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.”

Game rewind: Manu demands back-to-back action and thrives because of it

Manu Ginobili was ready and determined to play Wednesday night.

Recent reports that Ginobili’s action in back-to-back games would be limited proved to be a little premature as he rehabilitates from a recent hip flexor.

Ginobili told FOX Sports Southwest after the Spurs’ 117-112 victory over Sacramento that he wanted to play against the Kings.

It led Ginobili to tell Spurs coach Gregg Popovich he wanted to test himself in a back-to-back game for the first time this season. Coming off the bench, Ginobili responded with a team-high 20 points.

“I asked him to play this back-to-back because I was starting to feel good and I need to play,” Ginobili said. “I’m starting to feel better and I wanted to be with the guys and play.”

The Spurs still have a tough 17-game schedule looming over the remaining 29 days of the season. Ginobili doesn’t promise to play in all of them. But at least on Wednesday, he wanted to be in the lineup.

“I’m not sure if I’m going to play whenever we play that back-to-back-to-back, because that’s too much and kind of risky and we’re doing pretty well,” Ginobili said. “But I asked today to play because I was ready.”

The Spurs’ deep bench will enable Popovich to bring Ginobili along as he wants.

But after Wednesday night, Ginobili had cleared one remaining hurdle.

Here’s a detailed look at the Spurs’ sixth straight victory of the season — made even more impressive because they have been played over the last eight nights.

The game, simply stated: Even with some defensive ruts along the way, the Spurs employed sizzling shooting down the stretch to complete a wire-to-wire victory that was their fifth victory in six nights.

Where the game was won: After Isaiah Thomas’ 3-pointer pulled the Kings within 93-92 with 7:06 left, the Spurs put the game away with a 10-4 run that included Tony Parker’s driving layup, two baskets from Tim Duncan and hoops from Stephen Jackson and Kawhi Leonard. The rookie’s 7-foot running jumper with 3:48 gave the Spurs a 103-96 advantage with 3:48 left.

A little too close for comfort?: Two foul shots by Jason Thompson pulled the Kings within 103-98 with 3:04 left. But a long jumper by Jackson and a 3-pointer by Parker — both coming on assists from Duncan — iced the victory.

Close but never ahead: Sacramento cut the Spurs lead to one point on seven occasions in the third quarter and nine times in the second half, but never tied the game or went ahead.

Player of the game I: Ginobili came off the bench to score 20 points on 8 of 12 from the field, three 3-pointers and five assists.

Player of the game II: Leonard played with a confidence that belied his rookie season. He scored 19 points on 8-for-11 shooting, three 3-pointers, nine rebounds, two assists and two steals.

Player of the game III: Thomas erupted for a career-high 28 points, along with four rebounds and a team-high 10 assists.

Most unsung: This is the first time all season that Tony Parker has earned this mention. He produced only 10 points, more than nine below his season average. But he also provided seven rebounds,  seven assists and two steals. .

Attendance: The days when Phil Jackson complained about the Arco Arena as the NBA’s noisiest facility are a long time removed. The Kings have some exciting young players and a new arena on the horizon. But they still drew a crowd of just 13,119 for the Spurs — more than 4,000 below the building’s capacity. Sacramento has attracted four sellout crowds this season, but two came for their first two home games of the season.

Did you notice I: Popovich was like a kid with a new toy as he tweaked his rotation. He had already employed 11 players before the end of the first quarter.  And nine of them scored.

Did you notice II: The Spurs continued to pound the ball inside as they have throughout the recent winning streak. In the second half, San Antonio had 22 two-point baskets, with 17 hoops coming on points in the paint.

Stat of the game I:The Spurs claimed their sixth straight victory and their 13th road game in their last 15. Before that stretch, the Spurs had lost eight of their first 10 road games of the season.

Stat of the game II: San Antonio’s winning streak is the longest current streak in the league and their 9-1 record in the last 10 games is the best in the league.

Stat of the game III: The San Antonio bench was its most dominant element as the Spurs’ substitutes outscored Sacramento’s non-starters, 55-20.

