Popovich decides to cut losses against Rockets

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

HOUSTON — Two minutes into the second quarter of the Spurs’ first loss of the young season, Matt Bonner drilled a 3-pointer that capped a 13-2 run to tie things up with the Houston Rockets at 23-23.

It would be more than 30 minutes and eight straight misses before the Spurs would hit another from long range, and by then it did nothing but make a huge deficit slightly less embarrassing.

The Spurs came in with convincing victories over the Grizzlies — the team that ran them out of the playoffs last spring — and the Clippers, the biggest winners in post-lockout free agency. But Thursday, they were awful in a 105-85 loss that enabled the Rockets to celebrate their home opener in front of an announced sellout crowd of 18,267 at Toyota Center.

Houston was as sharp as the Spurs had been in their Wednesday night home victory over Los Angeles, making 50.6 percent of its shots. Rockets guard Kevin Martin scored 25 in the first three quarters and wasn’t even needed in the final period after Spurs coach Gregg Popovich elected to treat the second half like a preseason game.

In a post-lockout campaign that includes serial sets of back-to-back games and a few sets of three games in three nights, there will be plenty of peculiarities based on the reality of a brutal schedule.

On Thursday there was this: Spurs captain and future Hall of Famer Tim Duncan, willing and able to play, sitting the entire second half as his coach made a judgment based on the quirkiness of a 66-game schedule compressed into 120 days.

Popovich had a perfectly understandable explanation for limiting Duncan to just over 15 minutes of playing time and holding Manu Ginobili, who played only the halfway through the third period, to under 20 minutes.

The rationale came in bullet points:

“Down 18.”

“Third game in four nights.”

“On the road.”

“We weren’t playing well.”

Duncan exited the Spurs locker room without answering questions.

The ultra-competitive Ginobili wasn’t entirely pleased with throwing in the towel early, but understood the reasoning.

“(The Rockets) played a terrific game,” he said, “and after a back-to-back Pop never wants to risk going with everything to make our comeback because it gets dangerous and they just killed us.”

Ginobili predicted there will be more nights when Popovich holds Duncan, now 35, out of big chunks of games, perhaps holding him out of a few contests in their entirety.

“In a season like this one, I’m not going to say you’ll see it very often, but kind of often,” he said. “It’s really hard to send everybody to make a huge effort that you’re not sure is going to pay back. Then we have the (game on) Saturday, Jan. 2 and back-to-back (on Jan. 4-5).

“You have to be smart and just let it go and think about the next one.”

Popovich started thinking about Saturday’s game at the ATT Center against the Utah Jazz after the Rockets blitzed the Spurs in the final 4??1/2 minutes of the first half. With Martin leading the way by scoring 15 of his 25 in the game’s decisive stretch, the Rockets took a 34-31 advantage to 58-35 before the Spurs finished with a mini-flurry of their own and cut the lead to 18 at halftime.

“I’m not sure how many times I want to be down 18 in this shortened season and work Timmy, Manu and Tony (Parker) to work us out of that hole,” Popovich said. “Not this early in the season.

“Later on, depending on our situation, it might make more sense. But at this point, it was a great opportunity to treat it like training camp and get a lot of the younger kids out there and treat it like practice.”

Rockets 101, Spurs 87 – final

Veteran T.J. Ford and rookies Cory Joseph and Kawhi Leonard made their Spurs debut. The Spurs opened the preseason with a 101-87 loss to the Rockets on Saturday in Houston.

Ford started and played 25 minutes and finished with eight points and six assists. Leonard played 22 minutes and had two points and five rebounds. Joseph, who practice with the team for the first time earlier in the day, played 19 minutes and had four points and two assists.

Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Gary Neal did not play. DeJuan Blair and Manu Ginobili led the Spurs with 16 points each, Tiago Splitter had 13 and Matt Bonner had 12. Luis Scola led the Rockets with 20 points.

The Spurs shot poorly, hitting 29 of 82 from the field (35.4 percent). They actually shot much better the second half at 21 of 42 (50.0 percent).

Fourth quarter: The Rockets lead by seven points with 2:42 left. Spurs coach Gregg Popovich likes those close preseason games to see how the young guys respond in those situations.

Spurs try to make a late run with Cory Joseph, Danny Green, Kawhi Leonard, Steve Novak and DeJuan Blair.

Third quarter – Rockets 71, Spurs 65: T.J. Ford is showing his experience in his first appearance in a Spurs uniform. He has eight points and six assists.

DeJuan Blair is working on a double-double. He has 12 points and six rebounds. The Rockets lead 69-57 with 2:57 left in the third quarter.

Though none of the Spurs are shooting well, Manu Ginobili is’t doing too bad. He is 6 of 14 from the field and has a team-high 16 points.

Halftime – Rockets 51, Spurs 36: The Spurs are shooting like they haven’t played in more than seven months – 8 of 40 from field in half. DeJuan Blair has nine points and five rebounds.

The Spurs missed their first seven shots of the second quarter. With lots of young guys and no Tony and Tim, there are some unusual lineups.

First quarter – Rockets 24, Spurs 20: Matt Bonner has 7 points and 3 rebounds. Spurs rookies Kawhi Leonard and Cory Joseph both see action.

Matt Bonner hits his first shot of the year, or at least the preseason, hitting a 3-pointer. The Rockets’ Luis Scola follows with a basket and he has 10 points.

We’re about to get our first game-action look at Kawhi Leonard as a Spur late in the first quarter.

The Rockets lead the Spurs 18-6 at the first timeout midway through the first quarter. The Spurs missed eight of their first 11 shots.

The Rockets opened the game with an 11-2 run. Houston’s Luis Scola (remember him?) made his first four shots. Richard Jefferson hit a long jumper for the Spurs’ first basket.

Spurs starters: T.J. Ford, Manu Ginobili, Richard Jefferson, DeJuan Blair and Tiago Splitter. Tony Parker, Tim Duncan and Gary Neal are not playing tonight.

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Saturday notes: Cory Joseph finally is on the job:

Normal lineup expected tonight against Houston

Coach Gregg Popovich told the media that all of his players will see action tonight against Houston.

Popovich will start with what would appear to be his normal starting lineup of Richard Jefferson and Tim Duncan at forward, DeJuan Blair at center and Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker at guard.

Duncan and Parker both got the night off for the opener against the Rockets Saturday night in Houston. Both players have said this week that they hoped to play in the Spurs’ preseason finale as a way to build the team’s continuity.