The Finals: Spurs hoist O'Brien trophy, win 10th consecutive title (108-90, 4-1).

Dejounte Murray embraced Ben Simmons at halfcourt once the buzzer sounded, having seen Finals MVP Brandon Ingram ignite for 34 points, shooting early with confidence as the Spurs ended the 1st Quarter up 25-14, the crowd stunned.
Cold shooting did in Philly once again as it had in Game 1, with the onus of a necessary 3-1 comeback too much for the first time finalists to bear. They sneaked within 15 points, but the lead grew to 32 at one point, as a firestorm of perimeter proficiency shot forth from Joe Harris, J.R. Smith & Nik Stauskas whenever Philly gained any signs of momentum.
"We've had enough Game 7s, believe me, so I'm real proud of my guys for coming out strong early and putting this series to bed. I want to congratulate the Philadelphia 76ers for a tremendous run to the Finals, beating out Milwaukee who we've squared off against these last two years."
The Rest:
The Spurs also won the second quarter largely, 30-16, farther steepening the deficit for Philly. Tobias Harris had 18 points, high man for Philly, but shot 2-9 from 3PT range. Joel Embiid had 14 points, 18 rebounds, but went 0-3 from long range. Josh Richardson went just 4-9 for 12 points. Ben Simmons dished 14 assists, but struggled to score, iced out completely by the Spurs defense for just 5 points (2-6 FG%). He also had 3 turnovers. Al Horford had an underwhelming 8 points, going 3-6, 0-2 from long range. J.R. Smith had 19 points, going 4-7 from long range. Jarrett Allen had 11 points, 16 rebounds. Joe Harris had 10. Timofey Mosgov had 13 rebounds with 2 blocks.