Spurs-Thunder Game 1 Delivers Epic 2OT Thriller as Knicks Draw First Blood in East
The San Antonio Spurs outlasted the Oklahoma City Thunder 148-145 in a grueling double-overtime Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals on May 19, while the New York Knicks took a 1-0 series lead in the Eastern Conference Finals.

Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and the Oklahoma City Thunder delivered exactly the kind of instant-classic performance the NBA dreams about when it schedules prime-time playoff basketball. On May 19, 2026, the Spurs closed out a 148-145 double-overtime thriller, a result that sources described as an "epic 2OT thriller" and one that sets up a Game 2 rematch with significant stakes for both franchises.
The result matters in both conferences. In the East, the New York Knicks opened their Conference Finals against the Indiana Pacers with a 1-0 series lead, extending what has become a commanding playoff run since mid-April. Across both matchups, the league's power structure is being tested, and the early returns suggest the conventional wisdom about who can win in 2026 may need revision.
Wembanyama's Poise Under Pressure Defines the Moment
Victor Wembanyama has spent three seasons in the NBA learning how to close. Game 1 suggested that education is paying off. The Spurs' franchise center was decisive in the extra periods, making the plays that matter when the game stretched beyond regulation and into a second overtime. The 148-145 final score reflects not just offensive explosion but the kind of defensive stops that separate postseason performers from regular-season stars.
What made the performance notable was its completeness. Wembanyama's size and shot-blocking had already reshaped how opponents approach the Spurs' paint; Game 1 added another dimension—clutch scoring when the Thunder defense tightened in the extra periods. Oklahoma City threw multiple coverages at him across 58 minutes of game time. He answered enough of them.
The broader context is the Spurs' organizational trajectory. San Antonio has been patient with its rebuild, and the reward is a Conference Finals appearance built around a 22-year-old who plays like no one else in the league. The Thunder arrive as a tested opponent with their own young core, but on this night, the Spurs' experience in high-leverage situations—as limited as that experience is—proved the difference.
The Thunder's Case Isn't Simple
Oklahoma City will regret Game 1. Not because the effort was lacking—the Thunder pushed the Spurs to two overtimes on the road, which is competitive in any framework—but because the window for results like this is narrower than it appears.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is a legitimate MVP candidate who posted another high-volume scoring night. Jalen Williams, the Thunder's second star in waiting, contributed at a level that validates Oklahoma City's long-term investment in the roster. The problem is financial. Both players are approaching contract extensions that will reshape the Thunder's payroll, and keeping this core intact while adding the depth a championship requires means entering luxury tax territory that ownership has historically resisted.
The alternative—trading a key piece to stay under the cap—carries its own risk. The Western Conference in 2026 is not a landscape where Oklahoma City can afford to take a step back. The Denver Nuggets remain in contention mode. The Dallas Mavericks have constructed a roster built for playoff wins. The Spurs are now a Conference Finals team with salary cap flexibility and a generational talent. Standing still is not an option.
Knicks' East Lead Changes the Narrative
The Knicks' 1-0 lead over the Pacers is the subplot that complicates any clean read of the conference finals picture. New York entered the playoffs as a popular pick but not a consensus favourite. Eight wins in their first nine postseason games has changed that calculus.
Jalen Brunson has been the driving force, carrying the offensive creation load with a regularity that recalls his Villanova peak. The Knicks' defense, long a question mark, has held opponents below their season-scoring averages through three rounds. It is the kind of two-way performance that typically defines conference champions, and the Knicks are now two wins from the NBA Finals for the first time since 2000.
The structural advantage New York holds is roster continuity. The Knicks' core is signed through 2027. They have a franchise cornerstone in Brunson, complementary depth that has performed when called upon, and a coaching staff that has gotten more out of this roster than most preseason projections expected. The Pacers are a legitimate opponent—Indiana's ball movement and shooting efficiency have been exceptional—but the Knicks have answered every challenge thrown at them since mid-April.
What Comes Next
Game 2 of Spurs-Thunder tips off on May 20 at 8:30pm ET on NBC and Peacock. The series will head back to Oklahoma City tied 1-1 if the Thunder can reverse the result, or stay in San Antonio with the Spurs holding a commanding lead. Both outcomes are plausible; Game 1 proved that.
The stakes, though, extend beyond a single series. For the Spurs, this run validates the organizational patience that defined the post-Duncan rebuild years. For the Thunder, it exposes the tension between competitive ambition and financial reality that will define their next three seasons. For the Knicks, it is simply about finishing—two wins from a destination this franchise has not reached in a generation.
The NBA playoffs are built for moments like the one San Antonio produced on May 19. What matters now is what teams do with the pressure those moments create.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/18432
- https://t.me/NBALive/18427
- https://t.me/NBALive/18426