What the Spurs and Warriors said after Monday’s game

Here, courtesy of the good folks with the Spurs’ media services offices, is a post-game sampling of comments after San Antonio’s 111-96 triumph over Golden State Monday night.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich

(When asked about the Spurs’ defense after his technical in the third quarter)

“It happens against a team like Golden State that can score points and they’re such a good shooting team.  I thought we were in a lull defensively.  We got into their game and we shot a multitude of three’s without much defense on the other end.  We had a break in the action to talk about the defense and I thought they did a good job of coming back to it.  Steve Novak was great tonight.  He really gave us the energy we needed.  Unfortunately Tony (Parker) and Manu (Ginobili) needed to be on the court as long as they were.  If everybody on the bench would have shown, but we had a couple of guys who need to step-up their games as we get down the stretch and into the playoffs.  I thought (Antonio) McDyess and Tiago (Splitter) were solid for us and Steve Novak was on fire. I just need the bench to be more consistent and I don’t think they’ve been as consistent as I would like in the last five, six or seven games, even though we won a few.”

(on the lift Tiago Splitter gave the team with Tim Duncan going out of the game)

“Well Tiago (Splitter) is going to give you that every night.  He’s going to bust his butt to rebound and play defense.  He’s going to give you that grunt (work) that every team needs and every coach loves.  That’s nothing different from him that’s just what he does.”

(when asked if there was an update on Tim Duncan’s injury)

“X-rays were negative, but he’ll obviously be out a while.”

Spurs guard Manu Ginobili

(On Tim Duncan’s injury)

“Bad timing.  Hopefully it’s nothing really bad, but I saw him in pain and he’s not one of those guys that’s going to pretend or do that if he’s not hurting.  It’s bad, but hopefully it’s just a couple games and he’ll be back soon.”

(On what the Spurs will do without Tim Duncan)

“It’s really hard to tell.  You never know.  I’m guessing that Pop is going to be extra cautious knowing that in three weeks or four, I don’t know how far the playoffs are, but it’s not that far, so he’s going to be extra cautious, but we need him in the court and we’ll see what the doctor says.”

(On Tiago Splitter’s play tonight)

“It’s a great opportunity for him.  It’s the first time this happened all year long.  You never want it to happen, but if you want an opportunity, Tiago is going to be in a great spot now.  He’s going to probably start and have a lot of minutes so it’s the opportunity he’s been waiting for.  So hopefully he does good and gets more comfortable out there.”

(On Tiago Splitter’s confidence level over the last two games)

“Today he had a very good game.  In the first half, he played a couple one-on-ones, he passed the ball very well.  As I said probably a million times, he’s a good player, he understands the game, he’s solid, reliable.  He just has to be out there and feel confident and know that the team trusts him.  That’s what happened to me, what happened to everyone that comes here for the first time.  So he’s going to give us a big hand.”

(On if playing with the first unit will help Tiago Splitter)

“Of course, it makes it easier because Tony (Parker) and me draw attention and if he (Splitter) rolls, we’re going to give him the ball and he’s going to be able to finish or kick it to the wing and he’s really good doing it, so he’ll be fine.”

Spurs guard Tony Parker

(On what he’s thinking when seeing Tim Duncan go down)

“It’s no fun, especially when you can see it in his face that he’s hurting, so hopefully it’s not going to be too long.”

(On what the Spurs will have to do while Tim Duncan is out)

“Play a little bit faster, a lot of pick and rolls with myself and Manu (Ginobili), and just try to get everybody else to pick it up and be aggressive.”

(On his play tonight distributing the basketball)

“I was just trying to be aggressive.  My teammates were making shots and on the pick and rolls, I was finding them, my teammates Steve Novak, Matt Bonner, Tiago (Splitter) was doing a good job running to the basket, Manu (Ginobili) was super aggressive, so everybody picked it up tonight.”

Spurs forward/center Antonio McDyess

(On seeing Tim Duncan go down tonight)

“Actually I was scared that he did real damage as in broke it, fractured it, or something.  I was just happy to see it was just a severe sprain because I actually thought it was worse.  When you looked up at the jumbotron, it looked like his foot really turned and his ankle was on the court, so I’m just happy it wasn’t broken.”

(On how Tiago Splitter handled himself with getting more minutes)

“He did a great job.  He came off the bench with a lot of energy, played hard, rebounded, almost had a double-double in the first half, so he did great picking up the slack, but I think with Tim (Duncan) out, everybody is going to have to pick up the slack, the bench, the starters.  Everyone’s just going to have to pick up the slack from him being out.  It was just good that everybody came in as a group and got shots and did their job.”

Warriors coach Keith Smart

(On effort on the second night of a back to back)

“One thing that this team has shown is that they create a great reputation of how they will compete and play regardless of the back to back or they play a bad game one night—they have shown all year that the effort is going to be there.  Even when they are down within the game they have shown urgency to get themselves back into the game.  Once you get back into the game it comes down to a little know how and little nuances of controlling the tempo of the game.  Now you have gotten yourself back in to just a six-point lead and now that quick shot is not necessary and all the drive without vision is not there.  Then you get something really good going.  And that’s the growth part that you will develop over time.”

(On the Spurs’ loss of (Tim) Duncan and the effect it had on the game)

“Well they did make a lot of 3-pointers, so tonight their game was pretty much out on the perimeter.  But in tough games you would hope Tim (Duncan) is alright.  You don’t want to see a good guy like that getting hurt.  When he is in the game and it is close, then they will be going down to him which puts your team in a bind.  But that wasn’t the case tonight because we didn’t have any big guys.  But we were doing all we could tonight.  My guys worked their tails off, off of a back to back- flying in and getting ready to play against a good team that cuts hard and moves hard.  I thought we did that tonight, but we didn’t do that last night in Dallas.  I thought we did that and they tried to do everything that I wanted.  The game plan, they tried to do it and I know that they can do it because they have done it in the past.  We just didn’t get the results we wanted.  This was a test and it was a good game that we played.  Now we move on to Houston. ”

(On guys stepping up from the bench)

“Early on our big guys weren’t playing too well offensively.  Ginobili doesn’t slouch on defense and he will make you work really hard for the ball.  Parker also has the ability to make you work.  You have to catch out higher on the floor, so the help must be in a sooner position rather than a later position.  So that is the privilege of having a “1” and a “2” player.  Richard Jefferson is also another player. So you take three of our best scorers right away, and they are going to make them catch the ball a little bit out of their comfort zone.  But I felt we got that a little bit under control later on.  Our bench has played very well over the past few weeks, which has given us the ability to be down by 20 or more and yet get the game close. They always say, “Let’s get it down to seven.”

Warriors guard Acie Law

(On how the team just doesn’t give up)

“We can score the ball pretty good. We just got to finish it out defensively. It’s been a long season and it’s a work in progress. Hopefully we can get better but I mean to your question, we won’t give up, we are going to continue to fight it out.”

(Playing in a back-to-back tonight, did that impact the team’s performance?)

“I’m not going to make an excuse. There a damn good team, one of the best teams in the league, probably going to compete for a championship, we just got to figure it out. Got to try and finish up strong and go from there.”

(On the second unit’s performance tonight)

“Our second unit comes in and scraps, just try and make plays, hustle plays, and things of that nature. We were able to do that and chip away, but unfortunately with them being the veteran ball club that they are, they continued to stay with it, didn’t get rattled, made plays when they had to, and won the ball game.”

 Warriors guard Monta Ellis

(On the overall performance of the team tonight)

 “It was cool. We didn’t shoot the ball well at first, but we were still right there in the game. They made some shots; I think they hit every open shot, besides the first quarter. They hit every shot they had; I mean it was just a good ball club. We fought hard to get ourselves back in the game and they just made plays down the stretch.”

(Why weren’t you able to get going tonight?)

“It’s like that sometimes. I had all good looks. It felt good. It just wasn’t going down for me tonight.”

(What the team could improve on going forward?)

“We really just have to stay together, play hard every night, that’s it.”

Manu goes down as Spurs’ skid hits three

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — As the final buzzer sounded at FedEx Forum on Sunday night, signaling the first three-game losing streak of the Spurs’ season, point guard Tony Parker bowed his head and walked off the court and through the tunnel toward the locker room.

Another fourth-quarter lead had given way to another defeat, this one 111-104 at the hands of the relentless Grizzlies, and now the L.A. Lakers were one step closer to catching the Spurs atop the Western Conference leaderboard.

Had, at that moment, Parker taken stock of his blessings, the list would have begun with this: At least he was able to walk upright.

With Tim Duncan already out with a sprained left ankle, and Manu Ginobili perhaps poised to join him in street clothes after knocking knees with Marc Gasol, Parker has suddenly become the last of the Big Three standing.

“A lot of things aren’t going our way,” Parker said. “We just have to keep pounding on that rock and keep playing.”

For the first time in what has been a blessed season for the Spurs, it feels as if the rock is pounding them.

Zach Randolph scored 11 of his 23 points in the fourth quarter and totaled 11 rebounds, while Tony Allen also scored 23 and missed just one of 10 shots, as the Grizzlies provided the Spurs with a fitting end to a ruinous road trip.

The Spurs (57-16) will not want to keep the postcards from this particular excursion.

There was the fizzled finish at Denver, when a double-digit lead became a three-point loss. There was that preposterousness in Portland, when the Spurs gave up an 8-0 run in the final 72 seconds, felled by Nicolas Batum’s high-jump at the horn.

