Spurs memory 6: Glory goes to Horry after ‘Big Shot Rob’ delivers again

Date: Thursday, June 19, 2005
Place: The Palace at Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Mich.
Score: San Antonio Spurs 96, Detroit Pistons 95 (OT)

Throughout his NBA career, Robert Horry always was known for his clutch shooting in playoff series.

After earlier stops with championship teams in Houston and the Los Angeles Lakers, Horry cemented his legacy with another clutch shot with the Spurs that was one of the biggest plays in the team’s history.

Horry nailed a game-winning 25-foot 3-pointer with 5.8 seconds left to catapult the Spurs to a wild 96-95 overtime victory over Detroit in Game 5 of the 2005 Finals. The triumph over the defending champions gave the Spurs a 3-2 edge in the best-of-seven series.

After failing to score until the final play of the third quarter, Horry erupted to score all 21 points in the final 17 minutes, 1 second of the game to lead the comeback victory. Horry hit 5 of 6 from beyond the 3-point arc.

“I would say that there have been a lot of guys who have played incredible in the NBA Finals,” Horry told reporters after the game. “I don’t know, my second half probably ranks probably 25th, somewhere down there.”

In the process he helped rescue Tim Duncan, who struggled in a miserable performance late in the game after a blistering start.

Duncan finished with 26 points, 19 rebounds and two blocked shots, but floundered down the stretch. He missed three shots down the stretch, including an open tip-in that could have won the game in regulation. He also clanked six foul shots and committed a costly turnover.

But Horry, who scored the game’s final five points and 15 of San Antonio’s last 20, bailed Duncan out of the goat’s role.

“That was probably the greatest performance I’ve ever been a part of,” a relieved Duncan said about Horry’s efforts after the game. “He pulled me out of an incredible hole that I put myself in.”

Detroit had pulled ahead 95-91 on Rasheed Wallace’s turnaround over Duncan with 1:41 left in overtime. But Horry answered with a soaring left-handed dunk that showed athleticism a little unusual for a 34-year-old.

“I said, ‘Please let me get there. Please let me get there,’ “Horry said with a chuckle.  

The Spurs were able to persevere to claim the first tight game of the series. The first four game all were settled by at least 15 points and the Spurs had lost by 34 points in Game 4. But Game 5 was one to be savored as neither team led by more than four points after the third quarter. 

Their defense was critical to pull out the victory with two successive stops sandwiched around an offensive rebound.

Horry’s game-winning three that was set up when Wallace inexplicably left him open to double-team Spurs guard Manu Ginobili.

It left one of the most proficient shooters in NBA history with no defender within 15 feet.

“I saw Rasheed bite and said: ‘Oh, let me stay out here,’ “Horry said.

San Antonio’s final play was designed to get the final shot for Ginobili. But Horry was so open that the Spurs didn’t hesitate to let the veteran sharpshooter take his shot.

“The play was for me to take that shot, but then I saw Rasheed coming,” said Ginobili, who finished with 15 points and nine assists. “My first option in those moments was Robert. He’s a winner. He’s been in that situation so many times. Everyone knows what he does.”

Richard Hamilton had one final shot, but his contested off-balance shot just inside the lane didn’t hit the rim. Bruce Bowen grabbed the rebound and the Spurs escaped to take advantage of the series.

Chauncey Billups led the Pistons with 34 points of the tight game. The game was tied at 42 at the half and San Antonio held a 64-63 lead going into the fourth quarter.

Duncan’s tip at the end of regulation could have ended it. But after missing that easy shot, the Spurs’ captain placed his fists against his mouth in stunned disbelief.

Horry was ready when the Spurs needed him at the end.

“I’m the type of player, I want to win a game, I don’t want to go to overtime, Horry said. “I’m always going to go for the three. I want to win a game.”

They said it, part I: “I get on myself more than anybody. I wasn’t a very good teammate in the first half. I just told myself that in order for us to win, I had to come out and play,” Horry, to reporters after his frantic finish after the slow start.

