Spurs roadkill again in OKC

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

OKLAHOMA CITY — The Spurs knew, as every team in the NBA knows, there would be nights like this.

There would be times, during this cruel and unusual schedule that borders on a violation of the Eighth Amendment, when their legs wouldn’t be there, their lungs would be burning, and their gas tank would be empty.

That doesn’t mean they have to like it.

“You definitely don’t concede anything,” guard Gary Neal said Sunday after Oklahoma City walloped the Spurs 108-96. “We came here to win. It just got away from us.”

True, the Spurs were playing their fourth game in five nights, with the promise of another back-to-back coming around the bend.

But they knew better than to overplay the exhausted card. Not on this night. Not with Oklahoma City on the floor for the third night in a row and yet still summoning the energy to run the Spurs out of Chesapeake Energy Arena.

Kevin Durant had an efficient 21 points and 10 rebounds, while James Harden added 20 points to spearhead a relentless Oklahoma City bench attack, as the Thunder became the first team this season to sweep a back-to-back-to-back.

Teams are now 6-0 on the third night in such a scenario, but before Sunday — when Oklahoma City followed two victories over Houston by thumping the Spurs — no team had claimed the trifecta.

“I thought we had good energy,” said Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks, whose team snapped a six-game losing streak to the Spurs. “The defense was really good, the offense was really good, and we were getting out in transition.”

The Spurs arrived in the Sooner State playing with house money. They had won three in a row since losing star guard Manu Ginobili to a broken hand, including back-to-back home wins over a pair of Western Conference playoff teams, Dallas and Denver.

They leave Oklahoma City for Tuesday’s game at Milwaukee still winless on the road, dropping three away games by an average of 12 points.

Though the Spurs (6-3) played hard, and at times a little chippy, it became clear early in the second half that Sunday wasn’t going to be their night.

A 25-8 third-quarter run from the Thunder, highlighted by a run-and-gun lob from Durant to Russell Westbrook, pushed what had been a six-point Oklahoma City lead at halftime as high as 25.

The Thunder (8-2) outscored the Spurs 37-21 in the third and carried an 81-69 lead into the fourth.

“They kicked our butts in the third quarter,” said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, who sat all his starters except Neal in the fourth.

Unlike during the Spurs’ three-game, Ginobili-less winning streak, their bench didn’t provide much meaningful help Sunday.

Rookie Kawhi Leonard had 13 points and 10 rebounds for his first double-double, while Tiago Splitter added 10 points.

Fresh off a breakout 24-point game against Denver, reserve guard Danny Green finished with six points, going scoreless until he made a pair of 3-pointers in the final minutes.

Boosted by 14 first-half points from Harden, and an unexpected contribution from Nick Collison (12 points, 10 rebounds, two dunks), the Thunder bench kept the Spurs at bay until the third-quarter eruption.

“They made shots, and we didn’t,” said point guard Tony Parker, who scored four points on 1-of-8 shooting before leaving the game with a bruised leg early in the third.

“In the NBA, especially against a team like that, it can go fast.”

All in all, it was a forgettable night for the Spurs, but therein lies the beauty of a lockout-compressed season.

With another back-to-back coming around the corner, beginning Tuesday in Milwaukee, Sunday will be easy for the Spurs to forget.

“They come so fast, you can’t worry about this one,” Parker said. “You give them credit and move on to the next game.”

Spurs 95, Grizzlies 82 – final

A healthy looking Manu Ginobili scored 24 points to lead the Spurs to a 95-82 victory over the Memphis Grizzlies in their season opener on Monday at the ATT Center.

Tony Parker had 15 points. Neither Ginobili nor Parker scored in the first quarter, but both got going later in the first half. The Spurs took the lead for good in the second quarter after struggling with eight turnovers in the first nine minutes of the game.

Richard Jefferson gave the Spurs an offensive spark early and finished with 14 points. Tim Duncan had 10 points.

Rookie Kawhi Leonard made his NBA debut and recorded his first point, basket and rebound. Rookie guard Cory Joseph made his debut in the final two minutes of the game.

Fourth quarter: Spurs call timeout to get all their bench players in. The Spurs lead 92-78 with 1:16 left.

Manu Ginobili has 20 points, five rebounds and four assists. The Spurs lead 86-74 with 4:22 left.

James Anderson finishes a fast break and the Spurs lead 86-72 with 5:39 left. Grizzlies timeout.

Pop calls a timeout after the Grizzlies get an easy basket. The Spurs lead 75-62 with 9:21 left in the game.

Third quarter – Spurs 72, Grizzlies 58: Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker have been strong offensively in the second and third quarters. They have combined for 28 points.

Manu Ginobili has 12 points and Tony Parker has 11. Tim Duncan just hit his first shot since 7:22 of the first quarter. The Spurs lead 60-49 with 5:12 left in the third quarter.

