NBA Daily Digest: Knicks Bring a Clincher to San Antonio — Game 5 Tonight at 8:30 PM ET

NBA Daily Digest: Knicks Bring a Clincher to San Antonio — Game 5 Tonight at 8:30 PM ET

The New York Knicks arrive at Frost Bank Center tonight one win from their first championship in 53 years. Full injury report, the Finals MVP debate, Wembanyama fatigue concerns, Kornet's questionable status, series stats, and around-the-league updates including Giannis trade talk heating up before the June 26 draft.

Daily NBA News Digest
2026/6/14 · 0:07
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NBA Finals Game 5: Knicks one win from 1973, Spurs desperate at Frost Bank Center (8:30 PM ET, ABC)

Game 5 of the 2026 NBA Finals tips off tonight at 8:30 PM ET in San Antonio, with the New York Knicks one victory away from their first championship since 1973 and the Spurs fighting to extend a series they have been close in — and lost — at every turn.1
The Knicks lead 3-1 after one of the most-talked-about games in Finals history. OG Anunoby (SF, Knicks) grabbed the offensive rebound off a missed Jalen Brunson three and tipped it in with 1.2 seconds left to complete a 29-point comeback — the largest in Finals history — for a 107-106 Game 4 win at Madison Square Garden.2 That game averaged 20.9 million viewers on ABC, the most-watched Game 4 in the Finals since Michael Jordan's Bulls and the Jazz in 1998.3

Injury report

New York Knicks
  • Mitchell Robinson (C) — Available (fractured right fifth metacarpal, right hand). Robinson has played through the injury all series, averaging 13.6 minutes, 5.0 points, and 5.2 rebounds while shooting 68.0% from the field in the playoffs.4
  • Miles McBride (G) — Out (ankle)
San Antonio Spurs
  • Luke Kornet (C) — Questionable (illness). The 30-year-old backup center averages 13 minutes per game in the postseason and is Victor Wembanyama's primary rotation backup. San Antonio has until roughly 8:00 PM ET tonight to declare him out or active.5
  • Mason Plumlee (C) — Out (reconditioning)
  • David Jones Garcia (F) — Out (ankle)
Kornet's absence, if confirmed, strips Wembanyama (C, Spurs) of meaningful backup minutes. Wembanyama has logged around 40 minutes per game in the series and 44 in Game 4. With Plumlee already out, San Antonio's next interior options would be Carter Bryant or Kelly Olynyk — neither a natural anchor.5
Karl-Anthony Towns (PF/C, Knicks) and Mitchell Robinson stand to benefit from any reduction in Wembanyama's rest opportunities. As one analyst put it, Kornet's value is not about his own production but about buying Wembanyama oxygen in the fourth quarter — and in a close-game series where every clutch possession matters, that oxygen has a price.6
Victor Wembanyama defends Jalen Brunson during the NBA Finals
Wembanyama has averaged 24.0 points and 3.5 blocks in the playoffs, but the Spurs have lost three of four games in clutch situations. 5

The series so far

GameDateWinnerScoreLocation
1June 4Knicks105-95San Antonio
2June 6Knicks105-104San Antonio
3June 9Spurs115-111New York
4June 11Knicks107-106New York
5June 13?TBDSan Antonio
Through four games, the total run of play separates these teams by just eight points. The Spurs have held a double-digit lead in all four games — and lost three of them in the final minutes.

Three things to watch tonight

1. Will the Spurs avoid another slow start?

In Game 4, San Antonio opened with a 29-point halftime advantage only to watch it evaporate entirely. Josh Hart (SF, Knicks) acknowledged the pattern at Friday's media session: "We've got to make sure we come in focused... We know if we do that, and we play our style of basketball, we're going to put ourselves in a good position to be successful. But we can't keep getting into a hole and try to dig ourselves out."2
At the same time, the Spurs will carry an emotional hangover into Frost Bank Center. Devin Vassell (SF, Spurs) had a pointed self-assessment Friday: "Thought about it that night, thought about it yesterday. Woke up today ready to go." Whether San Antonio can translate that reset into actual fourth-quarter composure is the crux of the series.

