Victor Wembanyama addresses monk comparisons, says viral robe was for Eid al-Adha

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Victor Wembanyama’s pre-game robe drew fresh monk comparisons, but the Spurs star made clear after Game 6 that the outfit was actually for Eid al-Adha.

The moment caught attention because Wembanyama already had a powerful offseason story tied to his Shaolin Temple training in China.

But after San Antonio’s season-saving win over Oklahoma City, the meaning was more direct. It was about respect, timing and a star comfortable making a statement without overexplaining it.

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Victor Wembanyama Eid robe was not about monks​


As Omer Osman highlighted, Wembanyama was asked in French about the robe and quickly separated it from the monk storyline.

“Yes, it has nothing to do with the monks. Yes, it was for Eid.”

That distinction mattered because the visual was easy to misread. Wembanyama’s Shaolin work had already become part of his playoff mythology, so fans naturally linked the robe to that image.

This time, though, he pointed to Eid al-Adha, one of Islam’s major holidays. There is no firm public record confirming Wembanyama’s religious affiliation, which makes the gesture read more like respect for the occasion and the community around it.

Victor Wembanyama powered Spurs past Thunder in Game 6​


The robe drew attention, but Wembanyama’s play on the floor mattered more to San Antonio.

After a poor Game 5, he answered with 28 points, 10 rebounds, two steals and three blocks as the Spurs beat Oklahoma City 118-91 to force Game 7 in the Western Conference Finals.

That was the version of Wembanyama the Spurs needed. He attacked with force, defended with range and helped San Antonio keep the Thunder under 100 points.

Dylan Harper’s 18 points off the bench also gave the Spurs a real lift. Still, the tone clearly came from Wembanyama’s response after a game where San Antonio needed its best player to lead.

Spurs star keeps shaping his own image​


The robe story is smaller than Game 7, but it still adds another layer to Wembanyama’s growing presence.

He is already one of the NBA’s most unusual stars, not only because of his size and skill, but because he moves through the league in his own lane.

The Shaolin training, the thobe, the direct explanation and the Game 6 response all point to the same thing. Wembanyama is building his identity around discipline, curiosity and control.

Now San Antonio needs that control again. If he carries this edge into Game 7, the Spurs can turn a pre-game talking point into part of a Finals story.

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