NBA
Thursday, April 2, 2026 • Chase Center
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Golden State Warriors | 26 | 23 | 34 | 30 | 113 |
| San Antonio Spurs | 35 | 35 | 26 | 31 | 127 |
Team Statistics
| Stat | Golden State Warriors | San Antonio Spurs |
|---|---|---|
| Field Goals | 28/51 | 29/46 |
| 3-Pointers | 14/35 | 15/47 |
| Free Throws | 15/18 | 24/30 |
| Rebounds | 39 | 48 |
| Assists | 29 | 34 |
| Steals | 6 | 8 |
| Blocks | 3 | 6 |
| Turnovers | 15 | 15 |
Game Recap
The San Antonio Spurs defeated the Golden State Warriors 127-113, winning by 14 points in NBA action. San Antonio’s offense was highly efficient overall, shooting 29-of-46 (63.0%) from the field, and it paired that efficiency with strong ball movement (34 assists) to keep Golden State chasing for long stretches.
Victor Wembanyama powered the Spurs with a game-high 41 points, consistently anchoring San Antonio’s scoring and helping them maintain control as the game progressed. Stephon Castle added 15 points, providing secondary production as the Spurs continued to generate quality looks through their passing and pace.
Golden State received balanced scoring behind N. Williams (18 points) and 17 points apiece from Omer Faruk Yurtseven and L. Cryer. The Warriors moved the ball well (29 assists) and hit 14 three-pointers on 35 attempts, but they couldn’t match San Antonio’s overall shot-making efficiency and were also outworked on the glass, losing the rebounding battle 48-39.
Going forward, the Spurs can point to this result as a template: elite efficiency, a clear go-to scorer in Wembanyama, and consistent creation for teammates. For the Warriors, the perimeter output and playmaking were positives, but the margin underscored the need to tighten up defensive execution and rebounding to avoid giving opponents extra possessions and high-percentage looks.

