Wemby Makes $5.11 Million NBA History Amid Spurs Playoff Run

San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama received $5.11 million news before perhaps the biggest game of this career.
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San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama received $5.11 million news before perhaps the biggest game of this career.

Victor Wembanyama’s biggest news before Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals did not come from the San Antonio Spurs’ injury report, the Oklahoma City Thunder’s scouting plan or another wild playoff box score.

It came from the card market.

The Athletic’s Larry Holder reported on May 26 that Wembanyama’s 2023-24 Panini Prizm one-of-one Black parallel rookie card sold in a private deal for $5.11 million, making it the most expensive known sale of a non-autographed NBA card. The sale was brokered by Fanatics Collect, and the card carries a Gem-Mint PSA 10 grade.

That number is massive on its own. The timing makes it more interesting.

The Spurs and Thunder are tied 2-2 entering Game 5 on Tuesday night in Oklahoma City, and Wembanyama is coming off one of the best games of his postseason. He had 33 points, eight rebounds, five assists and three blocks in San Antonio’s 103-82 Game 4 win.

Wembanyama’s card sale is a collectibles story. His stats explain why it has become a Spurs story.


Victor Wembanyama’s Stats Are Backing Up the $5.11 Million Bet

The buyer of the $5.11 million Wembanyama card told The Athletic he paid that price because he believes the card will remain Wembanyama’s best. But his most revealing explanation was about Wembanyama himself.

“I think Victor Wembanyama’s (ceiling) is substantially higher,” the buyer told The Athletic, comparing Wembanyama’s upside to other hyped young stars.

That is the whole bet, distilled into one line.

Wembanyama has already made a rare leap from future projection to present playoff problem. During the regular season, he averaged 25.0 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 3.1 blocks in 64 games for San Antonio, according to StatMuse.

His full playoff line is slightly different but still elite: 23.1 points, 11.4 rebounds and 3.8 blocks through 14 games, per StatMuse.

The Western Conference Finals, though, have sharpened the case. Wembanyama had 41 points and 24 rebounds in San Antonio’s Game 1 double-overtime win over Oklahoma City. He followed that with 26 points in Game 3, then 33 points, eight rebounds, five assists and three blocks in Game 4.

Using his first three games of the series and his Game 4 line, Wembanyama is averaging about 30.3 points, 13.3 rebounds and 3.0 blocks against the Thunder. That is the kind of series leap that changes a conversation from “future face of the league” to “can he win the West right now?”


Wembanyama’s Game 4 Made the Card Sale Feel Less Like Hype

There is always risk in tying collectibles value to a player’s trajectory. Injury, team context and market swings can change the way even elite prospects are viewed.

That is why Wembanyama’s Game 4 mattered. The Spurs were coming off a Game 3 loss in which Oklahoma City’s bench overwhelmed them. San Antonio needed a response, and Wembanyama delivered one.

The Spurs beat the Thunder 103-82 to even the series, with Wembanyama leading the way. The New York Post noted that he also hit a 65-foot buzzer-beater before halftime, while San Antonio held Oklahoma City to 33% shooting and forced 20 turnovers.

That kind of performance is exactly why the card-market angle works as more than a novelty. Wembanyama is not simply a famous young player with a rare card. He is the central reason the Spurs are two wins from the NBA Finals.

The Athletic reported that Wembanyama does not have officially licensed autographed rookie cards because of the split between his Fanatics deal and Panini’s NBA trading card license during his rookie season. That scarcity helps explain why a one-of-one Prizm Black rookie card could carry such enormous value.

The basketball case is what makes the scarcity matter.


Spurs-Thunder Game 5 Turns Wembanyama’s Rise Into a Bigger Test

The $5.11 million sale will get attention because of the price tag. Game 5 will say more about the basketball bet behind it.

The Spurs and Thunder enter Tuesday night tied 2-2, with Game 5 set for 8:30 p.m. ET in Oklahoma City. The winner moves one victory from the NBA Finals, where the New York Knicks are already waiting after sweeping the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals.

For Wembanyama, the stakes are obvious. Another huge performance against Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren and the Thunder would deepen the sense that his playoff arrival is happening now, not later.

For the Spurs, this is no longer just a feel-good run. Wembanyama’s regular-season numbers made him a superstar. His playoff production has made San Antonio dangerous. His Western Conference Finals surge has made the Spurs a live threat to reach the NBA Finals.

That is what the buyer of the $5.11 million card is really betting on.

The card is rare. Wembanyama’s ceiling may be rarer.

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Wemby Makes $5.11 Million NBA History Amid Spurs Playoff Run

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