Battier says ‘magical run’ carried Grizzlies past Spurs in playoffs

Even a couple of months after the upset occurred, Memphis forward Shane Battier remains a little suprised the Grizzlies stunned the Spurs in the first round of the playoffs.

The Grizzlies’ six-game series victory over the Spurs was only the second time since the NBA went to a best-of-seven series for all rounds of the playoffs that a No. 8 seed toppled a No. 1 seed.

And it still is a, he said in an interview with radio station WFAN in New York City earlier this week. (Hat tip to Sports Radio Interviews.com)

“We knew that we had a favorable matchup in the Spurs,” Battier said. “Did we think we could beat them and take the Thunder in second round to seven games? I’d be lying to say I knew that was going to happen.”

The Grizzlies had never won a playoff game, much less a series before their matchup with the Spurs this year. But after splitting four games with San Antonio earlier in the regular season, Memphis has confidence coming into the playoffs, Battier said.

“We knew we had a chance against the Spurs. We felt that we matched up great against them,” Battier said. “We were younger and we were more athletic.

“After we won that first game in San Antonio, we all looked at each other and said ‘hey guys we can do this.’ We went on a magical run, the city was behind us, it was simply electric, and it was a fantastic lightning in a bottle run for us.”

It also didn’t hurt them that Manu Ginobili missed the first game of the series with what turned out to be a broken arm. But the Grizzlies took advantage of his absence in that game and held serve by winning the rest of their home games to claim the upset.

Battier said he hopes that the labor impasse between owners and players will be short. And he made an interesting comment that the NBA can’t go through an extended lockout like the NFL has endured.

“I’m cautiously optimistic that we will get something done before missing any games. We all know what’s at stake,” Battier said. “We can’t afford to go through what the NFL is going through and we can’t afford to lose the fans. I just think we have a perspective after going through this in ’99 that it’s in the best interest of everybody to hammer out a fair deal.”

Q&A with Manu Ginobili

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Six weeks after a shocking loss to the eighth-seeded Memphis Grizzlies sent the No. 1 Spurs to an early summer vacation, All-NBA guard Manu Ginobili has turned his basketball focus to his Argentine national team’s pursuit of a berth in the 2012 Olympic tournament in London.

From his offseason home in Bahia Blanca, Argentina, where he recently has completed a move to a new residence, the Spurs star took time to discuss, via telephone, the importance of the FIBA Americas tournament his country will host this summer and reflect on the Spurs’ great season gone to waste.

Here’s a transcript of the Ginobili interview, including his thoughts on watching his twin sons take their first steps, the Mavericks winning the NBA title, the looming NBA lockout, plus some happy news about former Spurs center Fabricio Oberto’s medical clearance to join him on the Argentine national team:?

How has your summer been?

Long, so far. It’s been a month and a half already since we lost (in the first round). I took my first month off, as I usually do. Now I’m trying to lift. Next week, I start running, slowly getting in shape. At the end of July, we start training with the national team. But I am enjoying my time with my family, loving it, spending lots of time with the boys, of course, and making some arrangements with my new home here, getting used to it with my family and friends.

Are the twins, Dante and Nicola, shooting hoops yet?

(Laughing) Not yet. Today they are 13 months. They are trying to walk, but they prefer falling. They are climbing on chairs and anything they can use to pull themselves up. It is fun and I have plenty of time for them and we are all loving it, us (Ginobili and his wife, Many), grandparents, uncles.

How goes the rehab from the sprained-fractured elbow?

I’ve been told not to play hoops for a month, month and a half, two months — not to put pressure on the arm.

I notice now that the pain is almost gone. The last time I did the MRI, probably around May 16 (or) May 20, they told me that the bone edema that I had was controlling itself, but I still needed a little time to go.

The little fracture is almost healed, but I needed more time to get completely healed. I am not playing basketball now, but lifting carefully. Running, well, I don’t need my elbow to run. Soon, I will start shooting free throws, with a break for a little bit, and see how it goes.

With 20-20 hindsight and the MRI that showed the elbow fracture, do you think it was it a mistake to try to play when you did?

I do not. The doctors said that if I avoided full extension of the joint, nothing bad could happen and, of course, that is why I wore the brace. It was a fracture, but it was tiny, at the very tip of the ulna, so it was not a big deal, not a big fracture that could bother me. I was OK.

Did the injury give you many problems? It appeared the brace you had to wear on your right arm affected your ability to handle the ball easily.

