Ginobili heeds coach’s call, sparks Spurs in comeback

By Jeff McDonald

Manu Ginobili looked sharper Sunday than he had at any other point throughout the playoffs.

And that was before he ever set foot on the floor at the ATT Center.

A few hours before tipoff of Game 1 of the Western Conference finals, Ginobili — whose sartorial style might best be described as slacker chic — strolled into the locker room wearing a dapper gray sport coat over his button-down dress shirt.

It wasn’t until later that night, after he had Pied-Pipered a come-from-behind 101-98 victory over Oklahoma City, that Ginobili began to regret his choice of threads.

“It’s probably going to be the first and last time of the season,” Ginobili said, squinting in the glare of the TV lights. “I’m sweating like a pig.”

In all other respects, Ginobili proved ready for his close-up. With the chips down in the fourth quarter, the Thunder did not.

Ginobili broke from his playoff scoring slump — (alternate take: what slump?) — for a season-high 26 points, including 11 in the fourth quarter, to help the Spurs overcome a nine-point deficit and deny OKC a golden ticket to the first lead of the series.

It was vintage Ginobili, at a moment when the Spurs desperately needed it, their 19th consecutive victory in dire jeopardy.

“We started to count on him for a long stretch there,” Tim Duncan said. “He really did it for us.”

In his first game against OKC this year — he missed all three meetings in the regular-season — Ginobili showed the Thunder what they had been missing.

He was 3 of 5 from the 3-point line and 5 of 5 from the foul stripe, all his free throws coming in the fourth.

Two classic Ginobili drives in the final 1:57 essentially finished off OKC. The capper, in which he split a pair of defenders before finding the rim, put the Spurs up 96-89 with 1:11 to go.

“That’s Manu’s game,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “He’s somebody we depend on to create and make things happen.”

Tony Parker added 18 points, six assists and a season-high eight rebounds, while Duncan had 16 points and 11 rebounds for his fifth double-double of the postseason.

Harder-earned than most, the victory gave the Spurs claim to one of the fourth-longest winning streaks in NBA history. Heading into the fourth quarter, with the Thunder up nine and rolling, that streak seemed on life support.

OKC already had forced 14 first-half turnovers, undermining any chance the Spurs had of generating offense, and Kevin Durant was heating up on his way to 27 points and 10 boards.

His team down seven, Popovich called a timeout and uttered the phrase soon likely to show up on bootlegged T-shirts across the Alamo City: “I want some nasty.”

Popovich got what he asked for, most obviously from Stephen Jackson, who spent every second of the final frame mugging Durant, then threw in a game-breaking 3-pointer for good measure.

But the Spurs also got a dose of nasty from Ginobili, who helped engineer a 30-11 run that flipped the game.

“Manu, I’m never worried about him,” Jackson said. “When it’s nut-cutting time, when we need him, we knew he’s going to be there.”

Ginobili came into the night averaging 11.3 points and shooting 25 percent from 3-point range in the postseason. There were signs early a breakout was in play.

Not long into his initial shift of the first quarter, Ginobili slithered for a few Ginobili drives. At the horn, he threw in an off-balance 3-pointer, then opened the second quarter with another.

“That’s when we knew,” Jackson said. “He was rolling.”

The last time Ginobili scored this many points: Game 5 against Memphis last postseason. He had 33 in an elimination game.

At times, Sunday had that feel. Had Ginobili been saving himself for this moment?

“I’m not that good,” he said. “It just happened. I don’t know how exactly.”

It’s a question the Thunder likely will be asking themselves up until tipoff of Game 2 on Tuesday. After losing control late in Game 1, Oklahoma City left the arena looking for reasons to hope.

“(The Spurs) are playing the best basketball in the league,” OKC coach Scott Brooks said. “And we were right there.”

The difference was Ginobili, who traded in his dress jacket for a superhero’s cape, just in the nick of time.

