, 56.3 FG%), Mitchell (22 pts), Isaiah Hartenstein (18 pts, 12 reb), and Alex Caruso (4-6 3s)

    “Just confidence-wise, as a group, it’s good to get the Playoff runs started off that way,” Shai said after Game 4… “You never know what can happen.”

    • What happened next, in Round 2, was a concerted defensive effort by the No. 4 Lakers on SGA. After netting 135 total points on 55.1 FG% against Phoenix, L.A. held Shai to 98 points in four games on 47.1 FG%
    • In his place, OKC got lead scoring efforts from Holmgren (20.0 ppg) and Mitchell (22.5 ppg), with Ajay logging his two highest-scoring Playoff games in Games 3 (24 pts) and 4 (28 pts). Jared McCain (11.5 ppg, 12-19 3s) also broke through
    • Taking the first three games, OKC faced its first 4th-quarter deficit of these Playoffs in Game 4, as late as the final minute. But Holmgren slammed home the go-ahead dunk with 33 ticks left, to put away LeBron’s (24 pts) Lakers
    Thunder bench

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    “Hats off to my teammates,” Shai said. “Obviously, their goal was to make my teammates beat them in the first three games, and my teammates did exactly that…”

    “In the Playoffs, no two games are the same,” he continued. “Especially when you change opponents. The challenges are all coming up.”

    • The Thunder’s greatest challenge this year returned in the form of the No. 2 Spurs, who took Game 1 of the West Finals in OKC. The champs responded to take Games 2 and 3
    • SGA rallied from Game 1 (7-23 FG) for 30 and 26-point outings in the two straight wins. OKC went back to Hartenstein (10 pts, 13 reb) in Game 2 vs. Wemby, and the Thunder bench scored 76 points in Game 3, headlined by 24 from McCain
    • Game 5 put the champs within a win of a Finals return after they took the lead for good as the 1st quarter ended. 32 from Shai, 22 from Caruso and 20 from McCain in his first-career Playoff start helped put the Spurs’ season on the line

    But after San Antonio sent the series to a final, deciding game, Caruso said the defending champs still control their own fate.

    “They make it challenging but, for the most part, Game 7’s got to be about us… making sure we’re doing the stuff we need to do at a high level.”


    3. HOW THE NO. 2 SPURS GOT TO GAME 7

    Victor Wembanyama flexes and yells.

    Ronald Cortes/NBAE via Getty Images

    Seven players making their NBA Playoff debuts.

    Multiple games without their MVP finalist Victor Wembanyama and All-Star floor general De’Aaron Fox.

    It’s been an up-and-down first venture into the postseason for this young Spurs core. Here’s how the West’s No. 2 seed has learned and applied in real-time to come within a game of the NBA Finals.

    • “The atmosphere was different,” noted Victor Wembanyama in his first Playoff action, where he paced a Game 1 win over the Trail Blazers with a Spurs’ debut-record 35 points, including an NBA-record 21-point debut half
    • Game 2 saw Wembanyama enter concussion protocol after a fall. San Antonio lost its lead at home in the 4th, but responded in Game 3, with Wemby out. Stephon Castle (33 pts) and Dylan Harper (27 pts) provided Playoff career-highs
    • Wemby returned for Game 4 with San Antonio up 2-1, posting a monster line (27 pts, 11 reb, 4 stl, 7 blk) for his first road Playoff win. He then fueled the Game 5 closeout (17 pts, 14 reb, 6 blk), as his Spurs claimed their first elimination game
    • “We gained experience and I’m still hungry for even better matchups,” Wemby said. “Definitely a different feeling to win against somebody and think that their season’s over.”

    Anthony Edwards and the No. 6 Wolves were hungry too, coming to town as San Antonio’s next matchup. Minnesota was out to return to its third consecutive West Finals.

    Anthony Edwards drives to the rim against Victor Wembanyama.

    Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ant’s Surprise: Returning early from injury, Edwards’ (18 pts) 11-point 4th quarter stole the show in Game 1, despite Wemby’s (11 pts, 15 reb) historic 12-block triple-double
    • “Offensively, I used too much energy on things that didn’t really help our team, so that’s on me,” Wembanyama said postgame
    • The Spurs bounced back to hand the Wolves their largest-ever Playoff loss (133-95) in Game 2, and Wemby (39 pts, 15 reb) soared to his highest-scoring Playoff game at the time to grab the series lead in Game 3
    • Following his first-career ejection in Game 4, Wembanyama returned on a mission in Game 5 (27 pts, 17 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk), and Castle (32 pts, 11 reb) led the charge in Game 6, where San Antonio led by as many as 37 to eliminate Minnesota

    Overcoming the physical series with the Wolves, Castle looked ahead to a West Finals matchup with a Thunder squad San Antonio went 4-1 against in the regular-season.

    “We know it’s going to be tough to knock them off, but we’re pretty confident we could do it,” said Castle.

    • That confidence was on full display in Game 1, a double-OT thriller on OKC’s home floor, with an electric 41-point, 24-rebound performance from Wemby and a Spurs’ Playoff-record seven steals from Harper (24 pts)
    • Clamps: After the champs won two straight, San Antonio rallied in Game 4 behind Wemby’s complete performance (33 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk) and a defensive showing that held OKC to a season-low 38-point 1st half
    • Facing elimination after dropping Game 5, the young Spurs forced Game 7 on the strength of their 32-13 3rd-quarter takeover, where they held OKC scoreless for over 7 minutes in a 20-0 run. Wemby (28 pts, 10 reb, 3 blk) set the tone

    So what will it take for San Antonio to unseat the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7?

    “First thing is: listening to the experienced people, whether it’s on our team, on our staff, or outside,” Wemby said. “We got the chance to have plenty of those [people] around.”


    4. SGA, OKC FACE FIRST GAME 7 SINCE 2025 FINALS CLINCHER

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

    After San Antonio took Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was asked about fatigue.

    “Oh I’m good, I’m ready to go. Biggest game of my career… and if I lose, my season’s over.”

    Put that way, the situation sounds daunting. But for SGA, the biggest games of his career have been some of his best.

    • Mountain Climb: In the first of two Game 7s for the Thunder in last year’s title run, Shai (35 pts, 3 stl) outscored Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray to help put away the Nuggets in the West Semis
    • “Every night’s an opportunity to learn and get better, and we’re gonna do so,” Shai said at the time of his young Thunder team gaining the big-game experience they lacked, in real-time
    • Crash Course: That OKC squad was the 2nd-youngest team ever to win a championship, with an average age weighted by playing time of 25.36
    • Completing that final step took one more Game 7, OKC’s most recent before tonight. SGA (29 pts, 12 ast, 2 blk) rose up again in that deciding game of the Finals against Indy, claiming the series’ MVP honors

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Almost a year later, the champs now know exactly what it takes to win in these moments.

    • “It’s going to take more than just Shai to beat [the Spurs], to beat any team at this point,” Alex Caruso said… “It’s just about being confident in each other and going out there and playing.”
    • Responding Thunder: Over the last two Playoff runs, OKC is a perfect 9-0 following a postseason loss, including Games 2 and 5 of this West Finals

    Can the Thunder again avoid consecutive losses tonight in Game 7 to return to the NBA Finals?


    5. WEMBY LEADS SPURS INTO HIS FIRST CAREER GAME 7

    Spurs huddle

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    He’s done it with his play.

    He can do it with his words.

