What the Spurs, Mavs said after Friday’s game

Here’s a collection of some of the comments from both dressing rooms after the Spurs’ 104-87 victory over Dallas Friday night, courtesy of the Spurs media services representatives.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich:

(When asked what he envisioned defensively when Boris Diaw came into the game…)

“I didn’t envision anything.  I just threw him out there to get use to the team and what we’re trying to do.  He did a fine job.  I thought overall the team’s defense was pretty good.  That was probably the best part of the game.  No matter who was out there, we were pretty aggressive defensively.  We reacted as a team to each other pretty well on defense.  Dallas is such a great scoring team you have to do that if you want a chance to beat them.”

(When asked about the energy of Danny Green in the first quarter…)

“It looked like he was shot out of a rocket for the first couple of minutes.  I don’t know how he did that, but maybe I should find out and have everybody do it before next game.”

(When asked about the energy Stephen Jackson had in the third quarter…)

“He (Stephen Jackson) has an edge to him.  He’s got a toughness, a physicality, he’s a competitor.  I think our whole team had more energy then we had the last time in Dallas and that showed.”

(When asked if he thought that this game had a playoff intensity…)

“I not sure it was all the way to playoff status tonight.  Maybe where you were sitting it was louder.  They are the NBA champions, they competed and we competed as well as they did tonight and our defense did well.  It’s one game and that’s that.  The next game is the most important.  They’ll bounce back and hopefully we’ll play well again.”

Spurs guard Manu Ginobili:

(On the introduction of Boris Diaw…)

“He played well today. Besides his defensive play, he is very active. He passes the ball well. We got a very good game out of the bench. Tony Parker did a good job of running the same Spurs plays on the French National team and that helps. He knew some of the basics because that was what they ran over there. Diaw did a really good job on Dirk.

 (On the intensity of the game…)

“We are trying to be more intense. We are better this year with trying to push the ball a little bit harder. Now we are trying to play with more aggressiveness and toughness. I believe we hustled a lot. We scrambled and made a few mistakes as everybody does, but we played with more intensity. This is something we need. We know how the playoffs are and there only 14 or 15 more games left until then (actually 21).”

(On the team’s collective victory tonight…)

“It was a team victory. We did not have Tony Parker. Parker has been leading us the last 40 games. He has been amazing scoring 30 points in a lot of games. We did not have him today. Also, not having Splitter in the paint hurt us too. But we got a great game from Stephen Jackson, Boris (Diaw), and Kawhi (Leonard). Leonard made three huge plays and it was a great team effort.”

(On starting at point guard…)

“It was different. It was a new thing. If you have to do it because Tony is struggling or not feeling well than you have got to do it.”

Spurs forward Matt Bonner:

(On a collective win against the Mavericks..)

“It was a team effort on offense and defense. We put five or six guys on Dirk Nowitzki in order to try and make him work for everything he got.”

(On Dirk Nowitzki’s shooting struggles tonight…)

“Like I said before it was a team effort. We kept rotating guys on him and tried to be physical. We made him work for everything.”

(On the Spurs rebounding tonight…)

“Guys have been going in and getting offensive rebounds. Especially guys like Danny Green and Kawhi Leonard. They have been doing a great job of hustling and getting 50-50 balls for us. They have also been controlling the defensive glass.”

(On Bonner’s night of shooting…)

“I am a catch and shoot guy. I am the recipient of ball movement. Tonight we did a great job. Everybody was moving the ball and found the open man. It was a fun game to play in.”

Dallas coach Rick Carlisle:

(How do you explain you guys getting beat so badly on the boards and in the paint?)

“A lot of the damage on the boards came in the first half. We did a better job early in the third quarter and that’s what got us the lead. The lineup that they had out there tonight had a lot of big guys that were crashing from all over. Our inability to secure rebounds early in the game kept us from climbing out of a hole in the first half. Clearly, that’s what got us the lead. (Jason) Kidd got hot and made some shots. We were doing some good things in the second half. Then, the 22-2 run, that killed us. We had worked our butt off to get a five-point lead, we were in good position, and actually increased the lead with Dirk (Nowitzki) on the bench. It’s disappointing. ”

(What were they doing against Dirk defensively that made it so difficult tonight?)

“Everybody plays Dirk hard and physically. We have to work on getting him some cleaner looks. He had some that he normally makes, that he didn’t make tonight. In those cases, you have to make up for that with efficiency with the ball, being able to rebound, and not giving up second-chance points. It was a tough game. I liked a lot of what we did out there. We played hard, but the rebounding, and then the run in the third and the fourth quarter just killed us. ”

(On decision to not play Lamar Odom?)

“It’s something that I talked to Lamar about, both yesterday and today. That, I was going to look at a different rotation tonight. There were a couple scenarios. If (Manu) Ginobli had come off the bench, (Shawn) Marion would have come off the bench and match up with him. Marion is probably the defensive player of the year this year. He’s been that great on guys individually. So, we wanted him on Ginobili. The way it happened with Ginobili starting, we started Shawn. It tweaked what the original plan was but we knew that was a possibility. It was something I wanted to look at. The thing that it shows is that Lamar’s minutes are valuable to us.”

Dallas forward Shawn Marion:

 (On being beat 50-16 in the paint and being outrebounded…)

 “Rebounding was the key tonight. Our rebounding was a big part of tonight. They got every rebound and they out rebounded us. That’s the game right there. We win the rebounding game and put ourselves in great shape to win tonight.”

 (On the Spurs…)

 “With this team you have to rebound. They get their hands on a lot of balls on defense. Throughout the game the Spurs grab all the loose balls and that hurt us tonight. We took the lead in the third quarter but we exerted so much energy because we were playing so hard out there. Our legs got heavy in the fourth and we could not knock down shots and that is when things hit the wall.”

(On the team’s mindset going forward…)

“We know what to do defensively and offensively, it is just a matter of going out there and doing it. If we rebound the ball, we win the games.”

 Dallas forward Dirk Nowitzki:

 (On the Spurs outrebounding and the outscoring them in the paint…)

“They obviously did not want to lose the season series so they came out with a little more fire. I thought we came out strong even though I had a brutal night. We played well at times but we just did not close the game the way we wanted to.”

(On his play…)

“I actually felt good at the beginning of the game then during the middle of the game I just could not get the ball in the rim and a lot of my shots were just short. I just did not have enough to get the ball in tonight.”

(On the Spurs 22-2 run….)

“Just bad decisions…throwing the ball away, we turned the ball over some and they turned up the heat. One time Bonner got a defensive rebound around three of our guys and that is something that should not happen. Those are just things you cannot let happen against a great home team in the Spurs.”

(On the Mavericks’ offense…)

“Offensively we struggled tonight. The Jet (Jason Terry) got going there for a bit. Then he forced some stuff because he felt like he was the only guy that got going tonight but it just was not enough.”

Nash steamed Suns didn’t try to sign Diaw

Veteran Phoenix point guard Steve Nash may have been pushed to the brink of wanting to leave the Suns by his team’s apathetic pursuit of free-agent forward Boris Diaw.

The New York Post’s Peter Vescey reports that that his team didn’t try harder to sign Diaw, a former teammate, after he was bought out of his contract with Charlotte. Instead, Diaw ended up with the Spurs.

Nash and Diaw made a tight connection when they played together with Phoenix from 2005-08. And with the Suns battling for a playoff spot, Nash thought that Diaw was a player who could help get them there.

Nash, a two-time MVP, is an unrestricted free agent after the season. Some of the penurious ways of Phoenix owner Robert Sarver haven’t made Nash happy as the team has been dismantled from one that played for the Western Conference Finals in 2010 but failed to make the playoffs in either of the last two seasons. The Suns are 25-26 and are two games out of the final playoff berth with 15 games to play.

Vescey opines that Diaw might have viewed the Spurs as a better opportunity, as well as a strong confirmation of the Spurs’ willingness to contend for the title this season.

“In that case, there was no future in Phoenix beyond this season, but there is the real possibility of a championship to be won by San Antonio, in addition to a playoff platform for Diaw to improve his stained image,” Vescey wrote.

