After cruising past the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday to finish February without a loss — just the third perfect month in franchise history — the San Antonio Spurs have now won 11 straight games. That’s the longest active winning streak in the NBA, and just the third double-digit roll in the league this season.

The other two teams to rip off at least 10 straight Ws in 2025-26 are the teams leading their respective conferences: The Detroit Pistons, whom the Spurs knocked off in impressive fashion earlier this week, and the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder — who, as you might recall, have had more than their fair share of problems with San Antonio this season.

Those problems now include objects in the rear-view mirror being closer than they appeared. Between San Antonio’s surge and Oklahoma City hovering just above .500 over the last month and a half amid a raft of injuries — including, most notably, to MVP frontrunner Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who’s about to return to the fold — the Thunder’s lead over the Spurs for the West’s No. 1 seed is down to just 1.5 games, with San Antonio holding the head-to-head tiebreaker.

The secret’s out: Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs are legit. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images)

(Ronald Cortes via Getty Images)

“After the All-Star break, we had the conversation with the team of just, every game from now on, it means something,” forward Julian Champagnie recently told reporters. “We’re fighting for something. We’re building something.”

Ahead of a marquee nationally televised Sunday matinee matchup against the New York Knicks — the team that beat them in the Emirates NBA Cup final back in December — here are 11 things worth knowing about the NBA’s hottest team, one for every win in the streak, starting with the literal and figurative biggest reason for the Spurs’ rocketship rise back to title contention:

1. Victor Wembanyama’s been ridiculous

Like, even for him.

The big fella’s averaging 22.5 points, 11.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 3.5 blocks and 1.4 steals in 29.3 minutes per game during the winning streak. He’s been a force down low, shooting 67% in the lane, scoring 1.22 points per paint touch, and averaging nearly eight free-throw attempts per game. And, as ever, what he does on offense isn’t even half the story.

Wembanyama has blocked 38 shots during this winning streak — as many as, or more than, six teams in that span (Dallas, Phoenix, Golden State, Brooklyn, Indiana, Denver). And his impact extends to plenty of shots he doesn’t get, too: Opponents are shooting just 46% on 2-point shots with Wembanyama on the floor during this stretch, according to PBP Stats — more than six percentage points below what the NBA’s worst inside-the-arc-shooting offenses have managed during the full season.

The Spurs have outscored opponents by a whopping 179 points in the 323 minutes that Wembanyama has played during the streak — far and away the highest plus-minus in the NBA in the month of February. That averages out to plus-25.9 points per 100 possessions, with San Antonio scoring like the best offense in the NBA and allowing a mere point per possession in his minutes.

Whether he’s incinerating an opponent to the tune of 40 points in three quarters, like he did to the Lakers, or mitigating a down shooting night by simply suffocating them, as he did to the Raptors in the fourth quarter on Wednesday or the Nets on Thursday, the sheer geometry- and probability-warping power of how Wembanyama deploys his dimensions necessarily makes every game he appears in about him. That kind of gravity has a way of bending outcomes in your direction; when Wemby’s on the floor, performing like this, things seem to go the Spurs’ way a whole hell of a lot.

Especially considering he’s got help.

2. Strength in numbers

No Spur is averaging more than 30 minutes per game during the winning streak. Seven Spurs are scoring in double figures; an eighth, veteran forward Harrison Barnes, is kicking in 9.2 points in 22.8 minutes per game, shooting 41.8% from 3-point range on just under five attempts per contest.

Wembanyama’s clearly the supermassive star around which the entire system revolves, but there is a system at work here. It’s a simple idea, one pounded into the heads of countless Spurs over the decades like the stonecutter’s hammer pounding into that proverbial rock: “point-five basketball.” Within a half-second of getting the ball, you need to be shooting it, passing it or driving it, putting perpetual pressure on the defense in the neverending battle to turn a good shot into a great one.

It’s working:

For the season, San Antonio ranks 11th in the NBA in offensive possessions per game finished following a dribble handoff, 10th in drives to the basket per game, and eighth in trips that end with a spot-up shot. (Conversely, the Spurs are just below league-average in how frequently they attack out of isolation.) Only seven teams average fewer dribbles per touch, and only nine have a shorter average touch time. The ball doesn’t stick, which means everybody’s a live threat, which keeps everybody engaged, because it can be anybody’s night.

During this winning streak, San Antonio trails only Cleveland in offensive efficiency, and leads the NBA in assists per game and points created via assist, while also sitting third in secondary or “hockey” assists — a.k.a. the pass that leads to the pass that leads to a score — with the 11 wins featuring six different players (Wembanyama, Devin Vassell, De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle, Keldon Johnson, Julian Champagnie) leading the team in scoring on the night.

Many hands make light work. The Spurs have had plenty of that recently, thanks in part to …

3. … a pretty kick-ass new starting five

When sixth-year swingman Vassell, who’d missed 13 games with an adductor strain, returned to the lineup at the end of January, Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson shuffled up his starting five. Vassell went back, joining Fox and Castle in a three-guard look, with Wemby in the middle and the sweet-shooting Champagnie at power forward.

So far, so good. The Spurs are now 9-1 in games started by that lineup, which has outscored opponents by 31 in 101 minutes in those 10 games. That quintet has scored a scorching 126.3 points per 100 possessions, blitzing the opposition by 13.2 points-per-100 — an elite net rating befitting one of the league’s elite teams, fueled by …

4. … three-guard lineups!

Hey, remember when folks were worried that, after trading for and maxing out Fox, with Castle coming off Rookie of the Year honors and in line for a bigger role in Year 2, with Vassell in the mix as a core rotation piece off the ball, and with No. 2 overall pick Dylan Harper about to work his way into the conversation, the Spurs might have too many mouths to feed in the backcourt? Turns out they were fine!

For the season, three-guard lineups have been really damn good for San Antonio. Whenever any three of Fox, Castle, Vassell and Harper have been on the floor, the Spurs have outscored opponents by 109 points in 569 minutes — which works out to 9.3 points-per-100 — and have averaged 29.5 assists per 100 possessions, which would lead the league for the full season.

The positional size of the Spurs’ guards — Fox stands 6-foot-3 with a 6-foot-6.5-inch wingspan, Castle’s 6-6 with a 6-9 wingspan, Vassell’s 6-5 with a 6-10 wingspan, Harper’s 6-5 with a 6-10.5-inch wingspan — helps mitigate the typical defensive concerns that might come with rolling three-guard looks. (So, too, does the looming back-line presence of Wembanyama — and, for that matter, reserve center Luke Kornet, who’s been aces in his first season in Texas.) And the offensive benefits of virtually always having multiple high-level ball-handlers capable of attacking the rim, moving without the ball and facilitating on the go have far outweighed any of those drawbacks.

Whether that stays true in the playoffs remain to be seen, particularly if Fox (35.1% from 3-point land), Castle (29.3%) and Harper (25.4%) are unable to consistently cash in on the long-distance opportunities they’re likely to get from postseason defenses hell-bent on packing the paint to limit Wembanyama. Thus far, though, the Spurs have found themselves very much enjoying having too much of a good thing.

5. They’re hitting the gas

One thing you can do when you got all them guards: run.

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