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Spurs survive Wemby injury scare to beat Knicks
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Spurs survive Wemby injury scare to beat Knicks

Associated Press

SAN ANTONIO—Julian Champagnie had a career-high 36 points and set a franchise record with 11 three-pointers and the Spurs survived an injury scare to Victor Wembanyama, rallying to beat the New York Knicks 134-132 on Wednesday night in a rematch of the NBA Cup final.

Wembanyama finished with 31 points and 13 rebounds in 24 minutes before limping off the court with an apparent leg injury with under 11 minutes remaining. He returned to the bench in warm-ups in the final minutes.

New York’s Jalen Brunson had 29 points, including a triple at the close of regulation after stripping Keldon Johnson of possession as he celebrated with San Antonio’s bench. Karl-Anthony Towns and Jordan Clarkson added 20 points apiece for the Knicks, who had a three-game winning streak halted.

Wembanyama hobbled off the court unassisted with 10:32 remaining, heading to the locker room after injuring his left leg. He had soared to gather an offensive rebound over Karl-Anthony Towns and lost possession when he landed. Replays showed there was no contact, but Wembanyama’s left foot slid forward and his knee appeared to hyperextend.

No limp

Wembanyama returned to San Antonio’s bench with 1:22 remaining, walking calmly and without a limp. It was a good time for the 7-foot-4 center to return. Wembanyama cheered from the sidelines as the Spurs held on to beat the Knicks to snap a two-game skid.

Champagnie scored 12 points in the fourth quarter, going 4-for-5 on three-pointers, as San Antonio erased a double-digit deficit.

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Champagnie finished 11-for-17 on three-pointers, besting the previous mark of nine set by Chuck Person on Dec. 30, 1997.

New York outscored San Antonio, 28-27, in the second quarter, but it would have been much worse without Wembanyama. The 7-foot-4 center had 16 points in the second period.

Wembanyama brought the sell-out crowd to its feet with a one-handed slam off an alley-oop pass from Castle that cut New York’s lead to 54-50. The Knicks responded with a 17-2 run following a timeout and Wembanyama’s exit.

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