Victor Wembanyama, Spurs Make Eye-Popping History — Topping Tim Duncan Era

The Spurs didn’t just hang on; they made history. Victor Wembanyama stacked 27 points, 18 rebounds, six assists and five blocks, and San Antonio beat Miami 107–101 to open 5–0 for the first time in franchise history. “MVP!” chants poured down late as the 21-year-old closed it out, giving the Frost Bank Center a signature October moment.

This wasn’t smooth. The Heat ripped a 17–1 run to start the fourth, wiping out a 15-point lead and briefly grabbing control before the Spurs regrouped. San Antonio answered with an 8–3 close and just enough stops to end Miami’s three-game surge. Bam Adebayo led the Heat with 31 points and 10 boards; Andrew Wiggins added 24. Miami played short-handed without Tyler Herro and Norman Powell among others, but pushed anyway.

Wembanyama’s rim protection again set the tone. He’s recorded at least one block in 90 straight games, the fourth-longest streak in league history, and he bothered everything at the rim while switching onto guards to blow up actions on the perimeter. Those closing minutes fed the chants and the early awards chatter that now trails every Spurs win.


Stephon Castle’s poise flips the fourth

For all of Wembanyama’s star power, second-year guard Stephon Castle was the pressure valve when things tilted. He finished with 21 points, eight assists and six rebounds — plus four steals — and repeatedly got San Antonio organized after Miami’s burst. Castle’s patient drives and hit-ahead passes helped the Spurs rediscover pace and matchups, especially when the Heat tried to junk the game with pressure. Devin Vassell chipped in 17 and a timely late three that steadied the building

San Antonio didn’t win this purely with shot-making. Defense and the stripe mattered. The Spurs held what’s been the league’s top-scoring attack to 43.3% shooting and finished with advantages in free throws (17–8) and fast-break points (18–9). That formula — protect the rim, run off misses, win the math — is a sustainable way to stack wins while parts of the rotation heal up.


What it means: early MVP noise, real playoff talk

Victor Wembanyama reacts during a basketball game.

GettyFans showered Victor Wembanyama with MVP chants as he got the team off to its first 5-0 start in franchise history.

It’s October, but stakes feel bigger because of how the Spurs are winning: with balance, length, and late-game calm. Wembanyama remains the engine, but the group’s composure after the Heat’s haymaker was the night’s long-term signal: first 5–0 in team history, star at the center, fans delivering the soundtrack.

What coach Gregg Popovich, Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili never accomplished, Wembayama did. In his third season. At the age of 21.

National chatter is keeping up. ESPN analyst Kendrick Perkins raved that the Spurs “are trying to win NOW!!!!” and said Wemby, Castle, Harper and De’Aaron Fox will “get them into [the] playoff this year.” That’s opinion, not a projection from the team, but it reflects how fast expectations have moved for a group that finished last season hungry for reps. For readers tracking roster context: San Antonio has been short pieces early (including Fox), making the 5–0 launch more striking.


What’s next

The schedule turns quickly: San Antonio visits the Phoenix Suns on November 2, a measuring-stick road test against elite shot creation. How the Spurs handle another fourth-quarter pocket — especially if the pace slows — will tell us even more about their closing package with Wembanyama as the mismatch magnet and Castle orchestrating.

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