A team performance — carried by a phenomenon
Sometimes there’s no drama. One side plays the right way, the other just breaks.
In Miami, the Spurs rolled. 136-111. A clean, faultless statement that proves one thing: San Antonio is turning into a real threat.
And at the heart of it all, Victor Wembanyama.

Wembanyama — total domination in just 26 minutes
26 points. 15 rebounds. 5 blocks. 4 assists.
And only 26 minutes on the floor.
Victor Wembanyama 26 PTS, 14 REBS, 4 ASTS, 5 BLKS, 3/3 FT on 11/22 FG vs Heat https://t.co/Ho3z9vH9EZ pic.twitter.com/Q1P37y7M9M
— NBA Performances (@NBARewinds) March 24, 2026
Those numbers already read massive. They look even crazier when you see how easy he made it look.
He didn’t grit his teeth. He controlled. He defended. He affected every possession.
On both ends, he was simply above the others. No question.
Impact beyond the box score
It’s not just what he does.
It’s how he does it.
Blocks that flip momentum. Rebounds that kickstart the break. Sequences where he looks like he’s covering the entire court by himself.
Miami had no answer. Too tall. Too mobile. Too complete.
And when Wembanyama shows up like that, everything gets easier for his teammates.
San Antonio on the rise
22 wins in their last 24 games.
A ridiculous run. A sudden surge.
Keldon Johnson and Dylan Harper added 21 apiece off the bench. Stephon Castle scored 19. The unit is humming.
And crucially, the Spurs clinched the Southwest Division.
This isn’t a team in rebuild mode anymore.
This is a team aiming high.
Miami hung out to dry
On the other side, the Heat got handled.
They gave up 76 in the first half. Trailed by as many as 30. Starters sat the fourth quarter.
Five straight losses. A worrying slide at the worst possible time.
Bam Adebayo and Tyler Herro (18 each) never really mattered.
Collectively, Miami just looked empty-handed.
Western race heating up
With this win, San Antonio stay within striking distance of Oklahoma City for the top seed in the West.
Three games back. Not insurmountable at this point.
And given the Spurs’ current form, the pressure is real.
Wembanyama — already at the top?
Performances like this are starting to feel… routine.
Maybe that’s the scariest part.
He doesn’t just shine. He sets a standard. He raises the bar.
At 22, he already plays like someone who can swing a playoff series by himself.
And with a confident Spurs roster around him, the question isn’t whether they’re dangerous.
It’s how far they can go.

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