Thunder and Spurs Collide with NBA Finals Berth on the Line
Two 60-win franchises meet in the Western Conference Finals on Monday night, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's Thunder riding an unbeaten postseason run into a high-stakes rematch against Victor Wembanyama's Spurs.

The Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs tip off Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals on Monday, May 18, 2026, at 8:30 pm Eastern Time on NBC and Peacock. Two franchises that rebuilt through the draft and arrived at championship contention by different paths now meet with a trip to the NBA Finals on the line.
The matchup carries weight beyond the immediate series. Both teams won 60 or more games in the regular season, a threshold that in recent NBA history has almost always preceded Finals runs. The Thunder arrive unbeaten in eight postseason games. The Spurs, anchored by Victor Wembanyama and riding the momentum of a deep playoff run, represent the most formidable obstacle yet in Oklahoma City's path.
SGA's MVP Season Carries Into the Finals Race
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander claimed his second consecutive Kia NBA MVP award this season, cementing a run of dominance that has made the Thunder the Western Conference's top seed. In eight playoff games, he has averaged 29.1 points and 7.1 assists per game while keeping the Thunder's undefeated postseason record intact.
The Thunder's success extends beyond their star's individual numbers. After securing the MVP, Gilgeous-Alexander purchased matching trench coats for his teammates—a gesture that reflected both the team's chemistry and the quiet confidence that has defined their playoff run. The Thunder have played fast, disruptive basketball, using their length and switching ability to fluster opponents while generating easy transition looks on the other end.
Gilgeous-Alexander has also showcased his defensive impact. A sequence captured in recent game footage showed him making a high-leaping block on a would-be scorer, a play that encapsulated his two-way evolution from scoring phenom to franchise cornerstone who guards the game's most critical possessions.
Ajay Mitchell's Quiet Emergence
While SGA commands attention, Ajay Mitchell has emerged as a critical secondary piece for the Thunder. Across eight postseason games, Mitchell has averaged 18.8 points, 4.0 rebounds, and 4.9 assists per game while shooting 47.1 percent from the field in just under 30 minutes per contest. His numbers do not jump off the box score the way Gilgeous-Alexander's do, but his ability to create offense when the defense keys on the MVP has been essential.
Mitchell gives Oklahoma City a secondary ball-handler who can orchestrate the half-court offense and score in isolation situations. The Spurs will need to account for him on every possession, which creates spacing for Gilgeous-Alexander to operate in late-clock scenarios.
A Rivalry Rewritten in the Emirates NBA Cup
These teams are not strangers to high-stakes postseason encounters. The Spurs and Thunder met in the semifinals of the 2025 Emirates NBA Cup, a game described by league observers as an absolute thriller. That contest established the competitive foundation for what has become one of the NBA's more compelling young rivalries.
The stakes are different now. The Emirates NBA Cup semifinal was a mid-season tournament game with a prize of additional regular-season revenue and a symbolic trophy. Monday's opener is a seven-game series with a Finals berth hanging in the balance. The emotional register shifts accordingly.
What makes the rivalry structurally interesting is how similarly both franchises are constructed. Neither built through free-agency splashes or blockbuster trades, but through patient drafting, development, and institutional patience. The Thunder selected Gilgeous-Alexander eleventh overall in 2018. The Spurs selected Wembanyama first overall in 2023. Both bets have returned franchise-altering talent.
What the Finals Berth Means
Reaching the NBA Finals would validate years of organizational patience for both teams. For the Thunder, it would represent the culmination of a rebuild that began after trading away established veterans, a process that tested the front office's conviction in drafting best-player-available over win-now optics.
For the Spurs, it would mark the franchise's return to the Finals for the first time since their five-championship dynasty ended in 2014. Wembanyama's trajectory—from once-in-a-generation prospect to playoff-tested competitor—would receive its ultimate validation.
Nickeil Alexander-Walker, who won the Kia NBA Most Improved Player award this season, comes from a basketball family that includes Gilgeous-Alexander as a cousin. His perspective on the series offers a window into the personal stakes embedded in what is, on its surface, a business competition between corporate franchises.
The Thunder have yet to lose a playoff game in 2026. The Spurs have won series against accomplished opponents to reach this point. Game 1 tips off Monday night in what promises to be a long, physical series.
This publication covered the Western Conference Finals buildup through the NBA's official wire feed, focusing on statistical substance and franchise trajectory rather than narrative theatrics that can distort postseason coverage.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/8923
- https://t.me/NBALive/8920
- https://t.me/NBALive/8918
- https://t.me/NBALive/8919
- https://t.me/NBALive/8915