San Antonio Spurs Guard De’Aaron Fox Ruled Out For Game 1 Of Western Conference Finals Against Oklahoma City Thunder

San Antonio Spurs guard De'aaron Fox (4) dribbles up the court.

There are bad playoff breaks, and then there’s this. Just hours before the lights go up in Oklahoma City and the Western Conference Finals officially turns into basketball chaos, the San Antonio Spurs are staring at the possibility of opening the series without De’Aaron Fox. If you have watched this Spurs team over the last two months, you know that it is not just “next man up” territory. That is ripping the steering wheel out of the car before a road trip through a thunderstorm.

Reports Monday indicated Fox would miss Game 1 against the Thunder because of lingering ankle soreness that has clearly been bothering him since the previous round. The timing could not be worse. How will the Spurs look without him on the court?

De’Aaron Fox Has Been the Spurs’ Playoff Engine

The box scores only tell part of the story. Yes, Fox has averaged strong playoff numbers during San Antonio’s run, but the bigger thing has been control. Tempo. Composure. The Spurs are young enough to occasionally play like somebody handed car keys to teenagers at prom. Fox prevents the game from spinning into chaos.

In the closeout win over Minnesota, Fox rolled his ankle, limped around like every pickup player at LA Fitness after turning 30, then casually returned and dropped 21 points on absurd efficiency. That is the kind of performance teammates remember forever, but playoff adrenaline only carries a body so far. Eventually, ankles start sending invoices.

Thunder Suddenly Gain a Massive Edge

Meanwhile, Oklahoma City received the kind of news that makes opposing fan bases stare blankly into the refrigerator at midnight. Jalen Williams is expected back for Game 1 after missing time with a hamstring injury.

That matters because the Thunder already had enough problems for opponents. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is operating at MVP-level rhythm, the defense swarms like it’s legally caffeinated, and Oklahoma City still hasn’t lost in these playoffs. Without Fox, San Antonio loses its fastest downhill creator and arguably its best pressure-release valve against OKC’s relentless perimeter defense. That is dangerous.

The Thunder love forcing turnovers, speeding teams up, and turning one mistake into a six-point avalanche in about 14 seconds. Fox is usually the antidote to that style because he can break pressure with pure speed.

The Spurs Still Have Hope

Here’s the thing nobody wants to admit: As terrifying as this matchup becomes without Fox, the Spurs still employ the basketball equivalent of a video game glitch. Victor Wembanyama changes everything.

He blocks shots that should count emotionally, even if they don’t count statistically. He alters offensive game plans before possessions even begin. And every playoff game feels one step closer to the moment where he completely hijacks a series on his own.

De’Aaron Fox Missing Game 1 Changes the Entire Feel Of This Series

Before the injury news, this felt like a track meet between the NBA’s present and future. Wembanyama versus Gilgeous-Alexander. Young stars everywhere. Pure chaos. No sleep for assistant coaches. Now there’s a cloud hanging over the Spurs.

Playoff series are cruel that way. One awkward landing. One swollen ankle. Suddenly, an evenly matched showdown starts leaning hard in one direction. Still, if these playoffs have taught us anything, it’s this: counting out De’Aaron Fox completely is usually a mistake.

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