Game analysis: Wasn’t this homestand supposed to be much easier?

After matching the NBA’s winningest nine-game road trip in league history, the Spurs were expected to catch a breather when they returned home from the Rodeo Road Trip.

Manu Ginobili and T.J. Ford were coming back from lengthy stints on the injured list. The ATT Center was supposed to be the same formidable homecourt that saw the Spurs win 13 of their first 14 home games before the road trip.

But injury-plagued Denver’s surprising 99-94 victory over the Spurs Sunday night might inject some concern in Spurs Nation after San Antonio has started the second half of the season with two home losses sandwiched around a victory over lowly Charlotte.

For whatever reason, the Spurs never seemed in synch during Sunday’s loss. As they struggled to match Denver’s speed and athleticism, it looked like they had spent all afternoon in preparation for the game sitting around the fajita pit enjoying the sunshine rather than preparing for the late-starting game.

“They brought a lot of injury and we didn’t match it,” Spurs guard Tony Parker said. “We started the game very flat. I do not know why, but it was just one of those games.”

Gregg Popovich was more descriptive when he described how Denver was able to beat his team.

“I thought they did a great job of attacking the rim, being aggressive with the basketball and we responded to it in fits and spurts here and there,” Popovich said. “They were much more consistent with their aggressiveness than we were.”

It was the major reason the Spurs dropped their third home game of the season Sunday night.

The game, simply stated:  Despite missing four key players and losing another one during the game, Denver jumped on the Spurs early and dictated the tempo in a game where they never trailed.

Where the game was won: Denver hit four of its first six shots to claim an early 11-2 lead to put San Antonio on its heels from the start of the game. It also didn’t help the Spurs’ cause when DeJuan Blair, who torched the Nuggets for 28 points in the Spurs’ Feb. 23 victory in Denver, sustained a knee injury 17 seconds into the game that hampered him during the rest of the game.   

The clincher: After Tim Duncan’s dunk pulled the Spurs within 95-94 with 29.9 seconds left, Ty Lawson drained a 19-footer on the ensuing possession to give the Nuggets a 97-94 lead.

Almost don’t count at the end of games: Gary Neal had a chance to tie the score, but his 3-pointer with 6.9 seconds glanced off. Lawson grabbed the rebound and hit two free throws  to ice the victory.

Player of the game I: Lawson was masterful running the point, missing his first career triple-double by only a rebound as he blistered the Spurs for 22 points, nine rebounds, 11 assists and only one turnover.

Player of the game II: Rookie Kenneth Faried dazzled the Spurs with his athleticism all night, providing 11 points, five rebounds and two blocked shots and a presence that made ventured into the paint an adventure for them all night.

Player of the game III:  Parker didn’t miss a shot in the second half as he notched a game-high 25 points and a team-high seven assists as the Spurs’ most consistent offensive threat.

Most unsung:  The Spurs had a lot of difficulty getting anything going offensively most  of the game. Kawhi Leonard was effective getting to the basket picking up 13 points (including 8 of 9 from the foul line) and six rebounds in 22:32, and he was also a pest defensively.  

Attendance: Even the late tipoff mandated by ESPN couldn’t keep another sellout crowd of 18,581 at the ATT Center. It was the Spurs 11th sellout in 17 home games this season, including eight of their last 10 games and fourth in a row.

Did you notice I: Despite playing with what were called flu-like symptoms, Duncan was spry when he was playing. His most notable play came when he abused Chris Andersen on a dunk late in the second quarter, smacking him in the fact for good measure en route to the basket. It was a played that prompted an apology from Duncan to Anderson at the next timeout. 

Did you notice II: Maybe Popovich was concerned about throwing a still-recovering Ford against Lawson. Ford was the last of the 12 Spurs to enter the game when he checked in with 2:45 left in the third quarter.  And as soon as Lawson hit a 3-pointer on one of the first  times he was matched against him with 9:00 left in the game,  Popovich pulled Ford for the rest of the game.

Stat of the game I: Despite missing three starters and their backup center Denver never trailed and were tied with the Spurs only once in their victory.  It marked only the second time this season the Spurs never led in a game, joining their loss at Houston on Dec. 29 in the third game of the season.

