De’Aaron Fox is the oldest starter on the NBA’s second-youngest Finals team, and his message to San Antonio’s young core before Game 1 against the Knicks is to trust the habits that got them here rather than reinvent anything for the moment.
The veteran’s message
Asked at Finals Media Day how his role as the elder statesman shapes what he tells teammates, Fox kept it simple. “Don’t change anything that we’re doing,” he said. “There’s a reason that we’re in the Finals. There’s a reason that we won 60 games. There’s a reason we didn’t lose three games in a row the whole year.”
The record backs the message. San Antonio finished 62-20 and never dropped three in a row across the regular season, then managed a concussion, an ejection and a 3-2 conference finals deficit on the way to the franchise’s first Finals since 2014.
Why the words carry weight
Fox, 28, is three years older than the next-oldest Spurs starter, Devin Vassell, and eight years older than Dylan Harper, who has effectively served as a sixth starter through this run. On a roster built around a 22-year-old in Victor Wembanyama and a 21-year-old in Stephon Castle, Fox is the one who has carried a playoff load before, and he has done it here through a sprained ankle.
His advice runs alongside what his coaching counterpart preaches. “Getting to the Finals is not easy,” Mike Brown said. “If you can navigate through some of those adverse times throughout the season, you’ll give yourself a chance when it really matters.”
The reunion in the background
Brown coached Fox in Sacramento, and now the two meet on the league’s biggest stage on opposite benches. Fox has spoken warmly about what Brown meant to his development, and that history adds a layer to a series in which Fox is trying to reach the championship round’s final step. “I’ve been an All-Star,” Fox said. “The last thing I think that there is, is to win a championship. And I think we have a good shot at it.”
The matchup that tests the message
Holding the line gets harder against this opponent. New York carried an 11-game playoff winning streak and a league-best offensive rating into the Finals, and under Brown the Knicks have leaned into a faster pace than the franchise has played in years. San Antonio’s habit-driven approach has to hold up against a team that punishes mistakes in transition, which is exactly the part of the game the Spurs cannot afford to let slip.
Fox’s case is that the answer is the same one that produced 62 wins. Stay disciplined, trust the structure, and make the Knicks beat a set defense. The Spurs did not change for anyone over six months. Fox is betting they should not start now.
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