November 26, 2025

A spectre is haunting the NBA – the spectre of Victor Wembanyama.

All the powers of the old guard have entered into a tenuous alliance to contain this unicorn: rivals Luka Dončić and Anthony Edwards, the Oklahoma City radicals, and the one with the most to lose, Nikola Jokić. Everyone senses the shift, from the veterans of past champions to the new faces of the league. The Spurs are a basketball dynasty-in-waiting.

The 7ft 4in (at least) forward from France signals an inevitable domination. Armed with a guard-like dribble, Defensive Player of the Year-type blocks, and Splash Brother-caliber three-pointers, San Antonio has become ground zero for the next great NBA team. For the second time this century.

The “MVP leap” talk no longer feels premature. Barring injury, the 21-year-old Frenchman will finish top five in voting while earning All-NBA first team and Defensive Player of the Year honors. How? By continuing to attack from the perimeter like a wing, reject screens while drawing contact, before finishing over other seven-footers like a dangling modifier. He’s tighter with the ball now – quicker decisions, zero hesitation, smoother footwork, cleaner finishes through traffic. The neophyte tremble is gone. He catches, drives and dictates a dish or dunk. In the post, you can see the fingerprints of Hakeem Olajuwon’s influence: jab steps, drop steps, and pivots with balance. (That’s not an accident.) On defense, he’s warping possessions with an eight-foot wingspan.

Against Dallas in last month’s season opener, Anthony Davis thought he had a layup. Until Wemby unfolded from nowhere to erase it, leaving AD begging for a goaltend. Ha. Riddle me this: what do you do when he blocks with one hand, rebounds with the other, and is somehow already pushing the ball in transition before the defense can process what happened? What about when he runs the floor like a guard, draws fouls in tight spaces, and forces teams into panic rotations? We don’t judge on how you choose to cope. Especially now that he’s attacking the paint more, initiating from the elbow, curling off pin-downs, and punishing doubles with kick-outs. Prayers up.