Popovich unapologetic for resting aging stars

OAKLAND, Calif. — The Spurs open their second and final back-to-back-to-back of the season tonight at Golden State.

That means at some point over the next three nights, coach Gregg Popovich will likely draw the ire of basketball purists, talking heads and fantasy geeks everywhere.

Though Popovich has announced no definitive plan to rest players on the whirlwind trip to visit Golden State, the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento, 30-somethings Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Stephen Jackson — as well as soon-to-be 30-something Tony Parker — would be wise to pack a sport coat just in case.

Popovich’s penchant for sidelining perfectly healthy players in the name of rest and relaxation has taken fire from two fronts.

One is from those who argue along “integrity of the game” lines. When Popovich chose not to take any of his Big Three on the road to Utah last week, for instance, it helped the Jazz get a win vital to their pursuit of the Western Conference’s final playoff seed, artificially affecting the race.

Popovich’s counter-argument? If a team is unhappy with its playoff lot, it should have won more games.

“I think people should mostly take care of their own business and end up where they end up based on how well they play, not based on other people,” Popovich said.

Popovich harbors more sympathy for fans who plunk down their hard-earned cash to watch an NBA game, only to have a D-League contest break out.

After Popovich sat four players in Portland in February, he received a disgruntled letter from such a fan.

“I understand completely,” Popovich said. “I would feel exactly the same. If I went to watch Miami, and LeBron (James) and Dwyane (Wade) weren’t playing, I’d feel shorted.

“It’s natural human reaction and totally understandable, but I have a different priority. I have a different responsibility, and that rules for me.”

Jedi mind trick: The last time the Spurs faced a back-to-back-to-back, from March 23-25, Popovich sat Duncan, Ginobili and Parker one game apiece.

The Spurs swept the set from Dallas, New Orleans and Philadelphia anyway, becoming the fifth team to win three games in three nights this season.

Might Popovich approach this trip the same way?

“You never know what Obi-Wan’s going to do,” Jackson said. “At the end of the day, everybody’s going to have to be ready.”

Green clocks out: Starting shooting guard Danny Green did not play in the second half Saturday against Phoenix, as Popovich opted to replace him with Ginobili to start the third quarter.

Though Green has been playing much of the year with a sore left shoulder, the move had nothing to do with an injury, Popovich said.

“He’s been playing a lot,” Popovich said. “It was a good opportunity to give him a bit of a rest.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

What the Spurs, Mavs said after Friday’s game

Here’s a collection of some of the comments from both dressing rooms after the Spurs’ 104-87 victory over Dallas Friday night, courtesy of the Spurs media services representatives.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich:

(When asked what he envisioned defensively when Boris Diaw came into the game…)

“I didn’t envision anything.  I just threw him out there to get use to the team and what we’re trying to do.  He did a fine job.  I thought overall the team’s defense was pretty good.  That was probably the best part of the game.  No matter who was out there, we were pretty aggressive defensively.  We reacted as a team to each other pretty well on defense.  Dallas is such a great scoring team you have to do that if you want a chance to beat them.”

(When asked about the energy of Danny Green in the first quarter…)

“It looked like he was shot out of a rocket for the first couple of minutes.  I don’t know how he did that, but maybe I should find out and have everybody do it before next game.”

(When asked about the energy Stephen Jackson had in the third quarter…)

“He (Stephen Jackson) has an edge to him.  He’s got a toughness, a physicality, he’s a competitor.  I think our whole team had more energy then we had the last time in Dallas and that showed.”

(When asked if he thought that this game had a playoff intensity…)

“I not sure it was all the way to playoff status tonight.  Maybe where you were sitting it was louder.  They are the NBA champions, they competed and we competed as well as they did tonight and our defense did well.  It’s one game and that’s that.  The next game is the most important.  They’ll bounce back and hopefully we’ll play well again.”

Spurs guard Manu Ginobili:

(On the introduction of Boris Diaw…)

“He played well today. Besides his defensive play, he is very active. He passes the ball well. We got a very good game out of the bench. Tony Parker did a good job of running the same Spurs plays on the French National team and that helps. He knew some of the basics because that was what they ran over there. Diaw did a really good job on Dirk.

 (On the intensity of the game…)

“We are trying to be more intense. We are better this year with trying to push the ball a little bit harder. Now we are trying to play with more aggressiveness and toughness. I believe we hustled a lot. We scrambled and made a few mistakes as everybody does, but we played with more intensity. This is something we need. We know how the playoffs are and there only 14 or 15 more games left until then (actually 21).”

(On the team’s collective victory tonight…)

“It was a team victory. We did not have Tony Parker. Parker has been leading us the last 40 games. He has been amazing scoring 30 points in a lot of games. We did not have him today. Also, not having Splitter in the paint hurt us too. But we got a great game from Stephen Jackson, Boris (Diaw), and Kawhi (Leonard). Leonard made three huge plays and it was a great team effort.”

(On starting at point guard…)

“It was different. It was a new thing. If you have to do it because Tony is struggling or not feeling well than you have got to do it.”

Spurs forward Matt Bonner:

(On a collective win against the Mavericks..)

“It was a team effort on offense and defense. We put five or six guys on Dirk Nowitzki in order to try and make him work for everything he got.”

(On Dirk Nowitzki’s shooting struggles tonight…)

“Like I said before it was a team effort. We kept rotating guys on him and tried to be physical. We made him work for everything.”

(On the Spurs rebounding tonight…)

“Guys have been going in and getting offensive rebounds. Especially guys like Danny Green and Kawhi Leonard. They have been doing a great job of hustling and getting 50-50 balls for us. They have also been controlling the defensive glass.”

(On Bonner’s night of shooting…)

“I am a catch and shoot guy. I am the recipient of ball movement. Tonight we did a great job. Everybody was moving the ball and found the open man. It was a fun game to play in.”

Dallas coach Rick Carlisle:

(How do you explain you guys getting beat so badly on the boards and in the paint?)

“A lot of the damage on the boards came in the first half. We did a better job early in the third quarter and that’s what got us the lead. The lineup that they had out there tonight had a lot of big guys that were crashing from all over. Our inability to secure rebounds early in the game kept us from climbing out of a hole in the first half. Clearly, that’s what got us the lead. (Jason) Kidd got hot and made some shots. We were doing some good things in the second half. Then, the 22-2 run, that killed us. We had worked our butt off to get a five-point lead, we were in good position, and actually increased the lead with Dirk (Nowitzki) on the bench. It’s disappointing. ”

(What were they doing against Dirk defensively that made it so difficult tonight?)

“Everybody plays Dirk hard and physically. We have to work on getting him some cleaner looks. He had some that he normally makes, that he didn’t make tonight. In those cases, you have to make up for that with efficiency with the ball, being able to rebound, and not giving up second-chance points. It was a tough game. I liked a lot of what we did out there. We played hard, but the rebounding, and then the run in the third and the fourth quarter just killed us. ”

(On decision to not play Lamar Odom?)

“It’s something that I talked to Lamar about, both yesterday and today. That, I was going to look at a different rotation tonight. There were a couple scenarios. If (Manu) Ginobli had come off the bench, (Shawn) Marion would have come off the bench and match up with him. Marion is probably the defensive player of the year this year. He’s been that great on guys individually. So, we wanted him on Ginobili. The way it happened with Ginobili starting, we started Shawn. It tweaked what the original plan was but we knew that was a possibility. It was something I wanted to look at. The thing that it shows is that Lamar’s minutes are valuable to us.”

Dallas forward Shawn Marion:

 (On being beat 50-16 in the paint and being outrebounded…)

 “Rebounding was the key tonight. Our rebounding was a big part of tonight. They got every rebound and they out rebounded us. That’s the game right there. We win the rebounding game and put ourselves in great shape to win tonight.”

 (On the Spurs…)

 “With this team you have to rebound. They get their hands on a lot of balls on defense. Throughout the game the Spurs grab all the loose balls and that hurt us tonight. We took the lead in the third quarter but we exerted so much energy because we were playing so hard out there. Our legs got heavy in the fourth and we could not knock down shots and that is when things hit the wall.”

(On the team’s mindset going forward…)

“We know what to do defensively and offensively, it is just a matter of going out there and doing it. If we rebound the ball, we win the games.”

 Dallas forward Dirk Nowitzki:

 (On the Spurs outrebounding and the outscoring them in the paint…)

“They obviously did not want to lose the season series so they came out with a little more fire. I thought we came out strong even though I had a brutal night. We played well at times but we just did not close the game the way we wanted to.”

(On his play…)

“I actually felt good at the beginning of the game then during the middle of the game I just could not get the ball in the rim and a lot of my shots were just short. I just did not have enough to get the ball in tonight.”

(On the Spurs 22-2 run….)

“Just bad decisions…throwing the ball away, we turned the ball over some and they turned up the heat. One time Bonner got a defensive rebound around three of our guys and that is something that should not happen. Those are just things you cannot let happen against a great home team in the Spurs.”

(On the Mavericks’ offense…)

“Offensively we struggled tonight. The Jet (Jason Terry) got going there for a bit. Then he forced some stuff because he felt like he was the only guy that got going tonight but it just was not enough.”

Bloodied Blair happy to know he’s human

An inadvertent elbow from Pacers center Roy Hibbert caught Spurs center DeJuan Blair smack in the middle of his face during the first quarter of Saturday’s game at the ATT Center. Blair headed to the bench, bleeding profusely from the nose.

If Blair is to be believed, it was the first time he had seen his own blood.

“I didn’t know I could bleed,” he asserted after the Spurs’ Sunday practice session. “I’m glad to see I was human.”

After Blair’s injury was checked out by the team’s medical staff, he returned and played another 12 minutes, 7 seconds despite being unable to breathe through his nose.

The third-year pro suffered through a night of fitful sleep but vowed Sunday that he would be available for Tuesday’s game against the Cavaliers in Cleveland.

“I don’t know (how the nose is),” he said. “I’m breathing a lot out of my mouth. I can’t feel my nose right now. I didn’t sleep a lot last night. I just couldn’t breathe out of my nose.”

Assurance his nose was not broken relieved Blair of the prospect of having to play wearing a mask, something he insisted he would not do.

“You’re not going to catch me wearing a mask,” he said. “I don’t need one of them. I won’t wear a mask. I’m cool.”

Blair is the only player to have started all 50 Spurs games. Guard Danny Green, who has started 22 games, is the only other Spur to have played in all 50.

Healthy hammy: Starting point guard Tony Parker remains the busiest of his teammates. At 34.5 minutes per game, he is the only player on the team averaging more than 28.5 minutes.

The Spurs’ scoring leader (19.3 points per game), who strained his left hamstring in a March 21 victory over Minnesota, anticipates sitting out at least one game before the end of the regular season as coach Gregg Popovich maintains awareness of the playoffs. But Parker insists he is ready to play all 16 remaining games squeezed into 23 days.

“I’m sure Pop will (give me a day off),” Parker said. “I don’t know when. I feel OK. Obviously, it’s a lot of games, but I feel fine. I’m healed up. My hammy is feeling better.”

Dentmon released: Point guard Justin Dentmon, signed to a 10-day contract March 24, was released, leaving the Spurs with 14 players.

Dentmon appeared in games against the Hornets and 76ers, scoring four points with one assist. He is expected to return to the Austin Toros, the Spurs’ D-League franchise.

Not mad at March: The Spurs won 12 of 15 games in March, more than any team in the Western Conference. Only the Chicago Bulls, who went 13-3 in March despite playing nine games without reigning MVP Derrick Rose, had a better record for the month.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA