Last-second three gives Spurs a pulse

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

The Spurs exited a timeout huddle late in the fourth quarter Wednesday, behind by three points and 1.7 seconds away from an early vacation, facing a thought that could have been unsettling if they let it be.

The game, the series, and their season had been placed in the hands of an undrafted rookie.

Gary Neal drained a tough 3-pointer from the top of the arc to force overtime, where Tony Parker took over to lift the Spurs to a 110-103 victory in Game 5 that sent their first-round round series with Memphis back to the banks of the Mississippi.

“I once hit a buzzer-beater to win a state championship in high school,” Neal said. “This feels a little bigger.”

The win brought the Spurs within 3-2 en route to Memphis for Game 6 on Friday, not enough to make them feel free and easy, but enough to make the series interesting again.

The Spurs needed a ceaseless string of miracles to get it.

Before Neal hit his new most-memorable buzzer-beater, Manu Ginobili — who finished with 33 points — nearly re-enacted Sean Elliott’s Memorial Day Miracle in the right corner. Except Ginobili’s toe was on the 3-point line, and the shot left the Spurs down by one.

After Neal sent the game to overtime came the biggest miracle of all — Parker found his mothballed jump shot, knocking down three to start the extra frame and point the Spurs toward victory. Parker finished with 24 points and nine assists, his best performance in what has been a frustrating series for him.

“When you are facing elimination,” Ginobili said, “you always seem to get something out of nowhere.”

In this case, the season’s biggest shot was by a player who came out of nowhere.

After TV replay ruled Ginobili’s circus shot a 2-pointer, erasing the three that would have tied the game, Zach Randolph made a pair of free throws to put the Grizzlies up by three.

Memphis, an eighth seed, was a short commercial break from pulling off one of the NBA’s greatest first-round upsets.

“We were very close to being on vacation time,” Ginobili said.

Then, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich took his dry-erase board and assembled a set of Xs and Os. The play was designed for a 26-year-old rookie, passed over by every other NBA team, who had made his bones in the hardscrabble pro leagues of Italy, Turkey and Spain.

A rookie who had played just 10 minutes to that point, and had made just one field goal.

The decision to place the season in Neal’s hands did not faze Ginobili, so long as he forgot the first time he’d ever laid eyes on the rookie.

“I’m not lying,” Ginobili said, recalling an open gym in September. “I saw him miss the first 20 shots he took.”

Still, Ginobili believed Wednesday. Maybe because he had no choice. And maybe because he had once been like Neal.

“Once, I was almost an undrafted rookie, too,” said Ginobili, the 57th pick in the 1999 draft.

Not everyone in the ATT Center was as confident. Tim Duncan, who set the pick to free Neal, spent the entire 1.7 seconds screaming at him.

“He’s got 1.7, and he takes a dribble,” Duncan said. “I’m like, shoot the ball.”

Neal, it turns out, knew exactly what he was doing.

“I knew I had time,” he said. “I was looking for my shot. That was my shot.”

Parker described the feeling of seeing Neal’s shot rip through the net this way: “Like a new life.”

And so the game went to OT, and Parker took over, and the Spurs began getting stops — the biggest of which coming as they forced Marc Gasol into an airball as the shot-clock sounded with 29.2 seconds left.

Still, it was not the kind of victory that left the Spurs feeling as if they had turned the series.

“We got lucky,” Ginobili said. “That’s the truth.”

Facing elimination, the Spurs needed every bit of luck in their playbook to pull out an overtime win at home. They harbor no illusions that pulling off a sequel in Game 6 on the road will be easy.

But, ultimately, the Spurs got what they came for on Wednesday. A new day. A new life.

Fittingly, it was Neal — a player whose entire season has felt like new life — who gave it to them.

“The Heatles” boost Miami to 3-0 series lead with S&D efforts

When Dwyane Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh united last summer, their goal was an NBA championship.

“The Heatles” took another step to that goal with a strong collective effort in Miami’s 100-94 Game 3 victory at Philadelphia, giving the Heat a 3-0 lead in the series.

Wade delivered a monster game with 32 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists. James tallied 24 points, 15 rebounds and six assists. And Bosh chipped in with 19 points, six rebounds and three blocked shots.

“This is what we envisioned,” James told reporters after the game.

The victory pushed the Heat to the brink of becoming the first team to finish out a series. Miami will get its chance at noon Sunday.

“We’re a desperate team right now,” James said. “We want to continue to play that way.”

Their big nights earned them all a place on Thursday’s Studs and Duds.

STUDS

Miami G Dwyane Wade: Went for 32 points, 10 rebounds, eight assists and two blocked shots in the Heat’s 100-94 Game 3 victory over Philadelphia.

Portland G Wesley Matthews: Tallied 25 points, three assists, two rebounds, two steals and was plus-5 in the Trail Blazers’ 97-92 victory over Dallas.

Miami F LeBron James: Notched 24 points, 15 rebounds, six assists and was plus-8 in the Heat’s victory over  the 76ers.

