Spurs vs Warriors: San Antonio Storm Back from 16 Down to Beat Golden State 126–113
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The San Antonio Spurs defeated the Golden State Warriors 126–113 at Chase Center, delivering one of the most impressive comeback wins of the NBA season. Behind a dominant second-half surge from De’Aaron Fox and Victor Wembanyama, the Spurs erased a 16-point deficit to secure their sixth straight victory and strengthen their position near the top of the Western Conference standings.
With trending searches around “Spurs vs Warriors highlights,” “Wembanyama stats tonight,” “De’Aaron Fox performance,” and “Warriors without Curry,” this matchup instantly became one of the most talked-about NBA games of the week.
Video:https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Fv09P5VxJuA
First Half: Warriors in Control Without Stephen Curry
Despite missing Stephen Curry, Golden State opened the game with sharp ball movement and perimeter efficiency.
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De’Anthony Melton and Moses Moody knocked down multiple three-pointers
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Draymond Green orchestrated from the high post
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The Warriors built a lead that grew to 16 points
San Antonio, playing on the second night of a back-to-back, struggled defensively. The Spurs allowed clean perimeter looks and failed to protect the rim consistently, enabling Golden State to dictate tempo and control spacing.
Although the Spurs trimmed the deficit to four by halftime, the momentum still leaned heavily toward the Warriors. Three consecutive threes early in the third quarter restored Golden State’s cushion — but that’s when everything changed.
De’Aaron Fox and Victor Wembanyama Flip the Game
The turning point came midway through the third quarter when San Antonio abandoned perimeter settling and began relentlessly attacking the paint.
De’Aaron Fox Takes Command
Fox dictated the tempo with aggressive downhill drives and precision pull-up jumpers. He finished with:
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27 points
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8 assists
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Efficient shooting from the field
Fox repeatedly exploited high screens, lived inside the lane, and controlled the rhythm of the game — a textbook example of playoff-style point guard leadership.
Wembanyama’s Fourth-Quarter Explosion
After a quiet first half, Victor Wembanyama erupted in the second half, finishing with 26 points and completely shifting momentum.
In one defining fourth-quarter stretch, Wembanyama delivered:
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An alley-oop dunk
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A chase-down block
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A three-pointer
All within roughly a minute.
That sequence blew the game open and pushed San Antonio into a commanding lead, silencing the Chase Center crowd.
Search interest around “Wembanyama highlights tonight” and “Wembanyama clutch plays vs Warriors” surged immediately after.
Spurs Dominate the Paint and the Glass
San Antonio’s physicality ultimately overwhelmed Golden State.
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60–42 advantage in paint points
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14 offensive rebounds
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Constant downhill pressure
Keldon Johnson provided a major spark off the bench with 20+ points, attacking the rim and maintaining scoring pressure while starters rested.
The Warriors’ offense stagnated once the three-point shooting cooled. Without Curry’s shot-making gravity, Golden State lacked a reliable late-game scoring option as the Spurs increased defensive intensity.
Warriors Collapse in the Fourth Quarter
Draymond Green flirted with a triple-double and battled defensively, while role players like Moody, Melton, and Brandin Podziemski contributed in spurts. However, Golden State was heavily outscored in the fourth quarter and surrendered the 16-point advantage.
Trending conversations around:
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“Warriors blown lead”
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“Warriors without Curry struggles”
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“Spurs comeback win”
reflect the growing narrative about Golden State’s inconsistency without its superstar guard.
What This Means in the Western Conference
The victory sends the Spurs into the All-Star break at 38–16, holding the second-best record in the Western Conference — a stunning rise for a franchise that was recently rebuilding.
For the Warriors, the loss highlights how thin the margin becomes without Curry and how quickly momentum shifts against younger, more athletic teams attacking downhill.
This game may be remembered as a defining moment in San Antonio’s emergence as a legitimate contender.
