McDyess happy to make amends

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

In the two days that passed between Games 1 and 2 of the Spurs-Grizzlies first-round playoff series, Antonio McDyess had a difficult time getting out of a deep funk.

Limited to just 13 foul-plagued, ineffective minutes in the Spurs’ Game 1 loss, he took it personally. He was embarrassed, admitting he had been “manhandled” by Memphis power forward Zach Randolph, who scored 25 points and grabbed 14 rebounds.

As McDyess walked out of the ATT Center after the Spurs’ 93-87 Game 2 victory, he managed a tired smile as he discussed a defensive performance that limited Randolph to 11 points and helped the Spurs get an important victory.

“When we lost that first game, I thought I was dreaming — a nightmare actually,” he said. “Me, personally, I’m the type of person I don’t want to see us lose any time we play, especially in the playoffs.

“They had manhandled us. They came out and did what they had to do the first game to get that ballclub a win, and they manhandled us, I must say.”

The Spurs’ oldest player got some encouragement from team captain Tim Duncan, who was just as dissatisfied with his own defensive work on center Marc Gasol in Game 1. Gasol scored 24 points in that one.

“We knew we had to do a better job on them,” Duncan said. “They obviously killed us last game. That was a big part of their win, so we took it upon ourselves to go out there and battle them a little tougher, make everything a little harder, and it helped.”

Randolph was limited to 11 points on 5-of-14 shooting, and just five rebounds. After making 9 of 10 shots in the series opener, Gasol made only 2 of 9 on Wednesday, scoring just 12 points. He did have 17 rebounds, a Grizzlies playoff record.

“Tonight we came out with our minds made up to make it as tough as possible on them, and I think we did that,” McDyess said. “We had a chip on our shoulders.”

The Spurs’ interior defense turned the Grizzlies into a perimeter-oriented team, which worked in the Spurs’ favor when guards O.J. Mayo and Mike Conley missed 18 of 26 shots and small forward Shane Battier missed 6 of 7.

“The Spurs were very physical, and they attacked (Randolph) every time he put the ball on the floor,” Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins said. “He had opportunities, but not enough to be effective.

“They did what they set out to do: They took the ball out of his hands.”

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said all the Spurs big men played better in Game 2.

“Well, Zach’s a great offensive player, and ’Dyess takes a lot of pride defensively,” he said. “?’Dyess did a good job. They just didn’t go down for Zach.”

The biggest relief for the veteran came when he scored on a layin off a slick pass from Tony Parker with 2:42 remaining. The basket gave the Spurs a six-point cushion.

“Man, I was thinking, ‘Antonio, you can’t make a shot, can’t make a layup, you got to make this one,’” he said.

Stakes higher, so Blair sacrifices favorite foods

It is an experience so painful, DeJuan Blair has to close his eyes each time he passes the familiar, orange and white A-frame building.

With the NBA playoffs under way, the Spurs big man is on the No Whataburger Diet.

Blair said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich pulled him aside a few weeks ago and conferred with him about how best to approach the playoffs.

The coach had one emphatic request: Drop some weight and get in better shape.

A self-professed fast-food junkie, Blair arrived in San Antonio from Pittsburgh and quickly discovered the joys of Whataburger.

Now he sounds like a man in a 12-step program.

“I’m not eating anything and I’ve changed from eating everything,” he said.

His dietary regimen is not a fast. It just feels that way.

“I just eat a lot of salads; eat a lot of little portions of a lot of things,” he said. “Portions, keep your metabolism up and drink a lot of water and you’ll be great.

“But no juice, no Whataburger with Strawberry Fanta.”

So far, he said, he has lost between 15 and 20 pounds in a little more than two weeks. Maintaining dietary discipline is easy, he said, because the stakes are so high.

“Pop told me they were going to need me,” Blair said. “I’ve got to be ready at all times.”

Blair’s assignment in the first-round series against the Grizzlies most often matches him against the Grizzlies’ beefy scoring leader, Zach Randolph. He admits the extra weight he was carrying about the time the Spurs lost to the Grizzlies in Memphis on March 27 proved Popovich’s point.

“I was huge,” he said. “Yes, fat. Now, I just try to get all the fat off and try to make it into muscle with cardio and running and all that.

“I feel great.”

R.J.’S LAMENT: In the run-up to Game 2, Richard Jefferson said he still hadn’t gotten over missing an open 3-pointer at the buzzer that would have forced overtime in Game 1.

Jefferson finished with a solid 13 points and six rebounds, and was 4 of 6 from the field, but his final attempt from the top of the key hit the back of the iron.

“I would take that shot any game, any day,” Jefferson said. “I’ve missed bigger shots and made bigger shots than that one. You just chalk it up to the game.”

DADDY BATTIER: Grizzlies forward Shane Battier spent Monday and Tuesday in Houston with his wife, Heidi, and the daughter Heidi delivered on Sunday evening, not long after Battier’s 3-point shot proved to be the game-winner in Game 1. He was expected back in San Antonio by Tuesday evening, and Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins said he did not believe Battier’s missing the two practice sessions would be much of a setback for the veteran.

“Yesterday was basically a day off. We watched film and we talked about some adjustments. Today we came out and did them. He wasn’t able to get back today but I’m pretty sure he’ll pick up the adjustments and he’ll be fine.”

Manu’s early elbow injury mars Spurs’ 61-53 halftime deficit.

Gregg Popovich’s worst fears — and that of Spurs Nation — were realized barely two minutes into the first half of the Spurs’ final game of the season at Phoenix.

Manu Ginobili went down with what appeared to be a hyperextended right elbow that has knocked him out for the rest of the game.  

The injury occurred with 9:46 left  in the first quarter when Ginobili was coming around a pick set by Tim Duncan and appeared to get his right arm caught between Duncan and Phoenix’s Grant Hill.  

Ginobili stayed down for an extended period before he was taken to the Spurs’ locker room for treatment. X-rays taken at America West Arena were negative and he’s scheduled to have an MRI performed when the team returns to San Antonio on Thursday.

The injury affected the Spurs’ focus for the rest of the first quarter. Phoenix hit 65.4 percent in the quarter en route to a 43-27 lead. It was the most points scored against the Spurs in a quarter this season.   

The Suns pushed their lead to 18 on several occasions later in the second quarter before San Antonio held them defensively with no baskets during a 13-4 spurt that pulled them within 58-51 on a runner by Gary Neal with 2:00 left.

Antonio McDyess got themn within 61-53 at the break after a jumper with 10.8 seconds left.  

Marcin Gorta scored 14 points and grabbed eight rebounds for the Suns, Grant Hill added 10 points and Steve Nash had eight points and seven assists.

The Spurs were led by Tim Duncan with 14 points and seven rebounds.

But the Spurs’ thoughts were with Ginobili after his injury. I wouldn’t be surprised if Popovich runs a lot of substitutes in the second half as he tries to get through the rest of the game without anybody else getting hurt.