Manu shakes off the rust

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

They told Kawhi Leonard, from almost the moment he joined the Spurs last June, to be ready.

He heard it from coaches. Teammates, too.

When Manu Ginobili comes hurtling through the lane, don’t fall asleep. The ball could be coming your way, from the oddest of angles with the oddest of English.

“They told me he throws some unique passes,” Leonard said.

So when the moment of truth came Monday, late in the third quarter of the Spurs’ 95-82 season-opening victory over Memphis, Leonard stayed true to that advice.

He was ready.

Ginobili’s behind-the-back pass hit Leonard in the sweet spot, in the corner, and the rookie small forward buried a 3-pointer to cap a 16-0 Spurs run.

“It’s good that he made that one,” Ginobili said later with a grin. “He made me look good.”

Just like that, old blending into new with one flick of the wrist, the Spurs took the first step toward exorcising the demons of the 2011 playoffs.

Ginobili scored 24 points, Tony Parker had 15 to go with seven assists, and Richard Jefferson added 14 points as the Spurs opened the new season by upending the team that ended the last one.

With 25 turnovers leading to 28 Spurs points, and a quiet 10 points and six rebounds from playoff monster Zach Randolph, this Memphis team looked little like the one that ousted the Spurs in April.

“I would rather start the season against somebody who wasn’t predicted to be a good team,” Memphis coach Lionel Hollins said. “They won 61 games last year. People forget that.”

A sellout crowd of 18,581 at the ATT Center welcomed the Spurs back from the five-month NBA lockout.

After one quarter, Parker and Ginobili were scoreless, Tim Duncan was on the bench with three fouls, and the Spurs had belched up eight turnovers.

Duncan played just 5:32 of the first half, and yet the Spurs went into intermission behind only 44-43.

“It was better than being down 20,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said.

With Tiago Splitter and Matt Bonner filling the breach, the Spurs this time would not be overrun by the Grizzlies’ big men. Memphis forward Rudy Gay helped the Spurs defend Randolph, taking 18 shots en route to 19 points.

The difference was apparent in the first half, when Bonner did something to Randolph nobody thought to do in last year’s playoffs. Battling for a loose ball, Bonner knocked Randolph into the camera well.

Bonner would later chalk Randolph’s pratfall up to a bit of play-acting — “I couldn’t even knock T.J. Ford into the camera well,” Bonner said — but the message was clear.

On this night, the Spurs would not be pushed around.

They held their ground until Duncan — who ended with 10 points — returned to start the second half.

The game turned during a third quarter in which Memphis made just 6 of 21 shots and gave out six turnovers.

“Defense fueled what we did,” said Popovich, now 14-1 in season openers. “We were active, we crowded things, we got our hands on a lot of balls.”

Parker finished with four steals, two of which came when he pickpocketed Mike Conley, his Memphis nemesis, on back-to-back possessions. Ginobili had three steals, one of which he converted into a two-handed dunk in the fourth quarter.

“Our defense got better as the game went on,” Jefferson said.

In the third quarter, Ginobili provided the made-for-TV highlight, whipping one of those unique passes of his to Leonard along the baseline.

Leonard, as promised, was prepared.

“Coaches told me to be ready in my spots, and he’d get me the ball,” said Leonard, who had six points and six rebounds.

One win in December does not wipe out the sting of April. The Spurs still have 60 victories to go to match last year’s total, an impossible feat given the 66-game slate.

But for one night, with old blending into new, anything seemed possible.

Buck Harvey: Ginobili locked in after the lockout

“I had such low expectations,” Manu Ginobili said as he was leaving the arena Monday night, and he wasn’t being modest.

His coaches had low expectations, too.

They’d seen him in practice looking like a guy who, well, had spent the past three months playing with his twins. To them, Ginobili appeared to be weeks away from being himself, and this scared them as they faced a 66-game season.

So what happened Monday stunned them. If Ginobili can play this way this quickly, don’t all their plans change?

The Spurs felt the opposite emotion last spring. Then, when Ginobili’s right elbow bent the wrong way, so did the Spurs’ locker room.

One coach admitted this over the summer: While they said the right things, the players lost their belief when Ginobili went down.

While all of the Spurs had something to do with a remarkable regular season that produced 61 wins, Ginobili had something to do with all of them. On his way to All-Star resurgence, Ginobili led the Spurs as he has Argentina. The pieces fit because of him.

That’s also a reason many in the league don’t see the Spurs as legitimate contenders anymore. Most forget the Spurs lost close games to the ? Grizzlies last season either without Ginobili or with Ginobili’s right arm in a brace. Most remember Ginobili’s age, which is 34.

Ginobili is certainly aware of the reality, too. After leading Argentina’s national team to an Olympic berth in September, he opted to rest his body over the next three months.

Given his history, it was a smart move. But the cost was clear, and his two preseason games showed that. Then, Ginobili shot a combined 7 of 22 from the field and did not make a 3-pointer in four attempts.

