Wembanyama Just Made Chets Thunder Future Feel A Lot More Complicated

Amidst Victor Wembanyama's rising stardom and lucrative new deal, the OKC Thunder grapple with the glaring disparities in performance and value tied to Chet Holmgren's hefty contract.

Victor Wembanyama’s new deal in San Antonio has only sharpened the spotlight on Chet Holmgren in Oklahoma City.

The Spurs center agreed to a $252 million extension on Saturday, choosing a max extension rather than a supermax. That decision will save San Antonio about $50 million over the next five years, and it also creates an awkward comparison for the Thunder as they look at Holmgren’s future.

The two big men are now lined up on almost identical contracts, even though their reputations sit in very different places. Wembanyama’s extension begins in the 2027-28 season, when he will make $43.5 million. Holmgren will be at $44.8 million in that same year.

That number lands differently because Wembanyama is viewed by many as a top-five player in the league, while Holmgren is still searching for the position where he can be most effective. His struggles against Wembanyama in the past Conference Finals only made that gap feel wider.

Holmgren was overmatched throughout that series, and Game 7 was especially rough. He took just two shots in a disappearing act that summed up how little he was able to impose himself against Wembanyama.

The questions around Holmgren go beyond that matchup, too. His inability to defend the five has already been a talking point, and it stretches back to the previous year’s NBA Finals run. In that seven-game second-round series against Denver, coach Mark Daigneault leaned on guard Alex Caruso to handle Nuggets star Nikola Jokic for long stretches.

Holmgren, meanwhile, was repeatedly pushed around by the bigger center.

Wembanyama’s rise has only intensified the conversation. Holmgren is in a tricky spot this offseason: too small to guard centers, but with enough questions about his agility and outside shooting that he can’t simply be treated as a full-time perimeter player either.

That’s why the contract comparison matters so much. Wembanyama and Holmgren have similar skill sets, similarly slender frames and a history of going against each other that dates back to 2021. But one has clearly separated himself from the other.

For Oklahoma City, that makes Holmgren’s deal harder to defend. If the Thunder aren’t careful, Wembanyama’s new contract could turn Holmgren’s salary into a liability.

And as Holmgren’s share of the payroll grows beginning in 2026-27, it will be worth watching whether general manager Sam Presti decides to keep Victor Wembanyama's stunt double on the roster.

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