Last-second three gives Spurs a pulse

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

The Spurs exited a timeout huddle late in the fourth quarter Wednesday, behind by three points and 1.7 seconds away from an early vacation, facing a thought that could have been unsettling if they let it be.

The game, the series, and their season had been placed in the hands of an undrafted rookie.

Gary Neal drained a tough 3-pointer from the top of the arc to force overtime, where Tony Parker took over to lift the Spurs to a 110-103 victory in Game 5 that sent their first-round round series with Memphis back to the banks of the Mississippi.

“I once hit a buzzer-beater to win a state championship in high school,” Neal said. “This feels a little bigger.”

The win brought the Spurs within 3-2 en route to Memphis for Game 6 on Friday, not enough to make them feel free and easy, but enough to make the series interesting again.

The Spurs needed a ceaseless string of miracles to get it.

Before Neal hit his new most-memorable buzzer-beater, Manu Ginobili — who finished with 33 points — nearly re-enacted Sean Elliott’s Memorial Day Miracle in the right corner. Except Ginobili’s toe was on the 3-point line, and the shot left the Spurs down by one.

After Neal sent the game to overtime came the biggest miracle of all — Parker found his mothballed jump shot, knocking down three to start the extra frame and point the Spurs toward victory. Parker finished with 24 points and nine assists, his best performance in what has been a frustrating series for him.

“When you are facing elimination,” Ginobili said, “you always seem to get something out of nowhere.”

In this case, the season’s biggest shot was by a player who came out of nowhere.

After TV replay ruled Ginobili’s circus shot a 2-pointer, erasing the three that would have tied the game, Zach Randolph made a pair of free throws to put the Grizzlies up by three.

Memphis, an eighth seed, was a short commercial break from pulling off one of the NBA’s greatest first-round upsets.

“We were very close to being on vacation time,” Ginobili said.

Then, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich took his dry-erase board and assembled a set of Xs and Os. The play was designed for a 26-year-old rookie, passed over by every other NBA team, who had made his bones in the hardscrabble pro leagues of Italy, Turkey and Spain.

A rookie who had played just 10 minutes to that point, and had made just one field goal.

The decision to place the season in Neal’s hands did not faze Ginobili, so long as he forgot the first time he’d ever laid eyes on the rookie.

“I’m not lying,” Ginobili said, recalling an open gym in September. “I saw him miss the first 20 shots he took.”

Still, Ginobili believed Wednesday. Maybe because he had no choice. And maybe because he had once been like Neal.

“Once, I was almost an undrafted rookie, too,” said Ginobili, the 57th pick in the 1999 draft.

Not everyone in the ATT Center was as confident. Tim Duncan, who set the pick to free Neal, spent the entire 1.7 seconds screaming at him.

“He’s got 1.7, and he takes a dribble,” Duncan said. “I’m like, shoot the ball.”

Neal, it turns out, knew exactly what he was doing.

“I knew I had time,” he said. “I was looking for my shot. That was my shot.”

Parker described the feeling of seeing Neal’s shot rip through the net this way: “Like a new life.”

And so the game went to OT, and Parker took over, and the Spurs began getting stops — the biggest of which coming as they forced Marc Gasol into an airball as the shot-clock sounded with 29.2 seconds left.

Still, it was not the kind of victory that left the Spurs feeling as if they had turned the series.

“We got lucky,” Ginobili said. “That’s the truth.”

Facing elimination, the Spurs needed every bit of luck in their playbook to pull out an overtime win at home. They harbor no illusions that pulling off a sequel in Game 6 on the road will be easy.

But, ultimately, the Spurs got what they came for on Wednesday. A new day. A new life.

Fittingly, it was Neal — a player whose entire season has felt like new life — who gave it to them.

Personals have Popovich in foul mood

Nobody could blame Spurs coach Gregg Popovich for being in a foul mood after he watched the Grizzlies manhandle his team in the second half of Monday’s Game 4 at FedEx Forum in Memphis.

In fact, fouls committed by the Spurs in the pivotal first four minutes of the third quarter seemed to bother Popovich as much, or more, than any aspect of a 104-86 loss that has the Spurs on the brink of elimination from the playoffs.

The Spurs committed three turnovers during the Grizzlies’ game-turning 14-0 run to start the third, but Popovich was more surprised by his team’s inability to defend without fouling.

Rookie center Tiago Splitter started the Grizzlies’ parade to the foul line when he committed a shooting foul against Marc Gasol just 42 seconds into the period. He committed a second shooting foul, on guard Mike Conley, 73 seconds later. In between, Richard Jefferson and Manu Ginobili picked up personals, so George Hill’s foul on Tony Allen with 9:19 remaining in the quarter put the Grizzlies in the bonus for the remainder of the period.

By quarter’s end, Memphis had shot 12 free throws and made 10.

“I would never expect that we would play that badly to start the third quarter in a game that we were playing pretty well in overall and actually leading and have an opportunity to play those first minutes just in a solid manner,” Popovich said.

