Sean Sweeney thinks the 2026 NBA Finals might have looked a lot different if the clock had just kept running a little longer.
The former Spurs associate head coach, now leading the Orlando Magic, said San Antonio’s title loss to the New York Knicks was shaped by bad luck, fatigue from the previous round, and a string of costly mistakes. On The Ryen Russilo Show, Sweeney pointed to a series that ended 4-1 for New York and suggested the Spurs were closer than the final margin showed.
“I think a few things,” Sweeney said. “One, I think there’s a little attrition, having to go through the previous series.
Two, bad luck. You know, they told me if the games were like 46 minutes or whatever, we would have won 4-1.
Jalen [Brunson] obviously had a monster game in that last one. You know, coached him in Dallas, like, happy for him, kind of.
But I think there’s some of that.
“And I think we just made more mistakes than we had made in the previous series,” Sweeney stated. “And you could maybe say some youth to that, but you don’t do what you did, and just all of a sudden become young. The one thing I think that’s a little different in the Finals than the other rounds is when you have to do media in the Finals, you have to answer questions even when you’ve played poorly or struggled, and you don’t have to do that in the previous rounds.
“You know, those guys like all year, if they have a longer media session, it’s because they’ve done something good,” Sweeney added. “You don’t have 15 minutes of answering like, why didn’t you make this play?
Are you too young? Are you guys on the same page?
What do you think about coach’s decision? So I think that’s like a different deal and can obviously contribute to it.”
The Spurs had their chances. They built double-digit leads in all five games, and in several of them they were still in front late. But they couldn’t close the door, and that was the story of the series.
Sweeney’s “46 minutes” line doesn’t quite line up with the game-by-game reality. San Antonio was ahead with two minutes left in Games 1, 3 and 4, and it only won one of those three.
Game 4 was the nightmare. The Spurs were up by 29 points in the third quarter before the whole thing unraveled. They managed only 14 points in the third and 16 in the fourth, turning a huge cushion into a collapse.
Even then, they still had a chance to steal it. With San Antonio up 106-105, De’Aaron Fox went for a layup instead of holding the ball and trying to get fouled. OG Anunoby blocked the shot, then finished the other end with the game-winner.
Victor Wembanyama also had a rough moment before that, missing two free throws with the Spurs clinging to a one-point lead and just under two minutes left. He had a costly turnover at the end of Game 2 as well, and Sweeney said there were simply too many errors.
The grind of a seven-game Western Conference Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder may have left its own mark, too. After that win, Josh Hart thought the Spurs looked like a team that believed it had already reached the top.
Then the Knicks sent them back down.
Sweeney still circled back to the two players who swung the series most decisively.
“But then, like you said, Jalen Brunson happened is probably a good answer too,” Sweeney said. “And OG’s a**.”
Brunson wasn’t always efficient, but he kept finding the big shot when it mattered. In Game 5, he finished with 45 points to close out the series and seal New York’s championship.
Anunoby had a strong case for Finals MVP heading into that game, thanks to his overall series and the decisive Game 4 block and tip-in. But Brunson’s final performance made the award his.
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