Spurs spurn rival

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

DALLAS — In the three days between their worst loss of the season and Friday’s tipoff against the Mavericks, the Spurs heard little from their coach except reminders of the need to play the sort of defense that has put championship banners in the ATT Center’s rafters.

When they made a defensive mistake on Dallas’ first possession at American Airlines Center, they heard a lot more during a 20-second tirade during a timeout called by an irate Gregg Popovich.

“We were supposed to switch,” said point guard Tony Parker, “and we didn’t switch. We’d talked about defense for three days, and the first play we had our first mistake. Pop was on fire from the get-go.”

It was a valuable reiteration of the lessons hammered home during a rare, three-day hiatus, for it was defensive focus and execution in the fourth quarter that allowed the Spurs to escape Dallas with a 97-91 victory. The Spurs secured a 3-1 season series victory over their Texas rival.

Despite going scoreless in the first five minutes of the final period, the Spurs yielded only five points from the 73-66 margin they held when the quarter ?? began.

By the time guard Gary Neal nailed a 3-pointer from the left corner, the Spurs had missed 13 consecutive shots from the final 1:30 of the third period to the 6:58 mark of the fourth.

They were able to run their record to 55-13 — the NBA’s best mark and the best record in franchise history after 68 games — only because they limited the Mavericks to two baskets during the same stretch.

Neal’s 3-pointer — which followed Manu Ginobili’s slick steal from Mavericks guard Rodrigue Beaubois near the Spurs’ 3-point line — started a Spurs scoring run that left them with a 91-77 lead with 2:34 remaining, just enough cushion to emerge with the win.

“We made enough shots down the stretch, and we were fortunate to get the win,” Popovich said.

With the playoffs approaching, Friday’s victory was a throwback to the Spurs’ championship years in another manner: Their big three scoring stars — Parker, Ginobili and Tim Duncan — combined to score 80 of their 97 points. Parker led the way with 33, Ginobili scored 25 and Duncan got 22, his first game of more than 20 points since he tallied 21 in a victory over the Knicks on Jan. 21.

Aggressive from start to finish, Parker scored four shy of his season high. He got to the rim with relative ease, making nine layups, but also banked in a big 3-pointer with 4:40 remaining to stretch a four-point lead to seven.

“I felt good when it left my hands,” he said. “I’ll take it. I’ve been shooting threes well lately.”

Parker called the victory a perfect shot of confidence for a team that had returned from Miami shaken by the 110-80 loss to the Heat.

“Nobody likes to lose by 30,” he said. “It was just a big comeback win for us on the road against a very good team.”

Ginobili went so far as to say the improvement in defensive focus would have been enough, even if the Spurs had lost.

“Even before the game, it was a pretty important game for us,” he said. “We were coming from two bad losses against contenders, the Lakers and the Heat. We needed to step up and have a good game today. Not necessarily to win, but we needed to compete and play a very good game today, and we did.

“We won, so we go back home pretty satisfied.”

Duncan was satisfied with his own offensive showing, but more pleased with the team’s defensive execution of a game plan that required switching on pick-and-rolls and some full-court pressure from the guards.

Neal, the 26-year-old rookie who has made an impact from the 3-point line, got praise from the captain for his defensive work.

“Gary Neal did a great job all night of picking up full court and turning people and making people work. Just a lot better focus all around.”

Popovich makes it a long day for the Spurs

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

A long film session segued into a long practice session Wednesday, which turned out to be the longest practice day for the Spurs since training camp, by unofficial media timing.

The practice began at 11 a.m. By the time reporters were ushered onto the court at the team’s practice facility, it was 1:32 p.m., with players finishing free-throw drills.

Asked if the lengthy session had been productive, coach Gregg Popovich gave a not-so-lengthy answer: “Yes, it was.”

A 30-point loss in Miami to be followed by a Friday road game against Southwest Division rival Dallas required such a long and painful film session, according to starting center Antonio McDyess, the team’s most veteran player.

He called replaying the many mistakes of Sunday’s blowout loss anything but fun.

“Nor was it a fun practice,” he said. “We were disappointed in the way we played down there, and Pop wanted us to look at some of the things we didn’t do down there.

“We could have looked at the whole film, but we didn’t do that. A lot of the mistakes we made, he wanted us to clean up going into the Dallas game. We feel this is a big game, so we wanted to clean up a lot of stuff.”

GREEN INITIATIVE: Just in time for St. Patrick’s Day, the Spurs brought back to their roster Danny Green, a 6-foot-6 guard-forward who played two games with the club in a brief stint in November.