    And sometimes, Victor Wembanyama can set the tone for the Spurs with just his presence.

    “He felt… an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways,” coach Mitch Johnson said of Wemby during these West Finals.

    Tonight, the 22-year-old is set to play the biggest game of his young career, in the series’ deciding game. Fortunately for the Spurs, their tone-setter’s never shied away from big moments.

    • Alien Unwrapped: All eyes were on Wemby for his Christmas Day debut at MSG in 2024, where he set the Spurs’ record for most points on the Holiday with 42
    • Emirates NBA Cup: Wemby (22 pts, 9 reb, 21 min) returned from a calf injury to fuel the Spurs’ knockout of OKC in this season’s Semifinals, before adding 18 points in the Cup championship against the Knicks
    • “Wemby set the tone,” said All-Star Game MVP Anthony Edwards of first-time starter Wembanyama, who led Team World with 33 points on the day

    “That’s kind of what Vic does,” Dylan Harper said in the West Finals. “He kind of steps into big moments. He’s never afraid of it. He loves that moment.”

    Spurs huddle

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Embracing the moment in his first-career Playoffs has set Wembanyama apart as the first player ever to total 50+ blocks and 25+ made threes in one postseason run
    • No Nerves: He’s also set a Spurs’ franchise record for most total points (350+) in a player’s first Playoffs
    • “I think he has shown in his three years – in a lot of different situations, with a lot of different circumstances – that he’s gonna attack those moments,” coach Johnson said

    Wemby’s Spurs will look to attack Game 7 tonight.

  • Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, Western Conference Finals | Spurs, Thunder ready for climactic Game 7

    Live Updates: 2026 NBA Playoffs, Western Conference Finals | Spurs, Thunder ready for climactic Game 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Victor Wembanyama lead the Thunder and Spurs into tonight's Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals.

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Victor Wembanyama lead the Thunder and Spurs into tonight’s Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals on NBC and Peacock.

    Welcome to the live blog! Tonight, Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs take on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals (8 ET, NBC/Peacock).

    The winner advances to play the New York Knicks in the 2026 NBA Finals. The loser goes home.

    Get hyped for one of the most meaningful games of the season!


    What we know for Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals:

    • This is the 12th matchup of the season between these two budding rivals, including the Emirates NBA Cup Semifinal, where the Spurs eliminated the Thunder in a winner-take-all Knockouts Round contest.
      • The Spurs lead the overall series 7-4.
    • The Thunder are 4-0 at home in Game 7s during the OKC era and 4-2 overall. The Spurs are 4-7 in these climactic contests.
    • It’s the first Game 7 featuring the teams with the two best records from the regular season since 1983.

    MAY 30 / 4:00 ET

    A legendary co-sign


    MAY 30 / 3:00 ET

    A rivalry that’s spanned the season

    Enjoy the best highlights from this epic series.

    Then check out the highlights from the semifinals of the 2026 Emirates NBA Cup, where the Spurs and Thunder squared off with it all on the line.

    It was both just yesterday and lifetimes ago.


    MAY 30 / 2:45 ET

    Saturday’s injury report

    Jalen Williams (left hamstring strain), Ajay Mitchell (right soleus strain) and Thomas Sorber (right ACL surgery recovery) are out for the Thunder tonight.

  • Starting 5: Instant classic Game 7 coming tonight? Spurs & Thunder meet for trip to NBA Finals

    Names are made in the Playoffs, but Game 7s give us icons.

    Who will play their way into the history books and push their team to the NBA Finals?

    Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Tonight at 8 ET on NBC & Peacock.

    The Spurs and Thunder are ready for tonight's Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    May 30, 2026

    Win Or Go Home: Everything to know for tonight’s Western Conference Finals Game 7 between the Spurs and Thunder

    Thunder’s Path: From 8-0 to Game 7, how No. 1 OKC moved within one win of a Finals return

    Spurs’ Mission: How San Antonio forged its own experience and forced the champs to Game 7

    Been Here Before: Shai and OKC face first Game 7 since 2025 Finals clincher

    Tone-Setter: Thriving in big moments, Wemby leads Spurs into his first career Game 7


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Game 7 Saturday…

    Game 7

    It all comes down to this in the West. Forty-eight minutes to decide this chapter in one of the NBA’s hottest rivalries, and set up an NBA Finals matchup with the Knicks. Spurs-Thunder, Game 7, tonight (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch).

    Injury Report: OKC has listed both Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Ajay Mitchell (calf) out for Game 7.

    Game 7 Reads: The Athletic’s Jared Weiss writes about Wemby setting the tone in Game 6 … Tim Reynolds of the AP covers the difference in the two teams heading into Game 7 … Andscape’s Marc Spears profiles Mitch Johnson, who’s earned the ‘full trust’ of the Spurs org.

    Playoff bracket


    1. EVERYTHING TO KNOW FOR GAME 7 IN 3 MINUTES

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama

    Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images

    Tonight marks the 160th Game 7 in NBA history. But few have looked quite like this one.

    It’s the fifth of these 2026 Playoffs, tying the all-time mark for most in any NBA postseason.

    It’s a win-or-go-home showdown between elite rivals, staged by two teams who know each other inside-and-out at this stage.

    And, this isn’t even their first win-or-go-home matchup this season(!)

    Tonight’s Spurs-Thunder finale (8 ET, NBC/Peacock) is adding up to be a Game 7 for the ages. Here’s everything you need to know:

    • Most-Familiar Foes: Tonight represents the 12th meeting between San Antonio and OKC this season, just the second time in 30 years two teams have met that many times in a single season across the regular-season and Playoffs
    • Win-Or-Go-Home, Again: In the short history of the NBA Cup, this is already the second time that two teams who met in a win-or-go-home Knockout Rounds game meet in a Playoff Game 7 later that year
    • Spurs Took Round 1: San Antonio eliminated OKC – just its second loss of the season at that point – in the Cup Semifinal on Dec. 13. It was their first of the 12 meetings, building a rivalry forged in the season’s biggest moments
    • West Parallels: The other two teams to wage two win-or-go-home games in the same season were the 2024-25 Rockets and Warriors, in the Cup Quarterfinals (Rockets win) and their First Round Game 7 in the Playoffs (Warriors win)
    • Houston and Golden State also represent the last time the West Finals went to a Game 7, with the Warriors moving on to claim their second straight NBA title in 2018 – the NBA’s last repeat champion

    Five Game 7s

    The reigning champs are out to rewrite that fact, with a return trip to the Finals on the line tonight, while San Antonio aims to uphold the other end of that trend: A Spurs win would guarantee an eighth different champion in the last eight NBA seasons.

    • Storm’s Edge: The Thunder are 4-2 in Game 7s in the OKC era, and 4-0 at home, where they’ll host tonight. Home teams are 117-42 all-time in Game 7s. The visiting Spurs are 4-7 all-time, and 1-5 on the road
    • “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said Thursday… “It being in your building is nice – it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us – but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to… be the better basketball team.”
    • Pressure Tested: OKC last played a Game 7 in last year’s Finals, topping Indiana to win it all. Chet Holmgren set a Finals Game 7 record with 5 blocks, while Shai (29 pts, 12 ast) claimed series MVP
    • Still Shai: This will be the fourth Game 7 of Gilgeous-Alexander’s career (2-1), where the West’s 2026 postseason scoring leader (27.1 ppg) averages 27.7 ppg
    • Trophy Tussle: This is the second time ever that the season’s Kia MVP and the Kia Defensive Player of the Year will face off in a Game 7. Shai and Wemby are also just the third pair of MVP finalists to meet in a Game 7 in 40 years
    • Two Titans: This is the sixth Conference Finals Game 7 between the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds since 1983, and the first Game 7 in that same span featuring the teams with the two best records from that regular season

    “I think a lot of fans are going to be happy,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, looking ahead. “They say it’s the best line in sports, I believe.”

