Spurs memory 6: Glory goes to Horry after ‘Big Shot Rob’ delivers again

Date: Thursday, June 19, 2005
Place: The Palace at Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Mich.
Score: San Antonio Spurs 96, Detroit Pistons 95 (OT)

Throughout his NBA career, Robert Horry always was known for his clutch shooting in playoff series.

After earlier stops with championship teams in Houston and the Los Angeles Lakers, Horry cemented his legacy with another clutch shot with the Spurs that was one of the biggest plays in the team’s history.

Horry nailed a game-winning 25-foot 3-pointer with 5.8 seconds left to catapult the Spurs to a wild 96-95 overtime victory over Detroit in Game 5 of the 2005 Finals. The triumph over the defending champions gave the Spurs a 3-2 edge in the best-of-seven series.

After failing to score until the final play of the third quarter, Horry erupted to score all 21 points in the final 17 minutes, 1 second of the game to lead the comeback victory. Horry hit 5 of 6 from beyond the 3-point arc.

“I would say that there have been a lot of guys who have played incredible in the NBA Finals,” Horry told reporters after the game. “I don’t know, my second half probably ranks probably 25th, somewhere down there.”

In the process he helped rescue Tim Duncan, who struggled in a miserable performance late in the game after a blistering start.

Duncan finished with 26 points, 19 rebounds and two blocked shots, but floundered down the stretch. He missed three shots down the stretch, including an open tip-in that could have won the game in regulation. He also clanked six foul shots and committed a costly turnover.

But Horry, who scored the game’s final five points and 15 of San Antonio’s last 20, bailed Duncan out of the goat’s role.

“That was probably the greatest performance I’ve ever been a part of,” a relieved Duncan said about Horry’s efforts after the game. “He pulled me out of an incredible hole that I put myself in.”

Detroit had pulled ahead 95-91 on Rasheed Wallace’s turnaround over Duncan with 1:41 left in overtime. But Horry answered with a soaring left-handed dunk that showed athleticism a little unusual for a 34-year-old.

“I said, ‘Please let me get there. Please let me get there,’ “Horry said with a chuckle.  

The Spurs were able to persevere to claim the first tight game of the series. The first four game all were settled by at least 15 points and the Spurs had lost by 34 points in Game 4. But Game 5 was one to be savored as neither team led by more than four points after the third quarter. 

Their defense was critical to pull out the victory with two successive stops sandwiched around an offensive rebound.

Horry’s game-winning three that was set up when Wallace inexplicably left him open to double-team Spurs guard Manu Ginobili.

It left one of the most proficient shooters in NBA history with no defender within 15 feet.

“I saw Rasheed bite and said: ‘Oh, let me stay out here,’ “Horry said.

San Antonio’s final play was designed to get the final shot for Ginobili. But Horry was so open that the Spurs didn’t hesitate to let the veteran sharpshooter take his shot.

“The play was for me to take that shot, but then I saw Rasheed coming,” said Ginobili, who finished with 15 points and nine assists. “My first option in those moments was Robert. He’s a winner. He’s been in that situation so many times. Everyone knows what he does.”

Richard Hamilton had one final shot, but his contested off-balance shot just inside the lane didn’t hit the rim. Bruce Bowen grabbed the rebound and the Spurs escaped to take advantage of the series.

Chauncey Billups led the Pistons with 34 points of the tight game. The game was tied at 42 at the half and San Antonio held a 64-63 lead going into the fourth quarter.

Duncan’s tip at the end of regulation could have ended it. But after missing that easy shot, the Spurs’ captain placed his fists against his mouth in stunned disbelief.

Horry was ready when the Spurs needed him at the end.

“I’m the type of player, I want to win a game, I don’t want to go to overtime, Horry said. “I’m always going to go for the three. I want to win a game.”

They said it, part I: “I get on myself more than anybody. I wasn’t a very good teammate in the first half. I just told myself that in order for us to win, I had to come out and play,” Horry, to reporters after his frantic finish after the slow start.

They said it, part II: “You can’t go back and say shoulda, woulda, coulda. It was caught in the corner and I just tried to double. Now we have a day and a half. We’re cool,” Wallace, explaining his defensive mistake to reporters at the end of the game.              

They said it, part III: “He was unbelievable. We had to keep him on the court as much as we could and he read the floor great. He drove it; he got to the open areas. He’s just got a great sense about him,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, to reporters about Horry’s monster finish.

They said it, part IV: “There’s nothing you can really say about him. He was unbelievable. He made all the right plays at the right times,” Billups, to the Associated Press about Horry’s big game. 

They said it, part V:  “Confidence, big character, he’s a winner. He knows what it takes. He’s always waiting for his chance. People are going to remember that three, but the dunk, a lot of important plays. He was unbelievable,” Ginobili on Horry’s heroics.

