New York’s 3-2 series lead arrives at Frost Bank Center tonight, June 13, at 8:40 p.m. EDT, where San Antonio has lost both previous Finals games. The Knicks are 3-0 on the road during their last five games, averaging a +9.0 scoring margin, while San Antonio’s 0-2 home Finals record and 2-3 stretch over the same window expose a team that tightens under championship pressure. San Antonio’s Victor Wembanyama has logged 712 playoff minutes, a 47% overload from his regular-season average, and his clutch production has dropped to 3.1 PPG on 44.2% shooting in tight games.
| Metric | New York Knicks | San Antonio Spurs |
|---|---|---|
| Platoff Record (Away/Home) | 18-7 (9-4) | 18-7 (10-3) |
| Points Per Game | 120.5 (4th) | 120.7 (3rd) |
| Opponent PPG | 112.1 (3rd) | 114.1 (T5th) |
| Offensive Rating | 120.5 (4th) | 120.7 (3rd) |
| Defensive Rating | 112.1 (3rd) | 114.1 (T5th) |
| 3-Point % | 35.9% (T14th) | 37.3% (4th) |
| eFG% | 55.9% (T6th) | 55.7% (9th) |
| True Shooting % | 59.5% (T5th) | 59.0% (8th) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 11.4 (T14th) | 12.7 (6th) |
| Turnovers/G | 12.7 (4th) | 12.8 (5th) |
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Key Advantage
Shooting Efficiency: New York’s 55.9% eFG% and 59.5% true shooting rate are top marks that exploit San Antonio’s slightly weaker defensive execution. Watch whether New York’s perimeter accuracy holds against San Antonio’s 37.3% three-point shooting, which could stretch the Knicks’ defense if Wembanyama draws double teams.
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Market Analysis
San Antonio’s -5.5 (-106) pricing implies roughly 64% win probability, while New York’s +5.5 (-114) and +164 moneyline reflect a 36% chance to close the series on the road. The 216.5 total sits between two top offenses that both rank in the top four in offensive rating. The spread is roughly 2-3 points wider than the raw efficiency gap between these teams, which tells you the books are pricing home floor and Wembanyama’s presence as compounding factors beyond the base numbers. San Antonio’s 114.1 defensive rating, the weaker mark in this matchup, explains why the total remains elevated despite both teams ranking in the top five in turnover avoidance.
Brunson’s Clutch Edge Against Wembanyama’s Fatigue
Jalen Brunson’s postseason clutch scoring is the decisive individual factor in this matchup. He has accumulated 164 points in final-five-minute, close-game situations since 2016-17, leading all postseason players in that span. New York’s 120.5 offensive rating and 55.9% eFG% provide the structural edge to Brunson’s late-game isolations, creating space through top shooting that San Antonio’s 114.1 defensive rating has not consistently contained.
Wembanyama’s physical decline is the counterweight. His 712 playoff minutes represent a 47% increase over his regular-season workload, and his clutch efficiency has cratered to 44.2% shooting. San Antonio’s 0-2 Finals record at Frost Bank Center is not a scheduling quirk; it reflects a team that relies on Wembanyama’s rim protection and offensive creation, both of which degrade when his legs go. The Spurs’ 12.7 offensive rebounds per game, sixth in the NBA, generate second-chance opportunities that partially offset his scoring decline, but that margin source is not enough to close the gap against Brunson’s execution.
Home Court Neutralized by Road Execution
New York’s 3-0 road record during its last five playoff games, with a +9.0 scoring margin, is the situational fact that undermines San Antonio’s home-court pricing. The Knicks have manufactured both transition luck and half-court execution away from Madison Square Garden, and reports of Knicks fans flooding Frost Bank Center compress whatever venue advantage the Spurs typically hold. San Antonio’s 106.2 PPG over its last five games, with a flat 0.0 scoring margin, reveals a team that has not separated from opponents even at home during this stretch.
The turnover battle is a wash on paper, both teams ranking in the top five in ball security, but New York’s 11.4 offensive rebounds per game against San Antonio’s 12.7 creates a possession-volume edge that favors the team with superior shooting efficiency. The Knicks’ 35.9% three-point shooting against San Antonio’s 37.3% is a narrow gap, but New York’s 55.9% eFG% converts more of those attempts into actual points. San Antonio’s pace advantage, 99.2 to 96.1, is the one structural factor that could expand the possession count and give Wembanyama more opportunities to impact the game before fatigue sets in.
