The De’Aaron Fox trade Spurs must make after NBA Finals debacle
The San Antonio Spurs accomplished far more than anyone expected during the 2025-26 season. They won 62 games and captured the Western Conference championship. They also accelerated their rebuild years ahead of schedule behind the brilliance of Victor Wembanyama. Yet, they fell three wins short of lifting the Larry O’Brien trophy. The Spurs left the 2026 NBA Finals knowing exactly what prevented them from winning. Against the veteran-heavy New York Knicks, San Antonio’s offense repeatedly stalled in crunch time. As difficult as it may be to admit, the Finals may have revealed that De’Aaron Fox and Wembanyama are not the ideal long-term pairing. If the Spurs will maximize Wemby’s prime, one trade needs to happen.
San Antonio’s biggest weakness
The Knicks ultimately secured the championship with a gritty 94-90 victory in Game 5. They overcame a brilliant 25-point effort from Dylan Harper and a dominant defensive performance from Wembanyama.. That clinching victory followed one of the most devastating collapses in NBA Finals history. San Antonio squandered a 29-point lead in Game 4 before OG Anunoby’s unforgettable putback winner shifted the emotional momentum of the series.
The Spurs were not overwhelmed. They were just out-executed. New York’s veteran core consistently exposed weaknesses in San Antonio’s halfcourt offense. Over five games, the Knicks repeatedly found ways to crowd Wembanyama’s space and force the Spurs into uncomfortable offensive possessions.
Pairing crisis
De’Aaron Fox remains one of the NBA’s most explosive guards. His speed is elite and transition game is explosive. His ability to pressure defenses in the open floor helped fuel San Antonio’s rise from promising young team to legitimate contender.
Still, playoff basketball is different. Once the Knicks slowed the game down, Fox’s limitations became increasingly difficult to ignore. Mike Brown’s defense routinely ducked under screens and invited Fox to beat them as a perimeter shooter. That strategy had a ripple effect throughout the offense.
Every defender sagging toward the paint meant less space for Wembanyama to operate. Every extra help defender allowed New York to crowd post entries before the Spurs’ franchise cornerstone could establish position.
The issue is that Fox requires many of the same offensive spaces that Wembanyama needs. Modern offenses built around dominant big men thrive when surrounded by perimeter gravity. The best supporting pieces are players who force defenders to remain attached to them at all times. The Spurs simply don’t have enough of that.
Perfect trade partner
If San Antonio decides to pursue a blockbuster trade, the Miami Heat immediately emerge as the most logical destination. The Heat have spent decades chasing stars rather than embracing lengthy rebuilds. Even after several competitive seasons, Miami continues searching for an elite offensive engine. Fox could check every box for them.
His speed, shot creation, and transition playmaking would immediately add an interesting dimension into the Heat’s offense. He would also alleviate pressure on Miami’s veteran core by providing a true downhill creator.
Just as importantly, Fox’s competitive edge aligns perfectly with Miami’s culture. The Heat aren’t looking for another developmental project. They want an All-Star level creator. Fox is exactly that.
The San Antonio fit
The framework is relatively straightforward.
Proposed trade
Spurs receive: Tyler Herro, two future conditional first-round picks, additional pick swap
Heat receive: De’Aaron Fox, three future conditional first-round picks, additional pick swap
Miami gets its franchise point guard. San Antonio gets the offensive fit it desperately needs.
Herro is not the superior overall player. That isn’t the point, though. The point is fit.
Unlike Fox, Herro provides constant perimeter gravity. Defenses cannot comfortably sag off him. Opponents must account for his shooting the moment he crosses halfcourt. That can change everything for Wembanyama.
Imagine defenses attempting to double-team the Spurs superstar while simultaneously tracking Herro flying off screens and relocating beyond the arc. Add Herro to a perimeter that already has Harper, Castle, Julian Champagnie, and Devin Vassell. The spacing immediately becomes cleaner. Passing angles improve. Post entries become easier.
The draft compensation included in the deal only strengthens San Antonio’s long-term outlook.
Accelerating a championship run

The goal is optimizing. A core built around Wembanyama, Harper, Castle, and Herro would still possess elite offensive upside while creating significantly better spacing around its franchise player. Harper’s emergence makes the transition easier.
His performance throughout the playoffs demonstrated that he is ready for increased offensive responsibility. Combined with Castle’s continued development, the Spurs already have young creators capable of carrying larger workloads.
What they need more is perimeter gravity. Herro provides exactly that. San Antonio has an opportunity to fix the flaw that the Knicks exposed.
If the Spurs truly believe Wembanyama is destined to become the face of the league, then every roster decision should be made with one question in mind: Does this maximize his greatness?
A Fox-for-Herro blockbuster will not be popular. Still, it may be exactly what the Spurs need to transform a Finals appearance into a championship.
The post The De’Aaron Fox trade Spurs must make after NBA Finals debacle appeared first on ClutchPoints.
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