Richard Jefferson has 13 points and the Spurs lead 52-49 with 7:18 left in the third quarter. He is shooting 5 of 10. Timeout.

Halftime – Grizzlies 44, Spurs 43: Richard Jefferson leads all scorers with 10 points and Manu Ginobili has nine.

The Spurs have cut down (eliminated) their turnovers in the second quarter. They lead 37-33 with 3:27 left in the first half.

Richard Jefferson is the first Spurs player in double figures this season. He has 10 points. Who had him in the pool? The Spurs lead 30-26 with 6:26 left in the second quarter.

Richard Jefferson hit three straight shots early in the second quarter – one of those a 3-pointer. The Grizzlies lead the Spurs 24-23 with 8:46 left in the half.

The Spurs averaged 13.43 turnovers per game last season. They are on pace to pass that in the second quarter.

First quarter – Grizzlies 22, Spurs 14: The Spurs shoot 26 percent and turn the ball over eight times in the first quarter.

James Anderson and Matt Bonner each hits a 3-pointer off the bench. The Grizzlies lead the Spurs 16-12 with 2:35 left in the first quarter. Tim Duncan is already on the bench with three fouls.

Tim Duncan has two quick baskets and the Spurs are piling up some early fouls. The Grizzlies lead the Spurs 9-6 at the first timeout with 6:41 left in the first quarter.

Spurs starting lineup: point guard Tony Parker, shooting guard Manu Ginobili, small forward Richard Jefferson, power forward Tim Duncan and center DeJuan Blair.

The Spurs at long last open the regular season tonight.

The Spurs play the Memphis Grizzlies at 7:30 p.m. (Central) at the ATT Center.

Join Jeff McDonald and Tim Griffin for a live game chat (below) beginning at 7 p.m.

Spurs notebook: Bad shooting doesn’t concern Duncan

MINNEAPOLIS — Spurs captain Tim Duncan seemed amused Saturday to learn about Raptors coach Dwane Casey’s new motivational tool. Casey had a 1,300-pound boulder placed in the locker room at Air Canada Centre to reinforce a “pound the rock” theme in his first season as Toronto’s coach.

Duncan adopted Gregg Popovich’s hammer-the-rock philosophy as a rookie, and he continues to lean on it through a tough start to his season. His playing time has been limited through the first four games for a variety of reasons: three first-quarter fouls in the season opener and Popovich’s decision to sit him during the second half in Houston on Thursday. Playing time aside, Duncan also has struggled with his shot.

Heading into tonight’s game at Minnesota, Duncan has made only 14 of 41 shots (34.2 percent). A career 50.8 percent shooter, Duncan said there is little to do but keep firing away until his accuracy returns.

“I finally got one to drop late,” he said of his 4-of-13 shooting against the Jazz on Saturday. “I’m getting just about every shot I want. I just can’t seem to put them in the hole.

“Hopefully, down the stretch here in the next couple of games, I can finally get some to go.”

SHORT-TIMERS: Popovich’s plan to limit the playing time of his veteran players — especially the Big Three of 35-year-old Duncan, 34-year-old Manu Ginobili and 29-year-old Tony Parker — is off to a good start.

Richard Jefferson’s average of 29.0 minutes per game is tops among all players. Of the Big Three, Parker’s 28.8 minutes per game is tops. Ginobili averages only 25.8 minutes per game and Duncan just 22.3, less than backup center-forward Tiago Splitter’s 24.8.

Ten Spurs average at least 14.8 minutes per game as Popovich has gone to his bench early and often, mindful of the grind of 66 games in 120 days.

Except for the opener, when Duncan left early with three fouls, Jefferson has been the first starter to come out, replaced each time by rookie Kawhi Leonard. He has been getting significant time with the second unit, even late in games.

“Over the course of 10-plus seasons, I’ve played 42 minutes a night (but I’ve also) played 31 minutes a night,” Jefferson said. “It doesn’t really matter. It’s a matter of getting in that group.

“The second unit is without Manu and Tony and Tim, so I’m able to get a few more looks, a few more shots. I feel comfortable in that group. But in whatever Pop needs, whatever position he puts me in, I’m going to try my best.”

THREE-FICIENCY: With the notable exception of the loss in Houston, the Spurs have been remarkably efficient from long range. Their 10-for-16 shooting beyond the arc in the victory over Utah pushed their season percentage to 37.6. Without their 2-for-17 performance against the Rockets, they are 30 for 68 (44.1 percent).

Ginobili made his first five 3-pointers against the Jazz. Utah’s C.J. Miles got a finger on his sixth attempt, deflecting it enough that it fell short of the rim.

“First two games I felt pretty good, but in Houston I couldn’t make one,” Ginobili said. “(Saturday) it felt great. I’m not the kind of shooter who will go 5 for 5. It was different (Saturday). We moved the ball. I didn’t force the shots. I was open, and I made them.”