They said it, part VI: “I guess there was a miscommunication, but ultimately, it’s on me. After it was over, we still had a chance. But up two, with nine seconds to go, you talk about the things all year that you want to accomplish, and unfortunately we had a little miscommunication,” Detroit coach Larry Brown on Wallace’s late defensive bust.

They said it, part VII: “I have to get over this one. This was tough,” Brown, to reporters about rebounding from the loss.

They said it, part VIII: “I had the chance. It didn’t go down, and the overtime, we continued to play. We just knew there were a lot of possessions to be had. Guys were just impressive all around, Tony Parker, Manu continuing on the attack. And of course, Bobby,” Duncan, to the Washington Post on his disappointing finish.

They said it, part IX: “He was big, man. There’s nothing else you can really say about him. He made all the right plays,” Billups to the Detroit News about Horry.

They said it, part X: “An absolute nightmare, yes,” Duncan, describing his late finish to the Associated Press.

They said it, part XI: “This is the kind of game you hate to see anybody lose,” Brown, on the close game and the finish.

THE UPSHOT: The Pistons went back to San Antonio and ended a 10-game losing streak there with a stunning 95-86 victory to even the series in Game 6. It was their first victory in San Antonio since 1997. But it wasn’t enough as the Spurs came back to claim a 81-74 triumph in Game 7 to finish their third NBA title … Horry’s  Game 5 effort was the final 20-point game of his career and was his first in a span of 325 games.  After scoring 23 points for the Lakers against the Spurs on March 31, 2002, Horry had only one 20-point game over the final 522 games of his career. It came in Game 5 of the 2005 Finals.

Buck Harvey: The luck of Horry came with a price

Robert Horry was lucky. Everyone saw it.

He kept moving from Hall of Fame big man to Hall of Fame big man, until he had won more championships than anyone except for the 1960s Boston Celtics.

Dirk Nowitzki is six rings behind him. LeBron James is seven.

But that’s just what everyone saw. In his private life, Horry faced the kind of misfortune that makes people ask, “Why me?” Along the way, he learned about sorrow, and he learned about what mattered.

No one would call this luck — but maybe this impacted his NBA career more than anything.

This week should remind everyone of the frailties of the rich and tall. There will be a memorial service today for another former Spur, Mike Mitchell, who passed away at the age of 55. And Horry’s 17-year-old daughter, Ashlyn, died Tuesday after a lifelong struggle with a rare genetic condition.

“People forget this sometimes,” Avery Johnson said Wednesday, “but we aren’t exempt. We go to weddings; we go to funerals. Maybe because we play a game, fans don’t think our lives are just like theirs.”

Avery knew Mitchell, but he was closer to Horry. Their families lived in the same Houston neighborhood, and Avery had a close-up view of Horry’s challenge.

“Heartbreaking,” is how Avery termed it.

Ashlyn struggled to talk, eat and breathe. She was in and out of hospitals from birth. Horry missed most of the Spurs’ preseason in the fall of 2007, for example, because her condition was life threatening.

But the Horrys customized their Houston home for her, and they arranged three-hour daily rehab sessions. Being away bothered Horry so much that he considered opting out of his Lakers contract in 2001 to play for the Rockets. At the time, he was merely winning three consecutive titles with the league’s glamour team.

From a 2001 Los Angeles Times article:

When he talks to Ashlyn on the phone, she holds the receiver to her ear. He tells her about his day, and about the Lakers, and how he loves her. And then he speaks to Keba, his wife, who describes Ashlyn’s expressions when he spoke to her.

If that sounds sad, it is, Horry said, “some days.”

“But you get used to it,” he said. “Well, you tell yourself that, anyway.”

Then there’s this from Horry in another story: “There are bad days, like on the Fourth of July, when we have my brother’s kids and her sister’s kids. You can tell she wants to do what they’re doing, but can’t. Those are the days I feel bad for her.”

Ashlyn was a reason he signed with the Spurs. He wanted to be nearer to Houston. On rare occasions, his daughter came to a game in San Antonio.

On rarer ones, Horry talked about her condition. Even those closest to him on the Spurs staff don’t remember him dwelling on his pain.

Through it all, Horry called Ashlyn “my little angel.” And maybe she was exactly that for him when he walked on a basketball court. His daughter was born, after all, just months before his first championship with the Rockets.

But she wasn’t a good luck charm, exactly. She changed the way he mixed anxiety and pressure.

“From the moment my daughter almost didn’t even make it,” Horry told an ESPN reporter in 2002, “I realized you can’t control what life hands you. I used to get nervous before that. Excited nervous, like gimmetheball-gimmetheball-gimmetheball. Hey, I love what I do, and it’s important in a sense, but not compared to my family. It’s just a game.”

So there he was in Detroit in 2005, with Rasheed Wallace diving at him, calm when most wouldn’t have been.

Luck?

To Horry, it didn’t come easy.

bharvey@express-news.net