    Game 7, tonight.


    2. HOW THE NO. 1 THUNDER GOT TO GAME 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks

    Eight wins, zero losses.

    The 2025 NBA Champion Thunder started their title defense undefeated through two rounds, before running into their fast-charging rival Spurs in the West Finals.

    Six games of pure cinema later, and OKC needs one decisive win to return to the championship round. Here’s how the Thunder got to Game 7.

    • The West’s top seed followed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s lead in its First Round series against Phoenix, as the MVP built up from 25 points in the Game 1 win, to 37 with 9 assists in Game 2, to a Playoff career-high 42 in Game 3
    • Next-Man Experts: The return of Jalen Wiliams’ hamstring issues in Game 2 forced the Thunder to utilize the rotation depth they strengthened through injuries in the regular-season. Ajay Mitchell (15 pts) started Game 3’s win
    • Storm Warning: Game 4’s series-clincher showcased Thunder themes still paying off two rounds later, with strong play from SGA (31 pts), Chet Holmgren (24 pts, 56.3 FG%), Mitchell (22 pts), Isaiah Hartenstein (18 pts, 12 reb), and Alex Caruso (4-6 3s)

    “Just confidence-wise, as a group, it’s good to get the Playoff runs started off that way,” Shai said after Game 4… “You never know what can happen.”

    • What happened next, in Round 2, was a concerted defensive effort by the No. 4 Lakers on SGA. After netting 135 total points on 55.1 FG% against Phoenix, L.A. held Shai to 98 points in four games on 47.1 FG%
    • In his place, OKC got lead scoring efforts from Holmgren (20.0 ppg) and Mitchell (22.5 ppg), with Ajay logging his two highest-scoring Playoff games in Games 3 (24 pts) and 4 (28 pts). Jared McCain (11.5 ppg, 12-19 3s) also broke through
    • Taking the first three games, OKC faced its first 4th-quarter deficit of these Playoffs in Game 4, as late as the final minute. But Holmgren slammed home the go-ahead dunk with 33 ticks left, to put away LeBron’s (24 pts) Lakers
    Thunder bench

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    “Hats off to my teammates,” Shai said. “Obviously, their goal was to make my teammates beat them in the first three games, and my teammates did exactly that…”

    “In the Playoffs, no two games are the same,” he continued. “Especially when you change opponents. The challenges are all coming up.”

    • The Thunder’s greatest challenge this year returned in the form of the No. 2 Spurs, who took Game 1 of the West Finals in OKC. The champs responded to take Games 2 and 3
    • SGA rallied from Game 1 (7-23 FG) for 30 and 26-point outings in the two straight wins. OKC went back to Hartenstein (10 pts, 13 reb) in Game 2 vs. Wemby, and the Thunder bench scored 76 points in Game 3, headlined by 24 from McCain
    • Game 5 put the champs within a win of a Finals return after they took the lead for good as the 1st quarter ended. 32 from Shai, 22 from Caruso and 20 from McCain in his first-career Playoff start helped put the Spurs’ season on the line

    But after San Antonio sent the series to a final, deciding game, Caruso said the defending champs still control their own fate.

    “They make it challenging but, for the most part, Game 7’s got to be about us… making sure we’re doing the stuff we need to do at a high level.”


    3. HOW THE NO. 2 SPURS GOT TO GAME 7

    Victor Wembanyama flexes and yells.

    Ronald Cortes/NBAE via Getty Images

    Seven players making their NBA Playoff debuts.

    Multiple games without their MVP finalist Victor Wembanyama and All-Star floor general De’Aaron Fox.

    It’s been an up-and-down first venture into the postseason for this young Spurs core. Here’s how the West’s No. 2 seed has learned and applied in real-time to come within a game of the NBA Finals.

    • “The atmosphere was different,” noted Victor Wembanyama in his first Playoff action, where he paced a Game 1 win over the Trail Blazers with a Spurs’ debut-record 35 points, including an NBA-record 21-point debut half
    • Game 2 saw Wembanyama enter concussion protocol after a fall. San Antonio lost its lead at home in the 4th, but responded in Game 3, with Wemby out. Stephon Castle (33 pts) and Dylan Harper (27 pts) provided Playoff career-highs
    • Wemby returned for Game 4 with San Antonio up 2-1, posting a monster line (27 pts, 11 reb, 4 stl, 7 blk) for his first road Playoff win. He then fueled the Game 5 closeout (17 pts, 14 reb, 6 blk), as his Spurs claimed their first elimination game
    • “We gained experience and I’m still hungry for even better matchups,” Wemby said. “Definitely a different feeling to win against somebody and think that their season’s over.”

    Anthony Edwards and the No. 6 Wolves were hungry too, coming to town as San Antonio’s next matchup. Minnesota was out to return to its third consecutive West Finals.

    Anthony Edwards drives to the rim against Victor Wembanyama.

    Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ant’s Surprise: Returning early from injury, Edwards’ (18 pts) 11-point 4th quarter stole the show in Game 1, despite Wemby’s (11 pts, 15 reb) historic 12-block triple-double
    • “Offensively, I used too much energy on things that didn’t really help our team, so that’s on me,” Wembanyama said postgame
    • The Spurs bounced back to hand the Wolves their largest-ever Playoff loss (133-95) in Game 2, and Wemby (39 pts, 15 reb) soared to his highest-scoring Playoff game at the time to grab the series lead in Game 3
    • Following his first-career ejection in Game 4, Wembanyama returned on a mission in Game 5 (27 pts, 17 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk), and Castle (32 pts, 11 reb) led the charge in Game 6, where San Antonio led by as many as 37 to eliminate Minnesota

    Overcoming the physical series with the Wolves, Castle looked ahead to a West Finals matchup with a Thunder squad San Antonio went 4-1 against in the regular-season.

    “We know it’s going to be tough to knock them off, but we’re pretty confident we could do it,” said Castle.

    • That confidence was on full display in Game 1, a double-OT thriller on OKC’s home floor, with an electric 41-point, 24-rebound performance from Wemby and a Spurs’ Playoff-record seven steals from Harper (24 pts)
    • Clamps: After the champs won two straight, San Antonio rallied in Game 4 behind Wemby’s complete performance (33 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk) and a defensive showing that held OKC to a season-low 38-point 1st half
    • Facing elimination after dropping Game 5, the young Spurs forced Game 7 on the strength of their 32-13 3rd-quarter takeover, where they held OKC scoreless for over 7 minutes in a 20-0 run. Wemby (28 pts, 10 reb, 3 blk) set the tone

    So what will it take for San Antonio to unseat the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7?

    “First thing is: listening to the experienced people, whether it’s on our team, on our staff, or outside,” Wemby said. “We got the chance to have plenty of those [people] around.”


    4. SGA, OKC FACE FIRST GAME 7 SINCE 2025 FINALS CLINCHER

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

    After San Antonio took Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was asked about fatigue.

    “Oh I’m good, I’m ready to go. Biggest game of my career… and if I lose, my season’s over.”

