[SAEN] 马刺阵容解析:休赛期谁去谁留?

By Jeff McDonald, Staff Writer | San Antonio Express-News (SAEN), 2026-06-22 05:10:10

图片
2026年5月24日,周日,在圣安东尼奥弗罗斯特银行中心举行的西部决赛第四场比赛中,圣安东尼奥马刺队前锋维克托·文班亚马 (Victor Wembanyama)(1号)、马刺队后卫迪伦·哈珀 (Dylan Harper)(2号)和马刺队后卫斯蒂芬·卡斯尔 (Stephon Castle)(5号)庆祝文班亚马在第二节结束时的压哨三分球命中。

刚刚结束NBA总决赛之旅,马刺队进入休赛期,希望继续微调这套让他们提前杀入总冠军争夺战的阵容。

下赛季前十名得分手中有九人尚在合同期内,因此在十月份开启2026-27赛季的马刺阵容,很可能与上周在总决赛中输给纽约尼克斯队的那支队伍相似。

尽管如此,马刺队在今年休赛期仍有一些阵容问题,可能会也可能不会通过交易、自由球员市场和选秀来解决。最受关注的将是他们如何处理迪伦·哈珀的崛起以及由这位前榜眼秀、达龙·福克斯 (De’Aaron Fox)和斯蒂芬·卡斯尔组成的后场人员囤积问题。但其他操作,例如通过选秀或利用中产特例为维克托·文班亚马寻找一名适配的内线搭档,也应当是重中之重。

以下是进入休赛期后,对马刺阵容的逐人分析:

维克托·文班亚马,中锋

年龄: 22岁。

合同: 一年,1680万美元。

展望: 在个人第三个NBA赛季中,文班亚马迈出了所有必要的步伐,巩固了其作为联盟顶尖球员之一的地位。他成为联盟历史上首位全票当选最佳防守球员的得主,入选了全明星和NBA最佳阵容,并率领马刺队令人惊讶地闯入总决赛。这位身高7英尺4英寸的法国球员即将进入其新秀合同的最后一年,但有资格签下一份价值至少2.51亿美元的五年续约合同。如果文班亚马在下赛季赢得MVP、最佳防守球员或入选最佳阵容,这个数字将自动上涨至3.033亿美元。无论如何,文班亚马都将拥有马刺队史上最昂贵的合同。球队正迫不及待地想让他签字。

达龙·福克斯,后卫

年龄: 28岁。

合同: 四年,2.231亿美元。

展望: 福克斯曾是马刺队史最昂贵合同的持有者,这要归功于他去年秋天签下的4年2.231亿的续约合同。该续约将从下赛季开始生效。在身披马刺战袍的第一个完整赛季中,福克斯职业生涯第二次入选全明星,并在带领球队取得62胜并闯入总决赛的过程中发挥了关键作用。但在对阵尼克斯队的系列赛中表现挣扎,加之新秀迪伦·哈珀的崛起以及对未来赛季薪资总额膨胀的担忧,引发了外界对福克斯在球队长期未来的质疑。马刺队最终可能会寻求通过交易甩掉福克斯的合同,如果不是今年夏天,就是未来的某个时间点。

德文·瓦塞尔,后卫/前锋

年龄: 25岁。

合同: 三年,7860万美元。

展望: 瓦塞尔的第六个NBA赛季是他表现最好的一个赛季,最终在季后赛征程中,他在攻防两端都持续做出了贡献。在接下来三个赛季都有合同保障的情况下,瓦塞尔应该会继续在马刺的轮换阵容中扮演重要角色。

哈里森·巴恩斯,前锋

年龄: 34岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 巴恩斯第14个赛季初期是马刺队首发阵容的一员,但随着赛季进行,他转为替补。到季后赛结束时,这位老将前锋的上场机会已经很少。马刺队有兴趣在下赛季将巴恩斯带回,但合同金额将远低于他本赛季挣到的1900万美元。如果另一支球队为巴恩斯提供更多的薪水和更重要的角色,那么下赛季看到他身披其他球队战袍也不会令人惊讶。

