Spurs respond to Game 1 loss with beatdown of Timberwolves in Game 2

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Spurs respond to Game 1 loss with beatdown of Timberwolves in Game 2

Spurs respond to Game 1 loss with beatdown of Timberwolves in Game 2

Victor Wembanyama and co. didn't play around in Game 2.

Spurs respond to Game 1 loss with beatdown of Timberwolves in Game 2

Victor Wembanyama and co. didn't play around in Game 2.

The San Antonio Spurs didn't just bounce back in Game 2—they sent a message. After a stunning Game 1 loss that saw Victor Wembanyama deliver an historic performance that still wasn't enough, the Spurs came out with something to prove. The result? A dominant 133-95 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves that evened their Western Conference semifinals series at 1-1.

That film session between games must have been intense. The Spurs looked like a completely different team, playing with a level of intensity and focus that left the Timberwolves scrambling from the opening tip. Game 3 now shifts to Minnesota on Friday (9:30 p.m. ET, Prime Video), and the momentum has clearly swung.

The Timberwolves will point to their injury situation—Donte DiVincenzo remains sidelined, Anthony Edwards is still coming off the bench after his surprise return in Game 1, and Ayo Dosunmu exited early with heel pain after being listed as questionable. But the Spurs didn't care about excuses. They came to dominate.

Wembanyama, the NBA's first unanimous Defensive Player of the Year, anchored a defense that was absolutely suffocating. Through the first three quarters, the Timberwolves managed just 5-of-21 shooting inside the paint and 5-of-21 from beyond the arc. They coughed up 19 turnovers against only 12 assists, while the Spurs racked up 10 steals. San Antonio even earned 10 more trips to the free throw line. It was a clinic in defensive intensity.

While Wembanyama didn't replicate his 12-block performance from Game 1—a game where Minnesota cried goaltending on multiple occasions—his presence alone was enough to alter everything the Timberwolves tried to do. The paint was a no-fly zone.

Offensively, the Spurs were just as sharp. All five starters scored in double figures before the fourth quarter even began. The game started slipping away from Minnesota late in the second quarter, and San Antonio used the third to slam the door shut. The turning point? A stretch where Julian Champagnie buried four straight 3-pointers, sending the crowd into a frenzy and the Timberwolves into a timeout they never recovered from.

For fans of the game, this is exactly the kind of response you want to see from a young, hungry team. The Spurs showed they can adjust, they can defend, and they can put together a complete 48-minute performance. If you're looking to rep the silver and black for Game 3, now might be the time to grab that Wembanyama jersey—this series is just getting started.

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