    Put that way, the situation sounds daunting. But for SGA, the biggest games of his career have been some of his best.

    • Mountain Climb: In the first of two Game 7s for the Thunder in last year’s title run, Shai (35 pts, 3 stl) outscored Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray to help put away the Nuggets in the West Semis
    • “Every night’s an opportunity to learn and get better, and we’re gonna do so,” Shai said at the time of his young Thunder team gaining the big-game experience they lacked, in real-time
    • Crash Course: That OKC squad was the 2nd-youngest team ever to win a championship, with an average age weighted by playing time of 25.36
    • Completing that final step took one more Game 7, OKC’s most recent before tonight. SGA (29 pts, 12 ast, 2 blk) rose up again in that deciding game of the Finals against Indy, claiming the series’ MVP honors

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Almost a year later, the champs now know exactly what it takes to win in these moments.

    • “It’s going to take more than just Shai to beat [the Spurs], to beat any team at this point,” Alex Caruso said… “It’s just about being confident in each other and going out there and playing.”
    • Responding Thunder: Over the last two Playoff runs, OKC is a perfect 9-0 following a postseason loss, including Games 2 and 5 of this West Finals

    Can the Thunder again avoid consecutive losses tonight in Game 7 to return to the NBA Finals?


    5. WEMBY LEADS SPURS INTO HIS FIRST CAREER GAME 7

    Spurs huddle

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    He’s done it with his play.

    He can do it with his words.

    And sometimes, Victor Wembanyama can set the tone for the Spurs with just his presence.

    “He felt… an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways,” coach Mitch Johnson said of Wemby during these West Finals.

    Tonight, the 22-year-old is set to play the biggest game of his young career, in the series’ deciding game. Fortunately for the Spurs, their tone-setter’s never shied away from big moments.

    • Alien Unwrapped: All eyes were on Wemby for his Christmas Day debut at MSG in 2024, where he set the Spurs’ record for most points on the Holiday with 42
    • Emirates NBA Cup: Wemby (22 pts, 9 reb, 21 min) returned from a calf injury to fuel the Spurs’ knockout of OKC in this season’s Semifinals, before adding 18 points in the Cup championship against the Knicks
    • “Wemby set the tone,” said All-Star Game MVP Anthony Edwards of first-time starter Wembanyama, who led Team World with 33 points on the day

    “That’s kind of what Vic does,” Dylan Harper said in the West Finals. “He kind of steps into big moments. He’s never afraid of it. He loves that moment.”

    Spurs huddle

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Embracing the moment in his first-career Playoffs has set Wembanyama apart as the first player ever to total 50+ blocks and 25+ made threes in one postseason run
    • No Nerves: He’s also set a Spurs’ franchise record for most total points (350+) in a player’s first Playoffs
    • “I think he has shown in his three years – in a lot of different situations, with a lot of different circumstances – that he’s gonna attack those moments,” coach Johnson said

    Wemby’s Spurs will look to attack Game 7 tonight.

  • Starting 5: Instant classic Game 7 coming tonight? Spurs & Thunder meet for trip to NBA Finals

    Names are made in the Playoffs, but Game 7s give us icons.

    Who will play their way into the history books and push their team to the NBA Finals?

    Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Tonight at 8 ET on NBC & Peacock.

    The Spurs and Thunder are ready for tonight's Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    May 30, 2026

    Win Or Go Home: Everything to know for tonight’s Western Conference Finals Game 7 between the Spurs and Thunder

    Thunder’s Path: From 8-0 to Game 7, how No. 1 OKC moved within one win of a Finals return

    Spurs’ Mission: How San Antonio forged its own experience and forced the champs to Game 7

    Been Here Before: Shai and OKC face first Game 7 since 2025 Finals clincher

    Tone-Setter: Thriving in big moments, Wemby leads Spurs into his first career Game 7


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Game 7 Saturday…

    Game 7

    It all comes down to this in the West. Forty-eight minutes to decide this chapter in one of the NBA’s hottest rivalries, and set up an NBA Finals matchup with the Knicks. Spurs-Thunder, Game 7, tonight (8 ET, NBC/Peacock | Tap To Watch).

    Injury Report: OKC has listed both Jalen Williams (hamstring) and Ajay Mitchell (calf) out for Game 7.

    Game 7 Reads: The Athletic’s Jared Weiss writes about Wemby setting the tone in Game 6 … Tim Reynolds of the AP covers the difference in the two teams heading into Game 7 … Andscape’s Marc Spears profiles Mitch Johnson, who’s earned the ‘full trust’ of the Spurs org.

    Playoff bracket


    1. EVERYTHING TO KNOW FOR GAME 7 IN 3 MINUTES

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama

    Morgan Givens/NBAE via Getty Images

    Tonight marks the 160th Game 7 in NBA history. But few have looked quite like this one.

    It’s the fifth of these 2026 Playoffs, tying the all-time mark for most in any NBA postseason.

    It’s a win-or-go-home showdown between elite rivals, staged by two teams who know each other inside-and-out at this stage.

    And, this isn’t even their first win-or-go-home matchup this season(!)

    Tonight’s Spurs-Thunder finale (8 ET, NBC/Peacock) is adding up to be a Game 7 for the ages. Here’s everything you need to know:

    • Most-Familiar Foes: Tonight represents the 12th meeting between San Antonio and OKC this season, just the second time in 30 years two teams have met that many times in a single season across the regular-season and Playoffs
    • Win-Or-Go-Home, Again: In the short history of the NBA Cup, this is already the second time that two teams who met in a win-or-go-home Knockout Rounds game meet in a Playoff Game 7 later that year
    • Spurs Took Round 1: San Antonio eliminated OKC – just its second loss of the season at that point – in the Cup Semifinal on Dec. 13. It was their first of the 12 meetings, building a rivalry forged in the season’s biggest moments
    • West Parallels: The other two teams to wage two win-or-go-home games in the same season were the 2024-25 Rockets and Warriors, in the Cup Quarterfinals (Rockets win) and their First Round Game 7 in the Playoffs (Warriors win)
    • Houston and Golden State also represent the last time the West Finals went to a Game 7, with the Warriors moving on to claim their second straight NBA title in 2018 – the NBA’s last repeat champion

    Five Game 7s

    The reigning champs are out to rewrite that fact, with a return trip to the Finals on the line tonight, while San Antonio aims to uphold the other end of that trend: A Spurs win would guarantee an eighth different champion in the last eight NBA seasons.

    • Storm’s Edge: The Thunder are 4-2 in Game 7s in the OKC era, and 4-0 at home, where they’ll host tonight. Home teams are 117-42 all-time in Game 7s. The visiting Spurs are 4-7 all-time, and 1-5 on the road
    • “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said Thursday… “It being in your building is nice – it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us – but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to… be the better basketball team.”
    • Pressure Tested: OKC last played a Game 7 in last year’s Finals, topping Indiana to win it all. Chet Holmgren set a Finals Game 7 record with 5 blocks, while Shai (29 pts, 12 ast) claimed series MVP
    • Still Shai: This will be the fourth Game 7 of Gilgeous-Alexander’s career (2-1), where the West’s 2026 postseason scoring leader (27.1 ppg) averages 27.7 ppg
    • Trophy Tussle: This is the second time ever that the season’s Kia MVP and the Kia Defensive Player of the Year will face off in a Game 7. Shai and Wemby are also just the third pair of MVP finalists to meet in a Game 7 in 40 years
    • Two Titans: This is the sixth Conference Finals Game 7 between the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds since 1983, and the first Game 7 in that same span featuring the teams with the two best records from that regular season

    “I think a lot of fans are going to be happy,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, looking ahead. “They say it’s the best line in sports, I believe.”

