Q&A: What does Pop do now?

By Jeff McDonald and Mike Monroe
jmcdonald@express-news.net

It has been two weeks since the Spurs were bounced from the playoffs by the eighth-seeded Memphis Grizzlies. That has given coach Gregg Popovich, in between haunting the bookstores and restaurants of New York City, sufficient time to ponder what went right in 2010-11, what went wrong, and how the Spurs should proceed. In an exclusive sit-down Thursday with E-N staff writers Jeff McDonald and Mike Monroe, Popovich shared some of those thoughts:

Q: Your team won 61 games, earning the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference, then lost in the first round of the playoffs. What’s the takeaway from that?

A: The most hurtful part, the toughest part to get over, is to have played so well all year, and for everybody to have their minutes watched and with all the care the staff had, and then to have Timmy (Duncan) lose his rhythm those eight or nine games at the end of the season (after spraining his ankle). And then to have Manu (Ginobili) go out the last game (with a sprained elbow).

It’s just a crushing “poor me” sort of feeling. You say, “My God, how can this happen?” Because no matter how you slice it, if Manu ain’t healthy historically we go nowhere.

That’s the part that is most disappointing. It’s that fate got us, in that degree.

Q: What exactly is your assessment of what went wrong against the Grizzlies?

A: I asked my team one day, after the third or fourth game, I said, “Guys,” — my big mantra was — “it’s the playoffs. Give me the name of someone on Memphis who is playing poorly. Give me a name.” They stared at me. There’s no name to give. Starters and bench guys all played fantastic.?

Then I said, “Let’s be honest with each other. Name me someone on our team who is really playing well. You can’t name one person. You can’t do it.”

Richard (Jefferson) played well the first two games, then he was MIA. Tony (Parker) was absent the first three or four games, MIA. Then he played well the last two. Manu was Manu, Timmy was Timmy. They’ve got their reasons why they were just average. Then off the bench, you’ve got two or three other players that don’t show up.

The thing that’s frustrating about that is, we were in position to win every single game at the end of the game, in the fourth quarter.

Q: Based on that reading of the series, is there anything you’d do differently?

A: I feel good about that assessment. I wouldn’t change the game plan a lick. There’s nothing we’d do differently. It’s the playoffs. Players have to step up and play.

Q: Duncan just turned 35 and is entering the final year of his contract. How confident are you that he will be in a Spurs uniform when games begin next season?

A: Timmy’s given me no indication he’s considering retiring, or anything like that, if that’s what you’re asking.

Q: Duncan does have an early termination clause in his contract that would allow him to opt out this summer and restructure his deal. Have you talked about that possibility?

A: I did mention to him, as an aside more than anything because I’m not prepared, either, but I said, “Hey, we’ve got to talk about your contract. Are you going to play? Are you going to opt out? Are you going to play nine more years? What?”

He said, “Yeah, my agent is talking to me about that,” and I said we had to get together to talk about it. That’s as far as it’s gone.

Q: Will you meet with him before June 30, given the uncertainty of the collective bargaining agreement that expires on that date?

A: I’m going to talk to Timmy as soon as (general manager) R.C. (Buford) prepares me and Tim is willing. Then we’ll talk about it.

Q: For the second season in a row, your team finished out of the top 10 in field-goal percentage defense, one of your pet categories, ranking 12th in the NBA. How much of the offseason will be devoted to regaining your defensive identity?

A: If you ask me what our goals are, I start out the same way I have the last 10, 15 years: “We want to be the best team we can possibly be, playing the best basketball we possibly can come playoff time and be healthy.” I’ve never given any other goal except that.

For the first time, there is going to be a second goal, and that’s to do everything humanly possible to become a more elite defensive team. For a couple reasons: One, historically, good defensive teams go the farthest in the playoffs, as can be proven in a million different ways.

Secondly, for personal reasons I felt very uneasy all year long with our spotty defense that could not be consistently relied upon in fourth quarters. It drove me crazy. I think I just need to do whatever I need to do — personnel-wise, or drill-wise or demand-wise — to go from the middle of the pack back to four, five, six, seven, somewhere in there.

We can’t be one, two, three anymore. We don’t have that youth, that juice to do that. But I think we can be four, five, six, seven, instead of 12, 13, 14, 15.

Q: As with the Celtics and Lakers, much of the media’s reaction to your team’s early exit has been to say that the Spurs are too old to compete at the highest level anymore. Is that a fair critique?

