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San Antonio Spurs' Potential Young Core Looks Extremely Promising

San Antonio Spurs' Potential Young Core Looks Extremely Promising

Yahoo2 days ago

The San Antonio Spurs are quietly assembling one of the most intriguing and dangerous young cores in the NBA. With seven players aged 25 or younger, headlined by generational talent Victor Wembanyama and Rookie of the Year Stephon Castle, the Spurs have laid the foundation for what could become a long-term Western Conference powerhouse.
And with the addition of De'Aaron Fox (27), a proven All-Star entering his prime, San Antonio isn't just building for the future. They're setting themselves up to compete right now.
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At the center of it all is Wembanyama, the 21-year-old unicorn who was on pace to sweep Defensive Player of the Year and All-NBA honors before a shoulder blood clot ended his second season.
Wemby had emerged as arguably the best two-way player in the league, averaging 24.3 points, 11.0 rebounds, 3.8 blocks, and 1.1 steals per game, all while anchoring the Spurs defensively. His rare combination of rim protection, perimeter range, and guard-like skill sets the tone for the franchise.
Now comes Dylan Harper. According to ESPN draft expert Jonathan Givony, Harper is the near-lock to be selected second overall by the Spurs, joining Castle and Fox in what could be a modern three-guard lineup.
At 19, Harper already possesses pro-ready scoring instincts and shot 48.4% from the field at Rutgers while averaging 19.4 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 4.0 assists. Givony even compared his pre-draft measurements to Dwyane Wade, praise that isn't handed out lightly.
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The idea of a Fox–Castle–Harper backcourt may raise concerns about shooting, but the upside is undeniable. Fox is a proven engine with speed, playmaking, and leadership. Castle brings length, athleticism, and slashing ability. Harper adds polish and natural scoring talent. Together, they offer the Spurs elite perimeter defense and pace.
Beyond the guard room, Jeremy Sochan (22), Julian Champagnie (23), Devin Vassell (24), and Keldon Johnson (25) offer versatile, switchable wings who can defend, rebound, and contribute offensively.
Sochan and Vassell, in particular, have flashed the ability to complement Wembanyama on both ends of the court. Johnson remains a rugged scorer with a winning mentality.
While some speculated the Spurs might trade the No. 2 pick to accelerate their timeline, the front office appears committed to its long-view strategy. Rather than mortgage the future for short-term gain, they're building a balanced core of high-IQ, high-upside talent around their cornerstone in Wembanyama.
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If Wemby returns healthy and continues developing into the MVP and GOAT-level player he projects to be, San Antonio could own the next decade of Western Conference basketball.
With a deep, young, and dynamic core, the Spurs' rebuild looks nearly complete. Now, it's about patience, chemistry, and letting the league-adjusting talent rise to the top. One thing's for sure, the Spurs are coming. And they're coming fast.
Related: How San Antonio Spurs Can Create Superteam With Giannis Antetokounmpo

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Magic Johnson Brings Back NBA Playoffs Claim After Pacers' Win
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Magic Johnson Brings Back NBA Playoffs Claim After Pacers' Win

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Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals score: Tyrese Haliburton does it again, stuns OKC with game-winner to cap furious Indiana rally in Game 1
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Yahoo

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Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals score: Tyrese Haliburton does it again, stuns OKC with game-winner to cap furious Indiana rally in Game 1

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(Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images) (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / Reuters) OKC was in complete control — until it wasn't For most of Thursday's game, the Thunder looked very much like the heavy favorites. Oklahoma City rode its trademark swarming defense to what was by most measures a dominant first half. It opened the first quarter by forcing nine Pacers turnovers and allowing eight made Indiana field goals. Advertisement By halftime, Indiana's turnover count (19) still exceeded its made field-goal tally (15), and the Thunder held a 57-45 lead. The Thunder had 18 more field-goal attempts (54) than the Pacers (36) at the break. There was little to indicate from the first half the Pacers could mount a rally. But Indiana limited Oklahoma City to 37% shooting in the first half to keep within striking distance. And a halftime message from head coach Rick Carlisle appeared to resonate. 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Pacers vs. Thunder: Indiana is way past resilient in these NBA Finals. It is a stone-cold gamer
Pacers vs. Thunder: Indiana is way past resilient in these NBA Finals. It is a stone-cold gamer

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

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Pacers vs. Thunder: Indiana is way past resilient in these NBA Finals. It is a stone-cold gamer

