The Spurs just finished their fourth-best season in franchise history in terms of win percentage. Is this one of the best San Antonio teams ever, or do we need to wait for the playoffs to claim that?
Marilyn Dubinski: We definitely need to see what’s in store for the playoffs before ranking them. Spurs teams with lower records have won championships and will therefore always be highly regarded. Conversely, the best regular season record for the Spurs was 67-15 in 2015-16, but we mainly remember that team for losing in the second round to the Thunder, however controversial it was (Dion Waiters, ugh), not for how great the regular season was. One thing this squad will always be remembered for is one
of the best turnarounds in franchise history, and while their 28-game improvement doesn’t beat the 35 games from 1989-90 or 36 from 1997-98, it may have been an even bigger surprise.
Mark Barrington: It’s the best turnaround I’ve ever seen, from a team that’s barely competitive to one of the league’s elites, but to be one of the best San Antonio teams ever, they are going to have to excel in the playoffs. Maybe one of the best regular seasons ever, but for a team that has five championships, the bar is higher than the regular season. If this team wins the championship, this will be the second-best year ever, after 1999, when they won their first trophy. I don’t know if this team is ready, but it seems possible. They don’t have much playoff experience, but I don’t think anything intimidates them.
Bill Huan: We need to see what happens in the playoffs. This team needs to go through the crucible of a postseason before we can make proclamations about where they rank in Spurs history, and we’ve seen elite regular-season teams flame out when things get tough before. Now that I’m done being a Debbie Downer, I feel comfortable saying that this has probably been one of the most fun seasons in team history, given the expectations going in and the turnaround they had compared to last year. Now, I wasn’t even alive when the Spurs won their first championship and I’ve been a fan for only a decade, so feel free to “expose” me, as the kids like to say.
Devon Birdsong: One of the best regular-season teams? Yeah, I think that’s pretty much set in stone at this point. For the latter fourth of the season, I’ve been comparing this year’s squad to the 2014 Spurs, and their Net Rating ended up being almost identical. They even both went 62-20, and if not for the Thunder, they’d have been the #1 seed like the 2014 Spurs were. However, the best overall is always going to be dictated by rings, so the postseason is where they’ll have to earn that accolade. Even if they were to just make the Western Conference Finals, though, that would be enough to make them a top 10 team in franchise history, and that’s no small thing to be able to claim in the history of this franchise. Obviously, we’d all prefer a title. Now *that* would be a fun ranking exercise.
Jeje Gomez: The potential is there. The record speaks for itself and the net rating is impressive. For most franchises, it would be easy to call them one of their best team ever. Unfortunately for this version of the Spurs, they are measured up against championship teams, so the playoffs have to be considered. If they get to the Conference Finals, they would get a spot among the best San Antonio teams ever, but until they achieve some postseason success, they can’t be regarded as one.
There were a lot of highlights and big moments in the regular season. Which was your favorite?
Dubinski: Just off the top of my head, Victor Wembanyama’s triumphant return in the regular season opener was special after overcoming DVT, and the way he made Cooper Flagg look like a deer in headlights was the cherry on top. (Although news flash: he isn’t anymore. He’s going to be special.) They also actually made me kinda care about the Cup with their wins in Los Angeles and against the Thunder in Vegas. Speaking of which, going 4-1 against the Thunder will always be a fun memory. Lastly, who can forget that entire February and-on stretch? That kind of run is something only true championship contenders do.
Barrington: For me, it might be the 25-point comeback to beat the Clippers on March 6, where they overcame a blah start and took over the game late, shutting down Kawhi Leonard and turning a bad night into triumph. It’s a measure of how resilient the team can be that they didn’t give up when they were down by 25 points in the third quarter and kept believing. But the whole season has been special, and I wouldn’t have missed any of it.
Huan: It’s gotta be Wemby’s performance in the season opener. I still watch highlights of that game once a week and I genuinely think it’s one of the most insane one-game highlight packages of any athlete, from any sport, ever. Jacob Tobey’s line about Wemby being “a figment of our basketball imagination” is one of my all-time favorite calls, too, and the best part is, the entire season continued to go uphill from there.
Birdsong: For me, it’s a tie between Wemby’s hyper-efficient 40-point games and Harper and Castle getting white hot from long distance. After struggling with unevenness from beyond the arc, Castle has been shooting 40% for about a month and a half, and Harper has actually been shooting 50% over that same stretch of time. No shock that the Spurs have been a nigh-unsolvable riddle in that time. Meanwhile, Wemby tied the Admiral for most 40-point 10-rebound games in a season (5), and did so while averaging less than 30 minutes a game. There’s just not much like watching him be unstoppable in that way. And several of those games weren’t far from being 40-20 stat lines. The even crazier thing? He scored 38+ points in four other games, coming unbelievably close to almost doubling the number of hyper-efficient 40-point rampages.
Gomez: Opening night stands out because it was one of the most impressive and unique individual performances the NBA has ever seen. I personally loved the last matchup against the Timberwolves, featuring 55 points from Anthony Edwards, a standout performance by rookie Joan Beringer, a great Wemby game and a wacky ending with missed free throws and offensive rebounds that went the Spurs’ way, the type of weird game that great teams tend to win with some help from the basketball gods. But if I have to pick one moment, I’ll be unoriginal and go with Wembanyama’s game-winner against the Suns. The Spurs were a lock to make the playoffs for the first time in years, but to clinch their spot with such a fantastic bucket from their superstar almost felt scripted.
What was the biggest surprise of the season, other than the record?
Dubinski: For me, it was how much an alleged lack of outside shooting ended up not being a problem. It wasn’t a strength, per se, but they were good enough that it didn’t hold them back. There was a little stress in that department coming in, considering the Spurs didn’t really sign any new outside shooters and the guard trio of De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper didn’t have a reputation as shooters, but all three of them shot well enough to keep defenses honest. Harrison Barnes also had his super hot start to the season (and started regaining his form in the last month or so), and Julian Champagnie has turned into one of the most reliable shooters in the league. They could still be better, but it wasn’t the glaring weakness we all feared it would be.
Barrington: I think it’s the maturity and emotional resilience of the team. The team is really young, but they don’t play like a young team mentally. Some of it is coaching, and also the veteran leadership of guys like Harrison Barnes, Keldon Johnson, and Jordan McLaughlin, but it’s mostly due to the character of the young players. Victor Wembanyama is an incredible leader, on top of being an insanely talented player. Behind that affable and nerdy exterior lurks an intense competitive nature and steely resolve. Stephon Castle works as hard as any player I’ve seen. Dylan Harper plays with the calmness of a veteran, despite being a rookie. Normally, a team this young would be expected to be bounced early in the playoffs, but they have a chance to make some noise this year if they keep their heads about them, and every indication is that they will.
Huan: Steph Castle, no question. I’ve mentioned countless times that I did not expect this leap from him, and I’m surprised I wasn’t banned from writing, given all the horrendous takes I had about him last season. I thought that he would become a trick-or-treat type player like Marcus Smart but he has developed into a legitimate All-Star calibre guard who’s a borderline elite playmaker and now a decent scorer on league-average efficiency. Oh, and did I mention the defense? I’ve never been this wrong about a player ever, and I’ve never been happier about being wrong, either.
Birdsong: I had no idea how adding Harper to the bench was going to play out. It was pretty obvious the kid had talent, but it was basically asking him to instantly run the show for a group of savvy vets. I especially wasn’t sure how he and Keldon might combine, with Keldon having accepted a role as 6th man, and Harper almost certain to pass him up eventually. Keldon’s a lovely human, but he has a very specific play style, and all anyone could do was hope that they’d complement each other. But not only was pretty much every bench lineup improved with Harper on the court, lineups with him and Keldon specifically are almost five points better on both offense and defense. A big part of why this team won 60 games (and why Wemby was able to dip out early as needed) was because the bench not only refused to relinquish the lead, but also built on it. The bench finished the year 5th in the league for net rating, and I was just hoping for them to be in the top 10. In San Antonio, that tends to align with banners.
Gomez: The seamlessness with which everyone slotted perfectly into their ideal roles was a little surprising for such a young team. Mitch Johnson deserves credit for that, as he seems to be a great locker room leader who can get the best out of his personnel, but the players themselves also need to be commended. The young veterans in particular deserve their flowers. Keldon Johnson was aggressive when he needed to save some offensively-challenged bench lineups, especially early in the season, but he didn’t force things. Devin Vassell had big scoring games and nights in which he took only a handful of shots, but always tried to contribute in any other way he could. De’Aaron Fox was the most impressive in terms of just doing what the team needed to win by moving to an off-ball role for long stretches and even entire games to make room for the young guards, something not a lot of players of his stature would have done in their prime. Raw talent is the main force driving the Spurs’ success, but chemistry is a close second.