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

SPURS VS. THUNDER
Western Conference finals
(Spurs lead best-of-7 series 1-0)

Game 1:

Game 2: Tuesday – Spurs vs. Thunder, 8:00 p.m. TNT

Game 3: Thursday – Spurs @ Thunder, 8:00 p.m. TNT

Game 4: Saturday – Spurs @ Thunder, 7:30 p.m. TNT

*Game 5: Monday June 4 – Spurs vs. Thunder, 8:00 p.m. TNT

*Game 6: Wednesday June 6 – Spurs @ Thunder, 8:00 p.m. TNT

*Game 7: Friday June 8 – Spurs vs. Thunder, 8:00 p.m. TNT

– All times Central
*If necessary

The Spurs push winning streak to 19 games

It’s been a long time since the Spurs lost.

Spurs Nation still remembers that 98-84 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on April 11.

In those 46 days since that last loss the Spurs have won 19 straight games, extending the streak with a 101-98 victory Sunday night over Oklahoma City. It’s included the last 10 regular season games and all nine playoff games.

Here’s the streak, broken down game by game.

1.     Apr. 12      Memphis              107-97

2.     Apr. 14      Phoenix                105-91

3.     Apr. 16      @ Golden State   120-99

4.     Apr.  17     @ L.A. Lakers     112-91

5.     Apr.  18      @ Sacramento    127-102

6.     Apr. 20        L.A. Lakers       121-97 

7.      Apr. 22       Cleveland           114-98

8.      Apr. 23       Portland             124-89

9.      Apr. 25       @ Phoenix         110-106

10.    Apr. 26       @ Golden State 107-101

11.    Apr. 29         Utah                  106-91     *

12.    May 2           Utah                  114-83      *

13.    May 5           @ Utah             102-90     *

14.    May 7            @ Utah               87-81     *

15.    May 15          L.A. Clippers    108-92    *

16.    May 17          L.A. Clippers     105-88    *

17.    May 19          @ L.A. Clippers   96-86    *

18.    May 20          @ L.A. Clippers 102-99   *

19.    May 27          Oklahoma City   101-98   *

* – Playoff game

CP3 will be facing friendly rivalry with TP

Los Angeles Clippers point guard Chris Paul has been credited for much of the turnaround in his franchise that was culminated by their first-round playoff series victory over Memphis Sunday afternoon.

It was only the second seven-game series victory in the 42-season history of the Clippers.

Paul is eagerly anticipating a chance to play against Spurs point guard Tony Parker, an old friend for many years.

Paul and Parker exchange texts frequently and have communicated since the Clippers’ victory at Memphis.

“He sent me a text saying “Congratulations, see you soon,” We talk all the time,” Paul said.

Paul’s son and wife traveled from Memphis to San Antonio after Sunday’s game. Shortly after their arrival, 2-year-old Chris Paul Jr. recognized a familar face at San Antonio International Airport.

“When they got off the plane last night, my wife said the first thing he did he was that he saw a picture of Tony and yelled his name,” Paul said, chuckling.

The Spurs and Parker eliminated Paul’s deepest advancement into the playoffs when they eliminated New Orleans in seven games in the 2008 Western Conference semifinals. Those games helped cement the friendship between Paul and Parker.

“TP is unbelievable,” Paul said. “He had an unbelievable season. He’s a great friend of mine. We talk on a regular basis.  The kid is just an overall great guy and great player. He’s somebody I’ve always had fun competing against.” 

Paul finished third in the MVP balloting and Parker was fifth. Paul said that Parker has had the best season of his 11-season NBA career this season.

“First of all, people are just noticing him a little bit more now,” Paul said. “You know Tony’s been this good for a long time. Me and him have talked about it before. I think it’s because he came into the league so young and Tim (Duncan) and them (the Spurs) have been so good for so long that at times people forget how great he is on a nightly basis.”

Owing to both playing collegiately at Wake Forest, Paul also is close with Spurs captain Tim Duncan.

But even with his association with Duncan and Parker, Paul said he won’t have any trouble putting aside his friendship to allow his  team to advance.

“It’s one of those things where we are all so competitive that we put it aside,” Paul said. “They know when we step on the court there’s none of that.”