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Dylan Harper is not yet confirmed to play for the San Antonio Spurs in Game 3 against the Oklahoma City Thunder, but the latest injury news has changed the tone of the series.
The boost is not that Harper has been cleared. It is that he is still even in the conversation.
Harper has been listed as a game-time decision after scans revealed soreness in his right adductor rather than a hamstring injury. For a series tied at 1-1, that is significant.
San Antonio did not need another injury certainty. It needed a window of hope.
Dylan Harper update gives Spurs a real chance to settle Game 3
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Harper left Game 2 with a right leg injury, and the initial concern was obvious. Any hamstring issue at this point of the playoffs would have changed San Antonio’s rotation immediately.
That is why the latest update is so important. Harper is not fully clear, but he has avoided the diagnosis that would have made Game 3 feel far more difficult before tip-off.
The Spurs can now treat him as a real possibility rather than an automatic absence. That difference matters when every possession against Oklahoma City’s pressure feels expensive.
This is not about pretending an adductor issue is nothing. It is about understanding that questionable is far better than ruled out.
San Antonio already knows Harper can handle this stage
Harper’s value is not theoretical. He already showed it in this series.
The rookie guard produced 24 points, 11 rebounds, six assists and seven steals in Game 1. He also played 47 minutes, which tells the real story of how quickly his role expanded.
Those numbers are not just box-score noise. They showed that Harper can defend, rebound, handle pressure and keep the Spurs functioning when their backcourt is under strain.
That matters because De’Aaron Fox was ruled out for Game 2. San Antonio has already been forced to ask more from younger guards than it planned to ask at this stage.
The Spurs need another ball-handler after Game 2
The case for Harper’s importance became clearer in Game 2. Oklahoma City beat San Antonio 122-113 and tied the series at 1-1.
But the Spurs committed 21 turnovers, and the Thunder turned those into 27 points. That is where Harper’s status becomes so important for Game 3.
San Antonio needs more than just another scorer. They need someone who can steady the offence and help avoid the kind of mistakes that cost them in Game 2.
Without Harper, the burden falls even heavier on Stephon Castle, Devin Vassell and Victor Wembanyama. With him available, even in a limited role, the Spurs gain a guard who has already proven he can handle this matchup.
This is a boost, not a guarantee
The Spurs still need to be cautious. Harper remains a game-time decision, and Fox is not a sure thing either.
But there is real optimism, not certainty, but hope backed by a diagnosis that is far less severe than initially feared.
That is enough to shift the mood heading into Game 3. A confirmed hamstring injury would have put Harper on the shelf. Right adductor soreness keeps the door open.
And for San Antonio, that is a significant boost. They do not need a perfect injury report, just a version of Harper who can play. This update gives them a real chance of getting one.
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