A: They’ve been telling us we’re too old for six years or longer. It’s always intrigued me, because who’s old? Timmy’s older. ’Dyess (Antonio McDyess) is older. But that’s not the reason we lost the series. Timmy’s not Timmy, like he used to be. But that’s not why we lost the series. We didn’t lose it because ’Dyess is old. Tony’s not old, Manu’s not old, Richard’s not old. George Hill’s not old, Matt Bonner’s not old. It’s overstated.

I don’t care about the age, the “athletic” thing. I care about performance. That team won 61 games. I contend if Manu was healthy, we’d still be playing. I don’t have any doubt we’d still be playing.

Q: You keep coming back to Ginobili’s elbow.

A: We have less margin for error of any team in the league. Something like that happens to Manu, we’re sunk. All our pieces have to play well, because we don’t have a margin for error.

We’re playing under the (salary) cap. We don’t have 90 million frickin’ dollars. We’re playing with minimum (salary) people off the bench. If somebody gets hurt, Danny Green’s going to play, that kind of thing.

Q: As far as improving the roster, what are your offseason priorities? Younger and more athletic?

A: I feel good about this group, knowing full well if there’s a trade that makes us younger and more athletic, fine, but a lot of athletes can’t play basketball. Young and athletic has to come with some sort of a skill. Young and athletic is easy. I can go get five from the D-League who are young and athletic.

We’d like to find another skilled athlete to add to the mix. Our biggest need right now — depending on what ’Dyess does (with retirement) — is a starting four (power forward). We need to know who is going to be our starting four. Is it DeJuan Blair? Is it (Tiago) Splitter, where Timmy’s the four and Splitter’s the five? Is it Matt Bonner? Do you need to make a trade? We’re investigating all those areas.

Q: If you do talk trades, are there any players you’d consider untouchable?

A: Yeah, there are several untouchables, but I won’t name them.

Q: When it comes to the degree to which you seek to tweak the roster, do you view ultimately this as a team that won 61 games, or a team that lost in the first round of the playoffs?

A: We’re either good enough to continue to contend, or we’re not. But I don’t see us being less of a team next year as this year, even if it stays exactly the same. So long as we’re healthy.

What the Spurs and Kings said after Wednesday’s game

Here, courtesy of the quick transcribers in the Spurs’ media services office, is a sampling of the post-game comments from the Spurs and Kings after San Antonio’s 124-92 victory Wednesday night at the ATT Center.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich

(On positive feedback to DeJuan (Blair) after diving for a loose ball and starting a fast break)

“Coaches love that sort of thing.  That kind of effort is above and beyond.  You have someone like that trying to get minutes and be on the floor and show you what you can do, that he can play the complete game.  That is impressive to any coach, so I was really happy for him that he did that.  It fires up the team, giving the team confidence in him.  So it is a win win for everybody.”

(On offense in second half, especially in the third quarter)

“I don’t really have any idea.  I didn’t really watch the offense too much.  We have been concentrating on the defense.  That is where we really need to improve the most.  Last night and tonight we played very good defense, and it fueled the offense that you saw.  That is where it all starts for us.  I thought we had great focus tonight after a back to back, where one might think we are the tired team.”

Spurs guard Manu Ginobili

(On how the team feels now with their magic number being one)

“Of course it’s better because we know we have a big chance on Saturday against the Jazz.  We were a little worried.  We knew it wasn’t the end of the world to finish second, but at the same time after the kind of season we had, we wanted it.  We got a great opportunity, it’s not over yet, and we definitely want to get the next one.”

(On what the three-game winning streak has done for the team’s confidence)

“We knew we were not going to lose every single game for the remainder of the season.  We had a few good games that we just couldn’t win, so it wasn’t that we were just playing terrible.  We had a better schedule in the last three games.  We had a pretty important game in Atlanta that we won and that kind of got us going and then we got lucky that the Lakers lost against the Jazz and that gave us an extra game to be able to close it next game.”

(On the offensive surge in the third quarter)

“We played much better.  We pushed the ball a little bit more and defensively I think we were pretty good in the first half too.  But the key was to move the ball, attack quick, we made a few shots, so we had the whole package in the third quarter.”

(On if the defense fueled the offense)

“Sometimes I think it’s both ways.  Sometimes defense fuels offense and sometimes when you make three threes in a row, everybody’s pumped up and the defense is more aggressive, more energetic.  So it goes both ways sometimes.”

Spurs guard George Hill

(On what was the difference in the third quarter)

“Just getting set.  I knew we needed a little bit of fire power coming off the bench, a little aggressiveness, so I just tried to come in and give a spark.  I think it kind of helped and at the same time, it got other people going too.”

(On the perimeter game tonight)

“Just taking open shots.  I think we had a lot of great looks and they fell.  Each game is not going to be the same looks but fortunately that was the game plan Sacramento went to and it opened up a whole bunch of corner threes and things like that.”

