
NBA Daily Digest: Spurs Cut Series to 2-1, Wemby Shove Triggers Officiating Firestorm Before Game 4 Tonight
San Antonio won Game 3 at MSG (115-111) to cut the series to 2-1, with Wembanyama's 32-point performance overshadowed by a missed flagrant foul on Jalen Brunson the NBA has since admitted — and is reviewing. Mike Brown called out the 24-to-8 second-half free throw disparity. Game 4 tips tonight at 8:30 PM ET on ABC.

San Antonio snapped New York's 13-game playoff winning streak with a 115-111 win in Game 3 on Monday night, but the bigger story out of MSG may be an off-ball foul the referees never saw.
Game 3 recap: Spurs 115, Knicks 111
Victor Wembanyama, SF/C for the San Antonio Spurs (age 22), posted 32 points, 8 rebounds, 6 assists, and 3 blocked shots — the kind of two-way performance that made a hostile MSG crowd go quieter with each quarter. Stephon Castle, PG, added 23 points, and the Spurs restored their signature ball movement after Games 1 and 2 had looked scattered. Dylan Harper, SG, contributed steady scoring off the ball-screen actions San Antonio runs for its young backcourt.1
For New York, Jalen Brunson, PG, led with 32 points, OG Anunoby, SF, added 17, and Josh Hart, SF, delivered 13 points, 15 rebounds, and 6 assists. Karl-Anthony Towns, C, was quieter than in Games 1 and 2. The Knicks led at points in the second half but couldn't hold the advantage against Wembanyama's late-shot-blocking runs.2
The series stands at Knicks 2, Spurs 1.

The foul the refs missed — and what the NBA admitted
With five minutes left in the first quarter, Josh Hart brought the ball up and Brunson was fighting for position with Wembanyama above the free-throw line. After about a second of jostling, Wembanyama put his hand around Brunson's head and neck and shoved him to the floor. No call was made, no automatic video review was triggered.3
The next morning, NBA Senior Vice President of Referee Operations Monty McCutchen appeared on ESPN's NBA Today and acknowledged the miss directly: "Most certainly I think we can all agree that a foul was missed on that play. A big part of our job is on-ball, off-ball exchanges between referees. We did a poor job of that here." He added that the league was reviewing whether the play should be upgraded to a flagrant foul.3
This is where the stakes get material. Wembanyama entered Game 3 with two flagrant foul points accumulated in this postseason — both from a single Flagrant-2 ejection against Naz Reid (Minnesota Timberwolves, F/C) in the second round. The NBA's rule: four flagrant foul points in a postseason triggers an automatic one-game suspension. If the Brunson shove is upgraded to a Flagrant 1, Wembanyama sits at three points and would face suspension if he collects one more flagrant foul anywhere in the remaining Finals games. A Flagrant 2 — unlikely but possible — would push him to four points and an immediate suspension.3
Knicks coach Mike Brown didn't address that specific play at the podium but made his frustration with the broader foul disparity clear: "I never thought I would be in the NBA Finals and see a team get 24 free-throw attempts in the second half to another team's eight." The Spurs finished the game having made 25 free throws; the Knicks attempted only 22 all night.4
Brunson's own response when asked about the shove: "Whatever you saw is what you saw." He declined to push it further.3
For context on how badly the Spurs need Wembanyama present: San Antonio trusts essentially six players in this series, and the team is being outscored in Luke Kornet's backup-center minutes by 17 points across the Finals so far. In the Western Conference Finals, the Spurs were outscored by 38 points whenever Kornet was on the floor. A suspension scenario would force San Antonio into lineups they haven't been able to trust all postseason.3
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The issue isn't just this one play. Wembanyama's physical style has drawn scrutiny throughout the postseason: the Flagrant-2 ejection on Reid in Round 2, a hair-pull on Lu Dort in Game 6 of the Western Conference Finals, and a grab of Jose Alvarado's neck in Game 2 of these Finals. The league has issued no discipline for those later incidents, but each one gets cited now when the conversation turns to whether the officiating is applying a consistent standard.3
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The rest of the night at MSG
President Donald Trump attended Game 3, becoming the first sitting president to attend an NBA Finals game. His arrival drew mixed reactions inside the arena — "USA! USA!" chants from some sections, audible boos from others. His presence had already triggered a five-block security perimeter and the cancellation of the outdoor watch party in the previous day's planning.5
After the final buzzer, multiple videos circulated on social media showing confrontations between Knicks and Spurs fans on the streets near the arena. NYPD was present at several incidents.6
Injury report and availability
Neither Anunoby nor Hart appeared on a new injury report following Game 3 — both played full minutes and combined for 30 points, 21 rebounds, and 6 assists. Entering tonight, both are expected to be available for Game 4 barring a pre-game status update.
Tonight: Game 4 at MSG
Spurs at Knicks, Game 4 | Wednesday, June 10 | 8:30 PM ET | ABC | Madison Square Garden, New York
| Game | Date | Location | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | June 3 | New York | Knicks 105, Spurs 95 |
| 2 | June 5 | New York | Knicks 105, Spurs 104 |
| 3 | June 8 | New York | Spurs 115, Knicks 111 |
| 4 | June 10 | New York | Tonight, 8:30 PM ET, ABC |
| 5* | June 13 | San Antonio | TBD |
| 6* | June 16 | New York | TBD |
| 7* | June 19 | San Antonio | TBD |
*If necessary
The Knicks won Games 1 and 2 at home by 10 and 1, then lost Game 3 at home by 4. Whether the officiating review — and any flagrant upgrade — shifts the physicality on the floor tonight is the undercurrent to watch alongside the basketball itself.
Around the league
Mitchell Robinson free agency: Robinson, C for the New York Knicks, continues drawing significant interest from multiple teams heading into the offseason. He has not been re-signed and is among the more coveted big-man free agents available.7
Ja Morant trade buzz: Morant, PG for the Memphis Grizzlies, remains a central name in pre-draft trade discussions. No deal has been reported closed as of Tuesday.8
Giannis Antetokounmpo: The Bucks superstar, PF, remains a potential offseason target for multiple contenders and rebuilding franchises. ESPN's Get Up crew debated Tuesday whether his injury history makes him too risky a trade target.9
Kawhi Leonard/Aspiration investigation: No resolution announced. The NBA's investigation into the Clippers' alleged salary cap circumvention involving Leonard's Aspiration sponsorship deal remains active.
References
- 1NBA.com Game Recap: Spurs 115, Knicks 111
- 2AP: Knicks need a quick response from first loss since April
- 3CBS Sports: NBA admits Wembanyama fouled Brunson, flagrant review ongoing
- 4Yahoo Sports: NBA admits fault, will review Wembanyama foul
- 5CNN: Trump booed at MSG as Knicks lose NBA Finals Game 3
- 6Twitter: Knicks fans clash with Spurs fans and NYPD post-Game 3
- 72026 NBA Free Agents List: Hoops Wire
- 8Yahoo Sports NBA Mock Draft
- 9TSN/ESPN: Is Giannis too much of an injury risk to trade for?
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