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Spurs may face Dylan Harper problem next season as calls for starting role get louder from his camp

Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images
Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images
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The Spurs built a Finals team around De’Aaron Fox, but Dylan Harper’s rise has made their backcourt hierarchy harder to defend.

San Antonio can still choose patience after losing to the Knicks.

But Harper has turned a future debate into an offseason pressure point.

Dylan Harper problem gives Spurs a starter question

The latest ESPN report says San Antonio remains committed to Fox as its franchise starting point guard, even as Harper’s camp is expected to push harder for a starting role next season.

“Harper voiced displeasure earlier in the season about a lack of playing time and his role, but those increased as the season progressed and the rookie gained more experience.”

“Internally, the Spurs remain committed to Fox as their franchise starting point guard. Sources called Fox a calming presence and the team’s closer for most of the season, adding that one rough series essentially playing on one leg doesn’t change that… It’s expected that calls from Harper’s camp for a spot in the starting lineup will grow louder going into next season. But it’s not an issue San Antonio needs to address right away.”

Oklahoma City Thunder v San Antonio Spurs
Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images

That stance was reasonable during the regular season. Fox averaged 18.6 points, 6.2 assists and 3.8 rebounds while shooting 48.6 percent, giving Victor Wembanyama a veteran organizer.

Harper’s rookie numbers also justified a sixth-man role. He averaged 11.8 points, 3.9 assists and 3.4 rebounds in 22.6 minutes while still developing behind Fox and Stephon Castle.

The Finals changed the tone. Fox averaged 12.8 points, 6.0 assists and 3.0 rebounds on 34.3 percent shooting, while Harper averaged 18.0 points, 6.4 rebounds and 3.0 assists on 49 percent shooting.

If Fox was essentially playing on one leg, that explains some decline. It also gave San Antonio more reason to trust its rookie.

Dylan Harper partnership tests the Parker and Ginobili blueprint

The Spurs have a historic model for a star guard accepting a role that does not always match his talent.

That is the Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili challenge. San Antonio can sell Harper on a Ginobili-style path only if closing lineups, touches and trust reflect his impact.

The harder problem is Fox’s contract. His extension runs from 2026-27 through 2029-30, with a reported value around $229 million and a cap hit beginning near $49.5 million.

That money makes a trade complicated, especially after a Finals series that gave fans reason to ask whether Harper should be elevated.

The cleanest answer is Fox starting next season with Harper empowered like a sixth starter, then letting the games decide the closing guard.

If Harper keeps rising and the noise from his camp keeps growing, San Antonio may discover this is not a problem it can delay.