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Wemby’s triple-double with 12 blocks is not enough: “It’s My Fault”
Sandy Verma | May 7, 2026 10:24 AM CST

The highly anticipated start of the Western Conference semifinals opened with a surprise: the Minnesota Timberwolves stole Game 1 on the road against the San Antonio Spurs winning a tight 104-102 contest. Despite a defensive masterpiece from Victor Wembanyama, who recorded 12 blocks the most in NBA playoff history, San Antonio now trails the series 0-1.

Wemby delivered a dominant performance on the defensive end, finishing with a triple-double that is anything but ordinary for a rookie in the playoffs: 11 points, 15 rebounds, and 12 blocks (NBA record).

Numbers that would be outrageous for anyone, let alone a young star making his first trip to the conference semifinals. And even if some rim contests may spark goaltending debate, the wall built by the French phenom rewrote the laws of defensive physics.

Offensive struggles cost Spurs

Despite the eye-popping numbers, there was also a clear weakness: offensive efficiency. Wembanyama finished just 5-for-17 from the field.

After the game, the French superstar offered no excuses and took full responsibility for the loss. The most difficult stretch came in the fourth quarter (won by Minnesota 35-30), when Wembanyama played the entire period but scored only 3 points, shooting 1-for-5 with 2 turnovers.

Spurs go cold shooting

It was not only Wemby. De’Aaron Fox also struggled to find rhythm, finishing with 10 points on 5-for-14 shooting. Credit also goes to a Timberwolves defense that looked disciplined and prepared. Even with his stars struggling, head coach Mitch Johnson stayed calm:

Wolves experience makes the difference

What likely separated the teams was Minnesota’s greater playoff experience under Chris Finch. With Anthony Edwards returning enthusiastically from a knee injury and scoring 18 points in 25 minutes, plus the steadiness of Julius Randle and the energy of Jaden McDaniels the Timberwolves showed they have the formula to neutralize San Antonio’s youth.

For Wembanyama and company, the playoffs are proving to be a baptism by fire. The regular season is over – now immediate adjustments are needed to avoid losing home-court advantage.


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