An unreal start
Some nights fly by far too fast. Then there are the nights when Victor Wembanyama decides to hit fast-forward. Eight minutes, no more. That is all it took for a double-double, ten points and ten rebounds, as if it were a warm-up and the NBA were a practice court.
Against the Chicago Bulls he wasted no time. He grabbed the game by the throat, set the tempo and forced everyone to match him. After that, nobody could keep up.

A full-on, dominant performance
The rest of the night was a clinic: 41 points, 16 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 blocks.
Victor Wembanyama 41 PTS, 16 REBS, 4 ASTS, 1 STL, 3 BLKS, 3/6 3PT on 17/27 FG vs Bulls https://t.co/DPaPkm3QX3 pic.twitter.com/00NnEaO73r
— NBA Performances (@NBARewinds) March 31, 2026
The stat line is loud, but it felt like more than numbers. It felt like total control. He scores at the rim, he steps out and drains threes, he protects the paint and he runs the floor. In short, he does everything, and he makes it look almost too easy.
The Spurs riding the wave
The result was a 129-114 win for the San Antonio Spurs, their ninth in a row. Yes, ninth. In a league that loves to preach parity, San Antonio are becoming the team nobody wants to draw, and when Wembanyama plays like this, you can see exactly why.
MVP in his sights
A game like this is not just another stat line. It is a statement, clear and loud, with no room for doubt. Wembanyama no longer wants to be “the future.” He wants to be the present. In the MVP race, nights like this carry serious weight, because beyond the box score there is impact. Every possession feels like something is about to happen.
Chicago left behind despite the effort
The Bulls did try. Tre Jones dropped 23, Collin Sexton and Leonard Miller chipped in, and even Guerschon Yabusele added 15. It still was not enough. When a player gets that hot, the game becomes ruthlessly simple.
A rise that genuinely scares
The frightening part is not the record. It is the trajectory. Night after night, Wembanyama grows more aggressive, sharper and more dominant, as if he is still learning and has not come close to his ceiling. That is bad news for the rest of the league.
The league staring at its new monster
Everyone went hunting for the “face of the future.” Maybe he was here all along, in San Antonio, stacking numbers, rewriting standards and turning NBA games into personal showcases. The wildest part is that this is only the opening act.


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