Of course, I wasn’t at full strength, but what are you going to do? You just play the way you are, and we are not the only team that had injuries. At least I could play and I’m not gong to say we just lost because I missed Game 1.

It just happens, and if you are going to win the championship, you have to do without a player for a game, and we should have won without me for one game.

To tell the truth, they could have easily beaten us in Game 5 at home. So no excuse. Of course, I was limited, but we are better than that.

How important is it for you to play in the ?FIBA Americas tournament (Aug. 30-Sept. 12, in Mar del Plata, Argentina) and help your national team get to the next Olympics?

Very, very important for me. Not only because it gives me the opportunity to play in my last Olympic Games, but also it will be the first time we have played in Argentina in a decade. After all we have accomplished, having the opportunity to play in front of our fans and our people is very important. It is going to be fun. It is just a short time, just nine games.?

I know I only have this one and probably the next one to play with all my great friends on the team, Luis (Scola) and Fabri (Oberto) and (Andres) Nocioni and (Carlos) Delfino and the rest. It is really exciting.

So Fabricio has been cleared to play? (Note: Oberto retired from the Portland Trail Blazers last season because of ongoing problems with cardiac arrhythmia.)

Fabri is planning to play. He is getting into really good shape. He got the OK from the doctors, so he is trying to get into better shape, the best possible.

He got the thumbs-up to go do it. Of course, he is rusty, but 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.

Has there been any discussion yet of the insurance issues?

No, that is an important issue and nobody really knows what is going to happen. I’ve been in touch with the NBPA (the players’ union) to know what’s going on, but it is very shaky. We all understand the situation. Nobody knows what can be done with a lockout coming. Nobody really knows what is going to happen.

Would you play without insurance?

That is a really tough decision to make if we arrived at that point. We will have to dig down with teammates and friends and make a decision, a really difficult one, and I don’t think that many players are going to be able to play if we don’t find an option for insurance. I’m really hoping that the NBPA finds a good, solid insurance company, finds the money that is needed and we can all think about playing.

If there is a lockout, would you consider going to play overseas, where you were a star a decade ago?

Not really. I would consider it only if the whole season was canceled. If the lockout goes to January and the season is canceled, I might consider. If not, no I wouldn’t.

To go make a move to Europe and then be called back to the NBA in a few weeks .?.?. I don’t want to do that and many teams won’t be willing unless they get a guarantee they will stay the whole year.

With that six weeks of time to reflect, what do you take away from the Spurs’ season and playoffs?

As I said before, I think we had a very good season, so of course it was a great season. Of course, the low point is we peaked probably too early — December, January, instead of April, as usual. But I truly believe it was a very tight and close playoff against Memphis and if we could have beat them, and been healthy, we could have made it.

I don’t think we were that much less than OKC or the Lakers or Mavs or Heat. We faced a tough opponent that we had difficulty matching up with and they beat us, really fair and square. But if we had beat them, we would have the same chance of making it to the (NBA) Finals as we all thought.

The Mavericks won the championship but they needed six games against the Blazers in the first round. That is how the playoffs are.

You remember against the Suns in 2007 we had a very tough (conference semifinals) series, but we won that and then won against Utah in five and Cleveland in four.

I think we had a shot. Memphis played really well and aggressively and just beat us.

Is there any sense at all that last year, especially with the No. 1 seed, really may have been the last best shot for the three of you, Tim (Duncan) and Tony (Parker) and yourself?

Not really, because you probably could have said that the year before, and then we went out there and started to fight and play hard and won 61 games.

So we will try to do it again and try to accomplish the goal. It’s hard to say when a team has its last shot. Of course, the Bulls lost Michael Jordan and couldn’t make another run. But we’ve got the same core of players and nothing changed dramatically, so why not? I believe in our players and our organization so I believe we do have another shot.

Tony recently said to French journalists that he didn’t believe the Spurs were capable of winning the championship any longer. What is your take on that?

I heard about it, but I didn’t read the quote or how he said it, but I never trust what I don’t hear directly.

Sometimes it’s not exactly what you meant to say, and I don’t really believe Tony meant that. We all saw what we did this year and there is no reason to believe next year will be so much different in six months. It depends on how professional we are in the offseason, and then after a lockout.

It’s not that easy. We won’t be the main candidate to win it, but the Mavs weren’t the main candidate this year and not many people believed the Mavs could win it. But it can happen.