Spurs close out, close in on West’s top spot

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Spurs 87, Celtics 86: April 4, 2012


San Antonio Spurs center Tim Duncan (21) makes a move against Boston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett (5) during the second half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. The Spurs won 87-86. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs guard Manu Ginobili (20) dishes the ball against Boston Celtics guard Ray Allen (20), forward Kevin Garnett (5) and forward Paul Pierce (34) in the second half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. The Spurs won 87-86. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


Boston Celtics forward Paul Pierce (34) falls back as he is called for a foul against San Antonio Spurs center Tim Duncan (21) during the second half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. The Spurs won 87-86. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs guard Daniel Green (4) drives against Boston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett (5) and center Greg Stiemsma, far left, during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


Kentucky basketball head coach John Calipari, left, chats with former Massachusetts treasurer Joe Malone prior to an NBA basketball game between the Boston Celtics and the San Antonio Spurs in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


Boston Celtics guard Rajon Rondo, left, loses control of the ball against San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker, right, during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


Boston Celtics guard Ray Allen (20) looks to make a move with the ball against San Antonio Spurs guard Daniel Green (4) during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


Boston Celtics forward Paul Pierce (34) dunks against San Antonio Spurs center Tim Duncan during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


Boston Celtics guard Rajon Rondo (9) leans into a shot against San Antonio Spurs center Tim Duncan (21) as guard Tony Parker (9) watches during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)


San Antonio Spurs center Tim Duncan (21) defends against a shot attempt by Boston Celtics forward Paul Pierce (34) in the last seconds of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Wednesday, April 4, 2012. The Spurs won 87-86. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) (AP)

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By Mike Monroe

BOSTON — The Spurs had been the most efficient offensive team in basketball.

They averaged an NBA-best 107 points per game in the month of March and, for good measure, piled up a season-high 125 points Tuesday in Cleveland to begin April.

Their coach calls the scoring explosion a necessary adjustment for a team he rates no better than above-average on defense. It also had made them the league’s hottest team of late with eight straight wins.

When the offensive magic disappeared in the second half at TD Garden against the Celtics, winners of five in a row before Wednesday’s showdown, it took some old-fashioned defensive magic to secure a ninth consecutive win — an 87-86 victory in the Spurs’ lowest scoring game in more than three months.

But a win is a win. This one, coupled with the Thunder’s close loss in Miami on Wednesday, puts the Spurs only one game out of first place in the Western Conference.

Who better to demonstrate the Spurs’ old way than Tim Duncan, whose challenge of an 18-foot jumper by Boston’s Paul Pierce forced an awkward miss that helped the Spurs ? hold on?

Trailing by a point with 7.9 seconds left, the Celtics called a pair of 20-second timeouts to set up a play for Pierce.

With a foul to give before Boston would be in the bonus, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich had instructed his players to foul Pierce before he could get off a shot. Told to switch on every screen, Duncan ended up defending Pierce after he took a pass from Rajon Rondo.

“I knew we had a foul to give, but once he turned that corner and got his shoulders squared to the basket, I wasn’t going to do it,” Duncan said. “Once he turned the corner and kind of squared his shoulder, when you reach out to grab somebody these days, they’re programmed to look like they’re shooting. I didn’t want to do it at that point.”

Instead, Duncan stretched his 6-foot-11 frame and made Pierce shoot a high-arching shot that was badly off line.

“I stood in front of him and challenged his shot,” Duncan said. “If you go back and look at the history, at least what I’ve seen, that’s the shot he wants.”

Duncan’s defense preserved a lead the Spurs had attained after two late possessions they extended with hustle plays. Duncan snared an offensive rebound and found Gary Neal for a 3-pointer with a minute left. Manu Ginobili later grabbed the ball after it was knocked away from Duncan and found Matt Bonner for a 16-footer that turned out to be the difference-maker.

The game-winning shot wasn’t close to something the Spurs had planned. A lob pass from Ginobili to Duncan on a pick-and-roll had been batted away by Boston’s Kevin Garnett. It landed right back in the hands of Ginobili, who zipped it straight to Bonner, wide open on the left wing. Bonner’s mid-range shot swished with 46.5 seconds left.

“Just Manu being Manu,” Duncan said. “He scrambled, made a great play, looked for me. They’d been getting hands on the ball all night, and it kind of bounced back to him. I guess just keeping his head up he got the ball back and made a quick pass.”

Bonner had missed his previous four shots in the second half, but he knew it was only a matter of time until one fell.

“The laws of probability,” he said. “I think I missed my previous 93 shots. At least that’s what it felt like in my head. So I knew that one was going in.”

Bonner wasn’t the only Spurs player unable to shoot with typical precision after intermission. The Spurs made only 4 of 20 shots in the third quarter and scored only nine points, a season low for any quarter. Their 28 second-half points were also a season-low.

“We were fortunate at the end,” Popovich said. “Manu got a great offensive rebound. We got a couple extra possessions at the very end, and lots of times, that’s a team’s demise.”

mikemonroe@express-news.net
Twitter: @Monroe_SA