Spurs rising in nearly every power ranking with playoffs approaching

The Spurs’ recent four-game winning streak has caught the attention of the basketball pundits across the blogosphere.

San Antonio moved up in the weekly power rankings of every poll we surveyed except one.

But in all cases, the Spurs are ranked behind the Chicago Bulls, who are the unanimous choice in every poll this week as the league’s No. 1 team.

Here’s a sampling of what our pollsters had to say about the Silver and Black this week:

, NBA.com

3. San Antonio (last week No. 4): How ridiculous was the San Antonio offense last week? Over their three games, only one Spur didn’t make at least half his shots. That was Matt Bonner, who shot 5-for-18. Richard Jefferson’s resurgance (21-for-36 from 3-point range over the last nine games) has made up for Bonner’s slump.

Teams ahead (in order): Chicago, Miami

, Fox Sports.com

4. San Antonio (last week No. 7): The Spurs have the league’s best record, seem to be healthy and have created a bit of momentum for themselves. But when you start looking at the next couple of months and start asking about LeBron, Kobe, D-Rose, Durant and such, do you actually think the Spurs can survive? They can, but only if they get some bounces and get excellent play from Richard Jefferson and George Hill.

Teams ahead: Chicago, Oklahoma City,  Los Angeles

, ESPN.com

4. San Antonio (last week No. 6): Should the Spurs, holders of the league’s best record since mid-November, lay down Tuesday night in L.A. to make sure the Lakers don’t fall all the way to the No. 4 seed and right into their bracket? You tell me.

Teams ahead:  Chicago, L.A. Lakers, Miami

, ESPN.com

5. San Antonio (last week No.7): Also pegged at an 18.0 percent chance of making the NBA Finals and an 8.7 percent chance of winning the championship (behind Chicago at 27.8 percent, Miami at 14.8 percent, Denver at 11.4 percent and the Lakers at 11.2 percent.)

Teams ahead:  Chicago, Denver, Miami, L.A. Lakers.

, Hoops World.com

4. San Antonio (last week No. 5): The Spurs have gotten through their injury woes and at 61 wins, and are tied with Chicago for best-overall record.

Teams ahead: Chicago, Oklahoma City, Miami.

, CBS Sports.com

3. San Antonio (last week No. 5): Season’s biggest surprise: George Hill. If the Spurs win the title, he’ll be the reason. His 30 minutes a night have helped keep Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili fresh.

Teams ahead: Chicago, Miami.

, SI.com

No numeric rankings this week (last week No. 7) Grade for season: A (trailing only Chicago’s A+. Memphis and Oklahoma City also received A marks): Whatever concerns exist about their lack of frontcourt size and depth or the advanced age of their stars, the Spurs have earned the No. 1 seed in the West while winning at least 60 games for the first time since 2005-06. Gregg Popovich deserves Coach of the Year votes for tinkering with the offense to emphasize the transition skills of a healthy Manu Ginobili (who has set a career high for minutes) and perpetually underrated Tony Parker (the NBA’s best finisher at point guard over the last five seasons), along with spreading the floor for spot-up three-pointers by Ginobili, Matt Bonner, Richard Jefferson and Gary Neal before defenses could get set. The result is the NBA’s second-most-efficient offense (behind Denver’s). Like Boston, San Antonio knows its championship window is closing and that it will need more minutes and vintage defensive excellence from Tim Duncan in the weeks ahead. But give this team its due for an outstanding regular season.

Teams ahead: Chicago.

, Pro Basketball Talk

4. San Antonio (last week No. 7): The Spurs offense is back in its groove, but Tuesday night in Los Angeles look for Gregg Popovich to sit his stars. He does not want the Lakers falling to the four seed, which could still happen.

Teams ahead: Chicago, Miami, Oklahoma City.

, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

2. San Antonio (last week No. 2): Can veterans last in playoffs?

Teams ahead: Chicago.

Rivers’ kids know to avoid him after loss to Heat

The children of Boston coach Doc Rivers know better than to mess with their dad after he endures a tough loss.

It’s understandable that the Rivers kids were planning to steer clear of an angry dad after Miami thumped the Celtics, 100-77, on Sunday afternoon.

It led toSunday night from Austin Rivers, the Duke-bound prep star who is still living at home with his parents this spring and summer before heading off to college:

“Man after looking at this Boston-Heat score…when my dad comes home I’m going to stay my a** upstairs! He might be a little grumpy! Lol.”  

It also might be wise for Austin not to mention Rajon Rondo’s late-season slump, either.

Notes on a scorecard: The return of the Spurs’ perimeter game

All season long, the Spurs have relied on their outside shooting to carry them to success.

It’s not suprising that with shooting percentages of 24.0 percent (against Portland), 27.6 percent (against Boston) and 26.3 percent (at Houston) have resulted in three losses in the team’s biggest collective shooting slump of the season.

That’s why the team’s quick start in their 114-97 victory over Phoenix Sunday afternoon was so vital.

The Spurs hit four 3-pointers in the first quarter as Richard Jefferson and George Hill both sank two apiece.

Hill’s entry into the game marked where the game turned. The Spurs were trailing when he came into the game.  The Spurs made seven of their next eight shots, including five from Hill. Two of them were 3-pointers.   

It didn’t stop from there until the Spurs finished at 15-for-29 from behind the arc. Their 51.7 percent from beyond the arc was their highest since hitting 60.7 percent against Miami on March 4. It marked one of eight times this season the Spurs have hit above 50 percent of their 3-pointers this season.

With Tim Duncan playing inside, the Spurs obviously are getting different looks when other teams have to account for him. Five different Spurs hit 3-pointers in the long-range barrage.

“We shot it a lot better,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “It makes things a little bit easier, that’s for sure.”

Popovich was greatly understating the obvious there.

The Spurs have hit 12 or more 3-pointers  in 12 games this season. They are 11-1 in those games.

The outside shooting binge paved the way for the Spurs to halt a six-game losing streak in the best way possible for them.

No starter played more than Tony Parker’s 28 minutes, 12 seconds. Manu Ginobili was limited to 23:43. Antonio McDyess played 18:29. And most importantly, Duncan played 18:19.

The victory, coupled with the Lakers’ loss against Denver later Sunday afternoon, gave them some breathing room heading into the final 10 days of the season.

Here are a few notes and factoids from Popovich’s 794th victory with the Spurs. He’s one triumph away from catching Red Auerbach for second place on the NBA’s list of most coaching wins with one team. Jerry Sloan has the NBA record with 1,127 triumphs.

  • Hill torched Phoenix for 29 points. It was tied for third on his career-scoring list, topped only by a pair of 30-point efforts including his game March 27 against Memphis. He also tied his regular-season career mark with four 3-pointers. His career high of five 3-pointers came against Dallas in last season’s playoffs.
  • Matt Bonner busted out of his slump by starting his emphasis on inside shooting and then moving outside as he produced 16 points and 11 rebounds. It was his eighth career double-double and first since notching 11 points and 10 rebounds on Nov. 18, 2009, against Dallas. Bonner also came within one assist of matching his career high of five assists.
  • Something about playing on Sundays must agree with Bonner. His big game came on the same day of the week as his 7-for-7 performance against Oklahoma City on Nov. 14. Bonner is hitting 62.2 percent of his 3-pointers on Sundays. His 3-for-4 effort against Phoenix was the first time he topped 50 percent of his 3-pointers since his 6-for-7 effort against Miami on March 4. During his previous 14 games before Sunday, Bonner had hit 22 percent of his 3-pointers.  His 16 points was tied for his fourth for his highest  scoring game of the season and was his biggest game since the March 4 game.
  • Gary Neal’s 15-point game was his highest scoring game since his career-best 25-point game effort against Denver on March 23. Neal also is in a mini-surge in his last two games after hitting 26.1 percent in two games before the Houston game. Since then, Neal has averaged 12.5 points per game and is shooting 62.5 percent of his field goal attempts and 63.6 percent of his threes in his last two games.  Neal also matched his career high with four assists, last set March 6 against the Lakers.
  • Jefferson’s quick start enabled him to match his top 3-point shooting game of his career. He hit all four 3-point attempts, matching his previous career-high game without a miss of four set March 19, 2008 when he played for New Jersey. His 12 points on Sunday was his fifth double-figure game in his last eight. His seven rebounds were his biggest game since Jan. 21 against New York. And he’s shooting 55 percent from the field, 69.2 percent of his 3-pointers and averaging 10.3 points in his last three games.
  • Duncan notched eight points and four rebounds in only 18:19. It marked his smallest playing time in a game where he wasn’t injured since Feb. 12 against Washington, where he posted 12:10. And his reduced role snapped a recent surge where he averaged 21.5 points and 13 rebounds in his last two games since coming back from a sprained left ankle.
  • Ginobili’s reduced playing time contributed to him scoring six points in 23:43. It marked the third time in four games where Ginobili has failed to score in double figures. During that span, Ginobili is averaging 10 points per game, hitting 36.6 percent from the field and 18.8 percent from beyond the arc.
  • More concerning, Ginobili failed to go to the foul line for the third time in his last four games. He’s done that six times this season.
  • Parker struggled through his second worst shooting night of the season as he hit 2-for-11 from the field. His only worse game this season was a 1-for-6 shooting effort in the loss at the Los Angeles Clippers on Dec. 1.
  • Parker notched eight assists for the 27th time this season. When he’s collected at least eight assists, the Spurs are 26-1 this season.
  • There was an interesting substitution pattern as DeJuan Blair didn’t enter until the second half. Blair accounted for two points, tying his single-game low since being demoted out of the starting lineup on March 9. But his eight rebounds were his second most since the change, topped only by nine rebounds March 12 at Houston.
  • One concern to close out the game came with San Antonio’s sloppy ball handling — understandable because of their big lead. The Spurs had eight of their 16 turnovers in the fourth quarter, including five during a span of 2 minutes, 19 seconds late in the game. James Anderson had four to lead the team. 
  • The Spurs jumped on Phoenix for a 31-point lead on Ginobili’s layup with 8:23 left in the third quarter. It was their largest lead since leading by 31 against Miami on March 4.
  • San Antonio’s 70 points in the first half, capped by a 15-footer by Hill at the buzzer, was their second most this season. The Spurs scored 72 points at Washington on Feb. 12.
  • The Spurs shot a little better from the foul line with 13-for-18 (72.2 percent). But they are still struggling with 67.5 percent from the line over the last six games.
  • Phoenix is one of the league’s worst rebounding teams and the Spurs took advantage with a 51-37 rebounding edge. It was the fourth-highest total of rebounds for San Antonio this season.
  • After allowing their last four opponents to score at least 100 points, the Spurs limited the Suns to 97. It was only the fifth time the Spurs have limited an opponent to less than 100 points in their last 14 games. They are 40-7 this season when limiting opponents to less than 100 points.
  • Bonner  led the team with a plus-31 plus-minus score. Other top San Antonio producers included Hill at plus-28,  Neal at plus-22 and Ginobili at plus-21. Anderson had the worst score at minus-23, with Blair at minus-10. 
  • All 12 San Antonio players on the roster scored. Danny Green, Chris Quinn and Da’Sean Butler were inactive.