Beast of the West: How Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs Just Shattered OKC’s Playoff Illusion

Comic-book style illustration of Victor Wembanyama throwing down a powerful dunk over a defender in the 2026 NBA playoffs.

Wemby’s First or SGA’s 2nd?

In my opinion, this series is the true NBA final because either the Spurs or OKC will beat the Knicks or the Cavs

If anyone thought the Oklahoma City Thunder were just going to cruise their way to an NBA Finals appearance, Victor Wembanyama just gave the entire league a 7-foot-4 reality check.

In a grueling, double-overtime Game 1 thriller, the San Antonio Spurs did what nobody else could manage in the first two rounds of these 2026 playoffs: they made the Thunder bleed. Oklahoma City rolled into the Western Conference Finals completely untamed, sweeping through their first two series with flawless, undefeated momentum. They looked unstoppable. But they hadn’t run into the sheer willpower of a generational monster. By the time the final buzzer rang on a 122-115 statement win for San Antonio, OKC’s perfect postseason record was dead and buried.

A Performance for the Ages. Let’s talk about the numbers, because what Victor Wembanyama just pulled off defies belief.

Wemby clocked over 49 minutes on the floor—the heaviest workload of his young career—and put up a staggering 41 points, 24 rebounds, and 3 blocks. At just 22 years old, he officially became the youngest player in NBA history to drop a 40-20 game in the postseason.

SGA and the Thunder’s Resilience Make no mistake—Oklahoma City didn’t just fold. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander played like the MVP candidate he is, answering every single Spurs run with absolute composure. SGA’s ability to get to his spots and collapse the defense is what dragged this game into double overtime in the first place. But even a masterclass from Shai wasn’t enough to overcome the historic interior wall San Antonio built in those final five minutes.

When the game dragged into deep water, the reigning Defensive Player of the Year simply refused to fade. After a clutch, ice-cold three-pointer in the first overtime kept the Spurs alive, Wemby completely broke the game open in the second extra period. He capped off his historic night by slamming home an and-one dunk right over Chet Holmgren, effectively shutting the door on the Thunder’s home court.

Mindset Over Momentum. What makes this win so significant isn’t just the tactical adjustments; it’s the psychological shift. The Thunder have been playing like an elite machine, but the Spurs brought a grit and a “survival mode” mentality that OKC wasn’t prepared to handle.

As Wembanyama noted post-game, it came down to sheer willpower. When you drag a top-ranked offense into a double-overtime fistfight, momentum goes out the window. It becomes about who wants to answer the call when their lungs are burning.

The Spurs stole home-court advantage in spectacular fashion, and while this is bound to be a long, brutal series, one thing is now undeniable: San Antonio knows exactly how to break the unbreakable.

Part 2: The LeBron James Respect Factor

A cartoon illustration of LeBron James (Lakers #23) holding a basketball on the NBA GOAT court, surrounded by floating statistical symbols representing his 23-season longevity, with Bronny James (Lakers #9) standing in the background.

The Longevity of Greatness: Why LeBron Needs More Credit

While we fight for Kobe’s seat at the table, we have to address the “King” in the room. LeBron James is currently playing in his 23rd NBA season. Think about that for a second. Most players are lucky to make it to season 10.

The Routine and the Stats People throw big-time shade at LeBron. They point to his Finals record or his “superteam” moves. But what they ignore is the sheer professionalism it takes to stay at this level for two decades. LeBron’s stats are better because he’s played longer, but that’s not a fluke—it’s the result of a legendary routine and a commitment to his body that we’ve never seen before.

The Genuine Side of the King Beyond the triple-doubles, LeBron seems like a genuine person who understands the weight of his platform. Watching him play alongside his son, Bronny, in 2026 is one of the coolest full-circle moments in sports history. It’s not just a PR stunt; it’s a testament to his longevity and his role as a father.

The Verdict MJ had the peak. Kobe had the mentality. LeBron has the career. You don’t have to hate one to love the other. But next time you’re debating the GOAT, don’t just stop at 23 and 6. Remember the 24. Remember the 81-point night. And remember that the conversation is a lot more crowded than people want to admit.


Who is your #1? MJ’s rings? Kobe’s Mamba Mentality? Or LeBron’s endless prime?

Send your arguments to scout@sportswriter.ca—we’re looking for the best fan takes to publish in our “Reader’s Voice” column next week!

Part 1: Did We Forget About Kobe?

animated image of Michael Jordan #23 & Kobe Bryant #8

Did We Forget About Kobe? Why the GOAT Conversation is a Three-Way Fight

If you turn on any sports talk show today, the debate is always the same: Michael Jordan vs. LeBron James. It’s like the early 2000s never happened. But if you were watching basketball in that era, you know that the “Black Mamba” wasn’t just a part of the conversation—he was the conversation.

The Michael Jordan Standard Let’s get the facts straight. Michael Jordan is the only person to ever win NBA MVP and Defensive Player of the Year in the same season twice. He went 6-for-6 in the Finals. Six visits, six rings, zero doubts. His 63-point masterpiece against the 1986 Celtics remains the gold standard for playoff dominance. Larry Bird said it best: “It was God disguised as Michael Jordan.”

The Kobe Bryant Reality Then there’s Kobe. We lost him far too soon, and it feels like some of his legacy is being buried in the shuffle of the MJ/LeBron wars.

Kobe has five championships. One of them was a legendary three-peat (matching one of the Bulls’ two three-peats). He didn’t just play; he obsessed. He dropped 81 points in a single game against the Raptors—the third-most in NBA history. And let’s not forget the storybook ending: 60 points in his final game. At 37 years old, with a body that was failing him, he willed himself to one last legendary performance.

Kobe wasn’t just “Jordan Lite.” He was the bridge between eras, the most skilled shot-maker the game has ever seen, and a five-time champion who deserves a permanent seat at the GOAT table.

MJ, Kobe, Lebron

It’s the argument that never dies. Every barber shop, every Twitter thread, and every courtside seat in the country has a different answer. But as we hit the final stretch of the 2025-26 season, the “Greatest of All Time” conversation has shifted.

We’ve seen Michael Jordan’s six-ring ghost loom over the league for decades. We’ve watched Kobe Bryant’s “Mamba Mentality” become the blueprint for every young star coming up today. And now, we are watching LeBron James—at 41 years old—still rewriting the record books in a Lakers (or maybe soon to be Cavs?) jersey.

Is it about the peak dominance of Jordan? The unrivaled work ethic and shot-making of Kobe? Or the unprecedented longevity and statistical god-mode of LeBron?

I’m about to weigh in with my definitive ranking. I’m looking at the rings, the impact, and the “eye test” that stats can’t always capture. This one is going to ruffle some feathers.