Game Recap
SAN FRANCISCO – The streak is loud. Nine straight. And counting.
But the real number San Antonio keeps checking? 2.5. That’s the gap behind Oklahoma City for the No. 1 seed out West. Not huge. Not comfortable either.
So here come the Spurs (57-18), rolling into Chase Center on Wednesday night, opening a quick three-stop swing that could shape the top of the bracket. Golden State first. Then the Clippers. Then Denver. No soft landings.
And yeah, circle this one. Because the Warriors already burned them twice back in November -both at the Frost Bank Center, both tight, both ugly if you’re Gregg Popovich. One was a 125-120 shootout. The other? A one-point gut punch, 109-108. Same script: late buckets, defensive breakdowns, Steph doing Steph things.
Different Warriors now, though. Way different.
No Stephen Curry. Knee still not right, 25 games and counting. No Jimmy Butler III either — torn ACL back in January, season gone. That duo hung 74 in one meeting, 70 in the other. That version of Golden State is long gone.
What’s left? A team scrapping to stay relevant.
Why are the Spurs suddenly everywhere?
Key Performances
Victor Wembanyama’s heater isn’t normal
Let’s just call it what it is. The kid is cooking.
Victor Wembanyama has been on a tear that forced his name into MVP chatter whether voters like it or not. March was absurd: 26.8 a night, 12 boards, nearly four blocks. Spurs went 14-1 in games he played. That’s not stat-padding. That’s control.
And Monday? He dropped 41/16/3 in 31 minutes on Chicago. Thirty-one. Sat the whole fourth like it was preseason.
He’s also playing with the eligibility clock ticking. Miss four more games and he’s out of the awards pool. So yeah, he’s suiting up. A lot.
But ask him, and he shrugs it off.
Healthy locker room. Good vibes. Winning fixes everything. That’s his lane right now.
The Spurs’ identity – defense first, then chaos
They’ve tightened up. Rotations cleaner. Rim protection elite. Opponents aren’t getting easy paint looks anymore, not with Wemby erasing mistakes like a cheat code.
And offensively? It’s pace, length, and a whole lot of “good luck matching up with this.”
What’s left of the Warriors?
Key Performances
Kristaps Porzingis trying to keep the lights on
Yeah, that Kristaps Porzingis.
Dropped into this Warriors situation midseason and suddenly he’s their most reliable bucket. Last four games: 22.5 points, flirting with 50/50 splits from the field and deep. Not a typo. He’s stretching defenses, popping off screens, punishing smaller lineups.
It’s not pretty basketball. But it’s working… sometimes.
Golden State is 36-39, stuck in that 10th seed grind, fighting just to stay in the Play-In picture. They did win three straight before Denver smacked them Sunday, 116-93. Looked flat. Legs gone by the second half.
But back home? Two straight wins. Different energy.
Life without Steph
Let’s not overthink it. Without Curry, everything shrinks.
Spacing tighter. Ball movement slower. Defenses load up, dare someone else to beat them. Sometimes Porzingis answers. Sometimes nobody does.
He hasn’t even shared the floor with Curry yet since arriving. Still, he sounds like a guy soaking it in from the sidelines watching, listening, picking things up.
That’s nice. It’s also not wins.
Turning Point to Watch
Can San Antonio avoid another Warriors trap?
Because that’s what November was. A trap they walked right into. Twice.
Golden State, even shorthanded, still has that “we’ve seen everything” DNA. They’ll muck it up. Slow it down. Try to drag this into a halfcourt grind where every possession feels like a coin flip.
If the Spurs get sloppy, if the turnovers creep up, if they settle for jumpers… this gets interesting fast.
If not? Could get ugly.
The Bigger Picture
San Antonio’s not hiding from it anymore. They want the one seed. They’ve got the tiebreaker over OKC, which could matter if this thing tightens late.
Four straight home games to close the season after this trip. That’s a gift if they handle business now.
Golden State? Different story.
They’re chasing Portland for ninth. Just trying to stay alive long enough to maybe get Curry back. Maybe.
Right now, it’s survival mode.
And Wednesday night? Feels like two teams living in completely different realities sharing the same floor.