2. The Finals MVP race — and OG's 53-point two-game stretch

The Athletic's five-writer panel unanimously placed OG Anunoby (SF, Knicks) at or near the top of the Finals MVP ballot after Game 4. Anunoby is shooting 50.6% from three in the postseason and is coming off a 33-point game on 10-for-15 shooting that included seven three-pointers and the game-winning tip-in.7
Jalen Brunson (PG, Knicks) remains in the conversation — he averages 27.4 points and 6.2 assists in the playoffs and has hit crucial shots in every win. Karl-Anthony Towns (PF/C, Knicks) was the panel's consensus leader before Game 3; the Knicks are plus-40 with him on the floor in this series.7
Victor Wembanyama (C, Spurs) has averaged 24.0 points, 10.7 rebounds, and 3.5 blocks across 21 playoff games and remains the most physically dominant player on the floor — but San Antonio's record in clutch time makes his individual numbers a footnote to a 3-1 series hole.4
OG Anunoby drives to the basket against the Spurs in the NBA Finals
OG Anunoby has been the most consistent two-way performer in the series. 7

3. Wembanyama's minutes and fatigue threshold

Wembanyama admitted at Friday's media session that fatigue was "definitely a factor" in Game 4 and that his 44-minute workload contributes to late-game breakdowns. His own diagnosis: "giving them less opportunities, rather than doing something incredible."2
With two full days of rest between Games 4 and 5, he believes conditioning won't be a factor tonight — though he added, bluntly: "Now we've got two days between the games — it's not going to be a factor." That confidence sounds convincing enough until the Knicks force another overtime sequence. Coach Mitch Johnson confirmed that De'Aaron Fox (PG, Spurs) will again have the ball late; Johnson said Friday he supports the star guard and backs the late-game process despite the series results.

Coaching mindsets

Mike Brown (Knicks) framed the challenge as a familiar one: "The hardest game to win is one that ends someone's season." He pointed to Pat Ewing's presence in the locker room as a steadying force — the Hall of Famer won the 1984 NCAA championship and lost the 1994 NBA Finals with the Knicks, giving him hard-earned credibility on both sides of the closing-a-series conversation.2
Mitch Johnson (Spurs), asked about the collapse in Game 4, pushed back on the narrative: "We've had a 10+ point lead in every game, so we feel like we've been the better team on some level." He added: "We need to figure out how to sustain those leads." The pressure of facing elimination at home is something Wembanyama himself embraced in a Joe Namath-style guarantee mode, saying the Spurs are "very confident" about their chances.

Around the league

TV ratings: This Finals is officially the most-watched through four games since Michael Jordan's 1998 run. The series has generated 8 billion social media views — surpassing the previous Finals record of 6.2 billion — with Game 4 alone drawing 3 billion.8
Karl-Anthony Towns of the Knicks reacts during the NBA Finals against the Spurs
Game 4 peaked at 26.3 million viewers at 11:15 PM ET, the most-watched Finals moment since 1998. 3
Giannis watch: Reports out of Boston on Friday linked the Celtics to Giannis Antetokounmpo in trade talks with the Bucks, with the NBA Draft on June 26 acting as a de facto deadline for any deal. The Heat, Cavaliers, and Magic are also believed to be engaged. Nothing is confirmed, but the chatter is intensifying.9
San Antonio tickets: The Spurs restricted out-of-state Knicks fans from purchasing Game 5 tickets at Frost Bank Center, acknowledging that Knicks supporters had taken over road sections in Games 1 and 2 earlier in the series.5

Tonight's schedule

GameMatchupTime (ET)NetworkSeries
NBA Finals Game 5Knicks @ Spurs8:30 PMABCNYK leads 3-1
If the Knicks win, the 2026 title ends in San Antonio — 53 years after the last one. If the Spurs win, Game 6 returns to Madison Square Garden on Tuesday, June 17.

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