Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 5
Spurs Seek Game 2 Offensive Reset After 95-Point Finals Opener as 16 Assists Mark Season Low
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 5

Spurs Seek Game 2 Offensive Reset After 95-Point Finals Opener as 16 Assists Mark Season Low

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 5

Summary

  • San Antonio spent Thursday framing its 105-95 Game 1 loss as an outlier, with Victor Wembanyama saying the Spurs need a better mental state and a more "normal" offense in Friday's must-win home spot.
  • A 99.0 offensive rating, 16 assists and a 40-point second half captured the breakdown: too much hero-ball, too little cutting and screening, and rushed perimeter looks despite 42 mostly catch-and-shoot 3-point attempts.
  • Wembanyama's 6-of-21 shooting and the Spurs' 11-of-46 mark from outside mirrored earlier playoff openers, when San Antonio also started slowly before rebounding later in each series.
  • New York's defense is central to the adjustment challenge, having held the Spurs to 42 paint points and only eight from Wembanyama while willingly conceding 3s; the Knicks allowed 44.8% of opponent shots from deep this season.
  • That trade-off suggests Game 2 may again hinge less on schematic overhaul than on whether San Antonio restores ball movement and converts the jumpers New York is prepared to live with.

Insights

After a historic shooting slump, how can the Spurs' young coach outmaneuver the Knicks' defense in a pivotal Game 2?
With a 53-year drought on the line, can the Knicks' experience overcome superstar Victor Wembanyama?
Is Jalen Brunson's high-volume scoring sustainable, or is it a sign of the Knicks' offensive vulnerability?