Ginobili’s return may throw wrench into works, for now

NEWARK, N.J. — A small crowd of students gathered outside the nondescript community college gym in midtown Manhattan on Friday, straining for a glimpse of the NBA team that had invaded their school.

Beyond the closed double doors, Spurs guard Manu Ginobili was going through a full-team, full-contact practice that would determine his availability for tonight’s game in New Jersey.

After about an hour, Ginobili emerged with the answer to one question, immediately giving rise to a host of others. Yes, he would play against the Nets, making his return from a broken left hand after a 39-day absence.

But.

“I don’t have great expectations for the first couple of games,” Ginobili said. “I just want to contribute, help a little bit. Just try to fit in again.”

Tonight at the Prudential Center, Ginobili rejoins a team on a roll. The Spurs went 15-7 in the 22 games he missed since his Jan. 2 injury in Minnesota, and own the NBA’s longest current winning streak at six games.

The Spurs (18-9) have ridden a wave of team chemistry to the top of the Southwest

Division, one spot below Oklahoma City in the Western

Conference. Players and coaches alike recognize the team might have to push pause on all of that to reintegrate the 34-year-old Ginobili into the rotation.

“Maybe it screws us up for a while, maybe it doesn’t,” coach Gregg Popovich said.

But.

It has to be done. The alternative — not reintegrating Ginobili — is too absurd even for words.

“No disrespect to my young teammates, but I don’t care how good they’re playing,” All-Star point guard Tony Parker said. “I’ll play with Manu any time of the day, even if he’s 50 percent.”

Popovich will ease Ginobili along slowly, perhaps bringing him off the bench at first, almost certainly limiting his playing time for a while.

Asked whether he has targeted a specific number of minutes for Ginobili tonight in New Jersey, Popovich said, “Not many.”

In truth, Ginobili has been gently prodding to get back on the floor since the start of the rodeo trip Monday in Memphis. As the days passed, Ginobili’s request became progressively more forceful.

Ginobili said he has full confidence in his surgically repaired fifth metacarpal. He doesn’t feel compelled to subdue his instinctive, breakneck style to accommodate it.

“I went for a couple steals (in practice), and I felt good,” Ginobili said.

That’s notable given the way Ginobili injured himself in the first place — making a feverish swipe at Minnesota’s Anthony Tolliver for a steal.

Ginobili admits he is in no kind of playing shape after the extended time off, but argued the only way to get there is on the court.

“I want to play,” said Ginobili, who was averaging a team-best 17.4 points at the time of his injury. “I need to be there. I can’t play one-on-one all year long.”

Having finally carved out an hour in the lockout-condensed schedule for a full practice, Popovich figures now is the time.

“He’s Manu,” Popovich said. “When he’s ready to go, you don’t care if you’re winning, losing. It doesn’t matter. He’s coming back.”

Ginobili’s return won’t come seamlessly.

Popovich will have to tweak a rotation that has produced results to find an increasing number of minutes for him. Somebody who is playing well — be it Danny Green, Kawhi Leonard, Gary Neal, Richard Jefferson, maybe even Parker — will lose time.

The Spurs might have to take a small step back in order to take a giant leap forward. If that’s the cost to get Ginobili back and in stride come playoff time, they are willing to pay it.

“We need Manu bad,” Parker said. “If we want to go anywhere — anywhere — in the playoffs, we need Manu 100 percent. It’s not even a question.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Spurs’ blowout loss blemish in big picture

By Mike Monroe

DENVER — The first half of the don’t-blink-or-you’ll-miss-it Spurs season ended with a calculated thud in Portland on Tuesday night.

The outcome of the 33rd game of the 66-game post-lockout season was a 40-point loss that will skew some of Gregg Popovich’s favorite statistical benchmarks: opponent points allowed and opponent field-goal percentage.

The Trail Blazers’ 137 points and 59.3 percent shooting were season highs for a Spurs opponent.

Count on the Spurs’ coach to use those defensive efficiency measures as a prod when he needs a motivational tool.

Loss aside, it was rest for his top two scorers one night after claiming the team’s seventh victory of the nine-game rodeo road trip that mattered to Popovich — not extending an NBA season-best 11-game win streak heading into tonight’s game in Denver.

There was little expectation the Spurs would win a road game against the Blazers without five members of Popovich’s preferred playing rotation: team captain Tim Duncan, All-Star point guard Tony Parker, star shooting guard Manu Ginobili, backup point guard T.J. Ford and backup center Tiago Splitter.

Even after ending the first half of the regular season with such a lopsided loss, Popovich knows his team has exceeded every expectation anyone had for it, including its ability to thrive after Ginobili broke his left hand in just the fifth game of the season.

Getting to the midway mark with a 23-10 record that leads the Southwest Division and is second-best in the Western Conference surprised even him.

“They’ve exceeded expectations, without a doubt,” Popovich said.

There are many explanations for such overachievement, and Popovich went down the list one by one:

?“We’ve had some people who have had some of their best years, like Matt Bonner. I think this is his best all-around season so far.

?“Tiago Splitter has given us what we thought he would give us when we brought him over (from the Spanish ACB League), so that’s been a good addition.

?“The young guys like Gary Neal, Danny Green and Kawhi Leonard have all done a good job and exceeded expectations we had for them considering what kind of a season this is and how short training camp was. So you have to be pleased with what they’ve done.

?“Duncan has played at such a high level, I thought he should have made the All-Star team again.”

