On a basic level, teams are working to disrupt the early rhythm of Wembanyama by taking away space.
When attempting to set up shop on the block, you’ll often see Wembanyama’s defender — likely a wing or forward, especially as of late, with the actual center roaming off a non-shooter — work under him, pushing him out (within the rules, of course) to make sure he’s catching the ball further from the basket.
From there, Wembanyama has to read (or attack) a thicket of bodies. It could be peeled-in early help. It might be immediate double teams. There might be (several variations of) zone defense.
None of those concepts are new, but the uptick in volume is noteworthy. A few stats for your consideration, courtesy of GeniusIQ tracking data:
After averaging an absurd 1.38 points per possession (PPP) on trips featuring a Wembanyama drive through the first five games, that figure has dropped to 0.87 PPP across the two losses.
Wembanyama logged a total of 15 drives in those games — four against the Suns, 11 against the Lakers — with a help defender present on every single one of them. The Lakers game was the first time in his career he logged double-digit drives with a 100% help rate.
After seeing a second defender, or a pure double team, on a season-high 29.4% of his touches against the Lakers, Wembanyama has now seen that time of attention on 22.6% of his touches this season. That ranks third — behind Giannis Antetokounmpo (27.2%) and Zion Williamson (26.3%) — among 142 players to log at least 300 touches this season. For career reference, Wembanyama saw that level of attention on 14.6% of his touches as a rookie, and that slightly dropped to 14.4% last season before it was cut short. This is a huge uptick.
We’ve seen a similar rise in zone defense, particularly when Wembanyama is on the floor. The Spurs have seen a zone on 5.2% of their possessions with Wembanyama present: roughly double his rookie season rate (2.63%) and over five times the rate last season (1.04%)
Unsurprisingly, as Wembanyama has tried to work through these looks and matchups, the Spurs have struggled. When faced with zone, the Wemby-led Spurs have generated a typo-worthy 0.38 PPP. They’ve fared much better on the possessions where Wembanyama is double-teamed (1.04 PPP), but that’s still well below their usual efficiency when he isn’t.
https://sports.yahoo.com/nba/article/victor-wembanyama-woes-how-nba-teams-are-finding-ways-to-stop-the-spurs-161933194.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall





















