YOUTH MOVEMENT 🔥
At 25 years and 20 days old, the San Antonio Spurs weighted average age this postseason makes them the 2nd youngest to reach the NBA Finals since minutes were tracked in 1951-52‼️
























Getty
The San Antonio Spurs pose with the The Oscar Robertson Trophy after defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game Seven of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Paycom Center on May 30, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
The “ahead of schedule” San Antonio Spurs will enter the NBA Finals with the youngest nine-man core in history and the second-youngest Finals team based on weighted minutes played, per ESPN Research.
ESPN’s Anthony Slater noted that the Spurs are also the first-ever Finals team with their top two scorers — Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle — aged 22 or below.
“Victor Wembanyama and the young Spurs are attempting to crash the championship party far quicker than history suggested feasible.
“San Antonio just became the first Finals team with its two top scorers — Wembanyama and third-year guard Stephon Castle — age 22 or below and the second youngest Finals team based on weighted minutes played, according to ESPN Research.
“The 1977 Portland Trail Blazers were the youngest.”
YOUTH MOVEMENT 🔥
At 25 years and 20 days old, the San Antonio Spurs weighted average age this postseason makes them the 2nd youngest to reach the NBA Finals since minutes were tracked in 1951-52‼️
Spurs beat writer Dusty Garza highlighted that the Spurs’ 9-man playoff rotation is the youngest core group of players to reach the NBA Finals.
Mitch Johnson’s 9-man playoff core, averaging exactly 24 years of age, becomes the youngest core group of players on a team headed to the NBA Finals. They are way ahead of schedule.
Harper (20) Bryant (20) Castle (21) Wembanyama (22) Champagnie (24) Vassell (25) Keldon
However, in terms of the weighted age of overall minutes played, the 1976-77 Portland Trail Blazers, led by Bill Walton, still hold the record. The Spurs’ 9-man core will be technically younger in the NBA Finals (excluding early playoff minutes).
In the 21st century, the 2014-15 Golden State Warriors (26.393) remain the youngest championship team in terms of weighted age. Wemby’s Spurs (25 years, 20 days) will be a year younger if they beat the Knicks in the 2026 NBA Finals.
| Championship Team | Weighted Age (WAGE) | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | 1976-77 Portland Trail Blazers | 24.199 |
| 2. | 1955-56 Philadelphia Warriors | 25.587 |
| 3. | 1979-80 Los Angeles Lakers | 25.710 |
| 4. | 1954-55 Syracuse Nationals | 25.867 |
| 5. | 1951-52 Minneapolis Lakers | 25.940 |
| 6. | 1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks | 26.049 |
| 7. | 1974-75 Golden State Warriors | 26.386 |
| 8. | 2014-15 Golden State Warriors | 26.393 |
| 9. | 1952-53 Minneapolis Lakers | 26.485 |
| 10. | 1956-57 Boston Celtics | 26.556 |
The Spurs benefitted from the Thunder missing their second- and third-best offensive weapons — Jalen Williams and AJ Mitchell — for a large chunk of the West Finals. However, Thunder’s core players refused to make excuses after their loss, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander conceding he lost to the better team.
“They’re young, they’re talented, well-coached, play the right way, play together, seems like they like each other,” SGA said, via ESPN’s Tim MacMahon.
“They have the makeup for sure. You don’t beat us without the makeup, and we’re here. They got the makeup to go get [a championship].”
Alex Caruso, though, highlighted that the Thunder were “unlucky” with injuries.
“In general, it’s hard to win one [championship], let alone go again, and it always takes a little bit of luck,” said the two-time NBA champion.
“We were unlucky. We were lucky last year. Our team was healthy the whole time outside of [Jalen Williams’] wrist, but he was able to play still. This year, losing those two guys, it changes the dynamic of the team, and then obviously, you’re playing a good opponent.”
Game 1 of the Knicks vs Spurs NBA Finals tips off at 8:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday. The Spurs enter Game 1 as 4.5-point favorites and are favored to win the Finals. The Knicks, eyeing their first NBA title since 1973, are on a historic 11-game winning streak.
Sai Mohan covers the NBA for Heavy.com. Based in Portugal, Sai is a seasoned sports writer with nearly two decades of publishing experience, including bylines at Yardbarker, FanSided's Hoops Habit, International Business Times, Hindustan Times and more. More about Sai Mohan
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。