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NBA reviewing missed foul on Victor Wembanyama shove of Jalen Brunson

By Thomson Reuters Jun 9, 2026 | 4:34 PM

NEW YORK — Referees missed a foul call on Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama when he shoved Knicks guard Jalen Brunson in the first quarter of Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Monday.

Without ​a whistle on Wembanyama, the play continued with San Antonio on ‌offense. A replay review appeared to show Brunson, who was on defense and working through a screen on the play, making initial contact with his left hand and grabbing a fistful of Wembanyama’s jersey, prompting the retaliatory shove. With his own left hand, Wembanyama aggressively ‌shoved ​Brunson in the upper back and neck area, sending ⁠him toward the floor.

But it ⁠remains unclear if either player will be cited for any offense in the review of the matter on the off day before Game 4 at Madison Square Garden.

NBA head of officiating Monty McCutchen said Tuesday the ​league is reviewing the play, and holds the ability to retroactively assess a flagrant-1 foul. The NBA rulebook deems “unnecessary contact” a flagrant-1 foul, because ⁠it goes beyond the actions warranting a common ⁠foul.

If the NBA issues a flagrant-1 for the play, Wembanyama ​would not be subject to a suspension. But the Spurs’ big man would ​be skating into Game 4 on thin ice.

Wembanyama has already obtained ‌two penalty points for a flagrant-2 foul in Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals against Naz Reid of the Timberwolves.

All players can accumulate a total of three penalty points in the playoffs. If Wembanyama’s shove is upgraded to ⁠a flagrant foul, he would have three penalty points. His next flagrant in the Finals would prompt an automatic suspension.

Julian Champagnie had the ball on the left ⁠wing facing San Antonio’s basket ‌with Landry Shamet defending when the action happened near ⁠the foul line and away from the play.

Brunson was ​also called ‌for a flagrant foul closing out on a Champagnie ​3-pointer. Officials ⁠said he did not provide ample landing space for the Spurs’ deep threat. Brunson had little to say about the non-call postgame.

“Whatever you saw is what you saw,” Brunson said.

A flagrant-2, described as justified in the rulebook when “unnecessary and excessive or reckless contact” is “committed by a player against an opponent,” would prompt an ​automatic ejection.

–Field Level Media