    Game 7, tonight.


    2. HOW THE NO. 1 THUNDER GOT TO GAME 7

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks

    Eight wins, zero losses.

    The 2025 NBA Champion Thunder started their title defense undefeated through two rounds, before running into their fast-charging rival Spurs in the West Finals.

    Six games of pure cinema later, and OKC needs one decisive win to return to the championship round. Here’s how the Thunder got to Game 7.

    • The West’s top seed followed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s lead in its First Round series against Phoenix, as the MVP built up from 25 points in the Game 1 win, to 37 with 9 assists in Game 2, to a Playoff career-high 42 in Game 3
    • Next-Man Experts: The return of Jalen Wiliams’ hamstring issues in Game 2 forced the Thunder to utilize the rotation depth they strengthened through injuries in the regular-season. Ajay Mitchell (15 pts) started Game 3’s win
    • Storm Warning: Game 4’s series-clincher showcased Thunder themes still paying off two rounds later, with strong play from SGA (31 pts), Chet Holmgren (24 pts, 56.3 FG%), Mitchell (22 pts), Isaiah Hartenstein (18 pts, 12 reb), and Alex Caruso (4-6 3s)

    “Just confidence-wise, as a group, it’s good to get the Playoff runs started off that way,” Shai said after Game 4… “You never know what can happen.”

    • What happened next, in Round 2, was a concerted defensive effort by the No. 4 Lakers on SGA. After netting 135 total points on 55.1 FG% against Phoenix, L.A. held Shai to 98 points in four games on 47.1 FG%
    • In his place, OKC got lead scoring efforts from Holmgren (20.0 ppg) and Mitchell (22.5 ppg), with Ajay logging his two highest-scoring Playoff games in Games 3 (24 pts) and 4 (28 pts). Jared McCain (11.5 ppg, 12-19 3s) also broke through
    • Taking the first three games, OKC faced its first 4th-quarter deficit of these Playoffs in Game 4, as late as the final minute. But Holmgren slammed home the go-ahead dunk with 33 ticks left, to put away LeBron’s (24 pts) Lakers
    Thunder bench

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    “Hats off to my teammates,” Shai said. “Obviously, their goal was to make my teammates beat them in the first three games, and my teammates did exactly that…”

    “In the Playoffs, no two games are the same,” he continued. “Especially when you change opponents. The challenges are all coming up.”

    • The Thunder’s greatest challenge this year returned in the form of the No. 2 Spurs, who took Game 1 of the West Finals in OKC. The champs responded to take Games 2 and 3
    • SGA rallied from Game 1 (7-23 FG) for 30 and 26-point outings in the two straight wins. OKC went back to Hartenstein (10 pts, 13 reb) in Game 2 vs. Wemby, and the Thunder bench scored 76 points in Game 3, headlined by 24 from McCain
    • Game 5 put the champs within a win of a Finals return after they took the lead for good as the 1st quarter ended. 32 from Shai, 22 from Caruso and 20 from McCain in his first-career Playoff start helped put the Spurs’ season on the line

    But after San Antonio sent the series to a final, deciding game, Caruso said the defending champs still control their own fate.

    “They make it challenging but, for the most part, Game 7’s got to be about us… making sure we’re doing the stuff we need to do at a high level.”


    3. HOW THE NO. 2 SPURS GOT TO GAME 7

    Victor Wembanyama flexes and yells.

    Ronald Cortes/NBAE via Getty Images

    Seven players making their NBA Playoff debuts.

    Multiple games without their MVP finalist Victor Wembanyama and All-Star floor general De’Aaron Fox.

    It’s been an up-and-down first venture into the postseason for this young Spurs core. Here’s how the West’s No. 2 seed has learned and applied in real-time to come within a game of the NBA Finals.

    • “The atmosphere was different,” noted Victor Wembanyama in his first Playoff action, where he paced a Game 1 win over the Trail Blazers with a Spurs’ debut-record 35 points, including an NBA-record 21-point debut half
    • Game 2 saw Wembanyama enter concussion protocol after a fall. San Antonio lost its lead at home in the 4th, but responded in Game 3, with Wemby out. Stephon Castle (33 pts) and Dylan Harper (27 pts) provided Playoff career-highs
    • Wemby returned for Game 4 with San Antonio up 2-1, posting a monster line (27 pts, 11 reb, 4 stl, 7 blk) for his first road Playoff win. He then fueled the Game 5 closeout (17 pts, 14 reb, 6 blk), as his Spurs claimed their first elimination game
    • “We gained experience and I’m still hungry for even better matchups,” Wemby said. “Definitely a different feeling to win against somebody and think that their season’s over.”

    Anthony Edwards and the No. 6 Wolves were hungry too, coming to town as San Antonio’s next matchup. Minnesota was out to return to its third consecutive West Finals.

    Anthony Edwards drives to the rim against Victor Wembanyama.

    Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Ant’s Surprise: Returning early from injury, Edwards’ (18 pts) 11-point 4th quarter stole the show in Game 1, despite Wemby’s (11 pts, 15 reb) historic 12-block triple-double
    • “Offensively, I used too much energy on things that didn’t really help our team, so that’s on me,” Wembanyama said postgame
    • The Spurs bounced back to hand the Wolves their largest-ever Playoff loss (133-95) in Game 2, and Wemby (39 pts, 15 reb) soared to his highest-scoring Playoff game at the time to grab the series lead in Game 3
    • Following his first-career ejection in Game 4, Wembanyama returned on a mission in Game 5 (27 pts, 17 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk), and Castle (32 pts, 11 reb) led the charge in Game 6, where San Antonio led by as many as 37 to eliminate Minnesota

    Overcoming the physical series with the Wolves, Castle looked ahead to a West Finals matchup with a Thunder squad San Antonio went 4-1 against in the regular-season.

    “We know it’s going to be tough to knock them off, but we’re pretty confident we could do it,” said Castle.

    • That confidence was on full display in Game 1, a double-OT thriller on OKC’s home floor, with an electric 41-point, 24-rebound performance from Wemby and a Spurs’ Playoff-record seven steals from Harper (24 pts)
    • Clamps: After the champs won two straight, San Antonio rallied in Game 4 behind Wemby’s complete performance (33 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast, 3 blk) and a defensive showing that held OKC to a season-low 38-point 1st half
    • Facing elimination after dropping Game 5, the young Spurs forced Game 7 on the strength of their 32-13 3rd-quarter takeover, where they held OKC scoreless for over 7 minutes in a 20-0 run. Wemby (28 pts, 10 reb, 3 blk) set the tone

    So what will it take for San Antonio to unseat the reigning champion Thunder in Game 7?

    “First thing is: listening to the experienced people, whether it’s on our team, on our staff, or outside,” Wemby said. “We got the chance to have plenty of those [people] around.”


    4. SGA, OKC FACE FIRST GAME 7 SINCE 2025 FINALS CLINCHER

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

    After San Antonio took Game 6, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was asked about fatigue.

    “Oh I’m good, I’m ready to go. Biggest game of my career… and if I lose, my season’s over.”

    Put that way, the situation sounds daunting. But for SGA, the biggest games of his career have been some of his best.

