
Victor Wembanyama dominated the Portland Trail Blazers in the first game of their first-round series. After the San Antonio Spurs center suffered a concussion on a scary fall early in Game 2, his team will have to scramble to win without the Defensive Player of the Year.
Three minutes into the second quarter, Wembanyama slipped after using a spin move to go around Jrue Holiday. The 7-foot-4 center hit his head hard on the floor, then headed to the locker room, where he was ruled out for the game — and perhaps more of the series. The Spurs went on to lose to the Blazers, 106-103.
Wembanyama scored 35 points in the Spurs' 111-98 Game 1 victory, scoring on dunks, foul shots and 5-of-6 shooting from three-point range. He had five points, four rebounds and a block in his 12 minutes of action in Game 2 before departing.
San Antonio had to lean on backup center Luke Kornet, their only major free-agent signing of the summer. He averaged just 6.5 points and 6.1 rebounds, though the Spurs had spectacular advanced numbers with him on the floor (offensive rating of 154, defensive rating 111). Kornet had 10 points and two steals in the Game 2 loss. The Spurs also used ultra-small lineups where 6-foot-7 Harrison Barnes was the smallest player on the floor. Barnes had four points in the loss.
But there's no substitute for Wembanyama, a transformative defensive player who forced the Blazers to try a variety of defensive matchups on him in Game 1, with limited success. His combination of height and handles is unprecedented, though it does mean he has further to fall than any comparable NBA player.
Victor Wembanyama hits his head hard on the floor, after the drive and spin move on Jrue Holiday.
— MrBuckBuck (@MrBuckBuckNBA) April 22, 2026
He looks dazed and confused, the Spurs take a timeout and he heads to the locker room. With replays. pic.twitter.com/hrEAKkEDMb
After the game, ESPN's Shams Charania confirmed Wembanyama suffered a concussion. Wembanyama will need to hit "several benchmarks" without experiencing any symptoms before he gets cleared to return, as Charania notes.
Per NBA guidelines, Wembanyama cannot return to full participation for 48 hours but can resume gradual activity in 24 hours as long as his symptoms don't worsen. Then he must hit several benchmarks while being symptom-free before he is cleared to play. He'll then require… https://t.co/9Szz0FIu6s
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) April 22, 2026
The Spurs are certainly dependent on their MVP candidate, but they do have some veteran options. The team added 36-year-old Mason Plumlee for insurance in March, though he played just 48 minutes in six games with San Antonio. They have 35-year-old Kelly Olynyk, a career 36.9 percent three-point shooter, and 33-year-old Bismack Biyombo.
That could be crucial against Portland's 7-foot-2, 280-pound Donovan Clingan and backup Robert Williams III. At least in Game 2, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson chose to trust his smaller lineups, upping the minutes for rookie forward Carter Bryant instead of dipping into his center depth.
Getting past the Blazers is one thing. Advancing further in the playoffs against big men like Nikola Jokic, Rudy Gobert, Chet Holmgren and more will be a huge challenge without Wembanyama. The best thing the Spurs could do is hold tough against Portland and give their franchise player as much time to recover as possible.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!