凯尔登·约翰逊,前锋

年龄: 26岁。

合同: 一年,1750万美元。

展望: 作为球队中效力时间最长(已达七个赛季)的球员,约翰逊在常规赛期间成为了马刺冲击季后赛的灵魂与核心。他成为队史第二位赢得NBA年度最佳第六人奖项的球员,加入了名人堂成员马努·吉诺比利的行列,但季后赛开始后表现有所下滑。约翰逊预计将在下赛季——也就是他的合同年——于替补席上扮演重要角色。

斯蒂芬·卡斯尔,后卫

年龄: 21岁。

合同: 两年,2270万美元 (球队选项)。

展望: 这位NBA年度最佳新秀在二年级时更进一步,成长为联盟顶尖的攻防一体后卫之一。卡斯尔的得分(场均16.7分)、篮板(场均5.3个)和助攻(场均7.4次)全面上涨,同时他继续承担着防守端最艰巨的任务。身处新秀合同期内,他依然极具性价比。

迪伦·哈珀,后卫

年龄: 20岁。

合同: 三年,4380万美元。

展望: 在经历了一个出色的新秀赛季后,哈珀的身价在季后赛期间飙升,当时他场均替补出场贡献14.1分和5.6个篮板。换作其他大多数球队,哈珀——这位来自罗格斯大学的前榜眼秀——本应锁定一个首发位置。但在圣安东尼奥,哈珀迈向未来巨星之路,使得原本已有福克斯和卡斯尔需要球权的后场变得复杂化。在某个时间点交易福克斯将有助于解决这一人员囤积问题。除此之外,就要靠主教练米奇·约翰逊想办法如何让他的三位明星后卫共同上场了。

朱利安·尚帕尼,前锋

年龄: 24岁。

合同: 一年,300万美元(球队选项)。

展望: 尚帕尼曾是发展联盟弃将,众所周知在2023年情人节被费城76人队裁员,但自从加盟马刺后,他成为了联盟最成功的励志故事之一。上赛季,他刷新了队史单场三分命中数(对阵纽约时的11个)、单赛季三分命中数(512个)和单次季后赛三分命中数(61个)的纪录。马刺下赛季可以仅用300万的白菜价将他带回,或者选择与他们薪资最低的轮换球员协商一份更长合同。无论如何,预期尚帕尼下赛季仍将是马刺计划中的重要组成部分。

卢克·科内特,中锋

年龄: 30岁。

合同: 三年,2970万美元(其中1300万受保障)。

展望: 从波士顿凯尔特人加盟马刺的第一个赛季,科内特证明了自己是文班亚马的可靠替补。脚伤拖慢了这位身高7尺1寸中锋在季后赛的脚步,他在五场总决赛中场均仅出战8.2分钟。科内特下赛季将回归,但他此后在球队的未来仍不明朗。他在下赛季之后的合同保障金额仅为255万美元,这给了马刺在科内特步入30多岁后灵活处理其合同的空间。期待马刺在今年夏天,通过选秀或自由球员市场,为他们的替补中锋再储备一名年轻替补。

卡特·布莱恩特,前锋

年龄: 20岁。

合同: 三年,1850万美元。

展望: 作为马刺2025-26赛季的另一位新秀,在球队以第14顺位将他从亚利桑那大学选中后,布莱恩特表现不俗。他的进攻技巧仍显生涩,三分球时灵时不灵,但布莱恩特在个人NBA处子赛季中展现出了成为防守大闸的潜质。在即将到来的二年级赛季,布莱恩特应该会获得更多的上场时间和发挥空间。

乔丹·麦克劳克林,后卫

年龄: 30岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 上场机会不多的麦克劳克林是本赛季结束后将成为自由球员的五名板凳末端老将之一。在这份名单中,他是最有可能回归的球员之一。每支球队都需要一名老练的控球后卫,在整个82场赛季的艰苦磨练中指导年轻球员,并提供可靠的零星上场时间。麦克劳克林完美契合这一角色。

俾斯麦·比永博,中锋

年龄: 33岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 身高6尺9寸的比永博在球场上已无法提供太多价值,但如同麦克劳克林一样,他可能因其作为更衣室中受人尊敬的声音这一价值而重返球队。

凯利·奥利尼克,中锋

年龄: 35岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 马刺在去年夏天与华盛顿奇才的交易中获得了奥利尼克,计划利用其1350万美元的到期合同作为未来的交易筹码。但赛季期间并未出现此类交易,奥利尼克将在七月进入自由球员市场。外界认为他不太可能重返圣安东尼奥。

林迪·沃特斯三世,后卫

年龄: 28岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 这位来自俄克拉荷马的射手在去年夏天签下一份一年老将底薪合同后,为马刺出战了40场比赛。今年夏天,他将在马刺或其他球队寻找一份类似的合同。

梅森·普拉姆利,中锋

年龄: 36岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 普拉姆利在二月份以一份10天短合同加盟后,成为了马刺队内最年长的球员。在那份合同到期后,马刺队签下了这位老将大个子打完剩余赛季,但预计他不会在此之后继续留队。

大卫·琼斯·加西亚,后卫*

年龄: 24岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 来自多米尼加共和国的琼斯·加西亚原本是个励志故事,但在一月份于发展联盟比赛中遭受严重脚踝伤势后,情况急转直下。他很有可能在下赛季以另一份双向合同回归球队。

哈里森·英格拉姆,前锋*

年龄: 23岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 作为马刺2024年的次轮秀,英格拉姆将进入他的第三个职业赛季,但在圣安东尼奥并没有明确的途径获得正式位置。由于马刺在即将到来的选秀中预计将增加多达三个次轮签,双向合同的名额十分宝贵。英格拉姆可能成为被淘汰出局的那一个。

埃马努埃尔·米勒,前锋*

年龄: 26岁。

合同: 自由球员。

展望: 米勒在二月份与马刺签下双向合同后,尚未在NBA级别的比赛中出场。他不大可能回归。

– 表示双向合同

San Antonio Spurs guard De'Aaron Fox (4) reacts to a play during Game 1 of the NBA Finals against the New York Knicks at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, on Wednesday, June 3, 2026.
San Antonio Spurs forward Carter Bryant (11), San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) and San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) walk off the court at the end of the first half of Game 6 of the Western Conference semifinals at Target Center in Minneapolis, Friday, May 15, 2026.
San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) and San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) celebrate a Game 1 win of the Western Conference Finals at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Monday, May 18, 2026. The Spurs defeated the Thunder 122-115 in double overtime.
San Antonio Spurs guard Devin Vassell (24), forward Victor Wembanyama (1) and guard De'Aaron Fox (4) watch the game action during the 4th quarter of Game 3 in the Western Conference Finals at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Friday, May 22, 2026. The Spurs fell 123-108 to the Thunder, who now lead the series 2-1.

由生成式人工智能翻译,译文内容可能不准确或不完整,以原文为准。

点击查看原文:Spurs' roster breakdown: Who stays and who goes this offseason?

Spurs’ roster breakdown: Who stays and who goes this offseason?

Image
San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1), San Antonio Spurs guard Dylan Harper (2), and San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) celebrate Wembanyama’s three point shot at the buzzer to end the second quarter of Game 4 of the Western Conference Finals at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Sunday, May 24, 2026.

Fresh off the NBA Finals, the Spurs head into the offseason looking to continue to tweak the roster that got them to the championship round ahead of schedule.

With nine of their top 10 scorers under contract for next season, the Spurs squad that opens the 2026-27 season in October is likely to look similar to the one that lost to New York in the Finals last week.

