The Portland Trail Blazersâ Game 4 assignment just got much harder.
San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama has cleared concussion protocol and will play against the Blazers on Sunday, April 26, according to ESPN. The update comes after Wembanyama missed Game 3, a game the Spurs still won to take a 2-1 lead in the first-round playoff series.
That is the bad news for Portland: the Blazers did not just lose a game without Wembanyama on the floor. They now have to respond with the Spursâ best player back in the middle of everything.
For Portland, this is more than a star returning. It changes the math of the game.
Victor Wembanyamaâs Return Changes Portlandâs Offensive Plan
The Blazers already had a narrow path in Game 4. They needed to protect home court, even the series and avoid heading back to San Antonio down 3-1.
Wembanyamaâs return makes that path tighter.
When he is on the floor, Portland has to account for his rim protection before the ball even gets into the paint. Drives that were available against smaller or slower lineups become floaters, kick-outs or rushed finishes. Second-chance opportunities become harder. Even clean-looking attempts around the basket can turn into altered shots.
That matters for a Blazers team that cannot afford long empty stretches.
Portlandâs guards and wings now have to be more disciplined than they were in Game 3. The Blazers cannot simply challenge Wembanyama at the rim and hope to win enough of those possessions. They need early ball movement, decisive corner spacing and enough made jumpers to keep San Antonio from loading up around the paint.
Wembanyamaâs return also puts more stress on Donovan Clingan.
Clingan gives Portland size, rebounding and a real interior presence, but this is a different matchup than dealing with a traditional center. Wembanyama can protect the rim, recover to shooters, play above the floor and stretch defensive decisions in ways that force young bigs to think through every possession.
That does not mean Portland should avoid the paint altogether. It means the Blazers have to get there with timing, not desperation.
Spursâ Game 3 Win Made the Update Even Worse for the Blazers
The most frustrating part for Portland is that San Antonio already showed it could survive without Wembanyama.
The Spurs won Game 3 behind major contributions from their young backcourt, with Stephon Castle scoring 33 points and Dylan Harper producing 27 points and 10 rebounds, according to MySanAntonio.
That matters because Wembanyama is not returning to a team that looked helpless without him. He is returning to a team whose supporting cast just gained confidence in a playoff road environment.
That creates a different kind of problem for Portland.
If the Blazers send too much attention toward Wembanyama, they risk opening room for San Antonioâs guards to attack downhill. If they stay home on shooters and drivers, Wembanyama can punish single coverage, clean up misses and erase mistakes defensively on the other end.
The Blazersâ response has to start with physicality and pace. They need to make Wembanyama defend multiple actions, move laterally and make decisions away from the rim. Portland cannot let him simply camp in the paint defensively and play as a release valve offensively.
Game 4 was already close to a must-have for the Blazers. Wembanyamaâs return raises the stakes.
Blazers Still Have a Clear Game 4 Opportunity
The update is bad news for Portland, but it does not end the Blazersâ chance.
Wembanyama is coming back from concussion protocol, and San Antonio still has to reintegrate him into a playoff game after he missed Game 3. Portlandâs best chance is to test the Spursâ rhythm early, push the tempo when possible and force Wembanyama into repeated defensive decisions.
The Blazers also need their primary creators to make fast reads. Holding the ball against San Antonioâs length gives Wembanyama time to load up as a shot-blocker. Quick passes, slip screens and weak-side movement can make his job more complicated.
The larger issue is urgency.
A win ties the series and restores some control for Portland. A loss gives San Antonio a 3-1 lead and puts the Blazers one defeat from elimination.
That is why Wembanyamaâs injury update lands as such a significant development for Portland. The Blazers were already trying to correct what went wrong in Game 3. Now they have to do it with one of the NBAâs most disruptive players back on the floor.
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