The Spurs evened up the Western Conference finals Sunday night with a smothering defensive effort, holding Oklahoma City to its lowest point total since December of 2021 in a 103-82 victory, Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News writes in a subscriber-only story. San Antonio was aggressive from the start, forcing 17 Thunder turnovers and harassing them into shooting just 33% for the game.
Stephon Castle was the primary defender on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, while several other players also helped to hold the two-time MVP to 19 points on 6-of-15 shooting. The Spurs altered their strategy by using single coverage on SGA and staying close to the Thunder’s outside shooters, who only hit one three-pointer in the first half and wound up at 18.2% from beyond the arc for the game.
“That’s what we hang our hat on, the defensive end,” Devin Vassell said. “We felt like those two games they won we just weren’t ourselves. We weren’t playing to a level we could. We were leaving them open way too much. So (tonight) we were in a lot of great rotations, guarding the ball and that helped us make them miss and get us out in transition.”
The performance by Vassell, who tallied 13 points, six rebounds, three assists, one steal and one block in 33 minutes, has been especially gratifying for head coach Mitch Johnson, Orsborn adds. Johnson was Vassell’s developmental coach when San Antonio drafted him in 2020 and has pushed him to expand his game throughout his six seasons in the league.
“It’s been personally for me really fun to observe him because when we first drafted him, he was kind of a, not to be lazy, but a three-and-D generalization is kind of the bucket he was in, and he’s developed into a heck of a scorer in this league,” Johnson said. “And at times when you are a young player it’s hard to increase your offensive load and still continue to put that same energy into defense. He probably went away from it a little bit, and now to see him have the two-way impact he has is very impactful for our team and very rewarding for someone who has been with him from his rookie year.”
There’s more on the Spurs:
- Victor Wembanyama continues to set records during his first trip to the playoffs, notes Michael C. Wright of ESPN. After posting 33 points, eight rebounds, five assists and three blocks on Sunday, Wembanyama joined Bill Walton as the only players with at least 300 points, 150 rebounds and 50 blocks in their first postseason since blocks became an official statistic in 1974. Wembanyama now has 324 playoff points, breaking Stepen Jackson’s franchise record for a player in his first postseason.
- Former head coach Gregg Popovich inspired the team with a fiery speech after the Game 3 loss, Wright adds. De’Aaron Fox said it’s the first time this season that Popovich has come to the locker room to address the players. “Every team gets blown out, but just mentality wise, I think that was one of the worst games we had probably of the season,” Fox said. “Then, Pop came in after the game. He saw it, we all saw it. We all felt it. Coming into this game, we wanted to make sure that mentality was out the door. Even if we lost this game, as long as we came in with the right mentality and played the right way, we could be OK with losing the game. The way that we lost [Game 3] I think hurt more than losing the game, and that was pretty much for everybody in the locker room.”
- Fox continues to feel the effects of a high right ankle sprain that forced him to miss the first two games of the series, per Jeff McDonald of The San Antonio Express-News (subscription required). Fox was noticeably limping afterward, but he was still the game’s leading rebounder with 10 boards. “I don’t know how many of them I actually jumped for,” he said. “But I mean, that’s half the battle – instinct.”
