Game Recap
SAN ANTONIO Ball in his hands, clock bleeding out, building already halfway to losing its mind. And yeah, you knew who was taking it.
Victor Wembanyama rose up from 17 feet no rush, no panic and buried it with 1.0 on the clock. Spurs 101, Suns 100. Season flipped in a blink.
Six years out of the postseason? Done. Over. San Antonio’s back.
“It’s what you dream about,” Wembanyama said after, calm as ever. Meanwhile the arena sounded like a jet engine.
The Spurs didn’t just win this thing. They stole it late, ripped it out of Phoenix’s hands in the final minute and didn’t apologize.
Turning Point
The sequence that broke Phoenix
Phoenix had it. Up one. Ball. Under 12 seconds.
Then chaos.
De’Aaron Fox and rookie Dylan Harper trapped Devin Booker near the sideline nowhere to go, nowhere to breathe. Suns coach Jordan Ott had to burn a timeout just to save the possession. That’s already a red flag.
Out of the timeout? Worse.
San Antonio fouls immediately. Rasheer Fleming steps to the line. Miss. Miss. Both rattled out. Building got loud. Like, uncomfortable loud.
And that was it. You could feel it slipping.
Wemby took the inbounds, walked it up like he owned the night, then pulled up over Oso Ighodaro. Bucket. Ice cold. Curtain.
Key Performances
Victor Wembanyama’s takeover
Wemby finished with 34 and 12. Numbers are nice. The timing? That’s the story.
He wasn’t forcing it all night. Let the game come. Picked spots. Protected the rim. Then in the last minute yeah, he grabbed the whole thing and bent it.
That jumper? Clean look, high release, basically unblockable. You contest it, you just hope.
Kid’s already living in late-game moments. That’s different.
De’Aaron Fox keeps them alive
Fox dropped 23, but it’s the little stuff late.
That finger-roll with 26.6 left cut it to one and gave San Antonio life. Before that? Spurs looked cooked.
He pushed pace all night, got downhill, made Phoenix guards work. And when it got tight, he didn’t blink.
Suns backcourt brought the fire… until it didn’t
Collin Gillespie came out bombing 24 points, five triples, no hesitation. Booker added 22, including a third-quarter stretch where he looked ready to take over.
They combined to shoot 15-for-34. Not bad.
But late? Booker gets trapped, offense stalls, and Phoenix doesn’t get a clean look when it matters. That’s the part that’ll sting.
How did San Antonio climb back?
Third-quarter punch flipped the game
Spurs came out of halftime down and looking flat. Then boom 19-11 run to open the third.
Ball movement got sharper. Defense tightened. Suddenly it’s 71-70 and the building’s back in it.
Phoenix answered Booker scored seven straight like a reminder but San Antonio never faded again.
They hung around. And hung around. Then stole it.
Bench and role guys did enough
Julian Champagnie chipped in 14. Nothing flashy, just steady buckets when the offense bogged down.
And even with Stephon Castle scratched (right hip tightness), the Spurs pieced together enough defense late to make it messy for Phoenix.
Not pretty. Effective.
Why did the Suns collapse late?
Short answer? Execution.
You can’t miss two free throws in that spot. You just can’t.
You can’t get trapped that easily with the game on the line, either. Spurs forced it, sure, but Phoenix looked disorganized spacing off, timing off, everything just a half-step slow.
And defensively? Letting Wembanyama walk into a rhythm pull-up… that’s a gamble. He made them pay.
What this means
Spurs are officially back
Four straight wins. Top-six seed locked. No play-in drama.
After years in the lottery, San Antonio’s got real momentum and a superstar who already looks way too comfortable closing games.
Suns still stuck in the play-in grind
Phoenix drops to seventh in the West. And yeah, that means extra work.
They just wrapped a 2-4 road trip, and it showed. Legs looked heavy. Execution slipped.
Now it’s about surviving.
Up Next
The Suns head home to face Milwaukee on Saturday not exactly a get-right spot.
Spurs stay in San Antonio and host Indiana. Different vibe now. Different stakes, too.