Spurs steal one at the Garden: Castle's late shot keeps San Antonio alive in Finals

The San Antonio Spurs arrived at Madison Square Garden on the night of 8 June 2026 facing a deficit no NBA Finals team has ever come back from: three games to none, a trip to San Antonio on Wednesday, and a New York crowd that had been waiting for a Knicks championship banner for a generation. The Spurs won anyway, and the reason is a 21-year-old guard who refused to flinch.
Stephon Castle, a year removed from being drafted into a rebuild, calmly knocked down the biggest shots of his young life: a late three-pointer that swung the final possessions, and the game-sealing free throws that put the Knicks away. The Spurs left MSG with a 104-99 win, trimmed the Knicks' series lead to 3-1, and put a sliver of impossible back into the Finals.
The shot, the whistle, the building
Castle's three came with the Spurs clinging to a one-point lead inside the final minute of the fourth quarter, the kind of possession that ends most teenage careers and most series. The free throws followed at the other end, after a New York foul with the clock winding down. MSG, a building that has made grown men forget how to dribble, went quiet.
Asked after the game about playing in that environment, Castle cut to the thesis of the series. "It's something you can't shy away from… you should want to play in these kinds of environments," he said, per the NBA Live wire. It is the line that travels. The Spurs, a franchise that has won five championships on the back of veterans who treat hostile road arenas as a personal invitation, appear to have found the next version of that temperament.
Game 4 is Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. ET on ABC, with the Knicks now needing only one home win to close out a title that has been 25 years in the waiting.
The visitor's box stays empty
There is one fewer name in the lower bowl on Wednesday. President Donald Trump, who attended Game 3 at the invitation of Knicks owner James Dolan, is not expected to return for Game 4, according to a report carried by CBS Sports. Trump's presence at Game 3 — a courtside walkout, the customary presidential broadcast cutaways — was the most-watched piece of optics around the series so far, and a reminder that the modern American sports championship is now a stage for three overlapping audiences: the fans in the building, the television audience, and the political one.
The Knicks have not commented publicly on the report as of Tuesday afternoon. A White House travel schedule for 10 June 2026 had not been released.
What Castle's performance actually was
Strip out the highlight package and the line was unglamorous in the way Spurs wins usually are: contested pull-ups in transition, free throws made under pressure, defence on the perimeter that forced New York into late-clock looks. The Knicks shot below their season average from three, the Spurs won the turnover battle, and Castle — who had been the second option behind San Antonio's veteran core for most of the postseason — became the first option when it mattered.
The structural read: this is a San Antonio team built to survive precisely these spots. The Spurs are short on star power relative to a Knicks roster that finally has two-way wings and a backcourt that can score in bunches. What they have is depth, a coach in Mitch Johnson who has not flinched in his first full season at the helm, and a young player who just learned — in front of a national audience, in the league's loudest building — that he belongs on this stage.
What remains uncertain
Three things. First, the injury report. The Spurs' rotation has been stretched thin all series; if any of their wings are limited on Wednesday, the late-game execution that saved Game 3 is harder to replicate. Second, the Knicks' response. New York was 7-1 at home in this postseason entering Game 3 and remains a heavy favourite to close out the series; the question is whether the home crowd, which has been a fifth defender all spring, is rattled or re-energised. Third, the political overlay. A presidential visit that does not repeat is, in a series this close, a subplot the league's broadcast partners will not be able to leave alone.
The Spurs have bought themselves one more game, and one more night in the loudest building in basketball. That is the size of it, and — for a 21-year-old guard who just authored the biggest win of his career — it is plenty.
How Monexus framed this: the wire covered the shot and the president's seat. We are covering the player, the building, and the series arithmetic.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive