Victor Wembanyama Joins Magic Johnson and Luka Doncic on Rare Playoff List
Victor Wembanyama has entered a historic statistical tier. Following a 27-point, 17-rebound, and 5-assist performance in Game 5 of the Western Conference Semifinals, the 22-year-old joined Magic Johnson and Luka Doncic as the third youngest in NBA history to record those marks in a playoff game.
The San Antonio Spurs secured a 126-97 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves, taking a 3-2 series lead. Wembanyama efficiently controlled the floor, shooting 55.6 percent and recording his 12th postseason double-double.
In tonight's Game 5 win, Victor Wembanyama (22yr, 128d) became the 3rd youngest player in NBA history to record 25+ PTS, 15+ REB, and 5+ AST in a postseason game.
— NBA (@NBA) May 13, 2026
He trails only:
Magic Johnson (20yr, 276d)
Luka Dončić (21 yr, 177d)
Spurs take a 3-2 series lead in Round 2 🍿 https://t.co/CUbawnJ9Nm pic.twitter.com/JhlrioUJz1
Ejection Lit A Fire
The performance served as a direct response to Wembanyama’s first career ejection in Game 4. San Antonio dominated the interior, outrebounding Minnesota 58-42 and holding the Timberwolves to a season-low 38.5 percent shooting.
“Victor’s a freak; he owned the paint and glass tonight – ejection lit a fire,” said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich after the game.
His full playoff run has been consistent at this level. Entering Game 5, Wembanyama was averaging 25.8 points, 12.4 rebounds, and 3.1 blocks per game across 18 playoff appearances – leading all players in blocks.
Paul Pierce called him the favorite for MVP earlier this season. The playoff numbers have not argued against that take.
Magic, Luka, and Now Wembanyama
Magic Johnson reached this stat threshold at age 20, during his legendary 42-point, 15-rebound, 7-assist, 3-block outing in Game 6 of the 1980 NBA Finals – the game where he started at center and closed out a championship.
Luka Doncic joined him in the 2022 Western Conference Finals, posting 35 points, 10 rebounds, 6 assists, and 3 blocks at age 21.
Doncic has faced his share of scrutiny in recent months, with Kevin Garnett leaving the Lakers’ star from his All-NBA First Team. If Wembanyama keeps up his rise, he could be in that conversation in the future.
At 22, Wembanyama is slightly later than the other two to reach the mark, but he has plenty of time to break more stats as the Spurs continue their charge in the playoffs.
The Bigger Picture for Wembanyama
Game 6 is Thursday in Minnesota, where the Timberwolves need a win to force a Game 7. Anthony Edwards is averaging 28.4 points per game in this series and will not go quietly at home. The Spurs close out on the road as often as anyone, but this series isn’t over.
What is increasingly clear is that Wembanyama is not building toward something – he is already there. Magic and Luka are the benchmark for young playoff greatness, and he just checked that box at 22 with a chance to reach the Conference Finals one win away.
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