Victor Wembanyama will not face additional discipline for shoving Jalen Brunson to the ground during the first quarter of Game 3 in the NBA Finals. The league reviewed the play following Monday night’s game and announced Tuesday that the incident would not be upgraded to a flagrant foul, meaning the Spurs star remains eligible to play in Game 4 and faces no suspension risk heading into the rest of the series.
The decision was notable not only for its conclusion but for the admission that accompanied it. A senior league official responsible for referee development acknowledged earlier Tuesday that a foul of some kind should have been called on the play when it occurred. Despite that acknowledgment, the league chose not to retroactively elevate the no-call to a flagrant designation, drawing a distinction between a missed call in the moment and a play that rises to the level of punishable post-game discipline.
What happened on the court
The play in question took place with just over four minutes remaining in the first quarter of Monday’s 115-111 San Antonio victory at Madison Square Garden. Brunson moved to set a screen near the free throw line, positioning himself in the path of Wembanyama. When the seven-foot-four center turned and encountered Brunson, he responded with a firm shove that sent the Knicks guard to the floor. No foul was called despite immediate and vocal protests from New York’s players and coaching staff.
The non-call became one of the more discussed moments from the game, particularly given its context within an already charged atmosphere and the fact that the Knicks spent much of the evening frustrated by the officiating.
Why the stakes were significant
The league’s flagrant foul system carries automatic consequences at certain thresholds. Any player who accumulates four flagrant points during the postseason faces a mandatory suspension. Wembanyama entered the review sitting at two flagrant points, meaning an upgrade to even a flagrant foul 1 on the Brunson play would have moved him to three points and within a single incident of a suspension that could alter the entire series.
His two existing points came from an earlier round of the playoffs, when he was assessed a flagrant foul 2 for contact above the neck against a Minnesota Timberwolves forward during the second round. That play resulted in an immediate ejection but no additional fine or further discipline beyond the two points assigned.
What it means going forward
With the review closed and no upgrade issued, Wembanyama enters Game 4 without any additional restrictions on his availability. He remains at two flagrant points for the postseason, giving him meaningful room before reaching any threshold that would trigger automatic consequences.
For the Knicks, the ruling closes an avenue they may have hoped would provide some form of relief heading into a must-win game. New York trails 2-1 in the series and has already raised concerns about the officiating environment after Monday’s loss. The league’s decision to acknowledge a missed call without applying discipline is unlikely to sit comfortably with a team that feels the balance of the whistles has not gone in their favor.
Game 4 is scheduled for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, where the Knicks will attempt to restore their two-game series advantage with the full version of Wembanyama standing across from them once again.

