Sports
Why NFL players trust a football outsider to navigate 18-game-season negotiations and more
LOS ANGELES — Lloyd Howell needs directions.
“Wait,” the NFL Players Association executive director asks, weaving through a crowd of future star players and their entourages convened for a rooftop reception. “Which way is stage right?”
It’s the penultimate night of the NFL Players Association’s Rookie Premiere, a business and marketing orientation for 18 top first-year players. Caleb Williams, Jayden Daniels, Drake Maye and Brock Bowers are among those mingling, eating and drinking with peers, family members, friends, former NFL stars and current NFLPA business partners. They await the evening’s main event — an unveiling ceremony where the young players will see the game jerseys they will wear this fall.
This is the first Rookie Premiere for Howell, 58, hired by the NFLPA last June after an almost 30-year career at Booz Allen Hamilton, a defense contractor and consulting firm with expertise in cybersecurity, engineering and espionage, where he spent his final years as chief financial officer and treasurer before retiring in December 2022.
Forgive him his directionally challenged moment. Howell has spent the last year crisscrossing the country — meeting with players, owners, agents, general managers, and head coaches on a fact-finding/relationship-building mission — and the fatigue is real. Now, as his first year on the job draws to a close, Howell just has this final obligation to fulfill.
If he can figure out where he’s going.
Finally, he reaches his landmark, and the ceremony proceeds without a hitch. Howell welcomes the ceremony’s emcees, former NFL quarterback Michael Vick and safety Ryan Clark, who impart words of wisdom before directing the unveiling of the jerseys. Howell then introduces the rapper Quavo, who performs a couple of songs before the rookies get their opportunity to pose with their new team-issued attire.
Once in the background, where he prefers to operate, Howell takes in the scene and floats between conversations with Vick, Clark, Williams and Fanatics founder Michael Rubin, his quest for information seemingly never-ending. The owner of a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from Penn and an MBA from Harvard, Howell never envisioned working in the NFL universe. But now, the life-long sports fan and self-described “geek” is fully entrenched, with the opportunity to play a pivotal role in the league’s continued growth.
Howell prioritized meeting with players, owners, agents, general managers, and head coaches in his first year as NFLPA executive director. (Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic; photo: Kevin A. Koski / NFLPA)
Howell won his five-year term as executive director last June after a secretive 16-month process largely because his expertise, vision and preparedness impressed the members of the NFLPA executive committee. During his second interview for his position, Howell turned the tables on committee members, grilling the men who would decide his fate rather than fielding their questions.
“He had our entire budget and was going line by line and making comments like, ‘Hey, I’m curious about this. I think this should be changed — just seems like it’s way too high. I really want to look into this, this detail here,’ and ‘Hey, what does this team do? This seems like there might be some crossover here,’” said Washington Commanders running back Austin Ekeler, an NFLPA executive committee member.
“We were blown away. Like, this man didn’t have this information for that long, and he was giving us these analytical breakdowns of things that he would suggest.”
The finances of professional football may have been foreign to Howell, but numbers and business practices were not. Growing up in Philadelphia, Howell learned about business and the importance of a strong work ethic from his father, Lloyd Howell Sr. (“a serial entrepreneur”), and mother Jeanette, a teacher. His love of sports was cultivated during his formative years. Although competitive swimming was uncommon for Black kids in Philadelphia during the 1970s, Howell was one of the early members of the Philadelphia Department of Recreation swimming program (founded by legendary swimming coach James Ellis, the program’s success inspired the 2007 film “Pride”). Howell played football in high school, calling himself an undersized tailback, and received offers to swim collegiately.
Then, in August 1984, just two weeks before Howell was to leave for Penn, Jeanette died of cancer only months after her diagnosis. “It was the first time in my life where your safety net, your everything, it’s just gone,” Howell said. “I found myself forced to think about things in a much more proactive, anticipatory way.”
The analytical approach forged through tragedy served Howell well in college — and as he climbed the ranks in the business world.
“It started as a security reflex, protective thing. And then I found that it had good implications to other aspects to my life, whether it was in school, whether it was business decisions, you name it,” he said. “I found getting into that mode just had all these benefits.”
