Victor Wembanyama stood at center court as the Spurs’ season ended, the celebration unfolding around him and the Larry O’Brien Trophy destined for other hands.Victor Wembanyama stood at center court as the Spurs’ season ended, the celebration unfolding around him and the Larry O’Brien Trophy destined for other hands.

NBA Finals experience

2026/06/16 17:57
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Victor Wembanyama stood at center court as the Spurs’ season ended, the celebration unfolding around him and the Larry O’Brien Trophy destined for other hands. He had just completed a postseason run that confirmed nearly everything observers already believed about his talent. Yet, after the final buzzer sounded, he wasted no time heading to the locker room. So much for congratulating the Knicks in the spirit of sportsmanship. Bitterness permeated in defeat, and, in his post-mortem, he could not help but reflect on “the biggest lesson of my life.”

True, the Spurs arrived at the Finals ahead of schedule, powered by Wembanyama and, around him, a young core that is, by any reasonable measure, frighteningly gifted. That said, they likewise left with pain that no regular season success could have tempered. Throughout the series, they demonstrated their superiority. They controlled stretches of play, dictated tempo, and seemed poised to seize momentum. Yet, as is true of just about every championship in pro hoops annals, the 2026 title was decided not by who dominated longest, but by who erred least when the margins narrowed. And, in this regard, the Knicks showed why they ultimately prevailed.

Which, in a nutshell, is why the criticism directed at Wembanyama during the Finals felt oddly misplaced. In New York, frustration over a series of hard fouls and confrontational moments led a significant number of fans to brand him arrogant, dirty, and even classless. All things considered, the reactions were predictable, if excessive. Greatness has always invited discomfort before inspiring admiration. Opponents rarely rail against dominance delivered politely; they object when it comes with edge. The very competitiveness, confidence, and unwillingness to shrink from confrontation that made the first overall pick in the 2023 draft a target of boos in hostile arenas carried him to the sport’s biggest stage at 22. The line between superstar and villain has invariably been thinner than public discourse cares to admit.

What stood out more than the criticism, however, was Wembanyama’s response to failure. There was no attempt to rationalize the loss, no refuge sought in youth or inexperience. He did not point to officiating, injuries, or circumstance. Instead, he focused on the reality that there may be another hundred games before he gets a chance to return to the Finals. That perspective revealed a maturity often overlooked amid the fascination with his physical gifts. The lesson was not simply that losing hurts. It was that opportunities are finite, even for those who appear destined to receive many. The National Basketball Association (NBA) is littered with protagonists who, at one time or another, appeared certain to claim multiple championships and instead found themselves defined by near misses.

In that sense, the Spurs’ defeat, and with it the takeaway that promise carries no entitlement, may prove more valuable than any early coronation. Wembanyama will look back to the 2026 campaign without a ring, but with experience that will matter as much in the years ahead. Transcendent talent brought him to the doorstep. Enduring agony showed him what remains beyond it. For all the noise surrounding the Finals, it may yet be the development worth recalling. The league would do well to take note. So, too, should everyone else.

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

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