Still, there are roster issues the Spurs may or may not address this offseason through trades, free agency and the draft. The most scrutinized will be how they manage the rise of Dylan Harper and the logjam in the backcourt with the former No. 2 pick, De’Aaron Fox and Stephon Castle. But other moves, such as finding a post player to fit alongside Victor Wembanyama through either the draft or with a midlevel exemption, should be a high priority.

Here is a player-by-player analysis of the Spurs’ roster heading into the offseason:

Victor Wembanyama, C

Age: 22.

Contract: One year, $16.8 million.

Outlook: In his third NBA season, Wembanyama took all the necessary steps to cement himself among the game’s greats, winning the first unanimous Defensive Player of the Year award in league history, earning All-Star and All-NBA honors and spearheading the Spurs’ surprising run to the Finals. The 7-foot-4 Frenchman is entering the final season of his rookie-scale deal, but is eligible for a five-year extension worth at least $251 million. That number automatically scales up to $303.3 million if Wembanyama wins MVP, the Defensive Player of the Year award or makes an All-NBA team next season. Either way, Wembanyama will be the richest contract in Spurs’ history. The team can’t wait for him to sign it.

De’Aaron Fox, G

Age: 28.

Contract: Four years, $223.1 million.

Outlook: Fox was the previous owner of the most lucrative contract in Spurs’ history, thanks to the four-year, $223.1 million extension he signed last fall. That extension kicks in next season. In his first full season with the Spurs, Fox made his second career All-Star team and was instrumental in guiding the team to a 62-win season and Finals berth. A rough series against the Knicks, combined with the rise of rookie Dylan Harper and concerns over a ballooning payroll in seasons to come have sparked questions about Fox’s long-term future with the club. The Spurs could look to offload Fox’s contract via trade eventually, if not this summer than later down the line.

Devin Vassell, G/F

Age: 25**.**

Contract: Three years, $78.6 million

Outlook: Vassell’s sixth NBA season was his best, culminating in a playoff run in which he was a consistent contributor on both ends of the floor. Under contract for the next three seasons, Vassell should continue to fill a prominent role in the Spurs’ rotation.

Harrison Barnes, F

Age: 34

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: Barnes began his 14th season as a member of the Spurs’ starting lineup, but moved to the bench as the season went along. By the end of the playoffs, the veteran forward was taking DNPs. The Spurs would be interested in bringing Barnes back next season as something far less than the $19 million he earned this season. If another team offers Barnes more money and a bigger role, it wouldn’t be surprising to see him playing elsewhere next season.

Keldon Johnson, F

Age: 26.

Contract: One year, $17.5 million

Outlook: The team’s longest-tenured player at seven seasons, Johnson emerged as the heart and soul of the Spurs’ playoff push in the regular season. He became the second player in club annals to win the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year award, joining Hall of Famer Manu Ginobili, but faded once the postseason began. Johnson stands to play a significant bench role for the Spurs next season, a contract year for him.

Stephon Castle, G

Age: 21

Contract: Two years, $22.7 million (team option)

Outlook: The NBA’s reigning Rookie of the Year took another leap as a sophomore, developing into one of the league’s top two-way guards. Castle’s scoring (16.7 points per game), rebounding (5.3 per game) and assist numbers (7.4 per game) increased across the board, while he continued to draw the toughest assignments on defense. He remains a relative bargain while playing on his rookie-scale deal.

Dylan Harper, G

Age: 20

Contract: Three years, $43.8 million

Outlook: After a standout rookie season, Harper’s stock soared during the playoffs, when he averaged 14.1 points and 5.6 rebounds off the bench. With most any other team, Harper — a former No. 2 overall pick from Rutgers — would be ticketed for a starting job. In San Antonio, Harper’s rise toward future stardom complicates a backcourt that already has Fox and Castle to feed. Trading Fox at some point would help address the logjam. Barring that, it will be up to coach Mitch Johnson to figure out ways to play all three of his star guards together.