?“And, obviously, Tony Parker has played at a very high level. It may be his very highest level ever, because he’s not just scoring; he’s assisting, he’s playing defense and he’s leading.

Duncan and Parker will be back in the starting lineup against a Nuggets team that had to play the Clippers in Los Angeles on Wednesday night. The Nuggets’ charter flight wasn’t scheduled to land in Denver until after 3 a.m.

Popovich wants his players to maintain the unified play that made the first 33 games such a surprising success and re-establish their competitive edge.

“The group has played unselfishly, really played solid basketball, night in and night out and showed some mental toughness,” he said. “Hopefully, we don’t lose that edge during the All-Star break.”

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Parker fuels rare triumph in Philly

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Spurs 100, Sixers 90: Feb. 8, 2012


San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker celebrates after scoring against the Philadelphia 76ers in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker (9) drives against Philadelphia 76ers’ Jrue Holiday in the first half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ DeJuan Blair, left, fights for a loose ball with Philadelphia 76ers’ Elton Brand (42) in the first half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan (21) goes up for a shot as Philadelphia 76ers’ Elton Brand (42) defends in the first half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker (9) goes up for a basket as Philadelphia 76ers’ Andre Iguodala, top right, and Elton Brand (42) defend in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, right, talks to Tony Parker(9) as they play against the Philadelphia 76ers in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker (9) defends as Philadelphia 76ers’ Lou Williams (23) goes up for a shot in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


Philadelphia 76ers’ Thaddeus Young (21) scores against the San Antonio Spurs in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Gary Neal, , front left, drives against Philadelphia 76ers’ Lou Williams, behind, in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker, right, goes up for shot as Philadelphia 76ers’ Jrue Holiday (11) defends in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs’ Tiago Splitter (22) has his shot blocked by Philadelphia 76ers’ Lavoy Allen in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Feb., 8, 2012, in Philadelphia. The Spurs won 100-90. (AP Photo/H. Rumph Jr ) (AP)

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By Jeff McDonald

PHILADELPHIA — The name has changed over the years, from the CoreStates Center to First Union Center to Wachovia Center to the Wells Fargo Center.

Informally, the building had also been known as Spectrum II and Stack’s House, after Jerry Stackhouse, the team’s star when the place was built in 1996.

None of the name changes were enough to fool Tony Parker.

For as long as he’s been with the Spurs, the arena the Philadelphia 76ers call home might as well have been the Temple of Doom.

“Our history is really bad here,” Parker said. “We played so bad in Philly. I figured we had to get a win here sometime.”

Behind the kind of performance from Parker that channeled a pint-sized Philly scoring star of a bygone era — Allen Iverson — the Spurs thwarted the 76ers 100-90 on Wednesday, ending a string of helplessness in the City of Brotherly Love.

Parker scored 37 points, which would have been a season high if not for the 42 he dumped on Oklahoma City on Saturday, to help the Spurs run their season-best winning streak to six games.

Before Wednesday, the Spurs had won an NBA championship more recently than they’d won a game in Philadelphia. The win broke a string of four straight road losses to the 76ers.

It was just the Spurs’ third victory in the building now known as the Wells Fargo Center in the last 11 years.

“We always joke there’s something in the water here,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said before tipoff. “Every time we’re here, we get put back on our heels. We can’t score a basket. Defense just swarms us, and we seem to give in.”

None of the above happened Wednesday, as the Spurs (18-9) moved to 2-0 on their annual rodeo trip, with games against Eastern Conference dregs New Jersey, Detroit and Toronto just ahead.

In what might be their final game without injured guard Manu Ginobili — who Popovich said could return against the Nets on Saturday — the Spurs produced perhaps their most impressive victory of the season.

Gary Neal added 18 points for the Spurs, hitting all four of his 3-pointers, and Tiago Splitter picked-and-rolled to 15 as the Spurs beat back the Atlantic Division-leading Sixers (18-8) on their home floor.

Tim Duncan contributed 16 points and 11 rebounds for his third consecutive double-double, while the Spurs reached 100 points against a Sixers team that came in allowing a league-low 86.6 on average.

“We kind of played consistently,” said Duncan, whose team owns the NBA’s longest active win streak. “They hit some shots that kept them in the game. We stuck with it and got our defense to start working for us. We’re starting to play the way we want to play.”

As has often been the case recently, Parker carried the Spurs when it mattered.

Though Wednesday’s scoring binge won’t do much for Parker’s All-Star chances — reserve ballots were due Tuesday, with results to be announced tonight — no Western Conference coach who voted for him is apt to regret it.

Parker was a perfect 13 of 13 from the line against the 76ers, a testament to an offensive aggressiveness he sustained throughout. He also had eight assists.

“He had that ball on a string,” 76ers coach Doug Collins said. “We just never could get him under control.”

When the game teetered in the third quarter, with the Sixers taking a brief lead and ghosts of Philadelphia failures past howling, Parker took over.

At a timeout early in the second half, Popovich hit Parker with familiar marching orders.

“He thought it was a good moment to be aggressive,” Parker said.

Parker responded by scoring 11 points in the quarter’s final 9:21, and the Spurs took a 75-67 lead into the fourth.

Half an hour later, with Parker as a guide, the Spurs walked out of their Temple of Doom with a road victory that felt better than most.

“Our history here hadn’t been very good,” Duncan said. “We needed this win.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net

– Associated Press photos