Stat of the game IV: After struggling the several games, the Spurs’ perimeter game returned with 10 3-pointers in 20 attempts for 50 percent. It was their most 3-pointers since hitting 11 in Dallas on March 17 — a stretch of six games. The Spurs shot at 50 percent for the first time since beating Orlando on March 14 — an eight-game stretch.

Stat of the game V: Parker notched his 10th double-double of the season with 10 points and 10 assists. It was his fourth double-double in his last eight games.

Stat of the game VI: The Spurs claimed their seventh straight victory in Sacramento and their 13th triumph in their last 14 games  against the Kings.

Stat of the game VII: Dominating inside, the Spurs racked up 60 points in the paint, marking the eighth straight game they have reached at least 50 paint points and 10th in their last 12 games. They have reached 60 points in four games this season, including three times in their last 12 games.

Stat of the game VIII: The Spurs set a season record by hitting 67.5 percent from the field (27 of 40). They also achieved a feat  by hitting 65 percent from the field in the third quarter and 70 percent in the fourth. It was the only time this season the Spurs shot at least 60 percent in the third and fourth quarters of the same game.

Weird stat of the night I: The Spurs had only two players with more than 30 minutes —  Leonard (33:12) and Parker (31:21). 

Weird stat of the night II: Parker matched his season high with seven rebounds and also led the team with seven defensive  rebounds. Leonard and Duncan were next with five defensive rebounds apiece.

Weird stat of the night III: The Spurs shot 70 percent in the third quarter and were still outscored by Sacramento, 29-28.

Weird stat of the night IV: Matt Bonner logged 23 seconds of playing time at the end of the first quarter for his only game action. It was his shortest playing stint since logging seven seconds against Phoenix on Feb. 28, 2010.

Weird stat of the night V: The Spurs improved their shooting in each quarter in Wednesday’s game, hitting 40.7 percent in the first quarter, 45.8 percent in the second quarter, 65 percent in the third quarter and 70 percent in the fourth quarter. It’s the second time they have accomplished that feat this season after also doing it against Atlanta on Jan. 25.

Weird stat of the night VI: The Spurs never trailed for  their eighth wire-to-wire victory this season.

Not a good sign: The Spurs permitted  Sacramento to hit 54.7 percent from the field. It was the highest opponent field-goal percentage since Portland hit 59.3 percent in its blowout victory over the Spurs on Feb. 21. The Spurs allowed opponents to shoot 50 percent or better in five of their first 10 games and eight of their first 18 games. Since then, opponents have reached 50 percent or better in only five of their last 31 games.

Best plus/minus scores: Leonard, Duncan and Parker shared the team lead, all at plus-14. Stephen Jackson was at plus-8.

Worst plus/minus scores: Tiago Splitter was minus-9, Neal was minus-6 and James Anderson was minus-5.

Quote of the game: “They play like a championship team. They play together and they look like they love playing together. That’s  a team we need to look up to because they are very solid in every area,” Sacramento rookie guard Isaiah Thomas, to the Associated Press about his respect for the Spurs.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs stayed in Sacramento Wednesday night and won’t play again until Saturday night at home against Indiana. They then will have a back-to-back Tuesday night in Cleveland and Wednesday night in Boston. Sacramento travels to Utah for a Friday game before home games Saturday against New Jersey and Monday against Minnesota.

Injuries: The Spurs had a complete roster with no injuries for the first time since the trade deadline and utilized 13 players. Sacramento was missing G John Salmons (sore right hip). G Marcus Thornton hit his head on the floor during a wild scramble at the end of the third  uarter. He was tested for a concussion, but returned to play 7:19 in the fourth quarter.