They said it, part II: “You can’t go back and say shoulda, woulda, coulda. It was caught in the corner and I just tried to double. Now we have a day and a half. We’re cool,” Wallace, explaining his defensive mistake to reporters at the end of the game.              

They said it, part III: “He was unbelievable. We had to keep him on the court as much as we could and he read the floor great. He drove it; he got to the open areas. He’s just got a great sense about him,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, to reporters about Horry’s monster finish.

They said it, part IV: “There’s nothing you can really say about him. He was unbelievable. He made all the right plays at the right times,” Billups, to the Associated Press about Horry’s big game. 

They said it, part V:  “Confidence, big character, he’s a winner. He knows what it takes. He’s always waiting for his chance. People are going to remember that three, but the dunk, a lot of important plays. He was unbelievable,” Ginobili on Horry’s heroics.

They said it, part VI: “I guess there was a miscommunication, but ultimately, it’s on me. After it was over, we still had a chance. But up two, with nine seconds to go, you talk about the things all year that you want to accomplish, and unfortunately we had a little miscommunication,” Detroit coach Larry Brown on Wallace’s late defensive bust.

They said it, part VII: “I have to get over this one. This was tough,” Brown, to reporters about rebounding from the loss.

They said it, part VIII: “I had the chance. It didn’t go down, and the overtime, we continued to play. We just knew there were a lot of possessions to be had. Guys were just impressive all around, Tony Parker, Manu continuing on the attack. And of course, Bobby,” Duncan, to the Washington Post on his disappointing finish.

They said it, part IX: “He was big, man. There’s nothing else you can really say about him. He made all the right plays,” Billups to the Detroit News about Horry.

They said it, part X: “An absolute nightmare, yes,” Duncan, describing his late finish to the Associated Press.

They said it, part XI: “This is the kind of game you hate to see anybody lose,” Brown, on the close game and the finish.

THE UPSHOT: The Pistons went back to San Antonio and ended a 10-game losing streak there with a stunning 95-86 victory to even the series in Game 6. It was their first victory in San Antonio since 1997. But it wasn’t enough as the Spurs came back to claim a 81-74 triumph in Game 7 to finish their third NBA title … Horry’s  Game 5 effort was the final 20-point game of his career and was his first in a span of 325 games.  After scoring 23 points for the Lakers against the Spurs on March 31, 2002, Horry had only one 20-point game over the final 522 games of his career. It came in Game 5 of the 2005 Finals.

Spurs memory 7: Duncan rebounds to lead Game 7 comeback to 2005 title

Date: Thursday, June 23, 2005
Place: SBC Center, San Antonio.
Score: San Antonio Spurs 81, Detroit Pistons 74 

Tim Duncan was struggling in a miserable game early in Game 7, continuing a disturbing trend that had dogged him throughout much of the 2005 NBA Finals.

With Duncan barely involved offensively, the Spurs hopes of winning the deciding game seemed to be slipping away. Detroit’s tough defense limited him to only six points and three rebounds in the first half of the deciding game.

And when the Pistons pulled away to a nine-point lead midway through the third quarter, it looked bleak for the Spurs. At that point, the Spurs captain had missed eight straight shots and 10 of his first 13 field goal attempts.

But fortunately for the Spurs, “The Big Fundamental” rebounded to spark a late comeback foiling the repeat hopes of the defending NBA champions.

With defenders Rasheed Wallace and Antonio McDyess benched with foul trouble, Duncan erupted for 17 of his 25 points in the second half to lead an 81-74 triumph to bring home the Spurs’ third NBA title.

“My teammates were more confident in me than I was,” said Duncan, who shot only 41.9 percent from the field in the series. “That is more appreciated than they will ever understand.

“I got on a roll there for a little while. It wasn’t the greatest of games, but there was a stretch when I felt really good.”

Duncan finished with 11 rebounds, three assists and two blocked shots. It helped him earn the MVP award for the third time in the NBA Finals, joining Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Shaquille O’Neal as the only players who have won the award at least three times.

“When you call plays, it always works better when he’s out there,” San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich told reporters after the game.  ”He was incredible, and he was the force that got it done.”