“So sure, I was surprised, more about the fouls than the turnovers. We’ve been capable of turnovers before, but we’ve been a great team all year as far as not fouling, so that was really out of character.”

Ginobili, whose only personal of the game came in the third-period foul fest, had no good explanation for the spate of fouls.

“Usually they are the team that fouls a lot and sends us to the line early,” he said. “In that third quarter, in three minutes they were in bonus and we kept fouling in bad situations. So we gave them the ball and said, ‘OK, you score from the line.’ And offensively, we were just dry. Those two things compounded for a horrible third quarter.”

HOLLINS HOLLERS: The inspiration for the Grizzlies’ third-quarter surge apparently came from head coach Lionel Hollins.

Players described an irate head coach challenging them to play with more intensity and physicality from the outset of the second half.

“He ripped us,” Grizzlies guard O.J. Mayo told reporters.

Leading scorer Zach Randolph verified Mayo’s account, saying Hollins “definitely had some choice words.”

Hollins enjoyed the response he got.

“The second half,” he said, “was just incredible to watch. It was an incredible performance in the third and fourth quarters. From the second quarter on, our defense just kept getting better and better and more aggressive.”

GRIZZLIES WARY: The Grizzlies gathered as a team at center court after Monday’s victory to steel their resolve for tonight’s Game 5 at the ATT Center.

“We understand that we have not won anything yet,” Gasol said. “It was a good game. We know how loud their place can get, and we need to be ready.”

Manu doubtful for playoff opener

Their first-round playoff opponent finally decided, Spurs coaches went to work Thursday piecing together the beginnings of a game plan for the Memphis Grizzlies.

The team’s most pressing concern, however, was not something that could be solved by any combination Xs and Os, only ice and rest.

An MRI exam revealed guard Manu Ginobili has a sprained right elbow, and the Spurs are preparing to open the playoffs without him.

Ginobili is officially listed as doubtful for Game 1 on Sunday at the ATT Center, leaving his teammates to seize onto the semantics that “doubtful” does not mean “out.”

“Hopefully he can be ready to go once the playoffs start,” Tim Duncan said. “You cross your fingers and hope for that.”

Ginobili was injured in the first quarter of the Spurs’ 106-103 season-ending loss at Phoenix on Wednesday, when he collided awkwardly with Suns forward Grant Hill while cutting off a Duncan screen.

His injury throws a wild card into the matchup between the top-seeded Spurs (61-21) and eighth-seeded Grizzlies (46-36).

Throughout NBA postseason history, No. 1 seed has advanced in 51 of 54 first-round series. Since 2003, when the first-round format switched to a best-of-seven series, the No. 8 seed has moved on to the second round just once — in 2007, when Golden State upset Dallas.

With Ginobili and his 17.4 points per game possibly out for at least Game 1, and with Memphis a more rugged draw than the garden-variety eight seed, the Spurs are still favorites, but vulnerable.

“It’s going to be a tough, physical series,” Spurs guard Tony Parker said. “We’ll be ready.”

Even before a bum elbow threatened to rob the Spurs of their second-leading scorer, there were signs Memphis wanted this matchup. Eschewing a chance to elevate to the No. 7 seed, Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins rested starters — including bruising star forward Zach Randolph — in each of the final two games of the regular season.

At least one prominent Spurs player noticed.

“Obviously, they’ve chosen their matchup,” Duncan said.

There are reasons for Memphis to bullseye the Spurs. The Grizzlies split four games against them during the regular season, losing one in overtime. In addition, Randolph has been a load for the Spurs to handle, averaging 23 points and 14.8 rebounds against them this season.

In hindsight, perhaps Hollins made the right call simply in keeping his most important players out of harm’s way.

Ginobili’s injury might have opened the door for the Grizzlies to make franchise history. Memphis is 0-12 all-time in playoffs, having been swept in all three of its previous appearances — including in 2004 by the Spurs.

After Wednesday’s game in Phoenix, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich defended his use of Ginobili and other regulars in a fairly meaningless finale, saying he wanted to keep his starters in fighting shape heading toward the playoffs.

“They needed to get a good run, and they did, so they can keep a rhythm,” Popovich said.

Duncan, too, refused to play Monday morning quarterback.

“You can’t predict anything, and there’s no reason to second guess,” he said. “I don’t think any one of us is going to do that.”

All the Spurs can do now is look to the future, which in the short term means the prospect of opening the playoffs without Ginobili.

The spacious nature of the playoff schedule could aid his recovery. With Game 2 not until Wednesday, Ginobili could ice his elbow for a full week and miss just one game.

For now, the Spurs just need Ginobili to get well. The Xs and Os, much like their chances for advancement, look better with him than without him.

“If he isn’t able to play in the playoffs, it’s going to be devastating for us,” Antonio McDyess said. “We definitely don’t want to see that happen.”