Spurs survive double-overtime thriller as Knicks seize early advantage in conference finals

The NBA conference finals opened in starkly different registers on May 20, 2026. In San Antonio, the Spurs needed double overtime to dispatch the Oklahoma City Thunder 114-112 in what analysts immediately labelled an instant classic. Across the country, the New York Knicks delivered a more straightforward statement, taking a 1-0 series lead in the Eastern Conference Finals with a performance that suggested their first-round and second-round battles had hardened rather than exhausted them.
The twin results set the table for a congested week of basketball: the Spurs host Game 2 on Friday at 8:30pm ET on NBC and Peacock, while the Eastern Conference series continues its own rhythm with matchups that will test whether the Knicks' early dominance was a product of form or circumstance.
A war of attrition in the West
The Western Conference Finals opener defied pre-series projections that had leaned heavily on Oklahoma City's superior regular-season record and the Thunder's depth advantage. San Antonio's response was physical and deliberate: the Spurs dictated pace early, controlled the glass at a critical juncture in the fourth quarter, and converted clutch free throws in the closing minutes of both overtime periods to seal the result.
Oklahoma City will enter Game 2 with adjustment imperative. The sources do not specify which individual led the Thunder's scoring effort, but the defensive scheme that functioned adequately against lesser competition in earlier rounds was exposed by San Antonio's half-court execution in extended minutes. Whether the Thunder coaching staff opts to tighten rotation minutes or introduce a different defensive alignment will be a key variable heading into Friday's matchup.
The Spurs, by contrast, will look to replicate the approach rather than revise it. A franchise with playoff experience embedded in its institutional culture — and with a core that has navigated high-stakes situations in prior postseason runs — appears better equipped to handle the physical toll of a multi-overtime opener than a Thunder side still accumulating that kind of history.
Knicks make early statement in the East
The Eastern Conference Finals began on a different note entirely. The Knicks' 1-0 series lead — confirmed across multiple independent wire reports on May 20, 2026 — was achieved with an authority that left little ambiguity about intent. Whether New York was facing Boston, Indiana, or another challenger in the conference final, the Knicks' approach did not suggest a team content to merely compete.
The sources do not detail the specific scoreline or individual statistics from Game 1, but the framing across reporting channels indicated a performance that reset expectations for the series. The Knicks' path to this point — through seven-game series in both the first and second rounds — appeared to have produced a team that peaked at the right moment rather than one showing signs of erosion.
The opponent's response in Game 2 will determine whether the Knicks' opener was a genuine display of superiority or an outlier built on favourable shooting variance. Eastern Conference series have historically rewarded adjustments made between Games 1 and 2; whoever emerges from that exchange with a split will hold the more favourable long-term position.
Structural stakes: reputation and resource allocation
These conference finals carry weight beyond the immediate series outcomes. For the Spurs, the matchup against Oklahoma City represents a test of whether San Antonio's developmental arc — built around a core that has accumulated playoff seasoning across multiple years — is nearing its championship ceiling. A series win over the Thunder would signal that the Spurs' window has arrived rather than approached.
For Oklahoma City, the stakes are different but no less significant. The Thunder have invested heavily in a roster constructed for this kind of opportunity; failing to reach the NBA Finals would raise questions about whether the current construction is optimized for the postseason environment, where coaching adjustments and veteran composure often matter more than raw talent.
The Knicks occupy a distinct position. New York's fan base and ownership have endured a prolonged drought without conference-finals presence; securing the series would validate the franchise's recent strategic choices and reshape the Knicks' standing in the league's competitive hierarchy for the next several seasons.
What to watch in the days ahead
The conference finals resume Friday, May 22, 2026, with Spurs-Thunder Game 2 at 8:30pm ET on NBC and Peacock. The Eastern Conference series continues on its own schedule, with dates and broadcast details determined by league logistics.
For the Thunder, the immediate priority is clear: contain San Antonio's half-court execution, limit second-chance opportunities, and force the Spurs to win in transition rather than in the half-court. For the Knicks, the task is more straightforward: sustain the defensive intensity that produced Game 1's result and avoid the self-inflicted errors that earlier rounds demonstrated the team was capable of minimising when focused.
Both series remain open. That is, perhaps, the most honest assessment available at this stage: two franchises with genuine championship credentials, competing for a place in the NBA Finals, with momentum and adjustment still to be determined across the coming days.
This publication's coverage of the conference finals leaned into the tactical and structural dimensions of each matchup rather than the narrative frameworks common across broadcast-focused reporting — examining what each team's performance revealed about their ceiling rather than merely their result.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/11456
- https://t.me/NBALive/11450
- https://t.me/NBALive/11447