Spurs handle Clipppers, host Pacers

The San Antonio Spurs used a 30-19 4th quarter run to (pardon the pun) Spur them to a 115-107 win over the competitive Los Angeles Clippers.  Now the good guys in black prepare to host the Indiana Pacers (16-10) who are coming off a 96-84 loss to the Memphis Grizzlies on Saturday night.

The Spurs won both contests against the Pacers last year by a combined eight points but this Pacers team is not the same caliber as last seasons.

“It’s a tough one, (loss to Grizzlies) but we have another one on Monday and we have to get ready for San Antonio,” guard Monta Ellis told the team’s official website. “We have to put this one behind us and keep moving.”

The game kicks off at 7:30 pm tonight and you still have the opportunity to attend!  Plenty of great seats and affordable tickets are still available so get yours today and help cheer on your San Antonio Spurs!

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What the Spurs and Warriors said after the game

Here, courtesy of the folks from Spurs media servies, are some post-game comments from the Spurs and Warriors after San Antonio’s victory Wednesday night at the ATT Center.

San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich:

(You used both T.J. Ford and Tony Parker down the stretch…was there something that you saw?)

“We needed to chase those guys.  I wanted to get Tony back in the game, but T.J. was playing great; so we just matched them up that way.  T.J. was fantastic.  Danny Green was fantastic.  The two of them, they gave us the energy to get that ball game.  They played fantastic basketball.”

(It appeared at one point that you were trying to get Tony to be more aggressive, offensively in particular…is this accurate?)

“I want all the players to be aggressive.  Everybody needs to be aggressive and in attack mode all the time.  Tony’s no different.  He’s a great player and when he’s in attack mode, he’s an even better player.”

Spurs guard Danny Green

(On pulling out the victory tonight…)

“We did, it was fun. In the second half we did a great job of shutting down their guards, a little bit. They came out hot and we played better defense. Our shots weren’t falling like we wanted too. Eventually they would fall, but we had to play defense and we ended up doing it.”

(Does success on defense trigger you on offense…)

“I think so; I think it triggers all teams. With us, we play some good defense and we get some stops. We’re able to get out and run and get some open threes. We’re a perimeter team and we were able to get some open looks and some of them fell eventually.”

(On finishing the game after not playing in the first half …)

“I rather finish the game than start.”

 Spurs forward Richard Jefferson

(On hitting all five of his 3-point attempts…)

“Tony had some great passes. We were down quite a few for most of the night. Those two guards were on fire. We kind of caught a break with Stephen Curry going out. It allowed us to focus a little more on Monta, but even then, it was tough to stop him. Danny Green came in and played some amazing defense, but for the most part, I was getting open looks. I think every shot was assisted. They were just good passes from my teammates.”

 (Was it important to win this game without Manu?)

“We have a mentality that were going to be O.K., not because we’re the San Antonio Spurs. It’s because everyone has to step up, everyone has to work extremely hard and everyone has to be more mistake free, than we normally are. Danny Green came in and played some great defense. The defense he was playing, just giving Monta a different look. That’s somebody else stepping up and every night someone else needs to step up because Manu is irreplaceable.”

 Spurs guard Tony Parker

(On playing together with T.J Ford)

“They played small for almost four quarters. T.J was playing well and Pop decided to keep T.J in and I played with him for the last six minutes. It worked out pretty well.”

(How important was it to win this game without Manu…)

“It was good for our confidence. We’re going to play a long time without Manu. In a schedule like this, you have to win games at home. It was a big one for us and now we have a big one tomorrow.”

Golden State Warriors coach Mark Jackson:

(When asked how much the mood changed when Stephen Curry was lost with his injury)

“It’s natural to think here we go again, as a player.  It was a disappointing loss.  Things were still going our way.  The bottom line is giving up 31 points in the fourth quarter is not a way to close out a victory on the road.”

(When asked if the Spurs did anything differently in the fourth quarter)

“They made shots.  We had some breakdowns.  It was disappointing.”

(When asked about the play of Monta Ellis tonight)

“He was incredible and inspiring.  He made every play.  I asked him if he needed a breather, he said, ‘No.’ It didn’t look like he was out of gas.  Not only am I asking him to make the plays on the offensive end, but I’m asking him to defend Tony Parker on the other end.  He gave me everything he had.  I’m proud of his effort and his leadership.  I hope that his passion for the game truly becomes contagious in the locker room.”

