LAS VEGAS — Victor Wembanyama missed 12 of San Antonio's first 25 games this season. Dylan Harper has missed 10 already for the Spurs, while Stephon Castle has been out for nine and De'Aaron Fox couldn't play in eight.
That's a lot of injuries.
And the Spurs are 18-7.
Dealing with adversity has been an every-single-day chore for Mitch Johnson since he inherited his job as coach of the Spurs, a move that came unexpectedly when NBA all-time wins leader and franchise patriarch Gregg Popovich had a stroke in November 2024. He wasn't planning to become a head coach on that Saturday afternoon when Popovich was stricken, and the job he did was more than admirable to finish out the season.
Now? The Spurs look like they could be contenders for the first time in about a decade. Johnson — despite all the injury issues — has seemed unflappable, guiding San Antonio to a spot in the NBA Cup championship game against New York and getting the team off to a start that suggests its first playoff appearance since 2019 may be awaiting this spring.
''I trust in Mitch 100%,'' Spurs guard Devin Vassell said. ''Mitch was my player development coach when I first got here, so I think me and him have an even better connection than the outside sees. But we all trust him. He's the brains of all of this. He helps us with everything ... and we're just going to keep relying on him. He's our head coach and we trust in him.''
There's a cliche in sports, and it's a cliche for a reason: Never follow a legend.
Johnson didn't have much of a choice.