Going into Monday night’s Game 3 at Madison Square Garden, the San Antonio Spurs were staring at a 2-0 series deficit against the New York Knicks and walking into the most hostile environment they had faced all postseason. The building had not hosted an NBA Finals game since 1999. The crowd was wound tight. The circumstances were as unfavorable as they could reasonably be for a road team carrying the weight of two straight losses.
None of it mattered. The Spurs played their game, won 115-111, and kept the series alive with a performance built on unselfishness, defensive grit and two historically young players delivering under extraordinary pressure.
Wembanyama and Castle write their names into the record books
Victor Wembanyama finished with 32 points, eight rebounds, six assists and three blocks, matching the game high and continuing a run of dominant Finals performances. Stephon Castle added 23 points, five rebounds and five assists alongside him. Together the two 22-and-under teammates combined for 55 points, becoming the first such pair in NBA Finals history to each reach 20 points in the same game. Their combined total was their highest in any non-overtime postseason game this year.
Wembanyama’s output was not the product of adrenaline alone. In the hours before tip-off, he had spent time in Gramercy Park, sketching the statue of Edwin Booth that stands at the center of the private square. It was a deliberate act of stillness from a player who has spoken openly about the mental demands of a deep playoff run, the need to create quiet moments that allow the mind to reset between the noise of each game.
Team basketball as the foundation
Beyond the star performances, San Antonio’s win was built on collective execution. The Spurs distributed 28 assists across the game, with De’Aaron Fox leading the way with eight of his own to go alongside 12 points. Six players finished in double figures, giving the performance a balanced quality that coach Mitch Johnson has consistently described as the standard his team holds itself to.
San Antonio attacked the paint relentlessly, using guard play and movement to destabilize New York’s defense rather than relying on isolation. The ball moved with purpose. Screens were set with conviction. Players made decisions quickly and trusted the system that had been built over years under the guidance of the franchise’s legendary former coach and carried forward by the current staff.
Johnson noted after the game that his group showed improved poise throughout the 48 minutes, particularly in the way players recognized when to push their own advantage and when to find a teammate in a better position.
Playing through the chaos
The game took place against a backdrop of unusual logistical complexity. A presidential visit to the arena created expanded security perimeters throughout Manhattan and extended arrival times for both fans and players. The Spurs, despite a police escort from a hotel less than a mile away, spent nearly 30 minutes in transit getting to the building. Inside, a sellout crowd packed with celebrities created an atmosphere as loud and electric as any in recent playoff memory.
Castle acknowledged the environment directly after the game, noting that the team had expected the crowd to generate big moments and had committed before tip-off to staying composed when those moments came. The Spurs’ poise in the face of a charged arena was perhaps the clearest evidence that this group is not done.
San Antonio is still down 2-1 in the series. But the team that walked out of Madison Square Garden Monday night looked nothing like a team that had already given up.

