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Spurs' unsettling response to adversity should worry the Timberwolves for Game 6

The Spurs' killer instinct guarantees they'll put the Timberwolves' heads to bed.
Jan 31, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) reacts during the third quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images
Jan 31, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) reacts during the third quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images | Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

We've all learned a great deal about the San Antonio Spurs this season. Most recently, Victor Wembanyama's 18-point first quarter in Game 5 was one hell of a response to being ejected from the previous contest. It wasn't about being heroic as some pundits will have you believe. It was about atonement, as Wemby set out to right the wrong caused by his decision to lash out.

Whether he was right or wrong for taking matters into his own hands to defend himself from the dusty tactics the Timberwolves were using is beside the point. The facts are that the Spurs lost the game, and he wasn't there to help prevent it. He could have returned angry and out of control. San Antonio, as a group, could have played tentatively with the pressure back on them in a tied series.

Instead, they bludgeoned Minnesota for almost a full 48 minutes, embarrassing the visiting team by defeating them by a 29-point margin. None of this should be a surprise, though. The Silver and Black tried to show us who they were in the very first game of the season. We just weren't paying attention closely enough.

The Spurs built their fortitude on the back of adversity

They say that young teams must experience heartbreak in the playoffs together before they can win a championship, but what if they are wrong about how the heartbreak must occur? As horrible as losing a best-of-7 matchup is, losing your beloved head coach is worse. The core of this Spurs team had to watch former Gregg Popovich's health suffer before their eyes, and that should have been enough.

It wasn't. Wembanyama's DVT diagnosis gets swept under the rug, incorrectly labeled as an "injury" by some, but it was much more than that. A blood clot can be scary, and had it gone untreated, it would have been much more terrifying. It still cost Wemby the back half of his sophomore campaign, and his teammates were there through the whole thing.

So, when they hit the floor for the first time this season in Dallas, Wembanyama's 40-point, 15-rebound night was about more than starting the year off right. It was a statement that it was time to get down to serious business. Too much had already been taken from this group, and they were ready to unleash their frustrations on the NBA.

The Spurs matured much faster than anyone realized

Everyone is so impressed by the maturity of these young players, but tragedy accelerates the maturation process. Wembanyama already seemed pretty seasoned when he hit the scene in 2023, but moments like the one we saw in Game 4 remind you he's still growing. His response proves he understands that. The Spurs aren't reacting to adversity at this stage; they're meeting it head on.

That's why the Timberwolves should be worried about Game 6. San Antonio began absorbing brutal lessons last season, fortifying them well ahead of their first postseason run. It's why they punch back harder when they get hit. Pressure either bursts pipes or creates diamonds, and the Spurs are beginning to look unbreakable.

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