Atlanta owner rips Celtics, calls KG ‘dirty’

Atlanta Hawks co-owner Michael Gearon Jr. might be among the most nondescript owners in the league.

Along with Boston owner Cody Heal, the Hawks and Celtics are the only ownership groups on Wikipedia.com.

But that could change after remarks he made at a Wednesday luncheon to the Atlanta-based W.E.B Dubois Society, where he called out the Celtics and their veteran leader Kevin Garnett.

Gearon ripped his team’s media coverage. But he reserved his biggest blasts for Garnett and the Celtics heading into tonight’s game at Boston, where the Hawks trail 3-2 in the series.

“We don’t get any calls, which I know everybody hears,” Gearon said in remarks . “But I’ll give you a stat. Last night, we are playing this old physical team. They are old. I know what happens when you play basketball, old guys foul.

“Kevin Garnett is the dirtiest guy in the league. We are playing Boston last night and they had two fouls the whole first half. We had five times that and we’re athletic.”

Those sentiments aren’t exactly original among the NBA owners. But it’s interesting that Gearon made them in a public setting about a rival player and a team.

For the record, Gearon’s dad has been a longtime mover and shaker in Atlanta, where he was a business associate of Ted Turner.

His son started a telecommunications enterprise after college and sold the business several years later to American Tower, one of the largest providers of communications towers in the world. He is currently involved with several businesses internationally and is a graduate of Georgia State.

And after his comments about the Celtics, he’s likely to earn his own Wikipedia biographical mention sooner than later, I would imagine.

Popovich using bigger rotation in these playoffs

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich typically shrinks his player rotation once the playoffs arrive, usually to no more than nine.

Through the first two rounds of this playoff run, however, he has continued to employ what amounts to a first team and second team, and that carried into Sunday’s close-out victory over the Clippers in Game 4.

Ten Spurs average at least 14 minutes per game. Only Tony Parker (35.0 minutes per game) and Tim Duncan (32.0) average more than 30.

Popovich got 14 points from Gary Neal in Game 4, eight in the fourth quarter. Backup big man Tiago Splitter had 11 points and seven rebounds in 24 strong minutes.

“We’ve been playing like that, but (Sunday) it was even more important,” said Manu Ginobili, a reserve only because Popovich likes the leadership on the second unit. “We played (Sunday) in a very important game. I think he tried to sit Tim for a longer period in the first half. So, yeah, depth always helps, especially in this type of playoffs where we don’t have the three days off like we used to.

“Hopefully, it keeps happening. These six or seven days — I don’t know how many we’re going to have off — are going to be important, too.”

In fact, the Spurs began their regimen of rest immediately after securing the sweep of the Clippers. They remained in Los Angeles after their Game 4 victory and returned to San Antonio at midday Monday. They won’t return to the practice court until Wednesday and will have another day off before practicing again Friday.

It is the same every-other-day work schedule Popovich employed in the week between their first-round sweep of the Jazz and Game 1 of the conference semifinals.

“It looks like it worked pretty good last time we did it,” Neal said.

Fundamental rejections: By blocking Chris Paul’s shot with 1:57 left in Sunday’s game, Duncan prevented a basket that could have given the Clippers a one-point lead. It also moved Duncan closer to becoming the all-time leader in playoff blocks.

Duncan has blocked 468 shots in 184 playoff games and needs only four to catch Hakeem Olajuwon for second on the all-time playoff list. He is just eight behind all-time leader Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

It should be noted that blocks did not become an official NBA statistic until 1973-74, after two of the game’s greatest shot blockers, Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain, had retired.

Duncan, however, jokes that he already is the all-time leader, both regular season and playoffs, in a special category.

“I’m pretty sure I am the all-time leader in blocks without leaving one’s feet,” he said earlier this season.

Officially select: USA Basketball on Monday made official what Kawhi Leonard and DeJuan Blair have known for more than a week: They will be part of a select team of young stars who will scrimmage against the players who will compete for spots on the U.S. Olympic team in Las Vegas in July.

The select team will be coached by former Raptors coach Jay Triano and Syracuse University assistant coach Mike Hopkins.

“The USA Select Team was a vital part of the USA Men’s National Team’s training in 2007, 2008 and 2010, and again in 2012 we’ll utilize this team of select NBA players to help get our National Team ready for the very competitive summer that is ahead of us,” USA Basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo said in a release.

Tickets available: Even with dates, times and an opponent unknown, tickets for Games 1 and 2 of the Western Conference finals went on sale Monday at the Spurs’ ticket office at the ATT Center.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA

Hollins accuses CP3 of being ‘a flopper’

Best-of-seven series tend to rachet up the emotion of competing teams as they see each other more often than in the regular season. 

That familiarity-breeds-contempt attitude has certainly been true in the Memphis-Los Angeles Clippers. The games have been tight with the Clippers claiming a 3-1 edge in the best-of-seven series after their victory Monday night in Los Angeles.

It sounds like Memphis coach Lionel Hollins is starting to see a little bit too much of Chris Paul of the Clippers, at least if his comments made during an in-game interview with TNT are any indication.

When asked why he inserted defensive stopper Tony Allen on Paul rather than Memphis point guard Mike Conley, Hollins had a specific reason.

“We just want a bigger stronger guy to get in and save Mike a couple of fouls early on because Chris does a good job of flopping and drawing fouls,” Hollins told interviewer Jaime Maggio. “We just want to make sure we kept him out of that.”

The look on Hollins faced when he answered the question, as can be seen below in the You Tube clip of the story, clearly shows his exasperation.