Spurs drill Mavs in 3-point no-contest

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

The first sign something had gone awry came when Matt Bonner — not typically a point guard nor a ball-handler — dribbled away about 12 seconds of the shot clock before finding himself trapped between a pair of 7-footers in Dallas blue.

Bailed out by a timeout with 4.8 seconds left on the shot clock, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich drew up a play that almost certainly didn’t include Richard Jefferson milking about 4.4 of those seconds before hot-potatoing the ball to backup point guard T.J. Ford about 5 feet behind the 3-point stripe.

After his Hail Mary found the bottom of the net, one of 11 3-pointers the Spurs would make in the first half of Thursday’s 93-71 rout of the defending NBA champion Mavericks, Ford offered the only reaction that seemed appropriate.

He shrugged.

“I didn’t give a you-know-what,” Ford said. “I just threw it up there, and it went in.”

That was the first half in a nutshell for the Spurs, who used a red-hot opening to their first 5-0 start at the ATT Center since 2007-08.

Gary Neal earned his second career start in place of injured All-Star guard Manu Ginobili and set the tone early, burying a pair of 3-pointers in the game’s first 89 seconds.

By halftime, the Spurs had hit 11 of 18 from beyond the arc, equaling both the number of total field goals Dallas had made and turnovers the Mavs had committed.

At that point, the Spurs had outscored the Mavs from 3-point range by a startling margin of 33-0. Bonner had outscored Dallas’ starting five 11-8. Not surprisingly, the Spurs led convincingly at half, 55-29.

“It’s always like that,” said Bonner, who made five 3-pointers en route to 17 points, out? scoring Tim Duncan and Dirk Nowitzki combined. “Misses are contagious, and makes are contagious.”

In the second half, an epidemic case of clank-itis broke out at the ATT Center.

With Dallas (3-5) playing its fourth game in five nights, and the Spurs (5-2) playing their third in four, the final two quarters were played on fumes. The third quarter, in which the teams combined to miss 33 of 41 shots, was lockout ball at its not-so-finest.

The Spurs scored just 11 points in the frame, yet saw their halftime lead of 26 shaved by just two points heading into the fourth.

“Neither team was very sharp,” said Popovich, whose team finished 16 of 33 from 3-point range. “We’re thrilled to have the win. We’re not going to give it away.”

Nowitzki, who came in averaging better than 22 points, struggled through a 3-for-11 night on his way to six points. For the reigning Finals MVP, it was the worst scoring night since Dec. 18, 2009 when he notched six points in 10 minutes in a loss to Houston, a game Nowitzki left early after a collision with the Rockets’ Carl Landry.

“You didn’t see the real Dirk tonight, that’s for sure,” Popovich said.

The list of Spurs who outscored Nowitzki included Jefferson (16 points, seven rebounds), Neal (12 points), Tony Parker (11 points, eight assists), Danny Green (eight) and Ford (seven).

Dallas coach Rick Carlisle refused to let the rugged schedule take all the blame for the dinosaur egg the Mavs laid.

“San Antonio’s energy was better to start the game,” said Carlisle, whose team made just 1 of 19 3-pointers. “We struggled, but their competitive level was higher and that was the difference in the game.”

And sometimes, as Ford proved with a prayer and a shrug early in the second quarter, the difference is in catching a team on the right night.

Ford’s clock-beating bomb, which inflated a 14-point lead to 17, was his only field goal until the fourth quarter.

“That was nothing that you can practice,” Ford said. “Just great timing.”

In a lockout-compressed season like this one, sometimes timing is everything.

Duncan: Sink or swim time for Spurs bench

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Two days away from playing the first game of his 15th season, Spurs captain Tim Duncan has declared himself fit, fresh and deeply concerned about the team’s depth.

A 66-game schedule being shoe-horned into 121 days will require the Spurs to play 17 sets of back-to-back games and two sets of back-to-back-to-backs.

It is one of the NBA’s most demanding schedules, and Duncan understands it will require more playing time from reserves.

“We’re going to find out if guys can play, if guys are ready to go, ready to contribute, because we’re going to have to use a lot of guys,” he said. “Whether you want to or not, you’re going to have to put guys out there and let them sink or swim.

“It’s not just our team. Everybody’s going to break down. Everybody’s going to need a deep team. That’s what it’s going to come down to.”

Duncan is one of only four big men on the Spurs roster with NBA experience, along with DeJuan Blair, Matt Bonner and Tiago Splitter. Two more big men, power forward Frank Hassell and center Luke Zeller, remain on the roster on make-good contracts.

“We need some guys to step up, a lot of guys,” Duncan said. “We’re going to need some of our bench to find their way and find their rhythm and help us out a lot. That will have to answer itself here come season time.

“We’ll have to figure out who’s going to be out there and who can give us some help, game in and game out, because it’s going to be a lot of games in not a lot of days and that depth is really going to make a difference.”

Blair’s answer: Blair, likely the starting center on opening night, has a fresh idea about how to make certain Duncan is fresh for the playoffs.

“We are going to play Tim a couple of games,” he said. “It’s 66 games in 120 days. That’s wild. I would rather Tim would sit out until the playoffs. We just have to get there first. That’s my big brother. I don’t want him to get hurt. I’m saving him.”

Of course, the Spurs’ chances of making the playoff field in the Western Conference are minuscule if Duncan plays only “a couple of games,” as Blair knows.

“He’s good and he wants to play every game if his body lets him,” Blair said. “It’s Pop’s decision and he’s going to be all right. I’ve got his back.”

Ho-ho-ho: The Spurs will practice today, but Popovich is giving his players a day off to celebrate Christmas. The truncated training camp means there hasn’t been a special emphasis on preparation for Monday’s game.

“It’s everything,” Popovich said, “squeezing a lot into a short time. We’re also not trying to go too fast. We all have to try and gauge what we think we can get in well, instead of what we think we can get in sloppily. It will take time.”

With two rookies on the roster and a new backup point guard, T.J. Ford, there has been plenty of teaching to get done in the short camp.

“They’ve been pretty efficient,” Popovich said of his new players. “The young guys are good people, good character, willing participants. I think they’re figuring things out pretty quickly.”

Manu shakes off the rust

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

They told Kawhi Leonard, from almost the moment he joined the Spurs last June, to be ready.

He heard it from coaches. Teammates, too.

When Manu Ginobili comes hurtling through the lane, don’t fall asleep. The ball could be coming your way, from the oddest of angles with the oddest of English.

“They told me he throws some unique passes,” Leonard said.

So when the moment of truth came Monday, late in the third quarter of the Spurs’ 95-82 season-opening victory over Memphis, Leonard stayed true to that advice.

He was ready.

Ginobili’s behind-the-back pass hit Leonard in the sweet spot, in the corner, and the rookie small forward buried a 3-pointer to cap a 16-0 Spurs run.

“It’s good that he made that one,” Ginobili said later with a grin. “He made me look good.”

Just like that, old blending into new with one flick of the wrist, the Spurs took the first step toward exorcising the demons of the 2011 playoffs.

Ginobili scored 24 points, Tony Parker had 15 to go with seven assists, and Richard Jefferson added 14 points as the Spurs opened the new season by upending the team that ended the last one.

With 25 turnovers leading to 28 Spurs points, and a quiet 10 points and six rebounds from playoff monster Zach Randolph, this Memphis team looked little like the one that ousted the Spurs in April.

“I would rather start the season against somebody who wasn’t predicted to be a good team,” Memphis coach Lionel Hollins said. “They won 61 games last year. People forget that.”

A sellout crowd of 18,581 at the ATT Center welcomed the Spurs back from the five-month NBA lockout.

After one quarter, Parker and Ginobili were scoreless, Tim Duncan was on the bench with three fouls, and the Spurs had belched up eight turnovers.

Duncan played just 5:32 of the first half, and yet the Spurs went into intermission behind only 44-43.

“It was better than being down 20,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said.

With Tiago Splitter and Matt Bonner filling the breach, the Spurs this time would not be overrun by the Grizzlies’ big men. Memphis forward Rudy Gay helped the Spurs defend Randolph, taking 18 shots en route to 19 points.

The difference was apparent in the first half, when Bonner did something to Randolph nobody thought to do in last year’s playoffs. Battling for a loose ball, Bonner knocked Randolph into the camera well.

Bonner would later chalk Randolph’s pratfall up to a bit of play-acting — “I couldn’t even knock T.J. Ford into the camera well,” Bonner said — but the message was clear.

On this night, the Spurs would not be pushed around.

They held their ground until Duncan — who ended with 10 points — returned to start the second half.

The game turned during a third quarter in which Memphis made just 6 of 21 shots and gave out six turnovers.

“Defense fueled what we did,” said Popovich, now 14-1 in season openers. “We were active, we crowded things, we got our hands on a lot of balls.”

Parker finished with four steals, two of which came when he pickpocketed Mike Conley, his Memphis nemesis, on back-to-back possessions. Ginobili had three steals, one of which he converted into a two-handed dunk in the fourth quarter.

“Our defense got better as the game went on,” Jefferson said.

In the third quarter, Ginobili provided the made-for-TV highlight, whipping one of those unique passes of his to Leonard along the baseline.

Leonard, as promised, was prepared.

“Coaches told me to be ready in my spots, and he’d get me the ball,” said Leonard, who had six points and six rebounds.

One win in December does not wipe out the sting of April. The Spurs still have 60 victories to go to match last year’s total, an impossible feat given the 66-game slate.

But for one night, with old blending into new, anything seemed possible.