Game rewind: Rare fourth-quarter collapse dooms the Spurs

The Spurs struggled through a fourth-quarter collapse that they haven’t endured very often this season.

Chicago charged back from a deficit to start the fourth quarter to claim a 96-89 victory over the Spurs. It marked only the second time in 19 games the Spurs have squandered a lead starting the fourth quarter and the first time in 11 home games where they lost a game after leading at the fourth-quarter break.

The only other time this season the Spurs had frittered away a game where they led entering the fourth quarter came in a 106-103 loss at Milwaukee on Jan. 10. San Antonio led that game by two points heading into the fourth quarter.

Spurs guard Tony Parker attributed the collapse as much on Spurs mistakes as Chicago’s defense. The Bulls came into the game ranked second in the league behind Philadelphia in points allowed.

“They have a good defense, but I thought we missed a lot of good shots that we usually make,” Parker said. “I know I missed about three teardrops that I usually make and I missed some easy shots. (Spurs captain) Timmy (Duncan), too. They have a good defense, but at the same time we missed a lot of shots we usually make.”

Danny Green was receiving some treatment for an injured shoulder he said he received bumping through some stiff Chicago screens.

“It was a very physical game, a playoff-like atmosphere,” Green said. “There were two good teams competing. They made some big keys down the stretch and hit some big shots. We could have done some things better, but we can’t take anything away from them. They are a great team.”

It was only the Spurs’ second home loss of the season and snapped a modest four-game home winning streak as their longest homestand of the season continues.

There were some positives for Gregg Popovich to take away from the game, but the loss ultimately made for a bitter beginning for the second half of the season.

Here’s how the Bulls did it.

The game, simply stated:  Chicago used a typically dominant performance from Derrick Rose and some clutch shooting down the stretch to steal a rare home victory in San Antonio.

Where the game was won: After Gary Neal’s 3-pointer tied the score at 75 with 7:09 remaining, Chicago coach Tom Thibodeau inserted key players Rose, Joakim Noah and Luol Deng into the lineup. Rose responded with a layup to give the Bulls the lead for good at 77-75 and Kyle Korver hit a deep three to give them a five-point cushion.

Making it close: Neal erupted for 13 consecutive points to keep the Spurs in the game. His deep three with 2:09 left pulled San Antonio within 85-82. And another Neal hoop pulled them within 89-86, but Deng’s second 3-pointer gave Chicago a 92-86 lead with 39.6 seconds left to ice the victory.

Early success: The Spurs jumped to an immediate 9-2 lead and were ahead for the entire first quarter as the Bulls missed six of their first seven shots. But Rose emerged to score all 11 first-quarter points in the final eight minutes to pull them within two at the quarter break.

Player of the game I: Rose showed why he was the NBA’s  Most Valuable Player last season, ripping through the Spurs for 29 points and four assists.   

Player of the game II: After struggling much of the season, Neal produced a season-high 21 points in 24 minutes, including 15  points in the fourth quarter to keep the Spurs in the game.

Player of the game III:  It wasn’t the best of starts for Duncan, who missed his first five shots and eight of his first nine until early in the third quarter. But he erupted for 12 points on 6 of 7 shooting in the rest of the third quarter as he produced 18 points and 10 rebounds. And he even had three dunks.

Most unsung: C.J. Watson came off the Chicago bench to blister the Spurs for 10 points in seven-plus minutes in the second quarter, boosting the Bulls into a halftime lead.

Attendance: Not surprisingly after the strong Rodeo Road Trip, the Spurs attracted a sellout crowd of 18,581. It was their ninth sellout in 15 home games this season, including six in their last eight home games.

Did you notice I: For those watching on ESPN’s broadcast at home, analyst Jeff Van Gundy wanted no part of interviewing Gregg Popovich at the end of the third quarter. Instead, he deferred to play-by-play announcer Dan Shulman, whose absence made Van Gundy provide his own call of the first several seconds of game action when Shulman was slow to return for the start of the quarter.

Did you notice II: The Spurs picked up a rare delay of game technical foul with 5:32 left in the first quarter when game officials ruled that Neal was buzzed into the game when he was sitting and tying his shoes before entering the game. The basketball gods apparently intervened on the unusual call when Rip Hamilton missed the enusing technical foul shot.  

Did you notice III: Maybe it was my imagination, but it appeared that the Bulls had more fans in the building than most rival teams. It’s safe to say that the Bulls might have the third largest contingent of fans in San Antonio besides those of the Spurs and Los Angeles Lakers.

Stat of the game I: Chicago took advantage in their fourth-quarter comeback, hitting 66.7 percent from the field after earlier shooting 35.7 percent through three quarters.

Stat of the game II: Duncan’s 18 points and 10 rebounds gave him his seventh double-double in his last 10 games. In his first 23 games of the season, Duncan produced five double-doubles.   

