Devin Vassell‘s success with the Spurs has come in large part because of his willingness to accept a different role than the one he initially envisioned for himself, James Herbert writes for CBS Sports. Rather than being San Antonio’s secondary star, the 25-year-old wing has become one of its crucial role players.
Vassell has been asked to fill different needs for the team since being drafted in 2020 due to the transitional stage the Spurs were going through. In 2025/26, he posted his lowest scoring average since ’21/22, but he has figured out how to be exactly what the team needs from him.
“I know my game,” Vassell said. “And I know I can get to my spot whenever I want to, I know I can get a shot whenever I want to. But for the betterment of the team, sometimes that’s not what you need.”
His teammates have been impressed with Vassell’s adaptability and the way he’s rounded out his game. “[His impact] has more substantive value to it,” Julian Champagnie said.
We have more from the Spurs:
- De’Aaron Fox believes that this season offers him the next and last bucket-list accolade for his trophy shelf, Tom Orsborn writes for the Express-News. “I’ve been All-NBA. I’ve been an All-Star,” he said. “The last thing I think that there is, is to win a championship. And I think we have a good shot at it.” He breaks down for Orsborn some of the matchups he expects to see from the Blazers in the first round.
- With the Spurs ready to take on the Blazers in Game 1 on Sunday, Victor Wembanyama is as ready as could be for his first taste of NBA playoff basketball, knowing full well the championship expectations that rest on his shoulders, Weiss writes. “This moment, it’s really what you work on all year, but also your whole career,” the Defensive Player of the Year favorite said. “We’re dreaming of the playoffs as kids before coming here.” Wembanyama called this the first truly high-stakes basketball he has played since the 2024 Olympics.
- Mitch Johnson‘s path from star high school point guard in Washington to Stanford floor general to coaching in the NBA set the stage for his debut as the first San Antonio head coach not named Gregg Popovich since 1996, Jeff McDonald writes in a profile on Johnson for the San Antonio Express-News.
- While Popovich has remained mostly out of the public eye since retiring, he has been monitoring the season and his former players closely, according to Keldon Johnson. “He stays in touch. He texts me or calls me from time to time, probably every other day,” Johnson said, per Jared Weiss at The Athletic, adding that he still gets tips on what he could be doing better from his former coach. “But at the same time, he’s very encouraging, telling me that he’s proud of me and things like that. I mean, he’s definitely still himself. He’s still sharp. He’s still very much Pop. He has not skipped a beat at all.”

This is the De’Aaron Fox playoffs, the Spurs will go as far as he takes them
I’m pretty sure it’s they go as far as Wemby takes them.
Wemby will be Wemby but he cant do it all by himself, thats why they will go as far as Fox takes them
Just look at yesterday’s game, he stepped up along with Wemby and they closed the game out.
Deni is the man. Great to see a player blossoming in front of your eyes man. Just a great thing to witness.
Spurs are a team. They are deep. Blazers need Scoot, Sharpe, Grant to step up. Clingan too has to play Wemby man. At least make Spurs sweat a little.
Here we go. Lets make this a game.
Lakers be seeing the Spurs in the finals, James is too good and he is very good in general. The Spurs are pretty cool to watch but James is so mean in the playoffs.
LAL will not go to the finals :) Chill.
It’s quite obvious they will Pete