2026 NBA Finals: Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs know they must be better in Game 2
To forge a series tie in the NBA Finals, Victor Wembanyama says the Spurs 'need to play our game.'
Jeff Zillgitt | Archive
Updated on June 5, 2026 2:10 PM
Victor Wembanyama talks with the media ahead of Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Finals.
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SAN ANTONIO â Victor Wembanyamaâs demeanor nearly 12 hours after losing to the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the NBA Finals was no different from what it was minutes after the loss.
âWe donât need to do anything incredible,â Wembanyama said early Thursday afternoon, looking ahead to Game 2 Friday in San Antonio (8:30 ET, ABC).
As the hour neared midnight Wednesday following the Knicksâ impressive 105-95 victory, Wembanyama remained undaunted.
âItâs almost not like I have anything to figure out. Itâs almost like I have to play normal, not even good,â he said. âItâs just like doing the right things is enough. When we play bad (and) when I play bad, (it) is when we shoot ourselves in the foot. This is why Iâm not worried. Weâre going to be so much better. Iâm going to be so much better.â
He doubled down on earlier comments.
âI was bad tonight. Itâs not more complicated than that.â
âIâm not worried the slightest.â
While technically not a must-win game, the Spurs want to avoid a 2-0 deficit before the series moves to New York for Games 3 and 4.
With a night to sleep on it and then review the video of the game with Spurs coach Mitch Johnson, the coaching staff and his teammates, Wembanyama remained serene.
âItâs not even technical, tactical,â he said. âWe need to approach the game with a better mental state. We just need to play our game. We just need to be normal.â
Then he explained what normal is: âNormal means trusting each other, trusting the basketball gods, trusting the game plan, executing, and not relying on talent so much to make shots or to save the day. Weâve been playing a certain way all season. Weâve been successful this way. Thereâs no reason to change the day the Finals start.â
Itâs clear Wembanyama didnât have his best game. He had 26 points, 12 rebounds and three blocks, but he was 6-for-21 from the field, 2-for-9 on 3-pointers and committed six turnovers.
Spurs coach Mitch Johnson talks with the media ahead of Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Finals.
Much has been made of Knicks center-forward Karl-Anthony Townsâ defense on Wembanyama. With Towns as the primary defender, Wembanyama was 2-for-11 from the field and turned the ball over five times, according to NBA.com tracking data. How much of that was Towns and how much of that was Wembanyamaâs decision-making? The Spurs will look to get Wembanyama into more advantageous spots offensively.
Now, Wembanyama doesnât bear the load for the loss. The Spurs shot 36% from the field and 25.6% on 3-pointers, and Johnson lamented their 16 assists on 32 made field goals â below 24.4 assists on 40.2 made field goals during the playoffs. Johnson didnât like that the Knicks scored 23 second-chance points off of 10 offensive rebounds.
âThe way we played offensively in terms of a team and our brand, we didnât play with the pass enough (and) we didnât put enough pressure and force on the rim in the paint,â Johnson said. âIt led to a lot of making or missing shots, us trying to play with talent offensively instead of playing together and finding opportunities to take advantage of forcing defenses into making decisions of giving up this or giving up that. New York gets a lot of credit for that.
âWe have a lot of room for improvement on that moving forward.â
How do they respond? The Spurs have been good in the playoffs after a loss, and following a bad game, Wembanyama has generally been better in the next game. San Antonio has lost consecutive games just once in the playoffs, and in Wembanyamaâs next game after a loss in the playoffs, he averages 26.7 points, 11 rebounds and 3.3 blocks and shoots 50.9% from the field.
The Spurs have played through basketball hardships in each round of the playoffs:
- Wembanyamaâs concussion in the first round.
- Losing the series opener and Wembanyamaâs flagrant foul 2 ejection in the Western Conference semifinals against the Minnesota Timberwolves.
- DeâAaron Fox missed the first two games of the Western Conference Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder and a 3-2 deficit to the Thunder, requiring a Game 7 road victory to reach the Finals.
âWe know weâre not here by chance,â Wembanyama said. âWeâve been through some weird situations, whatever. Yes, itâs reassuring to know that these guys, the 18 guys we got, are built this way, are resilient.â
That resiliency will be tested in Game 2.
Wembanyama told reporters he received a text from Gregg Popovich, the Hall of Fame coach who is now the teamâs president of basketball operations.
He didnât reveal precise details, but the overall message from Popovich to Wembanyama: âIt was that Iâve been bad, and Iâm better than this.â
Jeff Zillgitt has covered the NBA since 2008. You can email him at [email protected], find his archive here and follow him on X.
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