San Antonio never lets Miami find a footing, building a 30-point cushion behind a balanced barrage and a monster night from Victor Wembanyama.
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAS | 38 | 38 | 32 | 28 | 136 |
| MIA | 31 | 27 | 23 | 30 | 111 |
San Antonio comes in, punches first, and never gives Miami a chance to breathe
San Antonio doesn't just win in Miami — it buries the Heat early and keeps the pressure on until the final horn. The Spurs lead by seven after one, stretch it to 18 by halftime, and then turn the third quarter into a full-on avalanche. By the time Victor Wembanyama is swatting shots and filling the lane, this one is less a game than a showcase. The final score says 136-111, but the margin feels even wider because Miami never once gets the kind of sustained run needed to make this interesting.
The early tone is set by the Spurs' perimeter creation and pace. Norman Powell gives them instant juice with 21 points, while Dylan Harper keeps the ball moving and the defense guessing, finishing with 21 points and six assists. San Antonio's second-quarter push arrives in a key 10-0 burst that starts at 41-49 and ends at 41-59, capped by a Dylan Harper three assisted by Harper's own playmaking off a possession that had Miami scrambling. That sequence is emblematic of the night: the Spurs aren't settling, they're forcing Miami to defend multiple actions, and the Heat never get the clean reset they need.
Then Wembanyama takes over the interior and the game stops looking remotely manageable. He posts 26 points, 15 rebounds and 5 blocks in just 26 minutes, a ridiculous stat line that doesn't fully capture how many possessions he warps. Every drive has to be altered, every lob has to be rethought, and every Miami touch in the paint comes with the threat of a rejection. The Spurs' biggest swing comes in the third quarter, when a 12-point run turns a game that was already slipping into a full rout. That stretch includes S. Castle's free throw to make it 60-89, and by then San Antonio is stacking stops, pushing in transition, and punishing Miami for every missed shot. A few minutes later, Wembanyama and the Spurs have pushed the lead all the way to 30, and the Heat are playing from the kind of hole that only exists on the wrong side of a mismatch.
Miami does show brief resistance, mostly through Bam Adebayo. The Heat center scores in a mini-run midway through the third, and one of the few bright spots for the home side comes when Adebayo knocks down a 13-foot fadeaway in the middle of a 9-0 Miami push that trims the margin to 71-95. But even that burst barely dents the Spurs' control. Every time Miami hints at a run, San Antonio has an answer — a Powell bucket, a Harper assist, a Wembanyama block, or a Keldon Johnson finish. Johnson adds 21 points and six rebounds, giving San Antonio yet another scoring punch on a night when the offense hums without needing any single player to monopolize the ball.
The fourth quarter becomes about closing time rather than competition. Miami strings together a late 8-0 run, with Keldon Johnson finishing a running dunk and the Heat at least creating some momentary energy, but it only trims the deficit from 30 to 23. The clutch log tells the same story: steals from M. Gardner, J. McLaughlin, K. Jakučionis and S. Fontecchio, followed by C. Bryant's driving dunk and K. Olynyk's late finger roll, all happen with the Spurs comfortably ahead. San Antonio's defense remains active even in garbage time, and the ball keeps moving long after the outcome is settled. This is the kind of road win that can matter in the standings because it wasn't just efficient — it was emphatic. The Spurs leave Miami with a blowout, a dominant Wembanyama performance, and the sense that when their young guards and wings are clicking around him, they can overwhelm teams in a hurry.
Turning Point
San Antonio’s 12-point third-quarter run, capped by S. Castle’s free throws to push the lead to 29, turns a comfortable edge into a blowout.
Key Performers
He owns the paint on both ends, erasing Miami's drives and anchoring a Spurs offense that never loses control.
He provides early shot-making and steady scoring to help San Antonio build a lead before the game can settle.
He drives the second unit attack with playmaking and shot creation, including key threes and table-setting passes.
He keeps the pressure on with downhill finishes and helps slam the door in the fourth.
Box Score Leaders
| Player | PTS | REB | AST | 3PM | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Victor Wembanyama | 26 | 15 | 4 | 1 | 15 REB5 BLK |
| Norman Powell | 21 | 4 | 2 | 4 | |
| Dylan Harper | 21 | 4 | 6 | 3 | |
| Keldon Johnson | 21 | 6 | 1 | 3 |
How Our Predictions Held Up
No prediction data was provided, so there’s nothing to grade here. The accountability tracker remains empty, which means no calls were made to hit or miss.