The San Antonio Spurs escaped from the jaws of defeat with an epic comeback against the Los Angeles Clippers on the second night of a back-to-back. They also closed the distance further in the standings with the Oklahoma City Thunder (2.5).
A few artillery strikes uncorked the Spurs’ offense, and Devin Vassell and a few others kept the pressure on when Victor Wembanyama checked out. Yet they were mostly sloppy and the help defense was a step slow, surrendering unnecessary 3-pointers and cheap fouls.
They subsequently had trouble running their offense at the start of the second quarter, allowing multiple pick-6s, which allowed Kawhi Leonard to find his rhythm. Wemby checked back in and despite making a few baskets, he was pressing. He was unable to close the distance and then it became a 20-point crater in Luke Kornet’s minutes going into halftime.
The strategy in the third quarter was to feed Wemby and use him as a decoy. They later found something when De’Aaron Fox got free for a floater to cut the deficit to 19- points, forcing the Clippers to call a timeout. They kept chopping away and flipped the script by the time the fourth quarter started.
Wembanyama checked back in while they were down seven with nine minutes left and the snowball effect continued until Leonard got hot again. Then every time it seemed one like team was about to gain an edge, the other side came storming back or made a mistake. It took late heroics from Wemby, Fox, Carter Bryant and Julian Champagnie to get away.
Observations
- This was San Antonio’s first of three games with the Clippers this season and the first time seeing them without Ivica Zubac. LAC had a few key guys out, yet still had an older shooting presence in Brook Lopez. He had a hot start that lasted until the third quarter.
- The defense was stuck in quicksand much of the night, not pressuring drives enough and being slow to recover to the perimeter. Their performance the previous night against a top-tier team wasted lots of physical and mental energy. The Clippers have been good, and the Spurs should have been better prepared for them like a top-three team in the conference because of the tension that will forever linger between the fans and Leonard. Still, being able to erase a 25-point deficit says a lot about their talent and resiliency, especially the late part of the fourth where they took the lead with Wemby resting.
- The Spurs did not push the pace enough and saw too much of the Clippers’ half-court defense. Part of the problem was taking the ball up slowly and getting scored on too often, which makes it take longer to get across half-court. The Clippers had the fresher legs in the open court, outscoring them 21-12, but wasting this much energy was a reason their defense was weaker in the second half.
- Champagnie emerged in the third quarter, making four 3-pointers, including two and three freebies when Leonard was on the bench. He was a big reason why the Spurs didn’t fall apart in the non-Wemby minutes. The team even mixed in and out of a zone in that stretch, and it got stronger as the game went on. Bryant’s hustle was another key factor in a late 13-0 run.
- Luke Kornet is a fine backup because of his rim protection, but opponents sag off him making it harder for the others to get loose, and he lacks the foot speed to keep up outside of the lane. It might be worth a try to experiment with some Bryant as a small-ball five in situations that are not favorable for Kornet when Wemby rests. He has a limited offensive game as well, but he’s fast and strong enough.
- Leonard had the perfect blend of power and finesse as bodies bounce off of him and then he gently rises for a jumper. Nonetheless, Stephon Castle got the most time guarding him 25.5 hours after spending lots of time on MVP candidate Cade Cunningham.