“Lloyd often uses the term ‘North Star.’ ‘What is the North Star? Where are we going — both organizationally and then for this specific issue? … And in his framing of that discussion, everyone just starts to understand and collaborate,” said Matthew Curtin, who formed a business relationship with Howell during a 25-year span as vice president of J.P. Morgan and then managing director of Bank of America. In March, Curtin followed Howell to the NFLPA, where he is now the president of NFL Players Inc., the union’s licensing and marketing subsidiary.
Despite a change in fields, Howell’s approach has remained the same.
“He has this ability just to dissect the union and open our eyes to things that we might have not really paid attention to or we might let slip through,” said Detroit Lions linebacker Jaylen Reeves-Maybin, who was elected NFLPA president this spring. “And for him being able to do that within a year and see his areas of where he wants to improve, I think that’s been impressive.”
Howell’s hiring did not come without controversy. Former NFLA president JC Tretter said last year the prior two executive director hirings had been too public, so the union’s 32-member board of representatives agreed to allow the 11-player executive committee to vet candidates and approved a constitutional amendment that allowed the names of the finalists to remain secret until it was time for team player representatives to vote their approval.
Then, a month after Howell’s NFLPA hiring, Booz Allen agreed to pay $377 million to settle a Justice Department lawsuit alleging the company overcharged the U.S. government to help cover losses in other areas of its business. Booz Allen publicly disclosed the federal probe in June 2017, almost one year after Howell became CFO. A former employee who filed a civil complaint against the company in 2016 alleged in her lawsuit that she raised the issue of financial non-compliance for months with senior executives, including Howell.
His overall resume won over the NFLPA executive committee. Howell is not a lawyer, unlike his predecessor DeMaurice Smith, who during his 14-year tenure with the union negotiated two lucrative collective bargaining agreements with the league. Howell is also not a former NFL player, unlike the late Gene Upshaw, Smith’s predecessor, and a Hall of Fame Oakland Raiders guard who commanded the respect of owners.
The fact Howell was neither proved attractive.
“Because he’s an outsider — because he doesn’t have a stake in the game or a dog in the fight, I think that’s what made him come off as even more genuine in his efforts,” said free-agent safety Michael Thomas, an NFLPA executive committee member. “He’s very real and responds at a high level based off of his knowledge of business. … ‘Well, you know, no, I’ve never worked with NFL owners. But I’ve worked with billionaires before. I haven’t actually talked to (NFL broadcast partners) ESPN, CBS and Fox, but I’ve worked with billion-dollar companies. …
“Either you have that acumen and you have that high-level IQ, or you don’t. He’s smooth in the way he talks, but it’s genuine as he tries to understand and help us understand instead of trying to talk over you or be condescending.”
Once elected as NFLPA executive director, Howell wasted little time trying to learn the mindsets and priorities of both players and the owners. Throughout last season, he embarked on a league-wide tour to meet with each locker room and as many owners and/or general managers as possible.
Establishing a personal connection with NFL owners is vital to Howell’s mission. He believes that without strong relationships and receptiveness, he will fail in his quest to get owners to begin viewing players as business partners rather than commodities. As he met with the 25 owners (or ownership teams) who agreed to sit down with him, Howell worked to learn their perspectives and to educate them on players’ views.
“(They were) well-intended and, I felt, sincere people,” Howell said. “They have been engaging on some of the topics that we’ve talked about. They haven’t — with a few exceptions — they haven’t just been like, ‘Hell no. That won’t happen.’ Some of the topics, it’s more like, ‘Well, it’s complex. We’re gonna have to think about it.’ And I think they’re being sincere in that regard.”
On his Dallas tour stop, Howell scheduled a meeting with Cowboys owner Jerry Jones at team headquarters at “The Star” in Frisco, Texas. But when he arrived, Howell was greeted by Jones, his three children, and a host of grandchildren.
“It was important that my family meet him because he’s a part of what we are and he represents the constituency that deserves that from me,” Jones said. “So, it was not only respect deserved, individually speaking, but also as much about the respect owed because he represents all of the players.”
During the more than hour-long visit, the Joneses and Howell talked business — from playing surfaces to player contracts, team facilities to the current and future CBAs — and family. Howell left the meeting having earned Jerry Jones’ respect. He is someone who “wants to get out in front of things and help remedy things before things become a problem,” Jones said. “To me, he seems like someone that can look around corners. … I think that trait’s one of the best.”
