Spurs-Thunder is headed to Game 7. What was most surprising about San Antonio's Game 6 win? And who is the biggest X factor for Saturday's game?
Spurs-Thunder is headed to Game 7.
What was most surprising about San Antonio's Game 6 win?
And who is the biggest X factor for Saturday's game?
Ben GolliverCloseBen GolliverESPN Senior NBA WriterBen Golliver is a senior NBA writer who joined ESPN in May 2026. Prior to joining ESPN, Golliver covered the NBA on a national level since 2010 for The Washington Post, Sports Illustrated and CBS Sports. He is the author of Bubbleball, an account of his 93-day stay at the NBA's "Bubble" in Disney World during the coronavirus pandemic. He is based in Los Angeles. and
ESPN Senior NBA Writer
Prior to joining ESPN, Golliver covered the NBA on a national level since 2010 for The Washington Post, Sports Illustrated and CBS Sports. He is the author of Bubbleball, an account of his 93-day stay at the NBA's "Bubble" in Disney World during the coronavirus pandemic. He is based in Los Angeles.
Zach KramCloseZach KramZach Kram is a national NBA writer for ESPN.com, specializing in short- and long-term trends across the league's analytics landscape. He previously worked at The Ringer covering the NBA and MLB. You can follow Zach on X via @zachkram.
May 28, 2026, 11:15 PM ET
The San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder are going to seven games in the Western Conference Finals.
Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs -- facing elimination in Game 6 in San Antonio -- took down the defending NBA champions 118-91, with Wembanyama leading the way with 28 points and 10 rebounds in just 28 minutes. Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, meanwhile, struggled, shooting 6-of-18 and putting up just 15 points. Oklahoma City was minus-28 in Gilgeous-Alexander's 28 minutes on the floor.
Averytin News NBA update.

