NBA Finals Game 3 will have the cleanest possible setup, with the Knicks and Spurs both entering Madison Square Garden without major injury concerns.
The series already feels close to history. New York leads 2-0, returns home for its first Finals game at MSG since 1999, and sits two wins from its first title since 1973.
There are no injury excuses left. Game 3 comes down to execution, poise, and whether San Antonio can survive the Garden.
NBA Finals Game 3 injury list gives both teams full firepower
Underdog NBA reported that both the Knicks and Spurs have spotless injury reports before Game 3, clearing every key matchup to hold.
That gives the night a true best-on-best feel. Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, and Josh Hart should all be available for New York, while Victor Wembanyama, De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle, and Devin Vassell lead San Antonio’s response.
NBA Finals Game 3 puts history within reach for New York
The Knicks won Game 1 105-95 after erasing a 14-point deficit, then survived Game 2 105-104 after the Spurs again lost control of a double-digit lead.
Brunson is averaging 25 points through two games, while Towns has opened with two double-doubles at 19.5 points and 12.5 rebounds. Wembanyama has been brilliant too, averaging 27.5 points, 10.5 rebounds, and 3.5 blocks.

The difference has been late-game composure. New York has made the final plays, while San Antonio has looked rushed when the lead has needed protecting.
NBA Finals Game 3 preview brings stars and pressure
Game 3 is close to must-win territory for the Spurs because no NBA Finals team has ever come back from 0-3 down. They need Fox and Castle to pressure Brunson, Vassell to punish help defense, and Wembanyama to control the paint without being pulled too far from the rim by Towns.
The Knicks need Brunson to keep bending the floor, Towns to stretch Wembanyama, and their wings to win the possession battle.
The building will only add to it. President Donald Trump is expected to attend; celebrity interest is high, and ticket prices have surged, with upper-deck seats listed above $6,000 and courtside prices beyond $75,000.
Healthy rosters make the stakes cleaner. Game 3 is the Spurs’ last real chance to change the tone before the Knicks turn a star-studded night into a title countdown.
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