Wembanyama’s Spurs dethrone Thunder to reach NBA Finals against Knicks
The San Antonio Spurs defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder 111-103 in Game Seven to reach the NBA Finals, with Victor Wembanyama scoring 22 points and winning Western Conference Finals MVP. The Spurs, led by coach Gregg Popovich, will face the New York Knicks in the championship series starting Wednesday.
San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich has steered his team back to the NBA Finals for the first time in a decade after a tense 111-103 victory over the defending champions Oklahoma City Thunder in Game Seven of the Western Conference finals on Saturday. The Spurs claimed the series 4-3 and will face the New York Knicks in a championship showdown beginning on Wednesday in San Antonio, renewing a rivalry that began in December’s NBA Cup final, when New York defeated San Antonio 124-113 in Las Vegas.
Victor Wembanyama, the 22-year-old French centre and reigning NBA Defensive Player of the Year, led his team with 22 points and seven rebounds, guiding the Spurs through a winner-take-all contest that they controlled for most of the night. Wembanyama, who was named Most Valuable Player in the Western Conference finals, described the moment as a childhood dream realised. “Some part of the childhood dream was going to come true,” he said after the final buzzer, his voice trembling with emotion as he laughed, cried and embraced teammates. “Though we’re still hungry for one more, this feeling is… I can’t explain it, it’s so powerful. We want four more. We’re not done.” His performance capped a dominant postseason run in which he established himself as the cornerstone of a resurgent Spurs franchise.
Julian Champagnie contributed 20 points, including six three-pointers, while Stephon Castle added 16 as San Antonio relied on unselfish play and cohesive teamwork to secure the victory. “We had a great team,” Champagnie said. “We had to stay the course and play a good game. We were passing the ball. We were playing as a team. We come out here and play together.” Wembanyama, meanwhile, paid tribute to his teammates, saying, “They don’t even know how much I love them. They are just incredible. Everybody stepped up tonight.” The win marked the Spurs’ first Finals appearance since 2014, ending a prolonged period of rebuilding under Popovich and signalling the arrival of a new era anchored by Wembanyama’s generational talent.
For Oklahoma City, led by NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander with 35 points, the defeat ended a season that had promised a title defence. Thunder coach Mark Daigneault acknowledged his team’s effort but admitted frustration at falling just short. “There’s nobody we don’t think we can’t beat,” he said. “I thought we had enough to win, but credit San Antonio – they’re the ones who did.” The Spurs, a young squad with only one player who had previously experienced a Game Seven, overcame a more experienced Thunder side to book their place on basketball’s biggest stage. With a Finals rematch against the Knicks looming, San Antonio now stands on the brink of a championship, while New York will look to defend its newfound elite status after a dramatic season of its own.