“I’m not exhausted, I’m just out of basketball shape,” Ginobili said at the time. “When I want to do a step-back, I’m out of rhythm. I still need to fine-tune it.”

Nearly everyone in the league has a similar excuse today, not just the Mavericks. Everybody wanted more preseason games and more time, and Memphis showed the same needs Monday; the same team that was careful with the basketball last spring in the playoffs ended with 24 turnovers.

“It happens,” Ginobili said. “It was the first game of the season, and it goes either way. We all need time to get in shape.”

Ginobili thought he would need more time. He said he went into the game thinking he would “take it easy,” and the first quarter fit with that.

“What did I take, one shot?” he asked afterward.

No, two.

But then something happened, and he listed what likely got to him: “The fans, adrenaline, the pressure.”

Soon, he was taking charges and rebounding and finding cutters. A high, arcing 3-pointer fell, and suddenly he had returned to last season.

Ginobili’s behind-the-back pass to the rookie, Kawhi Leonard, all but demanded Leonard make the following 3-pointer. “It was one of those plays that happen every once in a while,” Ginobili said, when they seem to happen with him every game.

When he sat down, the Grizzlies pulled closer. And then Ginobili returned as if the lockout had never happened.

Ginobili gave Rudy Gay a ball fake, drawing a foul on 3-point shot. He made all three free throws, then drove again for another two free throws. He followed that by finding Tim Duncan on a cut, then led a break for another score.

Then there’s this for his low expectations: A steal and dunk to finish his night.

“I thought they executed much better than I expected,” Gregg Popovich said afterward.

The “they” was likely Ginobili.

bharvey@express-news.net

Facing Grizzlies again motivation for Spurs

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Tim Duncan swears he has not looked at the film. Not once since leaving Memphis after the Spurs’ stunning first-round playoff exit in April has Duncan felt the slightest need to dissect what went wrong, not even for the purposes of autopsy.

He doesn’t have to.

“It’s pretty crisp in my memory,” Duncan said.

For five months during the NBA lockout, the image of defeat played on a continuous loop in the minds of Duncan and the other Spurs who suffered through one of the most disappointing playoff losses in league history.

That is a long time to burn.

Tonight at the ATT Center, the Spurs open a new chapter, the start of a lockout-compressed season many thought would never happen. But first, they must close an old wound.

The Spurs begin their new campaign against the same team that unceremoniously shut down their last one. In stunning the Spurs in six games, Memphis became only the second No. 8 seed in the best-of-7 era to oust a No. 1.

“There’s definitely a lot of motivation there,” said point guard Tony Parker, who was outplayed in the series by his Memphis counterpart, Mike Conley. “I want to play them in the playoffs, but I’ll start with the first game of the season.”

Even Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, never one to play up the payback angle or any other made-for-TV storyline, sees a smidgen of added impetus in the opener.

Of course, beating Memphis in Game 1 of the regular season won’t erase the disaster of last season’s playoffs. But it could be a good first step toward cleansing the palate.

“People are people,” Popovich said. “I’m sure when the game starts, our people will be motivated because they got beat by a very good team last year.”

In a way, tonight might feel like a continuation of last April, a Game 7 without the pesky drama of win-or-go home. Though nearly eight months have passed since the last time the Spurs and Memphis met, little has changed with either team.

Zach Randolph, who averaged 21.6 points and 9.2 rebounds against the Spurs in the playoffs, is still a load. The Grizzlies do welcome back small forward Rudy Gay, the club’s perennial leading scorer who missed the postseason while recovering from shoulder surgery.

The Spurs, meanwhile, bring back a roster almost identical to the one that won a Western Conference-best 61 games last season before falling short in the first round.

The most significant addition since April — besides a two-armed Manu Ginobili — is first-round draft pick Kawhi Leonard, the small forward from San Diego State obtained in a draft-day trade that shipped reserve guard George Hill to Indiana.

The Spurs also will expect greater contributions from a pair of second-year players — guard James Anderson and center Tiago Splitter — than they got in last season’s playoffs.

“If we win, it doesn’t take back what happened last season,” forward Richard Jefferson said. “It’s just one game.”

For the Spurs, bigger challenges lie ahead after Memphis leaves town. Tonight’s game is the first of 66, overstuffed into 129 days.

Though the Spurs won a title in 1999, the last time the NBA staged a shortened campaign, Duncan said there is a smaller margin for error than in a full season.

“You don’t want to get yourself stuck in a hole and have to find a way to fight yourself back, especially with all these back-to-backs and all the games in not many days,” said Duncan, the only player on the Spurs’ roster active in ’99.

“You have to take care of stuff, especially when you’re healthy, especially when you’ve got everybody.”

The Spurs hope to start a new championship push tonight, against the team that ended the last one.

One door opens, but not before the other one closes.

“There’s no excuses, they beat us, congratulations to Memphis,” Parker said. “Now it’s a new season.”