San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama is fully aware of his growing niche in the NBA. He expects his team to finish near the top of the league standings. And after essentially serving as the buzzer-beater against the Phoenix Suns, he made it clear he thinks nothing is possible without his Spurs teammates.
"We've got former Clutch Player of the Year De'Aaron Fox, so that's a big component of it," Wembey said of his young team's success in close games. "We have talented guys all around. We can put five offensively talented guys on the court at any time in the game, so that makes a lot of sense. The fact that we don't have experience can work in our favor."
From 22 wins two years ago to 34 wins last season, San Antonio has not only clinched a playoff berth, but is already one of the best teams in the league despite its youth.
"It's not a meaningless game. I should say it's a meaningful game, close to the playoffs, so it's a good test right now," Wembanyama said of the 101-100 win against Phoenix.
"The good thing is I can feel like we've formed habits and that's on both sides of the field, especially defense. Now we just have to work without even thinking about it too much, and we know each other, and we can anticipate. And it looks the same on film. That doesn't mean our play was perfect. Far from it, I think it was actually below average, but it's a good test, especially this time of year."

Victor Wembanyama details his buzzer-beater vs the Suns
Vembanyama's jumper with 1.1 seconds remaining proved as subtle as it was effective.
“It was hard to keep up with all the excitement around me,” Vembanyama admitted. "The fans were looking at me. This guy spilled wine on me, and this, by the way, was before the game was over. I made the shot, I came back to defend and hit a guy, and now I have wine on my shorts. There was a lot going on. I didn't see all my teammates come forward in a second. It felt like I was stuck in the crowd."
However, Short himself could not trick Wembley.
Vembanyama said, "This is a shot I worked on. It's everything." "Our game plan is not inventing things, so it's all things we've been working on. This shot, in particular, is a shot I've been working on with (assistant coach) Tim Martin, so it's nothing new."
The Spurs trailed most of the time against Phoenix. Vembanyama did his best to ensure they did not fall behind again after their last-second effort.
“In this situation, you want to wait,” the two-time All-Star said about his approach on that final Spurs offensive possession. "If you take the shot too early, whether you make it or miss, you're shooting yourself in the foot because the defense will probably get the rebound and have some time or inbound and have some time. So, you want to shoot it as close as a second or two. That way if we miss we have a chance to get an offensive rebound, and if we make it, they don't have time."
Devin Booker's half-court heave missed at the buzzer, giving the Spurs their 52nd win in 70 games.

