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Home»Basketball»NBA Finals: Breaking down the most brutal 30 seconds of Victor Wembanyama’s career
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NBA Finals: Breaking down the most brutal 30 seconds of Victor Wembanyama’s career

News RoomBy News RoomJune 6, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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NBA Finals: Breaking down the most brutal 30 seconds of Victor Wembanyama’s career

Thirty seconds. It’s enough to change a lifetime.

Whether the final 30 seconds of Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Finals alter the course of San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama’s career remains to be seen, for the 7-foot-4 phenom is still only 22 years old, with his lifetime ahead of him, but there is no doubt he was shook in the biggest moment of his three-year journey into this league from France.

At halftime on Friday, when Wembanyama had as many turnovers (2) as made field goals, Charles Barkley, the all-time player and broadcaster, already figured the Spur was shaken.

“Wemby’s in shock right now. It’s probably been a long time since he’s got his ass kicked like this. … When you’re a great player, very rarely do you get your ass kicked,” said Barkley, as candidly as ever, recalling two occasions — once in high school, by Lewis Jackson, and once in college, by Leonard Mitchell, when he had his own ass kicked in a similar manner.

“Wemby’s spinning,” added Barkley. “You see he’s throwing the ball all over the place. It’s a shock to his system. He’s too young to understand. … He is so flustered right now, and, listen, we can say what we want to: ‘He’s 22. He’s going to own the league soon.’ But, right now, Big KAT [Karl-Anthony Towns] is taking his ass to the woodshed, plain and simple.”

The panel concurred: “KAT has him in shock.”

All of which helped set the stage for the last 30 seconds of what was a thriller — one the New York Knicks won, 105-104, swiping a 2-0 series lead — when Wemby, having spun his night on its head, had earned the right to be the hero, the GOAT, only to be, well, the goat.

Following his poor first-half performance, Wembanyama came to play in the second, pushing his total to 29 points on 11-for-19 shooting … until those final 30 seconds. It was his driving hoop and the harm that gave the Spurs a 104-102 advantage in the last minute.

Jalen Brunson, of course, doing what he does, tied the game, 104-104, with a fallaway jumper as the clock struck 39 seconds left, granting the stage back to Wembanyama.

And you could explain away each of Wemby’s miscues in the ensuing moments.

He was going for a 2-for-1 when he took a contested long 2-pointer against Mitchell Robinson from the left side of the court with exactly 30 seconds left in the tie game.

Stephon Castle was not looking when, after the rare Brunson miss, Wembanyama corralled the rebound and tossed the outlet pass into his teammate’s back. Brunson grabbed the errant pass and fell to the floor as Wemby, really, barely touched him.

“I didn’t see him throw it to me,” said Castle.

“Those things happen,” added De’Aaron Fox, San Antonio’s All-Star point guard.

And, following Brunson’s 1-for-2 effort at the free-throw line, trailing, 105-104, with a chance to win the game, Wembanyama got a good look at another long jump shot.

“I’ll take that shot every day,” said Castle.

But it landed long. And when you combine the entirety of that 30 seconds — the two missed long 2s, when the big man could have attacked the basket, sandwiching an all-time turnover, plus that foul, well, it can be an earth-shattering moment in his career.

And, man, did he look distraught about it.

And he sounded pretty beat up about it, too.

“I’m still very blurry,” Wembanyama told reporters following his second straight blown opportunity. “That’s the whole problem. I need to have more poise, more control over the game. I’m not going to go through the whole possessions, but that’s the general image.”

One could argue that these are just the bounces of the game and not some grander statement on the youth of this San Antonio team. Had either of those shots fallen, or had Castle not turned his attention forward, Wembanyama might have been the hero, taking a 1-1 series on the road, with a spring in his step, carrying some momentum in his luggage.

As Wembanyama conceded, “Of course, I liked the shot. I feel like in this moment, you need to shoot to score. In moments like this, it’s like results matter more than process, if you know what I mean. We just need to score. I just need to score. That’s the whole point.”

Instead, none of those three possessions fell in Wembanyama’s favor, and now he is facing a 2-0 hole and a Game 3 in Madison Square Garden on Monday. He was shook. He may still be shaken. We cannot predict the future, but we know what we just saw, and, frankly, that was Wemby failing massively in the biggest moment of his young career.

Wembanyama has a chance to rewrite the script, and there is precedent here. A 24-year-old Bill Walton, playing in just his third NBA season for the Portland Trail Blazers (the only Finals team ever younger than these Spurs), fell behind to Julius Erving’s Philadelphia 76ers in the 1977 NBA Finals, 2-0 (albeit on the road), only to sweep the next four games.

But that was not against these Knicks in MSG for the hottest ticket in the world. This is the moment Wembanyama now faces, and we saw how he met the last moment he faced. Will he respond? If he doesn’t, he may be reliving those 30 seconds for a lifetime.

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