Spurs’ win nets area-best ratings

By Jerry Garcia, jgarcia@express-news.net

The Spurs not only pulled off a win over Memphis on Monday. They also beat local programming to be the area’s top-rated show of the night.

Overnight Nielsen ratings released Tuesday say the Spurs’ 95-82 win over the Grizzlies on Fox Sports Net Southwest nabbed an 8.8 rating and a 14 share.

San Antonio has 880,690 homes counted by Nielsen, making the city the 36th-largest media market in the U.S. A ratings point represents 1 percent of the market’s universe. The share marks the percentage of homes or people with sets tuned into a specific program.

An estimated 77,500 homes watched the telecast, with 14 percent of area TV viewers looking at the Spurs game at any point during the 2½-hour telecast.

Viewership peaked in the fourth quarter with a 10.5 rating and 17 share.

The game had higher ratings than “Monday Night Football” between the Falcons and Saints, and “Rudolph’s Shiny New Year” special.

Z-Bo: Upset over Spurs still resonates for Grizzlies

Zach Randolph hasn’t forgotten about how good that Memphis’ six-game series victory over the Spurs felt last April.

He now might not be playing with the Grizzlies because of the lockout, but Randolph still is excited about one of the biggest series upsets in modern NBA history.

“It was a great feeling,” Randolph told Indianapolis radio station WFNI during a recent interview (hat tip:  Sports Radio Interviews.com). “The feeling was unbelievable. You could feel it. You can still feel it.

“Winning a playoff, going to the second round, game seven, it just got us hungry. We want to win a championship and to tell you the truth we are really ready to compete. That’s why I say the lockout happens when things are turning around, but once we get back in place we’re gonna be a team to be reckoned with.”

The Spurs certainly wouldn’t argue with that assessment, considering the way the season ended last year.

Randolph has struggled to stay in shape earlier in his career. But the unexpected playoff run is helping him steer away from the off-season burgers and fries that used to mark his diet.

“I’m doing this new training called chameleon training,” Randolph said. “It’s like special  ops. I’m just training and it’s really tough.”

The playoff run helped Randolph remake his image into one of the best players in the league. He’s determined to keep that edge once the lockout ends.

“The trainer said the training I had been doing was illusion training, like I had been doing fake training all these years,” Randolph said. “It’s something different for me and something good for me. I’ve been working out with him every day, taking my daughter to school and hoping we can get something worked out and get this season going on time.”

The Memphis franchise finished with incredible momentum after the unexpected playoff run. Randolph and the rest of the team can only hope the lockout is settled quickly.

Playing for Argentina rejuvenates Oberto

MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina — The Spurs were in a 3-1 hole in their first-round playoff series against the Grizzlies, but the veterans were happy to see an old friend in the hallway outside their locker room before Game 5.

Fabricio Oberto, starting center on the 2007 title team, was there to lend support to his Argentine friend, Manu Ginobili, and to Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Matt Bonner.

Oberto had other reasons to be in San Antonio. Just five games into the 2010-11 season, a recurrence of heart palpitations, which had beset him on several occasions during his four seasons in silver and black, had forced his retirement from the Portland Trail Blazers. Portland was Oberto’s second NBA team since the 2009 trade that sent him to Detroit as part of the deal that brought Richard Jefferson to San Antonio.

“I am here to visit with the doctors and see what they say about playing again,” Oberto said then. “I must try to play again for my country.”

Oberto was done with the rigors of the NBA, but he had not given up on basketball. Not with an important FIBA tournament scheduled for late summer in his native land; not with one more opportunity to play with the five Argentine national team members with whom he had shared so many memories and medals for more than a decade.

Oberto, Ginobili, Luis Scola, Carlos Delfino, Andres Nocioni and Pepe Sanchez played on the Argentine team that was the first to defeat a U.S. team that included NBA players. Their victory over Team USA at the 2002 FIBA World Championships in Indianapolis shocked the basketball world. Argentina went on to earn the silver medal at that tournament.

All six then were on the 2004 Argentine team that again defeated Team USA, this time in the semifinals of the Olympics in Athens. They won the gold medal, forever earning the nickname with which their basketball loving countrymen refer to them today: the golden generation.

So, if there were a way, Oberto vowed that April day that he would not let down his friends, teammates and countrymen.

That attitude is what Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich once famously characterized as “the heart of a champion.”

This is why in Argentina, where nearly every player has a nickname, Oberto’s alter ego is “El Guerrero” — the warrior.

The tests Oberto underwent in San Antonio produced good results. He headed home to Cordoba, Argentina, determined to get himself in condition for the tournament and wait for additional heart tests before the national team’s training camp was to begin in mid-July.

Argentina’s Fabricio Oberto shoots over Canada’s Kelly Olynyk during Monday’s game in Mar del Plata, Argentina. (Martin Mejia/Associated Press)

Doctors in Argentina gave the go-ahead in late June, and Oberto celebrated the good news with his longtime teammates.

“Nobody will work harder than Fabri to get into the best physical condition,” Ginobili said then. “We all know how hard he will work, and I am thrilled to play with him again and pumped to again play together — a month-and-a-half to be with him and all my other friends on the team.”

Training camp and exhibition games went well for Team Argentina and for Oberto, who was used sparingly as he worked his way back into condition.

Then, just a week ahead of the tournament, Oberto suffered another medical setback. A ruptured muscle in his left hand threatened his participation in the tournament.

Argentine coach Julio Lamas assured Oberto the injury would not cost him his spot on the team. If he had to miss the first round of the competition, the team would wait for him, Lamas said.

Oberto’s response was thrice-daily sessions with the team’s physiotherapist to speed his return to playing status.

One of the most popular players in Argentine basketball history, Oberto suited up for the first game of the tournament. During pregame introductions, the ovation he received equaled those for both Ginobili and Scola, the team’s biggest stars.

“It was amazing,” he said. “My legs were shaking when they cheered my name. I’m really thankful for how they treated me, and I will try to give all that love back inside the court.”

Finally, before Game 2 of the tournament, against Uruguay, Oberto got the news he had hoped to hear: Team doctors and athletic trainers again had cleared him for action.

“I think I will play only five minutes,” he said before that game, “but I will be happy just to be on the court.”

Instead, Oberto played 16 minutes against Uruguay, and in typical fashion: making slick interior passes to his teammates; playing smart, tough defense; and going hard after every rebound and loose ball.

“I returned to life,” he told Argentine reporters after that game.

“I passed through tough days, but I had the perseverance to go on working with the team doctor and kinesiologist, and I made it.”