    • Mountain Climb: In the first of two Game 7s for the Thunder in last year’s title run, Shai (35 pts, 3 stl) outscored Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray to help put away the Nuggets in the West Semis
    • “Every night’s an opportunity to learn and get better, and we’re gonna do so,” Shai said at the time of his young Thunder team gaining the big-game experience they lacked, in real-time
    • Crash Course: That OKC squad was the 2nd-youngest team ever to win a championship, with an average age weighted by playing time of 25.36
    • Completing that final step took one more Game 7, OKC’s most recent before tonight. SGA (29 pts, 12 ast, 2 blk) rose up again in that deciding game of the Finals against Indy, claiming the series’ MVP honors

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

    Almost a year later, the champs now know exactly what it takes to win in these moments.

    • “It’s going to take more than just Shai to beat [the Spurs], to beat any team at this point,” Alex Caruso said… “It’s just about being confident in each other and going out there and playing.”
    • Responding Thunder: Over the last two Playoff runs, OKC is a perfect 9-0 following a postseason loss, including Games 2 and 5 of this West Finals

    Can the Thunder again avoid consecutive losses tonight in Game 7 to return to the NBA Finals?


    5. WEMBY LEADS SPURS INTO HIS FIRST CAREER GAME 7

    Spurs huddle

    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    He’s done it with his play.

    He can do it with his words.

    And sometimes, Victor Wembanyama can set the tone for the Spurs with just his presence.

    “He felt… an obligation to set a tone for us in a variety of ways,” coach Mitch Johnson said of Wemby during these West Finals.

    Tonight, the 22-year-old is set to play the biggest game of his young career, in the series’ deciding game. Fortunately for the Spurs, their tone-setter’s never shied away from big moments.

    • Alien Unwrapped: All eyes were on Wemby for his Christmas Day debut at MSG in 2024, where he set the Spurs’ record for most points on the Holiday with 42
    • Emirates NBA Cup: Wemby (22 pts, 9 reb, 21 min) returned from a calf injury to fuel the Spurs’ knockout of OKC in this season’s Semifinals, before adding 18 points in the Cup championship against the Knicks
    • “Wemby set the tone,” said All-Star Game MVP Anthony Edwards of first-time starter Wembanyama, who led Team World with 33 points on the day

    “That’s kind of what Vic does,” Dylan Harper said in the West Finals. “He kind of steps into big moments. He’s never afraid of it. He loves that moment.”

    Spurs huddle

    Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

    • Embracing the moment in his first-career Playoffs has set Wembanyama apart as the first player ever to total 50+ blocks and 25+ made threes in one postseason run
    • No Nerves: He’s also set a Spurs’ franchise record for most total points (350+) in a player’s first Playoffs
    • “I think he has shown in his three years – in a lot of different situations, with a lot of different circumstances – that he’s gonna attack those moments,” coach Johnson said

    Wemby’s Spurs will look to attack Game 7 tonight.

  • Cavaliers’ Koby Altman addresses tough offseason calls that need to be made after Knicks sweep

    The Association crew talks about what they were most impressed by in the Knicks sweep over the Cavaliers.

    INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) — Koby Altman’s midseason trade for James Harden was supposed to be the move that got the Cleveland Cavaliers back to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2018.

    After the New York Knicks dominated in their four-game sweep of the Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals, Harden’s return is just one of many questions at the top of the roster Altman and the front office will need to figure out over the next month.

    “We’re not in the conference finals without James. We’re in the second apron (of the salary cap) as of right now and we need to figure out what pieces we can bring back. The CBA puts that if you have a really good deep roster, you have to make difficult decisions,” Altman, the Cavaliers’ president of basketball operations, said on Friday.

    Cleveland will need to make pivotal decisions on three of its four core players this offseason. The first is Harden, who has a $42.3 million player option for next season. He could decline to re-sign with the Cavs for multiple years.

    The 36-year-old Harden averaged 10.7 points and 1.7 turnovers for the Cavaliers in 26 regular-season games. He averaged 19.7 points in the postseason, but his turnovers also went up to 4.7 per game, including five or more in 10 of Cleveland’s 18 games. He also struggled on defense.

    “I think people need to take a step back and realize we didn’t trade for MVP James Harden, we traded for James Harden at the end of his career that has transformed himself to becoming one of the best point guards in the league,” Altman said. “We were kind of shaky there in terms of our belief and when he came on board, he gave us a real belief in swagger.”

    Altman and owner Dan Gilbert also need to decide when to offer All-Star guard Donovan Mitchell an extension and if forward Evan Mobley is one of the franchise’s cornerstones moving forward.

    Mitchell has two seasons remaining on his contract. The Cavaliers can offer a four-year, $272 million extension beginning on July 7, or Mitchell could wait until next year, when he would be eligible for the five-year supermax contract worth $350 million.

    The 29-year-old Mitchell averaged 27.9 points, 5.7 assists and 4.5 rebounds during the regular season. He averaged 26 points in the playoffs and had six games where he scored at least 30.

    “When we have a superstar of his caliber that wants to be in Cleveland, that’s our best ambassador, that’s our best recruiter. There’s guys that are here that wouldn’t be here without him, quite frankly,” Altman said. “So I think the bigger question is, the one that’s been answered is, does he want be here and does he want to be here long term? And I think he’s answered that.”

    Check out Donovan Mitchell’s best plays this season after he was named a reserve for the 2026 NBA All-Star Game in Los Angeles.

    Mobley’s future depends on if the Cavaliers want to go all-in on acquiring Giannis Antetokounmpo. The Milwaukee Bucks’ All-Star forward is likely to be dealt this summer with speculation on Mobley being part of a package.

    “I’m not going to speculate on any players outside of these walls. All I can tell you is since Evan’s been here, we’ve had the third-best record in the league,” Altman said. “He’s been remarkable for us in terms of our ascent the last five years. He’s a huge part of what we do. He knows he needs to get better. When we sat down and talked to him, we talked about the intangible stuff and I even saw the skillset stuff.”

    Mobley — the 2024-25 Kia NBA Defensive Player of the Year — had a slow start to the season, which included a pair of calf injuries. He looked like a more dominant player during the postseason, when he averaged 17 points and 8.1 rebounds.

    Coach Kenny Atkinson will be back for a third season despite some wondering if he was going to be fired after the sweep by the Knicks. After 64 regular-season wins and the top seed in the East in 2024-25, the Cavaliers had 52 victories in the regular season and were the fourth seed in the East. However, they did get to the conference finals for the first time in eight years.

    Atkinson dealt with more roster upheaval and injuries in his second season. The Cavaliers had 41 starting lineup combinations during the regular season and only eight games where the core four of Mitchell, Harden, Mobley and Jarrett Allen all played in the same game.

    Trying to find chemistry on the fly and not having the full roster until late in the regular season were factors in why Cleveland was pushed to seven games before beating Toronto and Detroit.

    Without at least two straight days off for nearly a month, the Cavaliers were showing signs of fatigue. Despite that, they had a 22-point lead in the fourth quarter in Game 1 against the Knicks before New York had the second-biggest comeback in an NBA playoff game in the last 30 years to win in overtime.

    “The Knicks were tremendous. I think over the last 10 games, they’re playing at an offensive efficiency unlike anything we’ve seen in the playoffs,” Altman said. “If we’re being honest and transparent, when we lost Game 1 that really impacted us and that was the time to sort of put them on their heels and stop that momentum that they had and we gave that one away. If we’re going to use legs as an excuse, then that means we’ve got to start now in terms of our preparation, endurance and durability, because everyone’s going through that right now.”