Julian Champagnie, F

Age: 24

Contract: One year, $3 million (team option)

Outlook: A former G League castoff famously waived by Philadelphia on Valentine’s Day 2023, Champagnie has become one of the league’s best success stories since joining the Spurs. Last season, he set franchise records for 3-pointers in a game (11 vs. New York), in a season (512) and in a single playoff run (61). The Spurs can have him back next season for the bargain-bin sum of $3 million, or choose to negotiate a longer-term deal with their lowest-paid rotation player. Either way, expect Champagnie to remain a big part of the Spurs’ plans next season.

Luke Kornet, C

Age: 30

Contract: Three years, $29.7 million ($13 million guaranteed)

Outlook: Kornet proved a solid backup for Wembanyama in his first season since coming over from Boston. A foot injury slowed the 7-foot-1 Kornet in the playoffs, and he averaged only 8.2 minutes in five Finals games. Kornet will be back next season, but his future with the club beyond that remains murky. He is guaranteed only $2.55 million after next season, giving the Spurs flexibility to move off Kornet’s contract as he gets deeper into his 30s. Expect the Spurs to back up their backup center with youth this summer, either via the draft or free agency.

Carter Bryant, F

Age: 20

Contract: Three years, $18.5 million

Outlook: The other member of the Spurs’ 2025-26 rookie class, Bryant acquitted himself well after the team selected him 14th overall out of Arizona. His offensive skills remain raw, and his 3-point ball comes and goes, but Bryant showed flashes during his inaugural NBA campaign of becoming a defensive menace. Bryant should be given more playing time — and more leeway — during his sophomore season to come.

Jordan McLaughlin, G

Age: 30

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: The little-used McLaughlin is one of five end-of-the-bench veterans who will be hitting free agency this season. Among that list, he appears one of the most likely to return. Every team needs a veteran point guard to mentor younger players and provide solid spot minutes throughout the grind of an 82-game season. McLaughlin fits that role to a T.

Bismack Biyimbo, C

Age: 33

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: The 6-foot-9 Biyombo does not provide much value on the court anymore, but – like McLaughlin – could return to the club due to his value as a respected voice in the locker room.

Kelly Olynyk, C

Age: 35

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: The Spurs acquired Olynyk in a trade with Washington last summer, with designs on using his $13.5-million expiring contract as a future trade chip. No such trade emerged during the season, and Olynyk will hit the free-agent market in July. He is not considered likely to return to San Antonio.

Lindy Waters III, G

Age: 28

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: The sharpshooter from Oklahoma appeared in 40 games for the Spurs after signing a one-year, veteran minimum contract last summer. He will be looking for a similar deal this summer, either from the Spurs or elsewhere.

Mason Plumlee, C

Age: 36

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: Plumlee became the Spurs’ oldest player when he joined the team on a 10-day contract in February. The Spurs signed the veteran big man for the remainder of the season after that deal expired, but he is not expected to remain with the club beyond that.

David Jones Garcia, G*

Age: 24

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: A native of the Dominican Republic, Jones Garcia was something of a feel-good story before suffering a severe ankle injury while playing in the G League in January. He is a good bet to return to the club on another two-way deal next season.

Harrison Ingram, F*

Age: 23

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: The Spurs’ second-round pick in 2024, Ingram will enter his third professional season without a clear path to a full-time spot in San Antonio. With the Spurs set to add as many as three second-round picks in the upcoming draft, and two-way slots are at a premium. Ingram could be the odd man out.

Emmanuel Miller, F*

Age: 26

Contract: Free agent.

Outlook: Miller did not play a game at the NBA level after joining the Spurs on a two-way deal in February. He is not likely to be back.

– denotes two-way contract

By Jeff McDonald, Staff Writer, via San Antonio Express-News