De’Aaron Fox finished Game 1 with seven points on 3-for-13 shooting while rookie Dylan Harper scored 16 on 6-for-10 in far fewer minutes. In a game the Spurs lost by 10, that contrast is the backcourt question San Antonio carries into Game 2.
The split that will get questioned
Fox went 0-for-4 from three with three turnovers and five fouls, though he did dish five assists running the offense. Harper, playing a reserve’s minutes, went 6-for-10 with a three, eight rebounds and a steal. He became the youngest player to score 10 points in an NBA Finals game, at 20, doing it in his first six minutes on the floor.
The gap got louder because of how the game ended. San Antonio led 95-94 with just over two minutes left before New York closed on an 11-0 run to steal Game 1 on its home floor.
Fox still gives San Antonio structure
The case for Fox is in the role. He is the veteran lead guard who can handle pressure, organize late-clock possessions and get the Spurs into their offense without putting every initiating read on Stephon Castle or Harper, and his five assists in Game 1 reflect that.
The structure has to come with enough scoring threat to matter. New York will duck under screens, switch aggressively and load up on Victor Wembanyama if Fox is not making the first defender pay, which is exactly what happened on a 3-for-13 night.
Harper gave the Spurs downhill juice
Harper’s 16 points trailed only Wembanyama’s 26 and Castle’s 17 on the San Antonio side, tying Champagnie. He attacked before the Knicks could set their lane help, and he has effectively been the Spurs’ sixth starter throughout this playoff run. A Sports Illustrated takeaway after the game put the question directly: “It’s O.K. for the Spurs to admit Harper should be playing more than their veteran point guard.”
Game 2 is a rotation test
San Antonio can keep Fox in his lead role and still tighten his leash on nights his jumper is flat and New York is selling out on Wembanyama, leaning harder on Harper’s scoring in those stretches. The Spurs lost home-court advantage Wednesday. Friday’s response shows whether Mitch Johnson treats Game 1 as a cold shooting night or a real backcourt usage warning.
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