Stat of the game III: The Spurs’ loss cooled off a recent surge where they had won 12 of their last 13 games before Wednesday.

Stat of the game IV: Rose continued his blistering recent pace against the Spurs. In his last four games, Rose has averaged 32.8 points per game against the Spurs. In his first three career games against San Antonio, Rose averaged 11.7 points per game.

Stat of the game V: The Spurs’ eight-point halftime deficit marked the third time in the last four home games the Spurs have trailed at the half. And the size of the margin was tied for their second-largest home halftime deficit. San Antonio trailed by 13 points at home against Houston on Feb. 1.

Weird stat of the night: Wednesday’s loss marked the first time since the Spurs have ever lost their first home game back after the Rodeo Road Trip ended. Before Wednesday, San Antonio was 8-0 in first games back after the Rodeo Road Trip.

Weird stat of the night II: Parker struggled through a rare recent offensive clunker with 11 points. It was his fewest since scoring five points at Memphis on Jan. 30 and tied for his fourth-lowest scoring effort of the season.

Not a good sign: The Spurs fourth-quarter defensive collapse was the most troubling sign. But the Spurs got to the foul line only 12 times — second-lowest total of the season. Their only previous time with fewer foul shots came Jan. 27 in a loss at Minnesota.  

Best plus/minus scores: Richard Jefferson and DeJuan Blair were plus-5, Green was plus-4 and Parker was plus-3.

Worst plus/minus scores: Matt Bonner was minus-16, Neal was minus-14 and James Anderson was minus-13.  

Quote of the game: “There were a couple of contested floaters that went in for me. Those don’t go in for me, I’m 5 for 15 instead of 9 for 15 and I’m not doing this interview,” Neal on his big scoring game that was boosted by several big shots with defenders in his face.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs’ homestand continues with games Friday against Charlotte, Sunday against Denver and March 7 against New York.  The Bulls travel to Cleveland Friday night and Philadelphia on Sunday before returning home Monday against Indiana.

Injuries: Manu Ginobili (strained left oblique muscle) missed his fourth game (Spurs 2-2) since he was injured Feb. 18 at the Los Angeles Clippers. Kawhi Leonard missed the game with tightness in his calves. Rose and Parker knocked knees midway through the first quarter but both remained in the game.

Spurs hit rocky patch despite Manu’s return

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Nuggets 99, Spurs 94: March 4, 2012


Matt Bonner guards Denver’s Al Harrington in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)


Manu Ginobili tries to maintain control of the ball in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)


Tim Duncan gets the dunk guarded by Denver’s Kenneth Faried in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)


Richard Jefferson is fouled by Denver’s Timofey Mozgov in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)


Tiago Splitter manages to maintain control and pass to Duncan after a fall guarded by Denver’s Timofey Mozgov in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)


Mnu Ginobili shoots guarded by Dnever’s Chris Andersen in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)


Tim Duncan gets the dunk guarded by Denver’s Chris Andersen in the first half Spurs vs Nuggets, Sunday, March 4, 2012. (JENNIFER WHITNEY) (special to the Express-News)

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By Jeff McDonald

Manu Ginobili paced himself through a brief pregame workout Sunday night, testing his left oblique strain one last time before a nationally televised game against Denver.

Satisfied, he finally wandered to the bench area to dribble around with his twin 2-year-old sons, Dante and Nicola.

Until that point, it was the most action Ginobili had seen inside the ATT Center in 2012.

Ginobili made his second return from injury in a 99-94 loss to the Nuggets. He hopes to make this comeback his last.

“Here we go again,” Ginobili said before his first game in the Spurs’ gym since New Year’s Eve. “I haven’t played in this arena since December. I missed it. It’s been too long.”

Ginobili, who had his brief comeback from a broken hand aborted by a strained oblique, hadn’t played anywhere since Feb. 18.

The return of the Spurs’ catalyst, playing in only his 10th game this season, wasn’t enough to lift them to victory.

Ty Lawson had 22 points and danced with a triple-double as the Nuggets rode a big first quarter to a wire-to-wire win.

After falling behind by 16 points in the first half and never leading, the Spurs had a chance to tie in the final 10 seconds, but Gary Neal’s 3-pointer hit the back of the iron.

Three games into a seven-game homestand, the Spurs (25-12) have already notched more defeats (two) than they did during the whole nine-game rodeo trip that preceded the All-Star break.

“We competed well and played together on the road,” said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, whose team is 1-2 since the break. “We’ve got to try to duplicate that at home.”

Ginobili’s return did put the Spurs at full strength for the first time since the opening tip of a Jan. 2 game in Minnesota, but only technically.

Just as Ginobili came back, Tim Duncan came down with a stomach illness. Duncan played, but had to dig deep for 14 points and nine rebounds, including four dunks.

His slam off a pass from Tony Parker with 29.3 seconds left brought the Spurs within 95-94, but Lawson buried a 19-footer on the other end to push Denver’s edge back to three.