Stat of the game II: At one point late in the first half, the Nuggets had a 15-0 edge in transition points and finished the game with a 24-8 advantage. It marked the second-most transition points the Spurs have yielded this season, topped only by the 28 the Nuggets scored on Jan. 7.

Stat of the game III: After winning 12 of their last 13 games before the All-Star break, the Spurs have lost two of three games after it.

Stat of the game IV: A game after notching a season-high 55 rebounds against Charlotte, the Spurs found much tougher sledding against the Nuggets. Denver grabbed 20 of their first 29 rebounds and held a 49-40 edge on the boards.

Stat of the game V: The Spurs limited Denver to 39.1 percent field goal shooting in the third quarter and 36.4 percent in the fourth quarter. It marked the fifth time this season the Spurs have limited opponents below 40 percent in both the  third and fourth quarters and first since a Jan. 18 overtime victory at Orlando. That game also was notable as the Spurs’ first road victory after five road losses to start the season.

Stat of the game VI: Denver guard Andre Miller started the game hitting four of his first five shots before missing 12 of his last 13. Miller was 1 of 10 from the field in the fourth quarter.

Weird stat of the night: Parker scored a game-high 25 points, although his first points in the game didn’t come until 7:14 was left in the first half. Parker missed his first four shots and six of his first seven before hitting his final nine field goal attempts of the game.

Weird stat of the night II: At halftime, the Denver starters outrebounded the Spurs starters, 16-3. But in the second half, starters’ rebounds were tied at 13-13.

Weird stat of the game III: Leonard has gone 14 of 15 from the foul line over the last two games (93.3 percent.) During the rest of the season, he was 27 of 41 from the line (65.9 percent).

 Weird stat of the night IV: Ginobili’s game was the first time he has played in a game at the ATT Center since Dec. 31 against Utah.

Not a good sign: The Spurs shot 37 percent from 3-point territory by hitting 10 of 27 from beyond the arc. It snapped a streak of eight games where the Spurs have hit at least 40 percent from beyond the arc. 

Best plus/minus scores: Tiago Splitter was plus-14, Ginobili was plus-6 and Leonard was plus-5.

Worst plus/minus scores: Duncan was minus-17, Richard Jefferson was minus-11 and Danny Green was minus-10.

Quote of the game: “I told the team after the game that I hate to break the news, but we can play better. I don’t know if we can play harder, but we can play better,” Denver coach George Karl on his team’s gutsy effort in their victory.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs’ homestand continues with games Wednesday against New York, Friday  against the Los Angeles Clippers and March 12 against Washington. The Nuggets will have three home games coming up beginning Monday against Sacramento, Wednesday against Cleveland, and Friday against New Orleans.

Injuries: The Spurs were at full strength without injuries for the first time since the Jan. 2 game at Minnesota — the game where Ginobili broke his left hand. Denver played without starting forward Danilo Gallinari (left ankle sprain), starting center Nene (left calf strain), backup guard Rudy Fernandez (lower back sprain) and backup center Kosta Koufos (tendinitis). And the Nuggets lost Sunday’s starting center Timofey Mozgov when he resprained his left ankle in the third quarter.

Sunday: Nuggets (20-17) at Spurs (25-11)

Time: 8:30 p.m.
TV: FSNSW, ESPN
Radio: WOAI-AM 1200, KCOR-AM 1350

STARTING LINEUPS

Point guard
Spurs: 9 Tony Parker (6-2, 11th yr)
Nuggets: 3 Ty Lawson (5-11, 3rd yr)
In two games since All-Star break, Lawson has 40 points, 24 assists.

Shooting guard
Spurs: 4 Danny Green (6-6, 3rd yr)
Nuggets: 6 Arron Afflalo (6-5, 5th yr)
Rout vs. Charlotte let Green rest ailing shoulder, playing just 17 minutes.

Small forward
Spurs: 24 Richard Jefferson (6-7, 11th yr)
Nuggets: 13 Corey Brewer (6-9, 5th yr)
Jefferson had 14 points vs. Bobcats, but Pop impressed with defense.

Power forward
Spurs: 21 Tim Duncan (6-11, 15th yr)
Nuggets: 35 Kenneth Faried (6-8, 1st yr)
Duncan shooting just 14 of 38 since All-Star break, averaging 16 points.

Center

Spurs: 45 DeJuan Blair (6-7, 3rd yr)
Nuggets: 25 Timofey Mozgov (7-1, 2nd yr)
Mozgov’s ankle sprain could force reshuffling of depleted frontline.

SPURS RESERVES
25 James Anderson, G, 6-6, 2nd yr
15 Matt Bonner, C/F, 6-10, 8th yr
20 Manu Ginobili, G, 6-6, 10th yr
11 T.J. Ford, G, 6-0, 8th yr
2 Kawhi Leonard, F, 6-7, 1st yr
14 Gary Neal, G, 6-4, 2nd yr
22 Tiago Splitter, C, 6-11, 2nd yr

NUGGETS RESERVES
11 Chris Andersen, F/C, 6-10, 10th yr
5 Rudy Fernandez, G/F, 6-6, 4th yr
1 Jordan Hamilton, G/F, 6-7, 1st yr
7 Al Harrington, F, 6-9, 14th yr
41 Kosta Koufos, C, 7-0, 4th yr
24 Andre Miller, G, 6-2, 13th yr
10 Julyan Stone, G, 6-6, 1st yr

COACHES
Spurs: Gregg Popovich
Nuggets: George Karl

INJURIES
Spurs: Ginobili (strained oblique) is a game-time decision.
Nuggets: Fernandez (lower back strain), Danilo Gallinari (left ankle sprain), Nene (left calf strain) are questionable. Mozgov (re-sprained left ankle) is a game-time decision.

PROJECTED INACTIVE PLAYERS
Spurs: Ginobili, Leonard
Nuggets: Gallinari, Nene

NOTABLE
Having already beaten Denver twice this season, Spurs looking for first season sweep of Nuggets since 2001-02. Spurs have won seven of past eight against Denver. … Nuggets are 5-7 since leading scorer Gallinari went out Feb. 6. … Denver ranks as NBA’s top scoring team at 103.8 points per game. Spurs are allowing just 88.3 points per game at home. … Blair tied his career scoring high of 28 points against the Nuggets in the Spurs’ 114-99 victory in Denver on Feb. 23. … Jefferson ranks seventh in NBA in 3-point shooting (76 of 168 for 45.2 percent). … Spurs are 12-1 against the Western Conference at home. … Rookie guard Cory Joseph was assigned to the Austin Toros of the Development League.

– Jeff McDonald

What the Spurs and Bobcats said after Friday’s game

The media services people for the Spurs were ready after the Spurs’ 102-72 victory over Charlotte Friday night.

Here’s a sampling of what was said in both locker rooms after the game.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich

(Opening Question – Charlotte made you work for it tonight, didn’t they?)

“Yeah. They don’t have a great record obviously, but Coach Silas isn’t going to let them just walk out there and do nothing. They were aggressive. They went after it and did everything they could. We got hot there in the second half and had a good run and that was the game. But, they busted their butts all night long and worked very hard.”

(Is this a good opportunity to get Tiago, T.J. and Kawhi back in sync?)

“We didn’t want to play them too many minutes, but since we made some shots tonight we had some chances to get them out there. T.J. got some time and Kawhi and Danny with his shoulder and so on and so forth. So that was good to give them a little introduction back into the flow of things.”

(You had a lot of assists and made a lot of shots…)

“We’ve got a very unselfish group. They know that if the ball moves we’re a much better basketball team. We’re the kind of team that’s not like ‘give the ball to this guy and he’s going to score.’ We’re not built that way. We have to win as a group and they know that, so they move the ball well.”

(Do you like what you got out of Richard Jefferson tonight? Not just the points, but he had seven rebounds.)

“I loved the points out of Richard. That’s what Richard does best. I love when he catches and shoots and does what he does. I thought he was real aggressive defensively tonight. I thought he had a darn good defensive game. Corey’s (Maggette) a tough nut. He likes to drive, he’s real physical and that kind of thing. I thought Richard had one of his better games in that regard too.”

Spurs forward Richard Jefferson:

(Was tonight’s game really more about the Spurs?)

“Coach (Popovich) said a good thing right after we played Chicago, which is that Chicago was able to get one game in before they came to us. So you get the post-All Star break butterflies out. Tonight we came in, we were still a little rusty early on, but we were able to settle down and get it done.”

(Feelings on 3-point shooting tonight?)

“I have been trying to catch and shoot more the last few games. I was a little frustrated that Chicago game because I got into foul trouble early. But, Denver I felt like I had some good looks and at Utah I had some good looks late. So, the last few games I have been trying to be more consistent with just catching it and shooting it.”

(On the Spurs’ passing)

“Pop will lose his mind if you throw a bad pass to a shooter. Sometimes you have to do what you can with the defense. Especially, if you have the ability to give it to a shooter with his feet set and right in his pocket. That’s something we practice everyday.”

Spurs guard T.J. Ford:

(On the team’s growth?)

“Just trying to build that confidence as quick as possible. It felt good to kind of know the game was out of reach, but still getting back in the form of running the show out there. You just have to make sure you’re still doing the right things.”

(On Spurs still rebuilding chemistry?)

“We haven’t had practice time for people to build chemistry. So, we’re still learning on the fly. We have guys who have a certain kind of rhythm and know when they are going to touch the ball. Some guys like Gary (Neal), had the ball in his hands a lot more, so we’re all making adjustments. We just have to continue to progress.”

(How did you feel tonight?)

“I felt good, I felt better. Still have a ways to go to get totally in game shape, but I think it was a good job and I had a better performance today.”

Charlotte coach Paul Silas:

(When asked how do you combat the 3-point shooting of the Spurs?)

“It’s tough. They penetrate and we have to help, then they kick out. It always seems that they always make a lot against us. I’ve haven’t seem them make as many threes against other teams then they make against us. Then when you’re leading by as many points as they were there’s not a lot of pressure on you. Then you can always make more shots. If there’s pressure on you then you’re not going to make as many.”

(When asked about the Bobcats forcing 11 turnovers in the first half… )

“Yeah, we did and I thought we played very well. We just couldn’t make shots in the first half. We rebounded and we defended. They turned the ball over and what not. I thought when Eduardo Najera came in he really helped us a lot by knowing how to play basketball. But in the second half it went back to the way that it’s been. We just didn’t play well.”

(When asked not having Bismack Biyombo makes things challenging…)

“It does. Here again we need everybody here. Still you have to rely on the guys that are here. As long as they are playing really hard and giving it to you, then I don’t have a problem with it. We just didn’t seem to have it in the second half.”

Charlotte forward Corey Maggette:

(What happened after the first quarter…)

“We just did not shoot the ball well and that starts with myself. We have to be a better shooting team. The Spurs are one of the best shooting teams in the league, so it’s hard to beat them when we are not hitting shots. ”

(What was the difference?)

“I thought we played well in the first half, then we had turnovers in the second half. Their second group came in and demolished us and that’s the game. It just went downhill from there.”

(On team rebounding…)

“I think it all starts with myself, I have to be more aggressive and help our big men out. With a few of our big guys out, it hurts us a lot. Aggressively, everyone has to rebound. If one guy doesn’t go to the boards, it’s going to hurt us but we have to get better as a team.”

Charlotte forward Boris Diaw:

(Started out great, then what happened?)

“We did pretty well, but the Spurs also didn’t start off to good either. They were missing shots and we were in a rhythm. We played good defense and we moved the ball pretty well, then the Spurs put more intensity on the defensive side. They played good defense and it was tough for us to find easy shots.”

(What did the Spurs do differently in second half?)

“They adapted to what we were doing defensively and they found our gaps on defense to get better shots. They also ran better plays. Defensively, we just did not play as good in the second half.”

(On the play of his good friend Tony Parker…)

“It’s great for him. The thing with Tony is that he is always getting better. It surprises everybody else but this is the best he has been playing, so it shouldn’t be surprising anymore. He is doing great and I’m happy for him. He has become the focus of his team.”