The Spurs overcame a 39-38 halftime deficit in what turned out to be a defensive masterpiece. San Antonio limited Detroit to 42 percent shooting and won the game down the stretch thanks to a pair of tactical defensive decisions by Popovich.

Leading Detroit scorer Chauncey Billups had made life miserable for Tony Parker most of the first six games of the series, averaging nearly 22 points per game. Popovich moved defensive ace Bruce Bowen to guard Billups in the second half of Game 7 and shifted Parker onto Richard Hamilton.

Billups was limited to five shots in the second half. Hamilton led Detroit with 15 points, but struggled through a 6-for-18 shooting night.  

Popovich also discombobulated the Pistons with the use of a zone defense in key stretches of the second half.

“Parker did a good job on (Hamilton), and Bowen did a great job on Chauncey,” Detroit coach Larry Brown said. “I thought Pop did a great job of getting us out of stuff with their defensive effort.”

The matchup between Brown and Popovich was emotional for both. Brown gave Popovich his chance to start coaching in the NBA when he named him on his original staff when he came to the Spurs in 1988. 

The two coaches dined often during the Finals, including the night before the deciding game. 

“Last night was real special for both of us,” Popovich said. “So we spent time together and talked very little about basketball, which is awkward because that’s all we ever do.

“We haven’t talked much about why we’re on the planet or what our fate might be upon death and what happens to an individual at that point. It’s always napkins and salt shakers and all of the staff that doesn’t matter.”

Robert Horry, the hero of the Spurs’ Game 5 victory earlier in the series, produced 15 points in a masterful performance off the bench. Horry hit a crucial 3-point shot early in the fourth quarter to spark an 8-2 run that gave the Spurs the lead for good.

Manu Ginobili erupted for 11 of his 23 points in the fourth quarter, including six in the final minute, as the Spurs held off one last charge by the Pistons.

Duncan came up with two critical passes out of double-teams that led to clutch fourth-quarter 3-pointers by Bowen and Ginobili that helped seal the victory.

It was the most difficult NBA Finals series for the Spurs and the only one to take seven games to finish. It was the NBA’s first seven-game series since 1994.

“We just played a great team. I don’t know how the hell we did it, but I am thrilled,” Popovich said.

They said it, part I: “He put his team on his shoulders and carried them to the championship. That’s what great players do,” Detroit center Ben Wallace on Duncan’s performance.  

They said it, part II: I felt like the game was going bad, yeah, I did feel that. But it was just about pushing through it and just the perseverance,” Duncan, on his early Game 7 struggles.        

They said it, part III: “We only go as far as Tim takes us. And today, he took us to the top,” Horry to the Express-News on Duncan’s play down the stretch.

They said it, part IV: “I know he’s going to come back and figure everything out. Timmy is always the focal point,” Popovich on his confidence in Duncan down the stretch.

They said it, part V:  ”The whole game was about perseverance, sticking to it, keeping it going. We just stuck with it. We just kept pushing. We didn’t do anything special. We believed in what we were doing and we believed that if we did it the right way, we could get it done,” Duncan on the Spurs’ comeback.  

They said it, part VI: “He was thanking me. I don’t know what he was doing. I was just telling him how proud I was of him and his team,” Brown, telling reporters about his post-game meeting with Popovich.

They said it, part VII: “We didn’t have the greatest game. We scored 81 points, which is pretty decent for us, but we didn’t have the greatest game where we ran away from anybody. But we stuck with it,” Duncan on his team’s Game 7 performance.

They said it, part VIII: “Nobody cares. Talk about Iraq or something that matters,” Popovich, to reporters when asked about his reaction to winning a third NBA title.

They said it, part IX: “I wouldn’t be standing here if it wasn’t for Larry Brown. He’s the best,” Popovich, describing his mentor during the trophy presentation.

They said it, part X: “There were two good games in a seven-game series. This was the worst finals in the history of the league,” Kansas City Star columnist Jason Whitlock, ripping the quality of play in the 2005 Finals.