  • Spurs. Thunder. Game 7. Squads set to battle with a spot in the Finals on the line

    Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs strike early in Game 6 and keep up the pressure to force Game 7 against OKC.

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    Win or go home. 

    Do or die. 

    The best two words in sports:

    Game 7. 

    The San Antonio Spurs vs. the Oklahoma City Thunder in the series finale of the Western Conference Finals. 

    A back-to-back Kia MVP. A unanimous Kia Defensive Player of the Year. A handful of All-NBA players and 2026 NBA All-Stars. There are All-Rookie selections. The 2023-24 Coach of the Year. The third-place finisher for this year’s coaching award. Former rookies of the year. 

    The past, present and future are converging in a vortex of playoff excitement and intensity with the defending champion Thunder and the rising Spurs.

    “Who doesn’t want to play in a Game 7?” said Spurs guard Stephon Castle.  

    Spurs rookie Dylan Harper said: “Definitely the biggest game of my life for sure.” 

    And the Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the 2025 NBA Finals MVP, offered: “Biggest game of my career. Yep, it’s the biggest game. It’s the next game, and if I lose, my season’s over.” 

    It’s an elimination game and closeout game for both teams, and the winner faces the New York Knicks in the Finals.

    No one should be surprised that two 60-win teams are going the distance in a series, but how they got to this point is a little unusual. Outside of double overtime in Game 1, the outcomes of the next five games weren’t really in doubt. The margin of victory in the past four games was at least 13 points, including a 21-point difference in Game 4 and a 27-point margin in Game 6. 


    Here are three things to watch – plus a bonus item – in Saturday’s Game 7 (8 ET, NBC/Peacock): 

    1. Gilgeous-Alexander needs MVP performance for Thunder

    The Spurs have defenders who are physical, have size and strength and are committed to defense. That combination has been difficult for Gilgeous-Alexander. Whether it’s Castle, Harper, Devin Vassell, Carter Bryant, De’Aaron Fox or occasionally even Victor Wembanyama, the Spurs’ game plan from the outset of this series has been focused on limiting Gilgeous-Alexander. 

    In Game 6, Gilgeous-Alexander had 15 points on 6-for-18 shooting. He missed his five 3-point attempts and shot three free throws, and the Thunder were outscored by 28 points in his 28 minutes on the court. 

    If the Spurs needed Wembanyama to play better than he did in Game 5 to win Game 6, the Thunder need a much better Gilgeous-Alexander in Game 7 if they want to a chance at a second consecutive championship. 

    The Spurs have hounded, pestered and muscled Gilgeous-Alexander into 37.9% shooting from the field, 26.1% on 3-pointers and 3.2 turnovers per game – the shooting numbers way below his season averages and his turnovers one more per game than he averaged during the regular season. 

    “A lot of the shots that I’m shooting, I’ve shot plenty of times before and they feel good,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “They’re just not going in. It’s too late to abandon my work and abandon my game and who I am this late in the season. I’ve got to trust it and live or die by it.” 

    Daigneault doesn’t want to put too much pressure on one player, and of course, it’s a team game. 

    “It’s not one guy, his shots, anything like that,” Daigneault said. 

    Assists aren’t always in his control because they rely on teammates making shots, but the Thunder are at their best when Gilgeous-Alexander is scoring, compiling assists and getting to the free throw line.  

    2. Is it Wembanyama’s time for a trip to the Finals?

    Victor Wembanyama puts up 28 points & 10 rebounds in a Game 6 win to keep the Spurs season alive.

    It’s rare for a 22-year-old in his third season to lead a team to the Finals. But it’s obvious now: Wembanyama is rare. 

    Now, he hasn’t been perfect, and it’s hard to achieve that the way these two teams play defense. But that’s what Spurs coach Mitch Johnson likes about Wembanyama’s approach this season. 

    “That’s maybe his biggest growth this year of not waiting for it to be perfect or necessarily to know what to do all the time but attack the moment and have the right approach and live with the results,” Johnson said. 

    In Game 6, Wembanyama answered his Game 5 shortcomings with 28 points, 10 rebounds, three blocks, two steals and two assists. Can the Spurs get another game like that from him in this series? 

    It’s his first Game 7, it’s on the road and the Wembanyama storyline adds more intrigue. 

    3. Game 7 intangibles: Experience and homecourt advantage

    The Thunder played in two Game 7s last season and won both – beating the Denver Nuggets in the conference semifinals and the Indiana Pacers in the NBA Finals. There is institutional knowledge.  

    “We’ve had a lot of experiences to this point,” Daigneault said. “And the one thing that we’ve learned more than anything is every game has a new life. Every game is earned if you want to win it. Game 7 will be no different. This is obviously a quality opponent. We have to play obviously a lot better than we did (in Game 6) and we understand that from a number of experiences.” 

    Being at home guarantees nothing. In 159 Game 7s in playoff history, the home team has won 117 times (73.6%). However, there has been at least one Game 7 road winner in each of the past 11 seasons, including two this season.

    On the injury front, the Thunder have ruled out Ajay Mitchell (right calf strain) and Jalen Williams (left hamstring strain) for Game 7. Williams played in Game 6 after missing three previous games, and it was clear he’s not close to 100%. 

    “Anything can happen in a Game 7,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “It’s win or go home. It being in your building is nice, but it doesn’t really mean anything. You have to go out there and be the better basketball team or else your season’s done and that’s what it comes down to. Now it’s going to be nice having our fans behind us and cheering us, but if we’re not better, our season will be over.”

    This is the first Game 7 for most of San Antonio’s key players, including Wembanyama, Castle, Vassell, Harper, Julian Champagnie, Keldon Johnson and Bryant. The Spurs have downplayed their lack of experience both in action and words. 

    “There’s been a lot of legendary Game 7s,” Harper said. “I feel like we’re a group that wants to be a part of that. We want to be part of that kind of history of Game 7. We’re going to go out there and swing no matter what. We’re just going to leave it all on the table.” 

    4. Bonus item! X-factors are Harper and Caruso

    After the 20-year-old Harper, the No. 2 pick in the 2025 Draft, had 18 points on 6-for-9 shooting, including 2-for-3 on 3-pointers, six rebounds and four assists in Game 6, Castle said, “When he plays with confidence, I don’t think there’s anybody his age that’s that good. I mean, he’s been a big part of our team all year, so we need him. When he plays like that, we’re pretty hard to beat.” 

    He, too, has been up and down in the series – just 18 points combined in Games 3-5 while slowed by a hamstring injury.  

    Said Johnson: “When he’s switched on mentally and aggressive, he’s pretty damn good. He’s got all the talent in the world and makeup to do whatever he wants. He’s capable of those nights when he’s in the right place between the ears. He’s a 20-year-old kid in the conference finals playing against a defending champ. He’s not 100% healthy and he’s doing a hell of a job. I’d say it’s probably a strain mentally, emotionally and physically.” 

    Alex Caruso sets a new postseason NBA record for the most 3PM off the bench in a single conference finals.

    For the Thunder, pay attention to Alex Caruso. He’s averaging 15.3 points and shooting 54.9% from the field and 55.9% on 3-pointers. In Oklahoma City’s three victories in the series, he’s averaging 18 points, 4.0 assists, 2.7 rebounds and 2.0 steals. He’s a disruptor defensively and a stabilizer offensively.  