Parker had 25 points and seven assists to lead the Spurs, who have already lost more games at home post-All Star break than before it.

The Nuggets (21-17) won despite playing without regular starters Danilo Gallinari and Nene and key reserve Kosta Koufos. Denver was further depleted in the second half, when center Timofey Mozgov collided with DeJuan Blair and had to leave the game.

The Nuggets won behind Lawson, who added 11 assists and nine rebounds. He was one of five players who scored in double figures for Denver.

Denver is 3-0 since the All-Star break, a run of success coach George Karl traces to a 114-99 loss to the Spurs leading into it.

“We played the right way with a passion and intensity, and it’s carried over,” Karl said.

For the Spurs, the most positive development Sunday involved Ginobili. He thought he could have played in Friday’s win over Charlotte but woke up that morning a little tight in the rib cage region.

“We all got a little worried,” Ginobili said. “I said, ‘No big deal. We’ve waited so long, let’s wait two more days.’?”

The Argentine star was not his sharpest Sunday but did show flashes.

Twenty-eight seconds after checking in in the first quarter, he drilled an open 3-pointer. He added another late in the third to pull the Spurs within two.

All told, Ginobili logged nearly 24 minutes and notched eight points, five assists and four rebounds. He lacked his natural explosion to the basket, twice being blocked at the rim in the first half.

All in all, however, it was a productive night for the 34-year-old. He got on the floor, and got away without hurting anything.

“I think I’m better than when I came back previously,” Ginobili said. “We’ll see.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: JMcDonald_SAEN

Spurs’ Neal looks for staying power

By Jeff McDonald

For Gary Neal, the idea is never to get too comfortable.

Though only in his second season, Neal is already an established NBA player, a fixture in Spurs coach Gregg Popovich’s playing rotation and — thanks to a spectacular buzzer-beater against Memphis in last year’s playoffs — an everlasting part of Spurs lore.

In his mind, however, Neal has never stopped feeling like an undrafted rookie still scratching to make it.

“To be honest with you, I don’t feel like I’ve arrived,” the Spurs’ reserve guard said. “I had one good season. That’s it.”

True, that one good season was like a lightning bolt out of the blue. Neal came from nowhere, or at least the Italian League, to set Spurs rookie records for 3-point percentage (41.9) and 3-pointers made (129) and averaged 9.8 points.

He earned first-team NBA All-Rookie honors, becoming the second undrafted player in league history to earn such a designation.

As if to prove Neal’s hypothesis that one good season does not a career make, the other was Jorge Garbajosa, an All-Rookie first-teamer for Toronto in 2007 who lasted one more NBA season after that.

“My goal is to retire in the NBA,” said Neal, 27. “To be able to do that, you have to be productive year in and year out.”

If Neal ever requires an added reminder of his NBA station, he need only look at his bi-weekly paycheck. He is still being paid like an undrafted rookie.

No member of the Spurs’ permanent roster earns less than the $762,195 Neal will make this season. He is set to receive a modest bump to $854,389 next season, the final year of his original three-year deal with the Spurs, but Neal will have to wait until the 2013 free agency to cash in on his NBA accomplishments.

So far this season, Neal’s quest to build on his rookie campaign has been hampered by a series of bizarre medical issues.

Four days into training camp, Neal suffered an appendix inflammation that required the removal of the organ. He missed all of the preseason and the first five games of the regular season recuperating.

Then in January, Neal needed four staples in his head after bashing it on his medicine cabinet at home.

“I was starting to think I was cursed,” Neal said.

Heading into tonight’s game against lowly Charlotte, Neal is averaging 9.7 points and shooting 39.6 percent from 3-point range, numbers down slightly from his rookie year.

Yet the arrow is trending upward. In February, Neal averaged 11.2 points and shot 43.9 percent from the beyond the arc.

Neal is coming off his best game of the season, a 21-point affair in Wednesday’s loss to Chicago in which he kept the Bulls off balance with his developing dribble-drive game.

“Some (plays) are designed for him, and some are just him making an effort,” Popovich said of Neal’s season-high scoring night. “Mostly, it was him. He was amazing.”

In an effort to avoid becoming the next Garbajosa, Neal has shunned being pigeonholed as a 3-point specialist.

Part of that is out of necessity. After his stellar rookie season, Neal is no longer sneaking up on opponents.

“The scouting report is more detailed on me,” Neal said. “Some of the 3-point shots I got last year were wide open. I really haven’t had too many wide-open 3-pointers this year.”

When T.J. Ford went down with a torn hamstring in January, Neal was temporarily forced to add “backup point guard” to his job description.

“That’s the challenge, to continue to add something every year and continue to keep yourself relevant,” Neal said. “That’s how you stay in this league.”

For Neal, staying has always been the goal.

It took so much blood, sweat, tears and time for Neal to finally make the NBA. Now that he’s here, he figures he might as well stick around.

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN