San Antonio vs. Milwaukee, Final Score: Spurs cruise past physical but shorthanded Bucks, 12795
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) shoots during the first quarter against the Milwaukee Bucks at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images
Usually, these Victor Wemanyama – Giannis Antetokounmpo m
atch-ups have been must-watch TV, but with the latter out along with several more members of the Bucks’ main rotation, it was another methodical Spurs blowout win against a struggling opponent. Things were clicking offensively for everyone not named Wemby in this one, and they used a full team effort to put the Bucks away 127-95, despite Milwaukee trying to make things interesting with a hot third quarter that still didn’t even put a dent in the Spurs’ lead.
Stephon Castle led the way with an efficient 22-10-10 triple-double, and while it wasn’t his most efficient shooting night ever on just 7-21 shooting with no threes, Wemby still had 23 points, 15 rebounds and 6 assists. Six Bucks scored in double figures, led by 18 from Gary Trent and 15 from Myles Turner.
Observations
Am I the only one who hates this 2 PM Saturday time slot for NBA games? This may sound weird coming from someone who likes lazy weekends on the couch and watches plenty of Saturday afternoon sports during college football season, but this just doesn’t jive with NBA ball for me. (Maybe it’s also in the back of my head that Spurs and matinee games never go well together, but the early tip-off didn’t bother them today.)
I love a good revenge shot. Despite the score, it was a physical game with Wemby ending up on the floor multiple times. At one point in the first quarter, the Bucks had a 5 on 4 advantage because Myles Turner had knocked Wemby over on defensive rebound, and he was able to sprint down the court unimpeded for a dunk. But the Spurs were quickly able to quiet the crowd as Castle jab-stepped Turner to fake him out and send him backwards before burying the spot-up three. Overall it was a solid first quarter for the Spurs, who gradually built the lead up to 37-24 with methodical team work, 61% shooting and 19 combined points from Castle and Devin Vassell.
The shots weren’t falling for Wemby in this one, but his passing game was on point with three assists in the first half, including a Manu-esque behind-the-back pass to Castle for a dunk and alley-oop pass to Carter Bryant. Usually Wemby is on the the receiving ends of oops, but a recurring development lately has been him using his gravitational pull to find his open teammates, and despite his height, he’s surprisingly accurate as an oop passer. The Spurs still led by 22 at halftime despite just five points from Wemby.
Wemby finally got his first block early in the second half, which was one of his signature high-point blocks above the backboard square. I guess the refs are still new to seeing this from Wemby, because they called goal tending, which Mitch Johnson immediately and successfully challenged.
The Bucks threaded to make things interesting with a hot start to the third quarter by exploding from three (they hit 8 in the quarter after only 4 in the first half) and cutting the deficit to 13, but in yet another sign of how far this Spurs team has come, they didn’t panic or fold, but instead came out of timeout and promptly went on an 8-0 run, spearheaded by two Vassell threes and a Dylan Harper lay-up. Despite the offensive onslaught from the Bucks in that quarter, the Spurs still managed to outscore them by one by dominating the paint.
Luke Kornet finally attempted his first three of the season at the third quarter buzzer, and it circled around the rim and out. His reaction was typical hilarious Kornet, with him kneeling over with a smile a clinched fists, wishing so badly that a shot that didn’t matter would have gone in.
The Spurs opened the fourth on an 11-0 run with Wemby presumably trying to improve his numbers to make his MVP case, as he drove with determination and usually ended up getting fouled. He was laughing through it all, but otherwise it felt weird that he was still out there and playing so hard despite it being a blowout. He finally exited with under six minutes to go.
The loss means the Bucks will miss the playoffs for the first time since 2016, and it will be Doc Rivers’ first losing season since 2007 with the Celtics. But that is also a reminder to the Spurs: you don’t have to make the playoffs the year before to win a championship the next season. Granted, it won’t be on the back of a super team built the same way the 2008 Celtics were, but they also don’t have to listen to this “lack of experience” talk.
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