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2x NBA All-Star wants Knicks to put ‘knife’ to ‘dirty’ Victor Wembanyama’s neck after Jalen Brunson incident

Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images
Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Stephon Marbury unloaded on Victor Wembanyama after the San Antonio Spurs star’s controversial Game 3 shove on Jalen Brunson went uncalled at Madison Square Garden.

The New York Knicks were already frustrated by the 115-111 loss, but the officiating conversation made the night feel even more heated.

One first-quarter moment between Brunson and Wembanyama became a flashpoint because no whistle came.

Marbury, a former Knicks guard and two-time NBA All-Star, did not hold back while discussing how he would want New York to respond after reviewing the play.

Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images
Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images

Stephon Marbury rips Victor Wembanyama after Jalen Brunson shove in New York Knicks loss

New York Basketball shared Stephon Marbury’s reaction to Victor Wembanyama’s physical exchange with Jalen Brunson during Game 3 of the NBA Finals.

“Wemby is an international player. They play dirty overseas. We’re not used to playing dirty in America how the way Wemby just threw Jalen Brunson,” Marbury said.

He added, “Now, if I’m watching film, and I see Wemby throw somebody on my team … then next game I’m gonna pop him in his rib cage.

“So hard with my elbow that he’s gonna fall and drop to the ground and he’s gonna wish he never put his hands on me.”

Marbury’s language was extreme, and it should be treated as a heated former-player reaction rather than a blueprint for retaliation. His larger point was that he believed the Knicks needed to show Wembanyama that Brunson could not be thrown around without a response.

Victor Wembanyama’s no-call on Jalen Brunson fuels New York Knicks anger

The play happened in the first quarter, when Wembanyama shoved Brunson while the Knicks guard was trying to work through contact.

Brunson immediately took issue with it, but no common foul was called and no flagrant was assessed during the game.

“After y’all watch that film, what he did to Jalen Brunson … you better make sure you put that knife in his neck … next game,” Marbury stated.

The NBA later acknowledged that a foul was missed on the play, though Wembanyama was not retroactively hit with a flagrant foul. That decision only added to the frustration for Knicks fans, who felt the contact to Brunson’s head and neck area deserved more scrutiny.

Wembanyama still finished with 32 points, 8 rebounds, 6 assists, and 3 blocks as San Antonio cut the Finals series to 2-1.

For Marbury, the issue was not just the loss; it was the feeling that New York’s best player had been crossed without the officials stopping it.

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