Green had been playing for the NBA D-League’s Reno Bighorns. In 16 games with Reno, he averaged 20.1 points, 7.5 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 1.38 steals in 37.4 minutes per game. He made 45.1 percent of his shots, including 43.4 percent (36 of 83) from 3-point range.

The former North Carolina Tar Heel played last season for the Cleveland Cavaliers. He scored six points in his two games with the Spurs in November.

“He’s a talented young man who has impressed us with his combination of pretty good defensive skills and awareness and a pretty good shot,” Popovich said. “He’s a young guy who, in time, is going to be a good player. Sometimes it takes somebody two, three, four years before they find the right situation.

“He’s obviously well schooled by Coach (Roy) Williams at North Carolina, and we like his skills.”

GOING TO GAGA: Several Spurs, including Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili, took in Tuesday’s concert at the ATT Center by pop star Lady Gaga.

Parker and Ginobili tweeted about the show.

“It was great,” Parker said. “She’s a great performer. Yeah, I like her stuff.”

Parker could not verify if Ginobili, who was suffering some laryngitis on Wednesday, was suffering because he had cheered too loudly at the concert.

“I don’t know if he was screaming,” Parker said, “but he was moving his head. Half of the team (was there). It was good.”

One Spur who did not take in the show: McDyess, at 36 the team’s oldest player.

“No, not me,” he said. “I don’t even know one of her songs.”

Spurs suffer symmetric smackdown in Miami

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

MIAMI — The first time LeBron James ever dunked a basketball, he was in middle school. He was playing in a student-faculty game and got the ball on a fast break.

“I just said, ‘I’m going for it,’” James said.

For the record, the Miami Heat’s 110-80 victory over the Spurs on Monday night wasn’t quite that easy. At times in the fourth quarter, however, it certainly looked that way.

James, Dwyane Wade and Jamaal Magloire all provided exclamation-point dunks for the Heat, who responded to a 30-point loss 10 days earlier in San Antonio by handing the NBA-leading Spurs one of their own.

Chris Bosh had 30 points and 12 rebounds, Wade scored 29, and James had a quiet 21 — save for his thunderous fourth-quarter slam — as the Heat continued their weeklong resurrection and reminded a national TV audience of something obscured by their recent five-game losing skid.

“We’re not talking about a second-division team in Asia,” Spurs guard Manu Ginobili said. “We’re talking about the Heat.”

For Miami, the victory was their third in a row in a streak that began with Thursday’s sigh-of-relief win over the Lakers. For the Spurs, it was a continuation of a trend that could become disturbing if it persists.

It’s a fool’s errand to make too much out of one game in 82, especially when the Spurs are 54-13, but Monday’s outcome was their third loss this month to a team currently in the playoff picture. Those three defeats, which include losses to the Lakers and Memphis, have come by an average of 20 points.

Monday’s loss was the Spurs’ most lopsided in the regular-season since April 7, 2005, when they dropped a 104-68 decision at Dallas.

“What goes around comes around,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “We made a lot of shots in San Antonio. They made a lot of shots here.”

In their 125-95 victory over Miami on March 4, the Spurs set a franchise record with 17 3-pointers. In the rematch, they were 6 of 22.

Credit goes to Miami’s perimeter defenders, who were much more aggressive than in the first meeting.

Tony Parker scored 18 points to lead the Spurs, but no other player managed more than Tim Duncan’s 14.

“We attacked,” James said. “And we never stopped attacking.”

Proof of the aggressiveness gap came at the foul line, where the Spurs didn’t get their first free throw until 2:17 left in the first half. The Spurs hung within 10 points at intermission but were outscored 14-7 to start the third quarter.

“I thought in the first half, we did a good job of hanging in,” Popovich said. “I was optimistic. Then, at the start of the third quarter, they came with the same aggressiveness and energy, and we didn’t match that.”

Even after the loss, the Spurs own a 6 1/2-game lead over Dallas for the top seed in the Western Conference. The Spurs and Mavericks play Friday in Dallas.

With the victory, meanwhile, the Heat (46-21) climbed within two games of Boston and Chicago for the top mark in the East.

“They needed the game more than us,” said Ginobili, who had 12 points and missed all three of his 3-point tries. “They were more upset than us.”

In the end, the Heat doled out a dish best served cold. Miami players admitted the idea of revenge was in the back of their minds when they entered the gym Monday.

By the end of the night, they had taken out their frustration not just on the Spurs, but on the rims at the AmericanAirlines Arena.

Led by James’ re-enactment of a middle-school play, the Heat transformed the fourth quarter into a dunk contest that the Spurs were in no mood to judge.

“It’s huge for us to get even with this team,” Bosh said. “They beat us pretty good up there, and I’m happy we were able to respond.”

With a 60-point turnaround, the Heat got even with the Spurs, in more ways than one.