OKLAHOMA CITY — Nearly every time he takes the basketball court, Victor Wembanyama does something so mind-blowing, so outside the realm of what we’ve ever seen before, that even wizened veterans of many revolutions around the sun are forced to guffaw in wonder.In the wake of the San Antonio Spurs’ epic 122-115 double-overtime win against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Monday’s Game 1 of the Western Conference finals — seriously, this might have been the best game I’ve ever seen — it seems almost impossible to distill the plays from his virtuoso 41-point, 24-rebound performance into one or two overarching points.So let’s eliminate 46 minutes or so from the middle of the game and just limit ourselves to the very beginning and the very end. Because those were the two parts that best illuminated Wembanyama’s unique talent, and how quickly he is threatening to take over the entire league.First, the start. Nobody seems to be talking about this, but two minutes into the game, something amazing happened: The Thunder sent Alex Caruso to the scorer’s table to replace Isaiah Hartenstein. Hartenstein, if you’ll recall, was the Thunder’s key free-agent acquisition in the summer of 2024 that turned them into NBA champions. By my metrics, he is a $32 million player who rates as one of the league’s top 15 centers.Against Wembanyama, two minutes into the first game of this series, the 64-win, defending champion Thunder realized that one of their elite performers was unplayable. Hartenstein can do a lot of things, but he can’t space the floor, and — as the Minnesota Timberwolves and Portland Trail Blazers already found out — that is basically fatal for a big man playing against Wembanyama, who will just sit in the paint and destroy an entire offense by himself.It took them two minutes Monday night, but the Thunder knew this was probably the case even before the game started.“I think it was pretty clear that that was the plan going in,” Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault said, “was to get (Hartenstein) staggered pretty quickly, to get Caruso in there. And we kind of predetermined that. I didn’t know how quick I would do it.”Hartenstein didn’t play one second on offense against Wembanyama the rest of the game. The Thunder only played him when backup center Luke Kornet checked in — a total of 10 minutes the rest of the night — because those were the only stretches that permitted Hartenstein to be a normal center. The Thunder started the second half with Cason Wallace in Hartenstein’s place, and one imagines that’s how they’ll start Game 2 as well.That decision, more than anything, underscores what a game-changing force the Spurs’ 7-foot-4 prodigy already has become: An Oklahoma City team that seemed on the brink of a dynasty, one that started this year 24-1, was left scrambling for answers. The Thunder, who are 71-14 against the rest of the league, lost to the Spurs for the fifth time in six tries.As the night wore on, the Thunder’s game of lineup wack-a-mole was almost as fascinating as Wembanyama’s highlight reel. Daigneault spent two-thirds of the game plugging holes in otherwise impervious lineups that only became exposed by a player of Wembanyama’s level.To wit: With Hartenstein out of the mix, rebounding, which he was brought in to fix, was suddenly a problem. San Antonio finished with a 36.8 percent offensive rebound rate, compared to just 21 percent for the Thunder, per NBA.com. With Wembanyama in the middle and San Antonio’s athletic guards pressuring up on the perimeter, the dribble drives that are the basis of the Thunder offense also dried up. MVP winner Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shot just 7 of 23 and had only four points at halftime, while slashing sophomore Ajay Mitchell produced only four points in his 34 minutes. The Thunder shot a ghastly 11-of-31 in the paint in Wembanyama’s minutes.It’s a testament to their depth, resilience and the awesomeness of Caruso that the Thunder were in the game anyway, and in position to win it at the end of the first overtime. Daigneault finally found a four-guard lineup that mostly worked and drew up two beautiful late ATOs to isolate Gilgeous-Alexander and get him to the rim. By the start of overtime, the body blows from Caruso and company seem to have exhausted Wembanyama.Which allows us to fast forward 46 minutes to the other notable stretch: the end of the first overtime.In a rarity, this wasn’t a moment in which Wembanyama awed with his physical tools. Instead, the play that left everyone who watched in wonder — and his own teammates cackling in amazement in the locker room afterward — was a display of his sheer audacity.Down three. Twenty-eight seconds left. Almost 30 feet from the hoop, and already 43 minutes into his night — more than he’d ever played in an NBA game.Wembanyama was absolutely gassed by the end of the first overtime. And yet somehow, at that exact moment, the chill Buddhist turned into the Shaolin Sniper, nailing a deep transition 3 to tie the game and stun the Thunder crowd — and his own teammates.“I’m like, ‘No way he shot that!’” Keldon Johnson said.“He had no legs!” Carter Bryant said.“I knew it was going in,” Stephon Castle said.“I was stunned a little bit,” Dylan Harper said. “But once the ball went up, I’m like, ‘Oh, that’s going in.’ It’s just who he is.”This, in a nutshell, is why Wembanyama is such a problem. He has as much talent as any player in the last quarter-century, but he also has a zest for greatness that emerges, win or lose, in these moments. It shows in the otherwise polite and considerate Frenchman’s inappropriate delight in humiliating Chet Holmgren on the court, it shows when he’s trying to embarrass his fellow All-Stars into playing a real game and it shows when the tallest player on the court is making hustle plays after playing 40-plus minutes.Consider another play, one that was nearly as remarkable, that happened only two minutes earlier and didn’t make the YouTube highlights: Wembanyama, seemingly out of gas and behind the play after a pass was thrown a mile behind him to create a 3-on-1 for Oklahoma City, put his head down and booked 75 feet, dove on a loose ball and knocked it off Holmgren’s foot for a turnover.When the play started, Wembanyama was 20 feet behind, trying to catch two guards. He had already played 41 minutes. His team was up two. Nobody would have raised an eyebrow if he had slow-jogged back; four other players on the court did the same thing.Instead, he made a game-changing play.Victor Wembanyama laid out to make a critical defensive play late for the Spurs. (Joshua Gateley / Getty Images)That clip may not show up when people recount the Legend of Victor 20 years from now, but it seems just as telling. Without the lung-busting sprint and full-length dive, there is no audacious 3-pointer to tie it.This, of course, was Game 1 in a best-of-seven series, and we don’t yet know how the movie ends. Perhaps Oklahoma City gets a few more 3s to fall, gets to its best lineups a bit quicker, Gilgeous-Alexander finds the rhythm and the Thunder still emerge. With one changed bounce on Monday, I’m writing a very different story.Yet for those who entered this series with a creeping sense that a changing of the guard was underway, this was proof of concept. Wembanyama changed Game 1 within minutes of it starting, and he willed his way to dominating its ending. In that sense, the micro is also the macro: He’s changing the game and dominating it in equal parts.