Howell’s short-term goals include working on playing surfaces, offseason structures, penalties and fine enforcement. (Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic; photo: Kevin A. Koski / NFLPA)
The NFL declined multiple requests to speak with Roger Goodell for this story, but Howell believes he has established a good working relationship with the commissioner. Their behind-the-scenes work last fall resulted in less-stringent punishments for gambling rules violations on non-NFL contests, which was viewed as a win for the players, but Howell still sees room for improvement on a wide range of issues.
He wants NFL owners to consider an evolution of contracts that includes equity stakes for players. Lionel Messi got such a deal last year from MLS club Inter Miami CF, which gave the soccer star a two-and-a-half-year contract worth up to $150 million that included a future ownership stake in the team.
This spring, news leaked that the NFLPA’s executive board was considering a proposal that would dramatically alter the offseason workout schedule to begin in late June rather than April.
“We are the beneficiaries of growing revenue, popularity, you name it. But nothing lasts forever,” Howell said. “So we have to look at it and evaluate what could be better. What could we do? How do we get in front of this? … We should know what the economics are and then how to optimize it. And for the benefit of all, not just one group.”
Earlier this year, Goodell publicly said the league would eventually like to move to an 18-game regular season. Barring a revision agreed to by both the league and the union, the current CBA prevents that expansion until its expiration in 2030, but Howell sees no point in waiting to begin deliberations.
“I’m glad Roger said 18. I’m glad that he’s leaning into international (games),” Howell said. “I think it gives our guys the opportunity to kind of get their thoughts together, get our position together, to say, ‘This is what and how we’re thinking about it.’”
Howell noted that discussions need to occur about how the additional game would affect, among other things, field surfaces, bye weeks, international travel, practice squads and player compensation. “It sounds attractive. Who doesn’t want to see more football, myself included?” Howell said. “But all these other things have to be worked out.”
Players will not readily agree to an 18-game regular season. And owners will not readily agree to incentives for which players ask. So Howell believes the best way to avoid a lockout in six years is to start talking now.
“It makes no economic sense for anyone to have a strike or a lockout,” he said. “The world’s most popular sports league is going well. How do we keep that going? A lockout is an irrational thing. What’s more rational is, ‘Hey, if I could grow this two times, if I could grow this three times, then we should figure out what the agreements would need to be.’
“That’s what rational private-sector people do.”
Smith presided over CBA negotiations in 2011 (which included a four-month lockout) and 2020, and while those deals ultimately proved lucrative for all involved, the players believed a change in approach was necessary.
“As we talked through the search process about what we needed in the next person, we decided we needed more than just a labor lawyer,” Thomas said. “Because of how much the business of the game has grown, we felt like we needed somebody who can take us even further, help us run as a business, speak the same language as these owners, and Lloyd is exactly that.”
Howell enters Year 2 on the job with eyes on short- and long-term goals. By next summer, he wants to have begun effecting change in NFL playing surfaces, offseason structures, penalties and fine enforcement. Meanwhile, he’ll continue working toward solutions on more complicated matters, like revenue sharing, expanded seasons and teaming with the NFL in its quest for a lasting stake in the international market.
“It all takes time, and we have to approach it all with a healthy amount of analysis, a healthy amount of scrutiny,” Howell said. “But the North Star should definitely be: How do we all get on the same page toward increasing the value of this already growing enterprise?”
The rookies have questions, and Howell has answers.
Amid the marketing tutorials, photoshoots and memorabilia-signing sessions at the Rookie Premiere, Howell picked off players here and there for face-to-face meetings. He wants to establish relationships and start educating the rookies on how the union can help them throughout their careers and beyond. If there’s one thing he learned during his league-wide tour, it’s that far too many NFL players didn’t know about the benefits the NFLPA has to offer.
Given the chance to pick Howell’s brain, players capitalized. Some, like No. 1 pick Williams — the Chicago Bears’ business-savvy quarterback, who made millions in Name, Image and Likeness earnings his final season at USC — had questions about the history and purposes of the salary cap. New England Patriots wide receiver Ja’Lynn Polk sought insight on how the league’s fine system works and the assistance that players receive from the NFLPA during the appeals process. Others wondered about benefits, offseason structures, the likelihood of an 18-game season and its impact on rest and recovery time.
