Spurs undone by critical gaffes

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

PORTLAND, Ore. – The doors swung open to the visiting locker room at the Rose Garden late Friday night, revealing a scene somber even for a wake.

Minutes earlier, the Spurs had just dropped a 98-96 decision at the buzzer, losing again in Portland, this time amid a roll call of fourth-quarter errors so horrifying they would later have to be seen to be fully appreciated.

Side-by-side, players sat at their lockers in pindrop silence. Coach Gregg Popovich, still in coat and tie, paced the room. All wore the same blank expression that asked the same unanswerable question: What had just happened?

On a laptop in one corner rolled video of Portland’s final, fateful play – a tie-breaking lob from Andre Miller to Nicolas Batum that beat the horn and set off Mardi Gras in bleachers. Four morbidly curious Spurs gathered around grimly, medical examiners performing their own autopsy.

Batum scored four points in the final 0.9 seconds, lifting the Trail Blazers from certain defeat, to probable overtime, to stunning victory, all without leaving time to breathe.

“It was ridiculous,” a subdued Manu Ginobili said. “One of the craziest games I’ve lost in the NBA.”

The Spurs still led 96-90 with 1:22 to go, when Ginobili drilled his fourth 3-pointer. Their Rose Garden demons, which had conjured up five straight losses in Portland, seemed on the edge of banishment.

And then, Miller scooted for a layup.

96-92.

And then, Miller took the ball from Tony Parker, his career-high eighth turnover, and made another basket with 30.2 ticks left.

96-94.

And then, Ginobili dribbled the ball off Wesley Matthews’ leg, sparking a frantic fast break that resulted in two Batum foul shots with 0.9 left.

And then, Batum – who still has not missed a free throw in March – hit both.

96-96.

And then, Steve Novak, inserted to inbound on the Spurs’ final play, with OT seeming like the worst-case scenario, threw high for Ginobili streaking to the basket. The ball went out of bounds untouched.

“I just couldn’t reach it,” said Ginobili, who had 10 of his 21 points in the fourth.

And then, with the Blazers afforded their own chance at a miracle, Miller hit Batum with a perfectly placed backdoor lob, which the latter dropped in over Parker – one Frenchman outleaping another.

And then, the final horn sounded, and the crowd exploded and the Spurs were left to make sense out of what had just occurred.

In one sense, the answer was easy. Just another end-game miscue.

“We knew they were going to the rim,” Popovich said. “We were switching it, and we did a poor job switching it.”

Miller, third among the NBA’s active leaders in assists with 6,976, had no trouble ranking his latest one.

“That was No. 1,” said Miller, who matched Batum with 21 points.

For the second game in a row, the Spurs wasted an opportunity to win with Tim Duncan and his sprained left ankle back in San Antonio. Just as in Denver two nights earlier, the Spurs came unraveled in the fourth.

Later, in the locker room, while his teammates still wondered what went wrong on the Batum tap, Ginobili still fumed about the turnovers that came all before.

“Three in 40 seconds,” he said. “Unacceptable.”

For the Blazers, it was eight points in the final 72 seconds. And another victory over the Spurs. The Spurs (57-15) have lost six of seven to the Blazers (42-30). But none like this.

It gave the Spurs their second two-game losing streak of the season, and their first since losing at New York and Boston on Jan. 4 and 5. But that was of little consolation.

Afterward, Ginobili compared Friday’s debacle to the 2005 loss to Houston, when Tracy McGrady scored 13 points in 35 seconds. Parker recalled Derek Fisher’s 0.4-shot to send the Lakers over the Spurs in Game 5 of the 2004 Western Conference finals.

“Nothing was worse than that,” Parker said.

Judging from the befuddled looks around him, that felt hard to believe. Even as he spoke the words, Parker stared at the ground, rubbing his temples like a man with a migraine.

This is the kind of loss that sticks with a team, even though it shouldn’t. There is another game Sunday in Memphis, against another tough team on the road.

“We just have to move on,” Parker said.

Hill helps Spurs get over the hump

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

As the losses piled up to unthinkable heights, and the Spurs’ once unapproachable lead in the Western Conference dwindled to next to nothing, Matt Bonner found himself looking back in time and across an ocean for perspective.

Playing for an Italian team, Sicilia Messina, as a professional rookie in 2003, Bonner not only endured a losing streak longer than the one the Spurs ended Sunday with a 114-97 demolition of Phoenix. His team finished dead last.

“It wasn’t my fault though,” Bonner said. “The team went bankrupt, and a couple guys stopped showing up.”

Say this much about the Spurs’ six-game losing streak, the club’s longest since 1996-97: At least the checks still cleared.

The frustration-venting that occurred Sunday at the ATT Center was more priceless than any paycheck for the Spurs, even if it came at the expense of a Suns team now eliminated from playoff contention.

George Hill scored 29 points, Bonner broke out of a personal slump of his own, and the Spurs’ bench sparked the team’s first victory since a March 21 win over Golden State that only feels like last season.

After the win, which came with Suns guard Steve Nash at home with the flu, the Spurs ? got bonus help from Denver, which ended the Lakers’ nine-game winning streak. That pushed the Spurs’ cushion in the West back to 2 1/2 games.

The Spurs (58-19) clinched the Southwest Division when Dallas went on to lose at Portland on Sunday night. It’s the club’s 17th division crown overall.

More than that, it gave the Spurs assurance that the team that won 57 of its first 70 games still lurked somewhere inside them.

“It’s all about confidence,” Bonner said. “We lost some during the losing streak. Hopefully, we got some of it back.”

The Spurs, who led by as many as 31, got 63 points off the bench, including Bonner’s first double-double of the season (16 points, 11 rebounds) and 15 points from Gary Neal.

The Spurs’ star, however, was a reserve who had combined for 11 points the previous two games.

Cajoling Hill to revert to his shoot-first roots, coach Gregg Popovich approached the third-year guard with a specific piece of instruction.

“He said, ‘You need to be the Indiana George,’” Hill said.

Hill had little trouble deciphering that code.

“Play like I did in high school and college,” said Hill, the Indianapolis native and IUPUI alum.

Instead, Hill went back to playing like he did last week, when he dumped 57 points on Memphis and Portland. Hill shot 10 of 16, including 4 of 7 from the 3-point line, and by halftime had more points (24) than he’d totaled in all but two other games this season.

“He gave us what Manu (Ginobili) used to give us coming off the bench,” Popovich said.

Hill’s early explosion, which included 11 points in the final 2:01 of the first quarter, boosted the Spurs to a 70-46 lead at intermission, the Suns’ largest halftime deficit of the season.

“We got knocked on our heels early,” said Phoenix coach Alvin Gentry, whose team is lottery-bound one year after sweeping the Spurs from the second round of the playoffs. “When you get that kind of separation, it’s hard to work your way back.”

A victory in their pocket, the weight of the longest losing streak of the Tim Duncan era off their shoulders and the West’s No. 1 seed still in their possession, the Spurs depart for Atlanta fully aware of more work to be done over the final five games.

Still, the Spurs took time to celebrate Sunday. For the first time in 13 days, winning beat losing.

“Losing six in a row, after winning so many games all year, wears on you mentally,” Bonner said. “First and foremost, (it was) get the win, end the losing streak, and try to build off that confidence.”

For Bonner, Sunday meant something else. For the first time in a while, being penniless in Italy did not feel like the good old days.

Manu goes down as Spurs’ skid hits three

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — As the final buzzer sounded at FedEx Forum on Sunday night, signaling the first three-game losing streak of the Spurs’ season, point guard Tony Parker bowed his head and walked off the court and through the tunnel toward the locker room.

Another fourth-quarter lead had given way to another defeat, this one 111-104 at the hands of the relentless Grizzlies, and now the L.A. Lakers were one step closer to catching the Spurs atop the Western Conference leaderboard.

Had, at that moment, Parker taken stock of his blessings, the list would have begun with this: At least he was able to walk upright.

With Tim Duncan already out with a sprained left ankle, and Manu Ginobili perhaps poised to join him in street clothes after knocking knees with Marc Gasol, Parker has suddenly become the last of the Big Three standing.

“A lot of things aren’t going our way,” Parker said. “We just have to keep pounding on that rock and keep playing.”

For the first time in what has been a blessed season for the Spurs, it feels as if the rock is pounding them.

Zach Randolph scored 11 of his 23 points in the fourth quarter and totaled 11 rebounds, while Tony Allen also scored 23 and missed just one of 10 shots, as the Grizzlies provided the Spurs with a fitting end to a ruinous road trip.

The Spurs (57-16) will not want to keep the postcards from this particular excursion.

There was the fizzled finish at Denver, when a double-digit lead became a three-point loss. There was that preposterousness in Portland, when the Spurs gave up an 8-0 run in the final 72 seconds, felled by Nicolas Batum’s high-jump at the horn.

Then there was Sunday, when the Spurs’ longest losing streak since Jan. 20-25 of last season gave the Lakers the opportunity to climb within four games.

“All three games, we had a chance,” Parker said. “We were up.”

The latest pinprick to the silver-and-black voodoo doll came just before halftime Sunday, when Gasol charged to trap Ginobili near the sideline. The Spurs’ leading scorer never saw his mug coming.

When Ginobili turned, Gasol’s knee dug into his left quadriceps, sending the Argentine guard flailing. Ginobili left the game immediately, and an attempt to return in the second half was aborted after 5 minutes and 50 seconds. He was diagnosed with a left quad contusion, and his availability for tonight’s rematch with Portland at the ATT Center is uncertain.

The play ultimately cost the Spurs not only their starting shooting guard, but also their head coach. Incensed no foul was called, Gregg Popovich became the recipient of two quick technicals and an ejection from official Jason Phillips.

Without their top scorer, their team captain, or their head coach, the Spurs hung around in the second half.

George Hill was rolling, on his way to matching a career high with 30 points. Parker, sensing someone else had to score too, found his way to 20. Assistant Mike Budenholzer was channeling Popovich, in play calls if not demeanor.

“I was proud of our guys,” Popovich said.

A 13-3 run to start the fourth staked the Spurs to a 90-84 lead, their largest since the first quarter. Then, Randolph put on his hard hat and went to work.

A sample: With Memphis down 97-95 with less than four minutes left, Antonio McDyess fought Randolph for the extent of the shot clock, denying him position. When O.J. Mayo missed, Randolph freed a paw to swat the ball to the perimeter, where Allen scooped it up and tied the game with a layup.

One possession later, Randolph banked in a running hook over McDyess, and Memphis (41-33) never trailed again.

Unlike in Portland, the Spurs left Memphis neither dazed nor confused. Despite their season’s longest losing streak, they aren’t convinced much is wrong with their team an upright Big Three wouldn’t repair.

“We can’t make excuses,” Hill said. “At the same time, we’re in a tough spot right now. Just have to get through it.”