THE UPSHOT: The Spurs avoided the stigma of becoming the first team to lose Games 6 and 7 at home since the league went to the 2-3-2 scheduling format in 1985. Their hopes for a repeat were foiled the following season when they were dethroned after losing in seven games to Dallas in the 2006 Western Conference semifinals. Brown left for the New York Knicks after the 2005 Finals, lasing only one year after a disappointing 23-59 season. Flip Saunders replaced him and led the Pistons to a franchise-record 64-18 record in the regular season before they lost to eventual NBA champion Miami in the Eastern Conference finals … Horry became only the second player to win championships with three NBA teams with the 2005 title.

Previous Spurs most memorable moments:

No. 8: Fisher’s 0.4 buzzer-beater .

No. 9: Parker makes history as .

No. 10: for Spurs ’79 series loss

No. 11: Duncan’s decision to remain .

No. 12: seals 1994 scoring title.   

No. 13: makes history.

No. 14: to wrap up 1978 scoring title.

No. 15: Strickland’s critical turnover .

No. 16: Spurs join NBA .

No. 17: Ice becomes the .  

No. 18: Kerr’s unexpected barrage .

No. 19: Rodman’s final Spurs incident .

No. 20:after injury-riddled 3-15 1996 start.

No. 21: Spurs for David Greenwood.

No. 22: Spurswith bubbly.

No. 23: Horry-Nash , may have sparked title run.

No. 24: Ice’s clandestine arrival .

No. 25: Barkleywith series-clinching shot.

No. 26: Silas becomes first Spur.

No. 27: Robinson makes history with .

No. 28: after crucial 1999 victory at Houston.

No. 29: on Halloween night.

No. 30: Torrid San Diego shooting

Spurs memory No. 23: Horry-Nash rumble turns 2007 West semifinal series

  Horry’s tussle with Nash helps spark Spurs 2007 semifinal series victory over Phoenix

Date: Monday May 14, 2007
Place: ATT Center, San Antonio
Score: Phoenix Suns 104, San Antonio Spurs 98 

 It was a moment that turned around a series and may have provided the opening which enabled the Spurs to claim their most recent NBA championships. 

And if you ask any Phoenix fan today –more than four years after the fact – most remain firmly convinced that Robert Horry morphed from “Big Shot Rob” to “Cheap Shot Rob” in a matter of seconds.

Phoenix had just taken control of a 104-98 Game 4 victory in San Antonio that evened the best-of-seven series at two games apiece. The Suns overcame a 10-point deficit in the final nine minutes to earn the victory and reclaim homecourt advantage in the series. Steve Nash was the instigator of the comeback with 24 points and 15 assists.

In the final seconds of the game, Horry delivered a hard body check of Nash that pushed him into the scorer’s table. Phoenix coach Mike D’Antoni initially charged at Horry before Raja Bell went after Horry.

“You got 250 going up against 150, it’s going to happen that way,” Horry explained to the Express-News.

As the rumble ensued, starting Phoenix center Amar’e Stoudemire and backup forward Boris Diaw left the team’s bench for a couple of steps as they advanced towards Horry and Bell.  

Horry was suspended with a flagrant 2 foul, leading to his suspension from the next two games because of the altercation and also because he used his forearm to shove away Bell in the resulting scrum. Stoudemire and Diaw both picked up one game suspensions from the league for leaving the bench area.

The suspensions cost Horry for two games, but the Suns lost more with Stoudemire and Diaw out of the lineup for Game 5. The league claimed the players violated a clear rule that forbids them from leaving their bench area during an altercation.

“I don’t like suspending players from games, and the commissioner doesn’t like suspending players from games, let alone a game in the middle of the second round of a playoff series,” said Stu Jackson, who, as the league’s executive vice president of basketball operations, assisted NBA commisioiner David Stern in determining the punishment.

“That’s unfortunate. But in this case, the rule is what it is.”

What they said, part I: “So I was like, ‘I’m going to just bump him a little bit. As you know the great acting skills Steve has when he hit the floor, he flopped and was, ‘Oh, I’m dying over here.’ It happens. I had no malicious intent to hurt Steve. I like Steve, and he’s a good person,” Horry, explaining the incident to the Express-News.

What they said, part II: “Sometimes in the playoffs, things get blown out of perspective, and it’s really going to be blown out of perspective because the other two players got suspended for a game. If that wouldn’t have happened, and if it wasn’t Steven Nash, it wouldn’t have been as big a deal,” Horry on the aftermath of the incident.

What they said, part III: ”Here in Arizona, we do have the most powerful microscopes and telescopes in the world. You could use those instruments and not find a shred of fairness or common sense in that decision,”  D’Antoni, trying to comprehend the suspensions on both teams.

What they said, part IV: ”As loose guidelines, you should probably punish the bad guys and bad deeds. The good guys and the no deeds — you kind of have to talk about,” D’Antoni, on the suspension of his two players.

What they said, part V: “It was just an end-of game foul and Steve fell down,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, on the rumble that sparked the incident.

What they said, part VI: “There was not going to be a fight. We  don’t have guys like that. You lump everybody together, and that’s not fair to the good guys,” D’Antoni on why he believed the NBA overreacted with the suspensions.

What they said, part VII: ”As I told you all over the past 15 or 40 years, I never liked ‘Big Shot Rob,’ so now that I go to ‘Big Cheap Shot Rob,’ it doesn’t bother me; I was already hated here,” Horry, on his image change in Phoenix after the suspension.

What they said, part  VIII: ”I was going to try to take a charge, and then it was, ‘Oh, he’s too fast, so let me bump him a little bit.’ As you know, the great acting skills Steve has, he hits the floor, gets the flop, and it’s, ‘Oh, I’m dying over here.’ I wasn’t trying to hurt him.” Horry on Nash’s reaction after the foul.

What they said, part IX: ”We went from soft to meaner than hell real quick,” Popovich on the Spurs’ national reputation transformation after the Horry incident.

What they said, part X: “As I sat in the lobby thinking to myself why would somebody make a bomb threat, along walks (TNT’s) Craig Sager, and the light went off,” Spurs guard Brent Barry explaining to the Express-News his rationale why a bomb threat was made at his team’s hotel.

What they said, part XI: “Everybody has to make their own decisions. But we have a good group of guys who are playing a very physical series, and what happens is what happens. Horry has never been known as a dirty player his whole career. It was just a unique set of circumstances,” Spurs majority owner Peter Holt, explaining the Horry-Nash altercation.

What they said, part XII: ”I know you have to roll with the punches literally a lot of the time. I felt like that was uncalled for. It’s hard to always take the high road,” Nash, to the Associated Press about the incident with Horry.

The upshot: Before Game 5, Horry was vilified outside America West Arena, where vendors hawked “DIRTY HORRY — Do You Feel Lucky, Punk?” T-shirts …  After Stern made his determination of the suspensions to Stoudemire and Diaw, he decided not to attend Game 6 in Phoenix.  On the night before Game 5, irate Phoenix fans called in a bomb threat to the Spurs’ team hotel, leading to a sweep of the building. But it didn’t matter to them. The Spurs took advantage of the absences of Stoudemire and Diaw to come back from a 16-point deficit to claim a gritty 88-85 victory over Phoenix in Game 5, winning the game on Bowen’s clutch 3-pointer with 36.4 seconds left in the game. Stoudemire and Diaw were back in the lineup for Game 6, but the Spurs claimed a 114-106 victory to wrap up the series – the Spurs’ most difficult in the 2007 playoffs. San Antonio then beat Utah in five games for the Western Conference title and swept Cleveland in four games to win their fourth NBA championship in a nine-season span.  D’Antoini’s whining caught up with him. His team was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs in the following season by the Spurs and was released after that season. He’s never won a playoff series since the Horry-Nash incident.

Previous Spurs most memorable moments:

No. 24: Ice’s clandestine arrival .

No. 25: Barkleywith series-clinching shot.

No. 26: Silas becomes first Spur.

No. 27: Robinson makes history with .

No. 28: after crucial 1999 victory at Houston.

No. 29: on Halloween night.

No. 30: Torrid San Diego shooting