30 teams entered, four faced off in Las Vegas, and now two remain in the battle for the NBA Cup. One, an underdog of sorts that fought tooth and nail to make it here. Another, the favorites in the Eastern
Conference, who have plenty of playoff experience. Yet, it seems like it could be anyone’s game when the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks face off in the NBA Cup Finals.
The Knicks steamrolled the Toronto Raptors and Orlando Magic in Vegas, on the back of dominant performances from Jalen Brunson. The All-Star guard is having another great scoring season, averaging 28.8 points and 6.4 assists. New York has been on a roll since introducing Josh Hart back into the starting lineup. They have won 9 of their last 10 games and are a true NBA title contender in the East.
San Antonio is playing their best basketball and is back to full strength. They have significant momentum coming off a win against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the semifinals. The NBA world has been gassing up the Spurs since the win, launching them into title contender conversations. A win against the Knicks wouldn’t just bring the franchise its first-ever NBA Cup; it would prove they can win the biggest games, even after the high of taking down the best team in the league.
The Knicks are a great offensive team and a near-top-10 defense. The Spurs will need to lock in defensively and take advantage of mismatches offensively if they want to win the Cup and its cash prize.
San Antonio Spurs (18-7) vs. New York Knicks (18-7)
December 16, 2025 | 7:30 PM CT
Watch: Amazon Prime | Listen: WOAI (1200 AM)
Spurs Injuries: Kyle Mangas – Out (G League)
Knicks Injuries: Miles McBride – Out (ankle), Landry Shamet – Out (shoulder)
What to watch for:
Slowing down Brunson
The Knicks’ offense starts and ends with Brunson. He’s incredible at creating space off the dribble and in the pick-and-roll. He’ll punish teams for switching bigger defenders on him by using his great footwork to get open from three or slice to the rim. Much like the other scoring guards the Spurs have faced in the cup, he’s an elite foul-baiter. Brunson takes 6.7 free throws per game. It’s safe to assume Stephon Castle will be tasked with guarding Brunson on Tuesday night. He made an impact and defended without fouling against the Thunder. He’ll need to do the same against the Knicks.
Exploiting defensive mismatches
Teams have been dead-set on guarding Victor Wembanyama with smaller, stronger players, trying to get underneath him and push him around, while their big men roam and protect the rim. If the Knicks follow this strategy, that means Hart will likely be the matchup on Wembanyama. He’s an awesome defender who can guard up and down. Although Wemby punished the Thunder by simply shooting over the top of many of them. The other downside to that matchup is that Karl-Anthony Towns will have to guard a quicker, more skilled perimeter player. Towns’ inability to protect the rim or keep up on the perimeter will be the defensive flaw that San Antonio needs to exploit.
Crashing the glass
The Knicks are a big, physical team. They are third in the NBA in offensive rebounds and fourth in total rebounds. Mitchell Robinson is a beast in the paint, Towns is a physical rebounder, and Hart always plays bigger than his height. The Spurs are a good rebounding team in their own right, but a lazy night on the glass could bury them. New York is great at shooting from deep and finishing in the paint as-is, and it becomes even easier for them when they are wide open on kickbacks or put-back dunks. Second-chance points are debilitating in a high-stakes game like this. Winning the rebounding battle will be paramount for the Spurs.