New-look Spurs sink champs

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Spurs 104, Mavericks 87: March 23, 2012


Kawhi Leonard slips inside for a shot in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Manu Ginobili fouls Brandon Wright as he combines with Stephen Jackson on defense as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Boris Diaw is accepted on the bench by coach Brett Brown and Tony Parker as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Stephen Jackson reaches in and tips the ball away from Dirk Nowitzki resulting in a fast break score by Manu Ginobili as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan powers a shot over Brandan Wright in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan clears his way into the basket by Ian Mahinmi in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green loses the ball after being fouled in the lane as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green gets inside of Jason Terry for a layup as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Stephen Jackson winds his way through the middle in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Gary Neal gets off a runner in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Kawhi Leonard rolls in to score on a fast break against Jason Kidd as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green gets by Dominique Jones in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Boris Diaw gets the assignment to guard Dirk Nowitzki in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan and Danny Green stop Jason Terry in the lane in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan runs into a block by Ian Mahinmi in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Boris Diaw defends against Dirk Nowitzki as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green gets a pass backward over Jason Kidd as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Shawn Marion loses control of the ball under pressure from Kawhi Leonard as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


DeJuan Blair pressures Dirk Nowitzki in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)

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By Jeff McDonald

The Spurs could have been content to sit tight.

With a roster good enough for second in the Western Conference, with an 11-game winning streak still fresh in their minds and a position about 25 general managers in the NBA would sell their first-born to acquire, the Spurs could have stood pat on a solid hand at the trade deadline.

Instead, the Spurs rolled the dice on a makeover that has changed the face of the team — and perhaps the Western Conference race.

When general manager R.C. Buford traded his starting small forward to bring back a prodigal son, signed a promising backup point guard and claimed a slick-passing big man from the free-agent pile — all in an eight-day whirlwind — it sent an unmistakable signal to his locker room.

“We’re trying to win this thing,” Tim Duncan said.

Friday night, the new-look Spurs were on display at the ATT Center, and the results were undeniable: Without Tony Parker — the only All-Star on the roster — the Spurs devastated the NBA’s reigning champions, choking out Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks 104-87.

Duncan had 15 points and 12 rebounds, while Manu Ginobili had 11 points, seven assists and seven rebounds, recovering from an uneven first half in his first start at point guard.

Danny Green led the Spurs with 18 points, and Kawhi Leonard added 12 and eight rebounds.

It added up to a significant victory, one that kicked off a back-to-back-to-back set that continues tonight in New Orleans and gave the Spurs (31-14) a six-game cushion in the Southwest Division.

It was also, as that noted purveyor of temperance and caution Stephen Jackson said afterward, just one game.

“You can’t be jumping the gun after one game,” Jackson said.

How thorough was the beating the Spurs administered Friday? They outrebounded Dallas 54-34, including a 12-4 edge on the offensive glass, and outscored the Mavs 50-16 in the paint and 21-7 in second-chance points.

Jackson had 10 points and eight rebounds. But his biggest contribution might have been his defensive work on Nowitzki during a short stretch in the first half. He appeared to so frustrate the big German that he sent the Dallas star into a game-long funk.

Nowitzki finished 5 of 21 and scored 16 points as Dallas (27-22) ended a four-game winning streak.

“He has an edge to him,” coach Gregg Popovich said of Jackson, who returned to the Spurs after nine seasons. “He’s a competitor.”

Boris Diaw, the newest Spurs player barely 24 hours off the plane from Charlotte, played nearly 16 minutes and made his lone field goal.

Signed on Friday after securing a buyout from the Bobcats, Diaw also helped defend Nowiztki, who missed 14 of 16 shots after the first quarter.

It was a surreal day for Diaw, who went from the NBA’s worst team to the thick of a title run overnight.

“I knew it was going to be pretty fast after the buyout,” Diaw said.

The Spurs put the game away with a 22-2 run in the second half, using a lineup that once would have been a hallucination: Gary Neal, Ginobili, Jackson, Diaw and Matt Bonner.

The only hole the Spurs showed Friday was at backup point guard, which could be filled once Patrick Mills clears up a visa issue.

“They obviously did not want to lose the season series,” Nowitzki said. “They came out with a little more fire.”

Nowitzki walked off the ATT Center floor worn and beaten, and this should concern Dallas when looking ahead to a potential playoff matchup. When Nowitzki shoved Leonard after a rebound with 2:04 left, drawing a technical foul, it was clear he’d had enough.

For the Spurs, it was off to New Orleans, in pursuit of the same goal they’d always had — winning this thing.

But thanks to their trade-deadline gamble, perhaps with a better chance of accomplishing it.

“We’re trying to be a contender,” Duncan said. “It’s good to see us making moves like that. Hopefully these moves pay off for us.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net