Chicago G Derrick Rose: Scored 23 points,  including the go-ahead layup with 17.8 seconds left,  to power the Bulls to an 88-84 Game 3 victory over Indiana. Rose also added four steals, three rebounds and two assists and was plus-6. 

Chicago F Luol Deng: Went for 21 points, six rebounds and six assists and was a team-best plus-9 in the Bulls’ victory over the Pacers.

Portland F LaMarcus Aldridge: Scored 20 points and grabbed four rebounds in the Trail Blazers’ victory over the Mavericks.

Miami F Chris Bosh: Produced 19 points, six rebounds, three blocked shots and was plus-6 in the  Heat’s victory at Philadelphia.

Portland G Brandon Roy: Came off the bench to produce 16 points, four assists and was a team-best plus-7 in the Trail Blazers’ victory over Dallas.

Portland G Andre Miller: Went for 16 points, seven assists and was plus-6 in the Trail Blazers’ triumph over the Mavericks.

Chicago C Joakim Noah: Tallied 11 points, 10 rebounds, four blocked shots and was plus-6 in the Bulls’ victory at Indiana.

Dallas G Jason Terry: Came off the bench to score 29 points, seven assists and was plus-7 in the Mavericks’ loss at the Trail Blazers.

Dallas F Dirk Nowitzki: Went for 25 points, nine rebounds and two assists in the Mavericks’ loss at Portland.

Philadelphia F Elton Brand: Notched 21 points, 11 rebounds and was plus-1 in the 76ers’ loss to Miami.

Indiana F Danny Granger: Scored 21 points, grabbed four rebounds, produced two assists and snatched two steals in the Pacers’ loss to Chicago.

Philadelphia G Jrue Holiday: Tallied 20 points and eight assists in the 76ers’ loss to Miami.

DUDS

Indiana G Paul George: Went 1-for-9 from the field and was minus-2 in the Pacers’ loss at Chicago.

Philadelphia F Thaddeus Young: Limited to four points on 1-for-8 field-goal shooting, had two turnovers and was minus-7 in the 76ers’ loss to Miami.  

Indiana F Tyler Hansbrough: Clanked through a 3-for-12 effort from the field and was a team-worst minus-13 in the Pacers’ loss to the Bulls.

Dallas G Jason Kidd: Went 3-for-9 from the field with five turnovers and was minus-1 in the Mavericks’ loss at Portland.

Indiana’s offense: The Pacers shot 37.9  percent from the field and converted only one 3-pointer in their loss to Chicago.

Memphis’ Battier knows AT&T Center noise

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Uncertain what to expect in the first playoff game of his career, Shane Battier discovered the difference before his first postseason game began.

“My very first memory is running out of the tunnel at ATT Center, having a wall of noise blast me and thinking, ‘So this is what they meant when they were telling us how different things are in the playoffs,’?” said Battier, who arrived with his Memphis Grizzlies on Friday to prepare for the team’s first-round playoff series against the Spurs.

That wall of noise experience was before Game 1 of the Spurs-Grizzlies first-round playoff series in 2004, when Battier was a 25-year-old with three seasons under his NBA belt. It was a brand-new experience for him and for a Grizzlies franchise that had entered the NBA in 1995 as the Vancouver Grizzlies, departing Canada in 2001 after seven seasons produced not a single playoff game.

Now Battier has 38 playoff games on his résumé, 26 of those with the Houston Rockets, the team with which he began the 2010-11 season.

Those playoff games in Houston produced 12 victories and a Game 7 against the eventual-champion Lakers in 2009 in a series that stamped Battier as one of the league’s best perimeter defenders.

A healed Manu Ginobili would give the Spurs a boost, but Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins understands Battier has had success defending him.

The Grizzlies still seek the first playoff victory in franchise history, and at age 32, with nine previous NBA seasons, Battier has become a valued veteran leader despite being reunited with his former team only in February, via trade.

In a short time he has seen enough to know that his young teammates are capable of anything, even in a seemingly daunting matchup against the West’s top-seeded team.

“To be honest, I don’t know how we’re going to react,” he said. “The moment may be too big, and we may not be ready. Or we may be young and dumb enough to think we actually have a shot in this series.

“It can go either way.”

The midseason trade was a shock to Battier’s system, but mitigated by a return to familiar surroundings. The Grizzlies made the move to Memphis not long after making Battier the sixth selection in the 2001 draft, out of Duke. He was one of the team’s most popular players before he was traded to Houston after the 2006 draft for Rudy Gay and Stromile Swift.

“I had nearly five great years in Houston,” he said. “Trades are tough enough in the summer, but it’s really difficult emotionally to get traded in middle of a playoff chase.

“I’m a person that enjoys being comfortable in my surroundings. I don’t like new things. So it took a while to adapt to a new style of play and a new, old city. The saving grace was that I’d spent five great years in Memphis and was able to reach back to some of my old cronies. That was a blessing.

“In terms of basketball, it took me a long time to get comfortable.”