logo
San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama heads to a temple in China for a few days

San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama heads to a temple in China for a few days

Victor Wembanyama is in China, and it's not all about vacation.
The San Antonio Spurs star is in the midst of what's expected to be a 10-day stay at a Shaolin temple in Zhengzhou, China. The temple is a place that welcomes visitors who wish to study Chan meditation, Shaolin Kung Fu, traditional Chinese medicine and more.
The NBA China office confirmed Wembanyama is at the temple, and some Chinese media also confirmed his presence there with the temple itself. 'Concentrate on training!' read part of a social media post on the NBA's Weibo account, which also revealed the plans for a 10-day stay.
Then again, the secret was getting out through other social media means anyway.
Some photos of Wembanyama with a shaved head — it wasn't shaved when he arrived in China — and wearing a robe similar to the other monks began widely circulating on social media this week. One of the photos showed the 7-foot-4 center sitting on a Chinese style chair in front of multiple Buddha sculptures.
There evidently was some sightseeing going on earlier in the trip as well.
'Victor Wembanyama, live from China, on the Great Wall itself, having an amazing time. It's crazy,' he said on a video posted to Instagram by the Spurs' account and others.
Wembanyama is expected back in the U.S. in the coming weeks and will likely be with the Spurs' delegation that goes to the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas next month. The Spurs, like many teams, often have many players on their NBA roster with the summer league team for various events.
The 21-year-old Frenchman led the NBA in blocked shots during the regular season, despite his season ending in February — just after his first All-Star Game appearance — because of deep vein thrombosis in his right shoulder. The Spurs are hopeful that he will be able to play when next season begins and the French national team has also expressed hope that Wembanyama will be able to play for his country at this summer's European championships.
Wembanyama was the league's rookie of the year last season and was widely expected to be a front-runner in this season's defensive player of the year race. He attempted 403 3-pointers and blocked 176 shots this season — no player in NBA history has ever finished a season with those numbers — and he was averaging 24.3 points, 11 rebounds, 3.8 blocks and 3.7 assists when the DVT was detected.
Winnipeg Jets Game Days
On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop.
The only other player in NBA history to finish a season averaging all those numbers was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1975-76.
___
Associated Press Writer Fu Ting in Washington contributed to this report.
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Pacers are 1 win from an NBA title. Assistant coach Jenny Boucek is 1 win from that, and history
The Pacers are 1 win from an NBA title. Assistant coach Jenny Boucek is 1 win from that, and history

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

The Pacers are 1 win from an NBA title. Assistant coach Jenny Boucek is 1 win from that, and history

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Indiana Pacers assistant Jenny Boucek isn't so concerned right now with becoming the first woman to be a primary assistant coach on a team that wins the NBA championship. She just wants to be part of a title. There is a barrier that could be broken in these NBA Finals, and Boucek is fully aware of that. She is the first woman to be part of the front-row assistants (it means exactly that: the coaches who sit on the front row of the bench) for a team in the NBA Finals, and she and the Pacers will face the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 7 to decide this season's title on Sunday night. Being in that role has led to the spotlight shining on her in these finals, though Boucek has found ways to not let it be overwhelming. 'I've been around long enough to have experience and felt where people build you up and those same people tear you back down. People jump on the bandwagon, they jump off. People love you one day, they bash you the next,' Boucek said. 'Just going through that a few times in different ways in my career has really taught me to tune it all out and not take in the compliments and the praise. And then that way, you're protected from the criticism. You can just focus on what you're in control of.' She played briefly in the WNBA and overseas before becoming a coach. Ron Rothstein — who was the first Miami Heat coach before becoming coach of the short-lived WNBA's Miami Sol — had Boucek on his staff there and even now, more than 20 years later, still raves about the kind of coach and person Boucek is. Working with an established NBA coach like Rothstein helped give Boucek some credibility, and others soon saw why he was so high on her talent and smarts as a coach. When Rick Carlisle was coaching Dallas, Boucek — who was coaching in the WNBA at the time — spent a few weeks around the Mavericks to learn whatever she could. Carlisle, now the Indiana coach and someone who didn't think twice about having Boucek on his staff, was impressed by what she brought to the table and never forgot. 'It was clear to me she was a prospect — not only to be an assistant coach in the NBA, but to perhaps one day be an NBA head coach,' Carlisle said. Boucek is in Carlisle's ear probably more than anyone in games, and she's tasked with essentially leading the Pacers' defensive plan. Pacers assistant coach Jim Boylen, another big fan of Boucek, also is involved in the defense. Pacers forward Pascal Siakam had a new system to learn when he was traded to Indiana from Toronto in the middle of last season. Boucek basically became his tutor for all things Pacers. 'She's been great that way,' Siakam said. 'She's a great communicator. And also, I like her positive just energy about everything. It's mostly needed. Even in those moments where sometimes it felt like we didn't do well or whatever, she's always bringing that positivity, which is needed for coaching.' Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. She's made history before. Boucek was part of the first all-female staff to win a WNBA title, when Seattle beat Connecticut in 2004. At the time, she didn't know how big of a deal that was. But now, she knows what an Indiana win on Sunday would mean as far as a female coach breaking yet another barrier. 'I was young and naive, and it meant nothing to me at the time,' Boucek said of being on that all-female Seattle staff in 2004. 'But now, looking back and reflecting on things, I can see how that meant a lot to a lot of women. Right now, it doesn't mean much. I just want to win a championship. I just want to be one of the guys. I want to do my part. But I'm sure at some point we'll look back at it, if and when that happens, and hopefully that's something that can be used for greater good.' ___ AP NBA:

The final act of the NBA Finals: 2 teams, 1 game, 1 trophy. Pacers at Thunder will decide a champion
The final act of the NBA Finals: 2 teams, 1 game, 1 trophy. Pacers at Thunder will decide a champion

National Post

time2 hours ago

  • National Post

The final act of the NBA Finals: 2 teams, 1 game, 1 trophy. Pacers at Thunder will decide a champion

OKLAHOMA CITY — It started with 30 teams, most of them fairly optimistic about their chances when the season began eight months and 1,320 games and 35,543 3-pointers and 299,608 points ago. Article content Only two teams remain. For one game. Game 7. Article content The NBA season ends Sunday night when the Indiana Pacers visit the Oklahoma City Thunder to decide which team will hoist the Larry O'Brien Trophy, take over for the Boston Celtics as champions and become the league's seventh different title winner in the last seven years. It's the first winner-take-all game in the NBA since 2016, when Cleveland beat Golden State. Article content 'I'm very much looking forward to Game 7,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'The last time we've had one of these in the finals, I think, was '16. These are special moments certainly for both teams but for our league, for the game, for the worldwide interest in the game. It's a time to celebrate.' Article content Yes, but only one team will celebrate Sunday night. For the Pacers, it would be a first NBA title and the capper to a season that started with Indiana banged up and getting off to a 10-15 record through the first 25 games. No team has ever been below .500 that deep into a season and went on to win a championship. Article content For the Thunder, it would be a first NBA title — kind of, sort of, Seattle won one in 1979 and even though the franchise moved to Oklahoma City from there, the Thunder don't recognize it as one of their own — and wrap up a season in which the team scored more points than any other club in NBA history and posted the best record. Article content 'We have to understand the work is done and we have to trust the work,' Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault said Saturday, the final practice day of the season. 'The muscle is built. We have to flex that muscle. That's what tomorrow will come down to for us.' Article content Article content It has been the epitome of a back-and-forth series, with both teams having the lead at some point. Indiana led 1-0 and 2-1; Oklahoma City led 3-2 but got blown out in Game 6, its first chance at winning the title. Article content So, here we are, tied at 3-3, one game away from a decision. Article content 'Grateful for the opportunity,' Thunder guard Jalen Williams said. 'That's one thing I can say is throughout the whole entire thing, you always have to remain grateful for where you are because there's a lot of NBA players that will trade their spot with me right now. That's how I look at it. But as far as history, I want to be on the good side of that, for sure.' Article content Oklahoma City has looked every bit the part of a championship contender all year; going 68-14 in the regular season cemented the Thunder into the favourite's role. Being the best team in the regular season is for this very privilege, to play host for Game 7.

The final act of the NBA Finals: 2 teams, 1 game, 1 trophy. Pacers at Thunder will decide a champion
The final act of the NBA Finals: 2 teams, 1 game, 1 trophy. Pacers at Thunder will decide a champion

Edmonton Journal

time2 hours ago

  • Edmonton Journal

The final act of the NBA Finals: 2 teams, 1 game, 1 trophy. Pacers at Thunder will decide a champion

Article content 'I'm pretty much in the same standpoint I was before Game 6,' Haliburton said. 'A little sore. Good thing I only had to play like 23 minutes. I've been able to get even more treatment and do more things. Just trying to take care of it the best I can. But I'll be ready to go for Game 7.' Thunder in title shots Counting all games this season, Oklahoma City's two lowest-scoring outputs were 81 points against Milwaukee and 91 points against Indiana. The Bucks game was in the NBA Cup final. The Pacers game was Game 6, when OKC had a chance to win the NBA title. So, in the two 'championship' games the Thunder have played this season, they're averaging 86 points. In all other games, they're averaging 119.7 points. 'We obviously have to get better offensively,' Thunder guard and NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'Last game, clearly, was not good enough and not going to cut it, and we know that. We watch film for those type of things. You have games like that. Now, it sucks to have it at that stage obviously, but we know we have to be better, for sure.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store