7 minutes ago
Victor Wembanyama Sees Impatience as Spurs’ Difference Between Good and Great
Wemby said patience only goes so far, arguing impatience “can be a virtue” for players chasing greatness before the NBA Finals. He said greats are rarely content with falling short, and even if impatience fails nine times, the tenth might make someone “play over your level” or “overachieve,” becoming “the difference-maker between good and great.”
By Raahib Singh
Other articles from NBA
8 minutes ago
Josh Hart Opens Up About Knicks Benchings and Self-Doubt
Hart said he did not always see “the bigger picture” when his Knicks minutes dropped, admitting he went home wondering, “Am I a**?” and “Do I suck?” Instead of spiraling, he focused on how to “build off of it” and improve, saying it took “self-reflection” to accept benchings when teammates were producing.
By Adit Pujari
34 minutes ago
Victor Wembanyama Turns Spurs’ Finals Inexperience Into Belief
Wemby said San Antonio’s youth can become an advantage, calling its “lack of experience” a strength before the Finals. Asked why, he framed inexperience as freedom, saying the Spurs “can do impossible stuff because we don’t know it’s impossible.” For a team entering the biggest stage, that mindset turns pressure into possibility.
By Adit Pujari
about 1 hour ago
Sophie Cunningham Calls Indiana Fever Too Soft After Portland Loss
Cunningham said Indiana has “all the pieces,” but must solve its defensive identity after a rough Portland loss. She said the Fever are “too soft right now” and need players to own roles, execute more schemes, and accept accountability. After a long meeting, Cunningham said the team “built back all the layers” before Thursday.
By Raahib Singh
about 1 hour ago
Jalen Brunson Reflects On The Only Time He Felt Imposter Syndrome
Brunson said his only real brush with imposter syndrome came as a Dallas rookie, when pickup runs and watching Luka work made him question himself. Seeing Doncic do everything “so effortlessly” forced Brunson to reassess the work required, pushing him to understand how hard he had to grind to become the player he wanted to be.
By Adit Pujari