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry

(On re-injuring his right ankle…)

“I got the steal. It was either a steal or a deflection but I got the ball. Put up a pump fake in transition and took off on my right foot. I pushed off on my toe and it flipped over. It was just a re-aggravation of the same thing that has been happening. It’s another frustrating incident that I have to deal with.”

(Measuring the severity of his ankle injury based on his other ankle injuries…)

“The way I do it is, I tell the athletic trainers the instant pain I feel and this is the worst it has been. I am sure it has to do with the fact that it’s the third time. It is hard to say exactly how to react. I tried to put weight on it. I did put weight on it. I tried to tape it back up and lace it back up to go back out there but it started to stiffen up. We will just have to see how it reacts tomorrow. It’s déjà vu all over again.”

Spurs survive minus Manu

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

In the first of what likely will be dozens of games without injured All-Star Manu Ginobili, the Spurs on Wednesday night needed a lift from someone, anyone, when the Warriors took an eight-point lead with 6:46 remaining at the ATT Center.

They got it from point guard Tony Parker, with an animated assist from coach Gregg Popovich.

The result was a 101-95 victory that was tonic for the Spurs’ confidence and proof that Popovich can still get from the bench to midcourt in just a few excitable seconds.

Parker scored 10 of his 21 points in the final 3:41 after Popovich had spent all of the previous Warriors possessions screaming at him to continue attacking on offense.

When Parker followed with an aggressive move to the basket for a 10-foot teardrop bucket that gave the Spurs a 91-88 lead, Warriors coach Mark Jackson called a timeout, and Popovich ran briskly to midcourt to greet Parker.

“That’s what I want,” the coach yelled on his way to meet Parker, who got a hug and a playful slap on the cheek, laughing at his coach as they headed to the Spurs’ bench.

“Everybody needs to be in attack mode all the time, and Tony’s no different,” Popovich said. “Tony’s a great player, and when he’s in attack mode, he’s an even better player.”

Spurs captain Tim Duncan watched his coach’s show of emo? tion and shared a laugh with Parker. But he understood the effect Popovich had on the game.

“He was pretty fired up in that situation for a couple of reasons, and that’s the fire we’re going to need to push this team along right now with Manu out,” Duncan said.

“He’s the one to give it to us, so that’s great.”

Parker and T.J. Ford teamed up in a double-point guard backcourt for the final six minutes of a game in which the Spurs trailed from early in the first quarter until the final period.

Like the Minnesota Timberwolves, who made 57.7 percent of their shots in Monday’s game in which Ginobili fractured the fifth metacarpal on his left hand, the Warriors were torrid from the floor in the first half. Guards Monta Ellis and Stephen Curry combined to make 15 of 19 shots, and an ankle sprain suffered by Curry with 2:49 left in the third period forced him from the game and factored into the Spurs’ comeback.

With Curry gone, Popovich put reserve guard Danny Green on Ellis, and Green helped to limit Ellis to 4-for-11 shooting in the fourth quarter.

Green logged all of his 15:41 in the second half and scored eight points, but it was mostly his defensive work on Ellis that prompted Popovich to credit him with a “fantastic” game.

Ford also had his best game with the Spurs. He played the entire fourth quarter — all of it in attack mode — and scored seven points, with four assists in the period.

Popovich liked what he saw of the mini-backcourt.

“We needed to chase those guys,” he said. “I wanted to get Tony back in the game, but T.J. was playing great, so we just matched them up that way.”

Duncan recorded his first points-rebounds double-double of the season and was more aggressive in the post than in the first five games.

“You make some shots early and get some double teams,” he said. “I’ve got to do a better job and get more involved in the post and make some moves and make some plays. But a pretty good game all around.”

Ginobili watched the action from behind the bench, leaning in to listen to Popovich’s animated instructions during fourth-quarter timeouts and high-fiving his teammates with his healthy right hand at game’s end.

“Obviously, with Manu out and coming off a loss and just being at home, we needed to protect our home court,” Duncan said. “Good win for us. We find a way to come back, find a way to get some stops and get back into the game.”