Howell made seven figures at Booz Allen and $2.2 million in compensation from the NFLPA in 2023, per Sports Business Journal, but people close to him said he views the union role as a mission. He is fueled by the chance to position current and former NFL players for life-long financial stability and to provide the quality working conditions necessary for improved physical and mental health.
In some ways, the divorced father sees his two adult sons in the young men he now serves. And a deep dive into the history of the NFL and the journey of its players has bolstered Howell’s resolve.
“I’ve always liked challenges even if initially they seem insurmountable,” he said. “I don’t know if it’s a hero complex. I don’t know if it’s just a glutton for punishment. But to be able to go into a situation that has a lot of challenges and the odds are stacked against you and to prevail … this is making a difference for young men who are entering into a very complex industry with tremendous pressure.”
(Illustration: Eamon Dalton / The Athletic; photo: Lev Radin / Pacific Press / LightRocket via Getty Images)
Sports
Knicks guard nearly wipes out Michael Bloomberg diving for loose ball during NBA Finals Game 3
Trump’s attendance at Knicks-Spurs Game 3 triggers enhanced security
Massive security preparations are underway for NBA Finals Game 3 in New York City due to Donald Trump’s planned attendance. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries criticized Trump’s visit. The NYPD and Secret Service have implemented a “frozen zone” around Madison Square Garden, leading to fan advisories and a no-bag policy. Former FBI agent James Gagliano discusses these heightened security measures following a recent Penn Station stabbing.
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Sitting courtside at a basketball game brings its own inherent danger, and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg nearly found out the hard way on Monday night.
The loose ball bounced toward the 84-year-old billionaire during Game 3 between the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs. Knicks guard Jose Alvarado dove into the stands and nearly crushed Bloomberg in the process.
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New York Knicks guard Jose Alvarado speaks with former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg after falling into him during the second half of Game 3 of the NBA Finals in New York on June 8, 2026. (Yuki Iwamura/AP)
Alvarado checked to make sure Bloomberg was fine – and he was. Bloomberg appeared to wave off any help from personnel on the sideline. Even comedian Dave Chappelle came over to check on the former politician.
The Spurs led by four points with 10:36 left in the game. San Antonio picked up the 115-111 win and finally got on the board in the series. Victor Wembanyama led the team with 32 points, eight rebounds, six assists, three blocks and two steals.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver greets former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg before game three of the 2026 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden in New York, N.Y., on June 8, 2026. (Geoff Burke/Imagn Images)
“I really tried to relax,” Wembanyama said. “The playoffs is like a whirlwind. It’s hard to put your head out of the water, and sometimes it’s like I don’t even (have) to watch the game back, by the way.
“I just need a little time off, let my brain cool down and recover — recover as much for the body as for the mind.”
Knicks star Jalen Brunson led New York with 32 points, five assists and five rebounds. Alvarado had four points in 12 minutes off the bench.
Jose Alvarado of the New York Knicks keeps the ball inbounds during the fourth quarter against the San Antonio Spurs in Game Three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden in New York City on June 8, 2026. (Dustin Satloff/Getty Images)
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Game 4 is set for Wednesday night back in Madison Square Garden.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
Mexico and South Africa face off again to open World Cup after 16 years of challenges
History tends to repeat itself at the World Cup. Such is the case with Mexico and South Africa, two teams that will face off in the World Cup opening match for the second time in history, just as they did in Johannesburg on June 11, 2010. The score that night was 1-1.
Many still remember Siphiwe Tshabalala and his powerful shot into the top corner that beat Mexican goalkeeper Óscar Pérez, and a celebration that remains etched in the collective memory of the soccer world. Unfortunately for the South African team that night, Rafa Márquez equalized for El Tri with 11 minutes remaining during what turned out to be a disappointing World Cup for the host nation.
Sixteen years later, the 2026 World Cup kicks off, curiously enough, with the same matchup, but with the roles reversed. Mexico is now the host at Azteca Stadium, known during this competition as Mexico City Stadium, at 7,216 feet above sea level. It will be the third World Cup the venue has hosted.
“It won’t be easy at all,” South Africa coach Hugo Broos said last December upon learning his team would debut against one of the hosts. “It’s a great thing to play in front of 80,000 people. We have nothing to lose.”
Mexico’s Giovani Dos Santos jumps on the back of Rafael Marquez after Mexico scored against South Africa during a World Cup group match on June 11, 2010, in Johannesburg, South Africa.
