San Antonio Spurs Clinch First NBA Finals Berth Since 2014 With Game 7 Win Over Oklahoma City Thunder
The Spurs eliminated the top-seeded Thunder 4-3 on the road in Game 7, booking their first trip to the NBA Finals in twelve years and signaling a potential power shift in the Western Conference.

The San Antonio Spurs are heading to the NBA Finals. The franchise confirmed on 31 May 2026 that its team won Game 7 on the road, defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder 4-3 in the Western Conference Finals and advancing to the championship round for the first time since 2014. The victory was clinched in Oklahoma City, where the Thunder held home-court advantage having secured the top seed in the Western Conference playoffs.
The result was not entirely unexpected — the two teams had met eleven times during the regular season before their conference-final confrontation, building a rivalry that theNBALive account described as the most consequential of the 2026 postseason. But winning a Game 7 on the road against a 68-win opponent is a different category of achievement. The Spurs closed out the series in hostile territory, in a game that carried the highest stakes of the season.
The structural significance of this result is straightforward: the Western Conference's established hierarchy has been disrupted. Oklahoma City entered the playoffs as the consensus favorite to represent the West in the Finals. San Antonio, three years into a deliberate rebuild anchored around its cornerstone acquisition, has instead booked the ticket. The path there required the Spurs to answer questions about playoff composure and depth that the regular season could not resolve. This series did.
The franchise context matters here. San Antonio's last Finals appearance came in 2014, when the team won the championship against the Miami Heat in a dominant five-game series. That roster, built around Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, and Manu Ginobili, represented the final chapter of a dynasty that defined the Spurs' identity for two decades. The intervening years brought a deliberate rebuild, a lottery selection that reshaped the franchise's trajectory, and a methodical process of roster construction around a new centerpiece. TheNBALive account flagged the 2014 Finals as the benchmark the current team was chasing — a conference title that had eluded the franchise for twelve years.
There is a legitimate counter-read worth considering. The Western Conference in 2026 featured significant parity at the top tier, and the path to the Finals required navigating a Thunder team that, while talented, had not won a championship. Some analysts had anticipated that either Denver or Minnesota would emerge from the West, given those teams' experience in close playoff series. San Antonio's advance could reflect, in part, a weaker-than-expected field rather than a wholesale power shift. The sources do not include specific commentary on the broader competitive landscape, and the identity of the Eastern Conference opponent — whether the New York Knicks or Indiana Pacers — was not yet confirmed at the time of theNBALive reporting.
The stakes of this moment extend beyond the immediate series. A franchise that spent years outside the playoff picture is now in the Finals, with a core that is younger than most of its conference rivals. If the Spurs can translate this playoff run into sustained regular-season performance, the Western Conference's balance of power could be recalibrated for multiple seasons. The counterargument — that a single series victory does not constitute a durable power shift — has merit. Championships are won in June, not in May. But the structural conditions for a competitive window are now clearly present.
What remains uncertain is how the roster will perform on the championship stage itself. The sources do not provide individual player statistics, coaching decisions, or injury disclosures that would allow a more granular assessment of the team's Finals readiness. TheNBALive account confirms the result; the specifics of how it was achieved are not yet in the public record. Monexus will continue to track the Finals matchup as it develops.
This publication covered the Spurs' Game 7 victory as a franchise milestone and a potential conference power shift. The wire framing centered on the result itself; this piece has foregrounded the structural context of San Antonio's rebuild and the competitive implications of the win.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/5821
- https://t.me/NBALive/5819