(On what Coach Pop said at halftime)

“He said we’re playing pretty good defense with the lack of giving up a couple offensive rebounds, but at the same time he wants to push the tempo since we know that they score a lot.  Our thing was if we can get the most second chance points and get the rebound and push it, it’ll open the game up and that’s what happened.”

Kings coach Paul Westphal

(Thoughts on the game)

“My overall assessment is that the Spurs are very, very good. We hung with them real well in the first half, not turning the ball over too much or shooting the ball very well. I thought our defense was good in the first half, except for our transition defense. When they got out and ran, we didn’t have too much defense for that, and in the second half, our defense wasn’t very good, our offense wasn’t efficient, and they hit every shot. They just blew us out in the third quarter.”

(On what to say to the players)

“Move on to the next game. It didn’t go our way tonight, we got beat by a great team, did some good things, learned from the bad things, get your rest, and we’ve got another game to finish this trip 2-1.”

(On the positives that come from this loss)

“There’s lot’s of positives. We played a very good first half. We showed that we can defend, we got good shots, didn’t always make them, but that’s basketball. In the third quarter, the roof fell in, but that doesn’t mean everything was bad.”

(On how to bounce back)

“We don’t lose our confidence because we just lost to the best team in the league. We did some good things, caused things to go the other way. Whatever team makes 12 out of 19 threes and gets to the line as much as they do, it’s not necessarily going to be a good result.”

Kings guard Tyreke Evans

(On the third quarter)

“We didn’t make shots. They did and they got a lot of points off the fast break and that’s what killed us.”

 (On why the Spurs are so dangerous)

“They make shots and they run their offense. They just play together; they’re a veteran team. They finish those quarters out.”

(On how the Spurs create so many open shots)

“They cut hard and swing the ball side to side. They set picks and make the defense move side to side. It’s hard. One time down the court we played great defense and they still hit a floater. It was good defense but they just move the ball so much.”

(On what they could have done differently defensively in the third quarter)

“I think we were playing pretty hard. They were out there moving the ball side to side and running the pick-and-rolls. They were making us help on defense and then they were finding the open guys and making their shots.”

(On Tony’s role in the offense)

“Tony Parker; it starts with him. Once he gets out in the open and gets a couple layups, that get’s them going. They start running because they know when he’s running he’s going to get a layup and get them the ball for an open look.”

Kings center Samuel Dalembert

(On the third quarter)

“In the first half everything was working. That’s how the game goes though. This game has ups and downs. The Spurs weren’t missing anything. They were hitting everything. They pulled away from us. Starting in the third quarter and going all the way to the fourth quarter they just kept pulling away and hitting their shots. We tried everything we could; we fought, but we just couldn’t get back in the game.”

(On the Spurs’ shooting tonight)

“What we’re taught is to run great 3-point shooters off the line. We were doing that and they were just ripping through and doing a one-dribble pull-up and knocking down their jump shots. Sometimes you just have to go in and give them a hard foul to try and get those guys out of their rhythm. But tonight the whole team was in rhythm; everybody was making shots.”

(On what they can take away from a game like this)

“I really wouldn’t say you can take anything away from this game because we lost. We just have to come back more mentally prepared from the beginning to the end of the game. We just have to keep playing and growing as a team. Hopefully things will work out in the end.”

Blake will miss tonight’s game with the chicken pox

Backup Los Angeles Lakers point guard Steve Blake will miss tonight’s game against the Spurs — and potentially several more — after he contracted chicken pox.

Blake’s wife Kristen and also said that he didn’t get the infection from his three young sons. 

“And before anyone asks NO my kids didn’t give it to him,” Blake’s wife tweeted. “They were vaccinated and are healthy. No clue where or how Steve got chicken pox. 

“I’ll have him healthy and back in no time. Good luck tonight to the rest of the guys.”

Blake has struggled from the field this season, hitting 35.9 percent. But converted three 3-pointers against Oklahoma City on Sunday.

Also, he’s a better defensive player than Derek Fisher and likely would have matched up often with Tony Parker in Tuesday’s game. It will mean that Shannon Brown will get more playing time and could mean that Kobe Bryant could get some time running the point.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Lakers backup forward Matt Barnes and his availability will be a game-time decision. Barnes had surgery on the same knee three months ago to repair torn cartilage. The injury flared up again Monday, causing him to miss practice.

The Lakers come into the game with a five-game losing streak — longest in the Pau Gasol area. Coach Phil Jackson will be challenged to beat the Spurs with a limited rotation missing those two players.