Wembanyama dominates and the Spurs soar: “No one can stop him”
The San Antonio Spurs enter the NBA Playoffs red-hot, with Victor Wembanyama at the center of everything. But is he truly unstoppable?
The San Antonio Spurs head into the playoffs riding one of the hottest streaks in the league: 11 straight wins and clear growth under head coach Mitch Johnson. But the real turning point has a clear name: Victor Wembanyama.
The French big man is now far more than a prospect. He has become a complete force, capable of impacting both ends of the floor. And it’s precisely this versatility that is fueling a growing belief: the Spurs can compete with anyone.
Kendrick Perkins: “There’s no game plan to stop him”
Speaking on the Road Trippin’ podcast, Kendrick Perkins was blunt and direct:
Pat Riley, Ty Lue, Red Auerbach, Gregg Popovich… there’s no game plan to stop Wembanyama
Kendrick Perkins
Perkins also emphasized how the Spurs’ real advantage lies on defense:
Their defense is better than anyone’s. Wemby is dominant on that end, and they’ll win games simply because they shut everything down
Kendrick Perkins
This highlights a key point: it’s not just Wembanyama’s individual impact, but the systemic effect he creates. His presence alters opponents’ decisions, timing, and spacing.
Elite defense and unique impact: why Wembanyama is different
Calling Wembanyama just a rim protector would be reductive. He’s closer to a “total deterrent”:
- Elite timing as a shot blocker
- Ability to cover ground instantly
- Veteran-level defensive reads
- A rare combination of length and mobility
In the paint, the feeling is clear: opponents rethink their decisions before even attacking the rim.
Historically, very few players have had this kind of impact. Still, some caution is needed – the comparison to all-time great defenders holds in terms of potential, not yet in playoff consistency.
The real question mark: the playoff test
There is, however, one aspect that Perkins seems to take for granted: the automatic translation of this dominance into the NBA Playoffs.
It’s worth pausing and questioning that assumption:
- The playoffs are a completely different environment
- Teams prepare targeted adjustments for every possession
- Young players, even elite ones, often face an initial drop-off
The Spurs, and Wembanyama himself, have not yet truly been tested under that level of pressure.
The Spurs system
Another way to interpret the Spurs’ rise is this:
not just a dominant Wembanyama, but a defensive system that amplifies his strengths.
In other words:
- Wembanyama is the centerpiece
- The system makes him even more devastating
If that’s the case, then the playoff challenge shifts: it’s not about “stopping Wembanyama,” but about breaking the Spurs’ defensive balance.
The excitement around Victor Wembanyama is more than justified. He’s already playing at a level few in history have reached this early. But calling him “unstoppable” is a strong claim – one that the NBA Playoffs will have to prove.