    “He has the most championships on this team, first and foremost,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “He’s played in the biggest games on this team. That experience, you can’t recreate and can’t manufacture. Either go do it or don’t. AC isn’t some uber-talented guy. He’s not some guy who’s 6-7 with a 7-3 wingspan and shoots lights out.  

    “But he’s one of if not the best competitors in the NBA, night in and night out. He wears that hat for this group all season long, and it’s on TV every night now, so the world’s getting to see it. He’s huge for us.” 

    * * *

    Jeff Zillgitt has covered the NBA since 2008. You can email him at jzillgitt@nba.com, find his archive here and follow him on X.

  • Measuring the 10 biggest shots of the playoffs so far

    Lookback at RJ’s game-winner from Game 6 + his sound on the shot postgame.

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    Only 30 of the 79 games in these playoffs have been within five points in the last five minutes, but we’ve still had some iconic moments and plenty of clutch shots.

    The NBA’s Leverage Score, powered by AWS, allows us to measure exactly which shots have been the biggest. The leverage score looks at each team’s win probability at the end of a play and compares it to the win probability should the play have gone differently.

    Most of the biggest leverage plays of the playoffs are missed shots or turnovers when the offensive team had the chance to take the lead late in a game. But there have also been some big shots that have connected.

    Here are the 10 biggest made shots of the playoffs according to the NBA’s leverage model, through Game 6 of the Western Conference Finals:

    Note: The leverage score measures how a play changed the outcome of an individual game, not the series.


    1. Barrett gets the bounce

    Game: Cavs vs. Raptors, First round, Game 6

    Leverage score: 4.89

    RJ Barrett knocked down a three-pointer with 1.2 seconds remaining in OT to lift the Raptors past the Cavaliers, 112-110.

    The Cavs erased an 11-point, fourth-quarter deficit and were ready to close the Raptors out in Game 6, up one with the ball in the closing seconds of overtime. But after Collin Murray-Boyles stripped the ball off Evan Mobley, the Raptors had one more chance.

    Scottie Barnes isolated against Dean Wade, drew help from Mobley, and kicked the ball out to RJ Barrett, who was a few feet beyond the arc. Mobley closed out and contested Barrett’s shot pretty well. The expected field goal percentage on the shot (based on shot distance, how square the shooter is, and level of contest from the defender) was 33.2%.

    It was off the mark.

    But after hitting the heel of the rim, the ball bounced more than 10 feet in the air and dropped back through the net, turning a one-point deficit into a two-point lead. The Raptors were about to be eliminated, but suddenly they were 1.2 seconds from forcing Game 7.

    The Mobley 3-point attempt that followed was one of three buzzer-beating misses that had higher leverage scores than Barrett’s 3-pointer, but in the negative direction. The other two were:

    • Julian Champagnie’s 3-point miss (with San Antonio down two) at the end of Game 1 of Spurs vs. Timberwolves in the conference semis.

    2, 5 & 7. Spurs win a classic

    Game: Spurs vs. Thunder, Conference Finals, Game 1

    Leverage scores: 4.12, 3.70, 3.50

    Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals was one of the best games in recent memory. The Spurs took a 1-0 series lead behind 41 points and 24 rebounds from Victor Wembanyama, who hit one of the three shots listed below.

    2. Champagnie for the lead: The Spurs and Thunder combined to score 21 points on the final 13 possessions of the fourth quarter. And because it turned a late deficit into a lead, the shot from Game 1 with the highest leverage score was Champagnie’s corner 3-pointer at the shot clock buzzer with 1:26 left in regulation.

    Julian Champagnie 3-pointer

    5. Caruso pick-and-pop: The only other clutch shot in Game 1 that turned a deficit into a lead was the one immediately preceding Champagnie’s 3. Alex Caruso set a ball screen for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, drawing both Wembanyama and Stephon Castle to the ball. He got it back to Caruso, who drained a 3-pointer from the top of the arc before Wembanyama could recover.

    7. Wembanyama from deep: The most iconic shot from this game ranks behind the two shots above (and a few more below). With the Thunder up three, Jalen Williams missed a contested pull-up jumper (with plenty of time on the shot clock), setting up Wembanyama’s audacious 3-pointer for the tie.


    3. McCollum beats the Knicks … again

    Game: Knicks vs. Hawks, First round, Game 3

    Leverage score: 4.01

    CJ McCollum hit the go-ahead shots in the final minute of both Games 2 and 3 against the Knicks. The first — a stepback jumper against OG Anunoby — came with the score tied and is just outside the top 10 leverage plays of the playoffs. The Game 3 shot — another stepback against Miles McBride — was bigger because it turned a one-point deficit into a one-point lead with 12.5 seconds left in Game 3.

    CJ McCollum game-winning jumper


    4. A big-to-big connection

    Game: Thunder vs. Lakers, Conference Semifinals, Game 4

    Leverage score: 3.94

    After winning each of the first three games of their series with the Lakers by at least 18 points, the Thunder were down one in the final minute as they tried to complete the sweep. The Lakers trapped Gilgeous-Alexander, who hit Isaiah Hartenstein on the short roll. Two Lakers came from the weak side to help, and Hartenstein dropped the ball off to Chet Holmgren under the basket. LeBron James was able to recover, but Holmgren gathered himself and rose for a dunk that put the Thunder ahead with 32.8 seconds left.


    6. LeBron ties it from downtown

    Game: Lakers vs. Rockets, First round, Game 3

    Leverage score: 3.58

    Up three with a little more than 20 seconds left, the Rockets just needed to hold onto the ball to win Game 3 in Houston. But James picked Reed Sheppard’s pocket from behind. Marcus Smart picked up the loose ball and a few seconds later, James drained a right-wing 3 over two Rockets to tie the game. The Lakers won in overtime to take a 3-0 series lead.

    LeBron James game-tying 3-pointer


    8. Shamet’s 3 bounces in

    Game: Cavs vs. Knicks, Conference Finals, Game 1

    Leverage score: 3.49

    When Landry Shamet’s 3-point attempt from the right corner first hit the rim, it looked like the Knicks’ comeback from 22 points down in the fourth quarter was going to come up short. But the ball hit the backboard, landed back on the front of the rim, paused for a split second … and then dropped through the net, tying the game at 99 with 44.3 seconds left. The Knicks completed the comeback in overtime and then won the next three games more easily.

    Landry Shamet 3-pointer


    9. Mitchell puts the Cavs ahead

    Game: Cavs vs. Raptors, First round, Game 6

    Leverage score: 3.33

    Prior to Barrett’s game-winning 3 with 1.2 seconds left, the Cavs had most of the big buckets in Game 6 in Toronto. Mitchell beat Barrett for the last of those, a deft scoop off the glass that gave Cleveland the lead with 33.7 seconds left in overtime.

    Alas, Mitchell was just 5-for-23 on clutch shots as the Cavs went 3-5 in their eight playoff games that were within five points in the last five minutes.


    10. Harden’s response

    Game: Cavs vs. Knicks, Conference Finals, Game 1

    Leverage score: 3.33

    After Shamet’s out-and-in 3 tied Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, James Harden isolated against Jalen Brunson, took him into the paint, and hit a turnaround jumper from the free-throw line to put the Cavs back ahead with 30.4 seconds left.

    Brunson then tied the game again by driving past Harden for a floater that ranks 14th on this list.

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    John Schuhmann has covered the NBA for more than 20 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Bluesky.