OKLAHOMA CITY — One and six-tenths of a second — that's all it takes to win a game. Not 48 minutes, or even 47 minutes and 58 seconds. One and six-tenths of a second is all the time it took between Tyrese Haliburton releasing a picture perfect jump shot destined for the rim and the ball knowing exactly where to go, cleanly swishing to stun yet another road crowd. Advertisement This time it happened to be the NBA Finals, as the Indiana Pacers and Haliburton conducted true thievery in the din of an Oklahoma City night, overcoming the odds and their own mishaps Thursday night to strike first and take Game 1, 111-110, in this best-of-seven series against the Thunder. For once, Haliburton didn't have Thunder resident linebacker Lu Dort steering him into an off-road ditch. He instead saw Cason Wallace. And Haliburton saw daylight and opportunity. He saw history. 'The ball ended in Obi's [Toppin] hands, and he passed it to me,' Haliburton said. 'I'm obviously confident in in my ability. 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Advertisement It didn't matter Shai Gilgeous-Alexander would have his turn at closing before the Pacers' star, the MVP coming up short against tough defense from fellow Canadian Andrew Nembhard, who bottled him up and forced a back-iron miss. Tyrese Haliburton rises up for the game-winner in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday night. (Photo by) (Matthew Stockman via Getty Images) 'But I think, as a group, like, we never think the game is over, ever, honestly speaking, never, like ... that never creeps in,' Haliburton said. 'How can we walk this team down?' Rather easy, if this postseason is any indication. One must have the confidence of a seasoned coach who won't call timeouts, who'll allow the game to be called on the terms of his players and not sideline wizardly. Pacers coach Rick Carlisle has done enough and seen enough to not be overwhelmed. 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It keeps happening because the Pacers stay close enough, long enough to put themselves in winning position, and they feel they have an ultimate winner in Haliburton. Advertisement 'Brother,' Turner said with a sigh in the winning locker room. 'If you've seen us the last two months, nothing is surprising.' For 24 minutes, it felt like the Pacers didn't belong in the same gymnasium as the Thunder — like a bad scrimmage between high school sophomores who've never played together against seniors who've been together for years. For 12 minutes, it looked like the Pacers would at least be competitive, that they weren't drawing dead for the entire series. But for the last five, at some point they realized the Thunder weren't this inevitable unit, that constant pressure would at the very least produce an opportunity — and, maybe, the Thunder would crack under the expectations of being heavy favorites. Advertisement The Thunder didn't choke this away, not necessarily. Perhaps Thunder coach Mark Daigneault overthought matters by inserting guard Cason Wallace in the starting lineup in place of center Isaiah Hartenstein to go smaller and quicker. Who knows whether it mattered or not? The Pacers' calamity of errors was the first-half storyline as their 19 turnovers outnumbered their made field goals (15). Dort, Jalen Williams and Alex Caruso were everywhere and were better than advertised, better than their amazing 36-1 mark against the Eastern Conference this year. And yet, the Pacers were down only 12 after two quarters. Advertisement 'When I got off the bus, when I put on my shoes,' Haliburton said when asked at what point did he start to believe the Pacers could win this game, this night. 'I mean, there was never a disbelief in this group, honestly. We like controlled chaos, but that was just chaos.' But within that the Pacers quietly stacked wins. They forced Gilgeous-Alexander into an evening where he took an overwhelming share of the offense — just like Knicks guard Jalen Brunson did last round. They stopped treating the ball like it was doused in Crisco and began chopping away in the second half, committing just five turnovers the rest of the way. 'I think that on this stage, you don't have time to be stunned, you know, you don't have time to be disappointed again,' Turner said. 'But we weathered the storm. We were resilient.' Advertisement The Pacers resiliently pulled themselves by their bootstraps all season, digging out from of a 10-15 record in the opening weeks of the season. 'After you have a run like last year,' Haliburton said. 'And you get swept in Eastern Conference finals, and all the conversation is about is how you don't belong there, and how you lucked out to get there, and that it was a fluke, guys are going to be pissed off.' The Pacers hear a little more than the average group does, outside conversations seeping into the locker room and bus rides. You bet they've heard how these two teams are in different weight classes. 'And I think as a group, we take everything personal,' Haliburton said. 'It's not just me, it's everybody, you know, I feel like that's the DNA of this group, and that's not just me. We do a great job of taking things personal, and that gives this group more confidence.' Advertisement So much unnecessary conversation has clouded the basketball in this series. Whether the NBA likes small markets at the big stage, whether Haliburton or Gilgeous-Alexander is a superstar or not, or if they're the face of the league. Maybe Haliburton's not. Maybe he's just a cold-blooded gamer. But while he's got the ball in his hands with 6.4 seconds left, tell him he's not one of those special dudes. Then close your eyes and pray.

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