2026 NBA Championship Finals Prediction

Talk about two polar conference finals! The western conference finals became a full-on, seven game slugfest between the top two teams of Oklahoma City and San Antonio while New York swept Cleveland in the east. The Knicks have won nine straight games, including two convincing series sweeps. Whichever team wins this year’s championship deserves the praise and accolades. It is time to break down which franchise has the best chance of winning a championship and raising a banner in the NBA’s 79th season.

#3 New York Knicks v. #2 San Antonio Spurs

Even skilled veterans like OG Anunoby have struggled against center Victor Wembanyama all season.

There couldn’t be a more polar finals matchup if you tried to find one. New York was close to a finals appearance last year and was favored by many to at least return to the eastern conference finals this season. In the words of previous coaches, this could be New York’s only shot to win a championship with this core group.

San Antonio will make the Knicks earn that championship. 7’4″ center Victor Wembanyama has shattered every prediction and expectation of where viewers thought the Spurs would be in both his tenure and where he will be by his fifth season. The talent around Wembanyama has stepped up whenever needed and most importantly, San Antonio has learned how to fix mistakes and win games following losses.

In a lot of ways, New York and San Antonio mirror each other well. They have a lot of depth at every position, great coaching and learn valuable lessons after losses. The Knicks mostly have experience on their side while the Spurs have a lot of talent, determination to start a dynasty and don’t know any better compared to previous teams that have made it this far.

If New York wants to win their first championship in over 50 years, they need Karl Anthony-Towns (32) to dominate almost every game this series.

Verdict: There are two key differences that will determine which team wins this series. The first is matchup at center. Oklahoma City was lucky Isaiah Hartenstein played one of the best series of his career against Victor Wembanyama after Chet Holmgren imploded not even one game into the conference finals. Hartenstein at least has the body, versatility and smarts to counter a young, naïve generational talent. The Knicks don’t have that with any center on their roster. Karl Anthony-Towns has the distinct honor (and probably horror) of trying to stop Wembanyama every game. Anthony-Towns has improved every season of his NBA career, but he has a mostly thankless task of trying to stop San Antonio’s star center. Yes, Karl Anthony-Towns will have help from Mitchell Robinson at times, but he’s had injury issues throughout the postseason. Meanwhile, Wembanyama already said in previous interviews he uses envy and jealousy to drive him further to victory. Those energies have fed and strengthened the Spurs’ young core to surprising wins. Anyone who has seriously studied the NBA for decades knows exactly who he sounds like by saying this and playing like everything is a personal slight.

The second difference is one most people should think of the longer this series goes. Yes, Mike Brown is a Hall of Fame worthy coach considering what he has accomplished both this season and in previous years. Against any other team, Brown would have the coaching advantage (yes, even against the deep Thunder), but San Antonio is still a Gregg Popovich anchored team. When the Spurs lose a game, Popovich is the first person to let them know and make sure they fix what went wrong. Mitch Johnson is a solid coach but make no mistake, as long as Popovich is alive and has a working brain, it’s still his team. With Gregg Popovich watching every game, there is little doubt San Antonio loses a best of four to a less versatile Knicks…especially since the Spurs lost to New York in the Commissioner’s Cup earlier in the season. That should fuel Wembanyama’s fire.

Prediction: San Antonio Spurs defeat New York 4-2 and win their sixth Larry O’Brien Trophy

2026 NHL Stanley Cup Finals Prediction

The NHL Stanley Cup finals are set. Vegas and Carolina have deep rosters and savvy coaches. Their power-plays and penalty kills are some of the best since playoffs began. Whichever team wins the finals deserves the accolades and label of champion. It is time to break down which one has the best chance of winning the finals and taking home both the Conn Smythe and Stanley Cup.

#4 Vegas Golden Knights v. #1 Carolina Hurricanes

Centers Jack Eichel (9) and Jordan Staal (11) mirror each other’s style of play.

