Wembanyama Confident He Can Help Spurs Stage NBA Finals Comeback
Wembanyama Confident in Spurs Comeback

Victor Wembanyama has been a crucial part of San Antonio's success this season. Photograph: Ross D Franklin/AP

Victor Wembanyama confident he can help Spurs stage NBA finals comeback: 'This is what I'm built for'

San Antonio 2-0 down in best-of-seven series

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Game 3 is on Monday night at Madison Square Garden

Victor Wembanyama's dream run in his first NBA playoffs has taken a nightmarish turn, but the San Antonio Spurs star says he is embracing the setbacks as well as the success.

"I think the key is acceptance a lot of times, taking a step back, realizing all the journey that's behind this and what's ahead of this," Wembanyama said on Sunday as the Spurs prepared for a crucial Game 3 of the NBA finals in what promises to be a hostile Madison Square Garden.

The 22-year-old, in the playoffs for the first time in his NBA career, has been the driving force of the young Spurs' unexpected run to the championship series. But Wembanyama has faltered in the face of an aggressive and well-planned Knicks defense, producing moments of brilliance but also devastating miscues including a costly late turnover and missed final shot in the Spurs' 105-104 Game 2 loss in San Antonio. That dropped the Spurs into a 2-0 hole, leaving them trying to become the first team to rally to win the NBA finals after losing the first two games at home.

"I think this is everything that I wished for," Wembanyama said. "There's really no reason to overthink it. This is what I'm built for."

The 7ft 4in Frenchman has inspired a startling transformation in the Spurs' fortunes in a remarkably short period of time, culminating in an against-the-odds seven-game defeat of the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference finals. But they squandered a 14-point second half lead in a Game 1 loss to the Knicks, and their furious fourth-quarter rally in Game 2 was undone by late mistakes.

"We need to capitalize, actually use all the efforts we did," Wembanyama said. "It felt like we did a lot, we did a lot of things wrong, but we also were relentless and kept pushing, but kind of like wasted that effort."

Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said much the same. "If there's a thematic thing, the biggest thing is we've put in some good, hard work at times, and have not taken advantage of that hard work," Johnson said. "That's been partially some undisciplined things of us, partially also New York has stepped up and made some plays at the end of clock and finished out possessions."

Now, Johnson said, it's imperative the Spurs avoid falling into a 3-0 hole – something no NBA team has come back from to win a playoff series. "We've got one game [Monday] night … in Madison Square Garden," Johnson said. "It's the only game that matters. We've got to come in here ready to win it."

Wembanyama is ready to produce his maximum effort for as long as he can. "The challenge been mostly about will, the will to do it," he said. "I feel like I'll take a breather at the end of the season."

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