Then there was Sunday, when the Spurs’ longest losing streak since Jan. 20-25 of last season gave the Lakers the opportunity to climb within four games.

“All three games, we had a chance,” Parker said. “We were up.”

The latest pinprick to the silver-and-black voodoo doll came just before halftime Sunday, when Gasol charged to trap Ginobili near the sideline. The Spurs’ leading scorer never saw his mug coming.

When Ginobili turned, Gasol’s knee dug into his left quadriceps, sending the Argentine guard flailing. Ginobili left the game immediately, and an attempt to return in the second half was aborted after 5 minutes and 50 seconds. He was diagnosed with a left quad contusion, and his availability for tonight’s rematch with Portland at the ATT Center is uncertain.

The play ultimately cost the Spurs not only their starting shooting guard, but also their head coach. Incensed no foul was called, Gregg Popovich became the recipient of two quick technicals and an ejection from official Jason Phillips.

Without their top scorer, their team captain, or their head coach, the Spurs hung around in the second half.

George Hill was rolling, on his way to matching a career high with 30 points. Parker, sensing someone else had to score too, found his way to 20. Assistant Mike Budenholzer was channeling Popovich, in play calls if not demeanor.

“I was proud of our guys,” Popovich said.

A 13-3 run to start the fourth staked the Spurs to a 90-84 lead, their largest since the first quarter. Then, Randolph put on his hard hat and went to work.

A sample: With Memphis down 97-95 with less than four minutes left, Antonio McDyess fought Randolph for the extent of the shot clock, denying him position. When O.J. Mayo missed, Randolph freed a paw to swat the ball to the perimeter, where Allen scooped it up and tied the game with a layup.

One possession later, Randolph banked in a running hook over McDyess, and Memphis (41-33) never trailed again.

Unlike in Portland, the Spurs left Memphis neither dazed nor confused. Despite their season’s longest losing streak, they aren’t convinced much is wrong with their team an upright Big Three wouldn’t repair.

“We can’t make excuses,” Hill said. “At the same time, we’re in a tough spot right now. Just have to get through it.”

Healing Spurs report no problems

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Physically, all members of the Spurs’ “Big Three” had no problems after returning to action Thursday against the Boston Celtics at the ATT Center.

Power forward Tim Duncan, who missed the previous four games with a sprained left ankle, said the injured joint felt good and presented no problems.

Point guard Tony Parker, who sat out Monday with a bruised left patella, had no residual pain.

Shooting guard Manu Ginobili, who sat Monday with a left thigh contusion, said his leg felt a little weak, but didn’t hurt.

What did hurt was the team’s fifth straight loss, a 107-97 defeat that further eroded the Spurs’ lead over the Lakers in the Western Conference standings, and Ginobili struggled to accept a subpar game he said wasn’t linked to the injury he suffered Monday in Memphis.

“It didn’t hurt,” he said. “My left leg was a little weak. It didn’t figure as much, but it felt good. Can’t complain.”

Ginobili also was puzzled by the fact he did not get to the foul line for the first time this season in a game in which he played more than 30 minutes.

“I think I should have gone a couple times,” he said. “It just didn’t happen. But I attacked the rim. It hurt me, also, that I couldn’t make a shot. The defense wasn’t really worried about my shot.”

MCDYESS RELIEVED: Starting center Antonio McDyess felt his left foot roll when he stepped on Ginobili’s foot with 8:21 left in the third quarter and immediately jumped off his other foot to take his weight off the joint.

Though he limped to the locker room with trainer Will Sevening in tow, he was able to return to the game with no ill effects.

“I didn’t think it was real bad when I did it,” he said, “but I was afraid it was going to swell up worse than it did. Once they checked it out and retaped it, I knew I was going to be able to come back to the game.”

McDyess was relatively certain he would suit up tonight in Houston.

“It’s just a little sore,” he said afterwards. “It’s nothing serious, just a little tweak. The initial pain was a lot worse, but it went away. I’ll ice it on the plane and keep the swelling down. I’m pretty sure it will be OK.”

BAD TIMING: Rookie guard Gary Neal followed Monday’s 3-for-14 shooting performance in a loss to the Trail Blazers with a 4-for-12 game against the Celtics, then promised to keep shooting.

“All you can do is stay in the gym and keep working and hope it’s a short slump and not a prolonged one,” he said. “You’ve got to keep shooting when the shots are there.”

PERSONALLY SPEAKING: Celtics star Kevin Garnett, who scored 20 points, said Boston’s players took umbrage at the fact Spurs coach Gregg Popovich “rested” four starters on Monday.

“We know they rested their stars and were prepared for this game,” Garnett said. “We took this personally. They are the best team in the league. If you don’t come in here and play, they’ll treat you like the worst team in the league.”