(Michael Steele / Getty Images)
On the Mexican side, the similarities to 2010 are striking — and not necessarily for the right reasons. Coach Javier Aguirre is back on El Tri’s bench — the same coach who led that campaign in South Africa — which, at first glance, might seem curious, though in practice it reflects the stagnation of a soccer team that has gone eight consecutive World Cups without advancing past the round of 16.
Former Barcelona player Márquez, who scored the equalizer, also remains connected to the national team, now as an assistant coach, with the mandate to take the reins of the team once the Aguirre era concludes after the World Cup. The squad has seen more than a dozen coaches come and go since 2010, including a qualification for Brazil 2014 that nearly ended in tragedy before a goal by the United States rescued the Mexican team and sealed its admission into the tournament.
“Javier [Aguirre] was a firefighter in 2002, he was a firefighter in 2010 and he stepped in as a firefighter again then — it’s the same old story,” said John Sutcliff, a journalist who has covered Mexico for more than 36 years. “[The federation officials] aren’t working in the best interest of the national team. There’s a lot of interest in bringing in foreigners [to the Mexican league] for business purposes and we don’t have players in Europe’s top leagues.”
Mexico’s recent record speaks for itself. It was eliminated in the World Cup round of 16 in 2010 by Argentina, by the Netherlands in 2014, by Brazil in 2018 and failed to even advance past the group stage in Qatar in 2022. Considered the “Giant of CONCACAF,” Mexico has remained dominant in its region since 2010, with five Gold Cups, although it has lost ground to the United States in the Nations League.
Outside the region, its participation in 2010 has been limited mainly to two editions of the Copa América held on U.S. soil, in which it has failed in both, reaching the quarterfinals in 2016 and being eliminated in the group stage in 2024.
“I think it’s been a roller coaster ride over these 16 years; for a moment it seemed like it was making progress, but then there were spectacular crashes,” said Gibrán Araige, a journalist who has followed El Tri through several World Cup cycles.
Mexico’s Raúl Jiménez celebrates with teammates after scoring against Serbia during a friendly at Nemesio Diez Stadium on June 4 in Toluca, Mexico.
(Agustin Cuevas / Getty Images)
For Araige, the level of the 2010 squad is similar to the current one, with players who are not yet established but have solid European experience.
Of the 26 players called up by Aguirre, 10 play in Europe, but few play for elite clubs or get significant playing time on their teams, mostly hampered by injuries, as is the case with Santi Giménez (AC Milan, Italy), César Huerta (Anderlecht, Belgium), Luis Chávez (Dinamo, Russia) and Edson Álvarez (Fenerbahçe, Turkey).
For its part, South Africa has not made significant progress since 2010.
After being eliminated in the group stage, finishing behind Uruguay and Mexico in a tournament held in its own country, it became the first host nation in a World Cup to fail to advance past that stage — a record that Qatar matched in 2022.
Bafana Bafana failed to qualify for the next three World Cups. In fact, this is the first time they have qualified since 2002, as they did not have to qualify in 2010, having hosted the tournament.
They were eliminated as group runners-up behind Ethiopia on the road to Brazil in 2014, they finished last in their group on the road to Russia in 2018 and finished second behind Ghana in the qualifiers for Qatar in 2022.
South African players run during a World Cup training session at Estadio Hidalgo on June 3 in Pachuca, Mexico.
(Manuel Velasquez / Getty Images)
They have also lacked consistency in the Africa Cup of Nations, missing the 2012 and 2017 editions.
Broos, who took over as South Africa’s head coach in 2021, sought to instill discipline and relied on local talent, which was vital in securing a spot in this year’s World Cup. During the qualifying round, South Africa won its group by finishing ahead of Nigeria and advanced despite starting the campaign with a loss due to an ineligible player used in a match against Lesotho.
Broos faced criticism for strategic errors early on, but ultimately built a competitive team that achieved historic qualification, aided by nine direct World Cup spots in the expanded tournament field.
“It’s a truly excellent group of players. We got through a very tough qualifying phase, which I think helped polish the team,” said Mark Gleeson, a journalist specializing in African soccer.
For Gleeson, South Africa missed a major opportunity to strengthen its league by failing to retain investors and wealthy clients after the 2010 World Cup and continued to operate in the same way — a trend reflected in the league’s stagnation and the scarcity of talent playing abroad.
