NBA Finals 2026: League execs, coaches, scouts preview Knicks-Spurs - ESPN
The 2026 NBA Finals should have something for everyone.
The New York Knicks, the standard-bearers of the league's biggest market who hope to snap a 53-year championship drought, enter Wednesday's Game 1 (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC) boasting one of the best playoff stretches in NBA history: 11 straight wins, featuring sweeps of the Philadelphia 76ers and Cleveland Cavaliers.
The San Antonio Spurs, meanwhile, are powered by a generational talent in center Victor Wembanyama and a young roster that is far ahead of schedule. That doesn't mean they don't belong on the league's biggest stage: San Antonio just took down the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder in a classic seven-game Western Conference finals.
«The NBA has to be thrilled,» a West executive told ESPN. «This is a dream matchup.»
Will All-Stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns lead New York to the ticker-tape parade through the Canyon of Heroes that legions of Knicks fans have dreamed of witnessing? Or will the NBA enter its Wemby era in just his third NBA season?
To get a sense of how these Finals will play out, ESPN asked coaches, scouts and executives around the league to provide their biggest series keys — including how the Knicks can contain the Spurs' 7-foot-5 big man, San Antonio's fatigue factor and a key injury question facing New York.
Jump to intel:
New York has something OKC didn't
How Knicks can hide Brunson, KAT
Why pace will matter for both teams
Could fatigue doom Spurs' chances?
Robinson's pinkie, NBA Finals X factor
No one is going to neutralize Wembanyama's impact in these Finals.
San Antonio's seven-game slugfest with Oklahoma City showed that even against the league's two-time reigning Most Valuable Player in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander,