Did you watch any of the NBA Finals?

None. Zero. I simply couldn’t take it. I would go online the day after to see what happened, but it hurt too much to watch the games. I just followed the scores.

I watched a couple games between Mavs and Thunder, but that was hard, too, so not much else.

Is there some gratification for a veteran player, such as yourself, to see guys like Dirk (Nowitzki) and (Jason) Kidd and (Shawn) Marion finally win a championship, rather than the team that tried to orchestrate its own greatness?

I said it on Twitter. Jason Kidd is a great pro and player and I admire him. It was good to see him get a championship at 38 and playing huge minutes and making the biggest stops. The rest are younger, a little different. Jason Kidd is sort of like Michael Finley for us in ’07. To see him get his chance was great. I really respect him.

Dirk and Marion will have many more shots.

I hear (former Spur) Ian (Mahinmi) played some big minutes, too. I didn’t watch. He’s a good kid and he has many more years. Good for him to go and play in the Finals.

Is it hard when you think back to the game up in Dallas on March 18, everyone healthy, the team beginning to gain some momentum with the playoffs approaching, the Mavericks also at full strength and still in position to move up in the standings, maybe even all the way to No. 1. Yet, you win the game to go 3-1 against the eventual champions? Or is there some consolation in knowing that when both teams were healthy, the Spurs were the equal of the eventual champions?

I think we were equal, but it’s just one game. We can beat the Lakers or Heat or Mavs one game. That happens in a season.

Sometimes I do think we match up better against the Mavs than Memphis, for example. But we lost in the first round, so we didn’t get a chance to win the championship. (The Mavs) swept the Lakers, which isn’t easy. So we can’t think of that regular-season game. That’s just not the way it is.

You are 34 and under contract through the 2012-13 season. You also were named All-NBA at age 34, proof you are still an impactful player. Have you begun to consider how much longer you intend to play in the NBA?

I really don’t know. Of course, anybody can tell that I played very good last season, especially at the beginning, but I don’t know how I will feel next season or the next few years.

Everybody knows I don’t have the same legs I once did, but I try to be decisive for my team, be a leader and provide ways for my team to win. I think I can do it for a few years more, but it depends on how I feel physically and mentally. If I am as motivated as I’ve ever been, I will keep going, but if not, I will say thanks to everybody and keep going on with my life.

Preview: Heat vs. Celtics; Thunder vs. Grizzlies

Express-News staff writer Mike Monroe breaks down the two series starting today:

East semifinals
Miami Heat? vs. Boston Celtics

Season series: Celtics won 3-1.

Key Matchup: LeBron James vs. Paul Pierce — James made only 43 percent of his shots against the Celtics in four regular season games, three of them losses. Pierce has been a playoff monster in seasons past and won’t shrink from this matchup. Then there’s this: before the first Celtics-Heat game in Miami this season, Pierce Tweeted he was “happy to be taking my talents to South Beach.”

Heat can win if: They understand how much better the Celtics have defended the post since Jermaine O’Neal came off the injured list. Their scoring will have to be from the perimeter, and James and Dwyane Wade are just he players to provide it.

Celtics can win if: Shaquille O’Neal can suit up for a game or two and Rajon Rondo can get enough easy looks for Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett. Miami is soft in the middle and Shaq is still enormous.

Prediction: Heat in seven

West semifinals
Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Memphis Grizzlies

Season series: Grizzlies won 3-1.

Key Matchup: Kendrick Perkins vs. Zach Randolph — Nobody has to convince Spurs fans about Randolph’s emergence as one of the elite power forwards in the league. He dominated in Memphis’ 4-2 first-round upset of the No. 1 seeded team. He will have a hard time getting to the basket against Perkins, one of the league’s meanest post defenders. Both teams may need to hire a cut man. Is Dr. Ferdie Pacheco available?

Thunder can win if: Kevin Durant doesn’t shrink six inches before tipoff of Game 1 and Russell Westbrook remembers to pass occasionally. Sam Young isn’t quick enough to defend him and Tony Allen isn’t big enough. Westbrook is quicker and more athletic than Mike Conley and just needs to remember to share the ball, especially with Durant.

Grizzlies can win if: They check the Thunder’s regular season results and notice the Spurs beat them three times. That ought to be just the jolt of confidence required to convince them they can hang with another team that had a better regular season record. They’ll also need Marc Gasol to rebound as he did against the Spurs in the first round.

Prediction: Thunder in six