Lwethu Makhanya (Philadelphia Union, USA), Ime Okon (Hannover 96, Germany), Mbekezeli Mbokazi (Chicago Fire, USA), Sphephelo Sithole (CD Tondela, Portugal) and Lyle Foster (Burnley, England) are among the few South African players competing abroad for a national team reliant on domestic soccer.
South Africa huddle during a training session at Estadio Hidalgo on June 3 in Pachuca, Mexico.
(Manuel Velasquez / Getty Images)
However, with the World Cup’s new 48-team format, the task of advancing proved less daunting for teams in the qualifying phase and at the World Cup, there will also be more opportunities to advance beyond the group stage because the best third-place finishers move on. That math could benefit South Africa even if it loses its opening match.
Should Bafana Bafana lose to Mexico, they would have to beat the Czech Republic in their second match on June 18 in Atlanta and would likely play for qualification on June 24 against South Korea in Monterrey.
“The Czechs are among the weakest in Europe, and there’s a good chance of beating them. Furthermore, South Korea is well below its own historical standards, as was evident in March with very poor results in high-pressure matches,” Gleeson said.
To prepare for the altitude in Mexico City, Broos, a former Belgian player who competed in the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, brought his team in early and, starting May 30, held training camp in Pachuca, a city at higher in elevation than the capital. Several of his players are already accustomed to some altitude from playing for clubs in Johannesburg, at 5,751 feet.
“South Africa has a chance; we can compete,” Tshabalala said in an interview after the draw. “I think the pressure will be on Mexico because they’re the hosts. That gives us a real opportunity to pull off an upset.”
A scoreless draw against Nicaragua in Johannesburg days before the World Cup isn’t exactly encouraging, but it also fits with the team’s expectations and the mindset of “having everything to gain and little to lose.”
“We have to enjoy it, and when you enjoy something, you can achieve great things,” said Broos.
Sports
Victor Wembanyama puts hand on Jalen Brunson’s head, pushes him down as refs look the other way in Game 3
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Victor Wembanyama’s aggression on the court was once again called into question as the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks played Game 3 of the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden.
During the first half, Knicks All-Star guard Jalen Brunson was trying to guard Wembanyama near the free throw line when the 7-foot-4 center put his hand on the back of Brunson’s head and shoved him to the court.
However, Wembanyama was never called for the foul and play continued with the Knicks in possession of the ball.
Jalen Brunson of the New York Knicks works against Dylan Harper and Victor Wembanyama of the San Antonio Spurs during the third quarter in Game Three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden in New York City on June 8, 2026. (Al Bello/Getty Images)
Brunson immediately got into Wembanyama’s face, and it appeared the Frenchman was smiling before the point guard got back to business.
The incident was similar to one that occurred in Game 2’s win for the Knicks on the road, when Brunson’s backup, Jose Alvarado, went to box out Wembanyama. Alvarado, who has comparable stature to Brunson, was wrapped up by Wembanyama and thrown away from the play.
NBA RESCINDS MITCHELL ROBINSON’S TECHNICAL FOUL FROM GAME 2 OF FINALS AFTER REVIEWING SHOVING MATCH
Once again, no foul call was made.
The Spurs are known for their physicality, but many believed that Wemby should’ve been called for fouls in these cases.
Jalen Brunson of the New York Knicks shoots a three-point basket over Victor Wembanyama of the San Antonio Spurs during the second quarter of Game Three in the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden in New York City on June 8, 2026. (Dustin Satloff/Getty Images)
San Antonio started this game red-hot, owning an 11-point lead after the first quarter, 33-22. But these Knicks have consistently shown their ability to come back no matter the deficit.
After a second quarter run, the Knicks ended the locker room with a seven-point lead at halftime.
Brunson was a main reason why that was the case, going 5-of-11 from the field for 15 points with three assists and one rebound.
New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson reacts as San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama looks on during the second quarter of game three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden in New York on June 8, 2026. (Vincent Carchietta/Imagn Images)
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As for Wembanyama, he was an efficient 6-of-10 from the field for 15 points of his own, while hauling in four rebounds and dishing out three assists.
The Spurs are trying to avoid a brutal 3-0 deficit in the best-of-seven series, while the Knicks are hoping they can keep momentum in the second half to have the chance at a sweep in their own building on Wednesday night in Game 4.
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