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Wembanyama’s ‘See You Never’ Sign-Off Might Be the Most Awkward Finals Moment

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Wembanyama’s ‘See You Never’ Sign-Off Might Be the Most Awkward Finals Moment

The confetti had barely settled on the Knicks’ first championship celebration in 53 years when Victor Wembanyama found himself at the podium, tasked with closing out a season that ended far sooner than anyone in San Antonio expected. The 7-foot-4 phenom delivered 19 points, 14 rebounds, and 5 blocks in Game 5 — a stat line most players dream of in a Finals elimination game. But it was his final words that stole the spotlight.

“Appreciate y’all. See you… never,” Wembanyama said, then dropped the microphone with a smirk that left reporters exchanging glances. The clip, shared by SNY Knicks, immediately went viral. Some fans laughed. Others winced. A few wondered if the third-year star was making a dark joke about his own mortality — or just signaling he didn’t plan on doing a Finals presser again anytime soon.

Either way, it was the most memorable moment of a night defined by missed opportunities.

The Spurs led by as many as 10 in the first quarter and 16 in the second, becoming the first team in the play-by-play era (since 1996-97) to hold double-digit leads in the opening quarter of all five Finals games. But New York, powered by Jalen Brunson’s 45-point masterpiece — including 13 straight points in the fourth quarter — erased it all. The Knicks outscored San Antonio 29-18 in the final frame to win 94-90 and close the series 4-1.

It was San Antonio’s first home loss in Finals history. And it stung.

The Supporting Cast That Went Silent

While Wembanyama put up a respectable line (7-of-19 shooting), the Spurs got shockingly little from two key backcourt pieces. De’Aaron Fox and Stephon Castle combined for 13 points on 4-of-25 from the field. That’s a 16% shooting night from two players who were supposed to ease the scoring load. Dylan Harper led San Antonio with 25 points in 31 minutes, but it wasn’t nearly enough against a Knicks team that refused to fold.

New York, which had already pulled off a historic 29-point rally in Game 4 capped by OG Anunoby’s tip-in with 1.2 seconds left, improved to 4-0 in closeout games on the road. The game featured the lowest combined first-half scoring in a Finals game since 2010 (79 points) and a 31.8% field-goal percentage — the worst in the Finals in the play-by-play era.

Brunson, who shot 14-of-27, was the obvious difference-maker. But the Knicks’ resilience — overcoming deficits in three of their four wins — told a deeper story about a team that refused to break.

What’s Next for Wembanyama and San Antonio?

Wembanyama finishes his third season with a Defensive Player of the Year award, All-NBA First Team, All-Defensive First Team honors, and a second All-Star nod — all while finishing third in MVP voting. The Spurs have a generational talent. But Sunday night’s press conference mic drop, awkward as it was, underscored a blunt truth: talent alone doesn’t close out Finals games. Teams do.

The Knicks, for their part, will celebrate their first title since 1973. The confetti will fade. And somewhere in San Antonio, a 7-foot-4 Frenchman is probably already thinking about next June — and hoping he doesn’t have to say “see you never” again.

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