The two most disciplined, veteran and talented teams made the Stanley Cup finals. Both coaches won a championship two decades ago and have evolved in how they see the game. While Rod Brind’Amour has been involved with Carolina for decades, John Tortorella was hired by the Golden Knights with eight games left in the regular season. Interestingly, both coaches are perfect fits for the teams they lead.

From Tortorella’s philosophy of constant shot-blocking and self-discipline on defense, to layers of scoring depth and a dangerous power-play, Vegas has played their best hockey in the postseason. There were reasons to think the Golden Knights would not make it this far after eliminating two younger teams the first two rounds. Yet, Vegas has played better the more quality the opponent and near elimination. It will be very hard to beat the Golden Knights in a best of seven.

Carolina though, has been the most dominant team this postseason. The Hurricanes became the fastest team to notch 12 wins in 13 playoff games. Their second line of Taylor Hall, Logan Stankoven and Nikolaj Ehlers have single-handedly eliminated all three prior opponents. Goaltender Frederik Andersen has been a brick wall in net every win. At one point, Andersen replicated records from the legend Jacques Plante no one came close to in 60 years. Two sweeps has Carolina in the best shape they’ve been in this entire season.

Series deciding factor: Golden Knights defense versus the Hurricanes second line

The Hurricanes second line of Hall, Stankoven and Ehlers have impressed because all three are talented veterans who have been in the postseason several times prior to this year. The trio had a season to learn each other’s patterns and play to everyone’s strengths. While all three are dangerous on breakaways and open ice, Hall, Stankoven and Ehlers are most lethal five-on-five. Ottawa, Philadelphia and Montreal learned the hard way how goals by all three feel worse than giving up power-play goals.

Despite the trio’s scorching postseason, Vegas’ defense is deeper, championship ready and addicted to pain when they deflect shots. Rasmus Andersson, Dylan Coghlan, Noah Hanifin, Ben Hutton, Brayden McNabb, Shea Theodore and Kaedan Korczak are massive (the shortest among them being 6’1″) and command respect once opposing offenses get to work in the Golden Knights defensive zone. It’s one thing for young offenses in Utah and Anaheim to struggle, but what they did to Nathan MacKinnon, Artturi Lehkonen, Martin Necas, Brock Nelson, Ross Colton and Valeri Nichushkin was textbook defense the other 29 teams will watch film on this offseason. Andersson, Korczak and Hanifin might be new to the championship lights, but McNabb, Theodore and Hutton are not.

Verdict: Coach John Tortorella has relished a return to the Stanley Cup finals for at least a decade. His calculated discipline and evolved tactics have made him one of the few coaches to be a candidate for any open coaching position when he isn’t behind the bench. This is a perfect fit in Vegas; the roster is mature, well disciplined and committed to defense while having a layered, high-scoring offense. The Golden Knights retained a lot of their 2022-23 Cup winning roster. That is a big reason Vegas has fared better than even the league best Avalanche and should be seen as a favorite to win this series. The Golden Knights could surprise many again and play their best series in the finals.

The biggest thing to consider is how Carolina beat three, inexperienced playoff teams to make the finals. The Hurricanes handled one playoff loss well, but the question is how will they respond when championship winning veterans and a strong-willed coach behind the bench on the other side constantly pushes back on defense and special teams? This is an older, more disciplined Golden Knights roster that enjoys physical play and making opponents uncomfortable. Carolina finally made it to the finals, but this series will add more valuable lessons for coach Brind’Amour and how the will to win isn’t just about smothering inexperienced teams. It demands constant changes against serious veterans, something the coach found out in his first finals as a player back in the 2001-02 season.

The Hurricanes and Golden Knights will have to earn goals and wins by beating each other up by the boards.

Prediction: Vegas Golden Knights defeat the Carolina Hurricanes 4-1 and win their second Stanley Cup championship in franchise history.

Conn Smythe winner: Goaltender Carter Hart

Conference finals picks record: 1-1