Spurs owe success to roster full of contributors

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich started this condensed 66-game NBA schedule with the notion that his starters, some of them a bit old, would need rest and they would need it often.

“It’s probably mandatory,” Popovich said in December.

As a whole, the veterans are playing fewer minutes, as Manu Ginobili has battled a few injuries and Popovich has found opportune times for Tim Duncan and Tony Parker to join the inactive portion of the box score.

Thanks to the deepest bench in the team’s championship era and likely ever, the Spurs have the best record in the West and second best in the NBA. And recent additions have made the bench strong enough to make some think the Spurs are primed for a run at championship No. 5.

It’s been especially noticeable as the Spurs built their recent 10-game win streak. After scoring 82 points in Friday’s win over New Orleans, the most by an NBA bench since 1990, the reserves have outscored the opposing bench 245-135 in the past four games.

Express-News staff writer Tim Griffin examines how much the bench aided the Spurs’ first four titles and this season’s Spurs. See Page C6 for a statistical breakdown of the starters and reserves from these five Spurs teams and some key moments off the bench in the title runs:

1999
Veterans Jaren Jackson, 31, Steve Kerr, 33, Jerome Kersey, 36, and Will Perdue, 33, were key contributors. No reserve averaged more than 6.4 points or 18.3 minutes as Popovich stuck with his starters more than any of his other title teams.

2003
Malik Rose (10.4 ppg, 24.5 mpg) and 25-year-old rookie Manu Ginobili (7.6 ppg, 20.7 mpg) were the most important, but vets Steve Smith, Danny Ferry, Kevin Willis, Speedy Claxton and Kerr had their moments.

2005
Robert Horry hit the big shots, but Nazr Mohammed, Brent Barry, 22-year-old rookie point guard Beno Udrih and late-season acquisition Glenn Robinson all played regularly by playoff time.

2007
Ginobili was a reserve most of the season, providing 16.5 ppg as the third-leading scorer. Michael Finley and Barry also averaged more than 20 minutes a game, and Fabricio Oberto and Udrih complimented them.

2012
Three moves bolstered a strong bench with late acquisitions of Stephen Jackson, Boris Diaw and Patty Mills. Four bench players average at least 20 minutes a game and two others are close to that. With Tiago Splitter, Gary Neal, Matt Bonner and Ginobili playing well, Popovich has leaned on his bench more than any of his other teams.

TITLE MOMENTS OFF THE BENCH

The Spurs’ bench has come up with key performances that have helped produce pivotal moments in the team’s previous four championship seasons. Here is a key bench contribution in each of those seasons:

1999: Jaren Jackson goes for 22 points and 20 points in the final two games of the series helping to finish off road victories in a four-game sweep of the Los Angeles Lakers in the second round of the playoffs.

2003: After playing only 13 minutes in the playoffs up to then, Steve Kerr comes off the bench to hit four clutch 3-pointers that fuels a series-clinching victory over Dallas in the Western Conference finals.

2005: The legend of “Big Shot Rob” continues as Robert Horry sinks a game-winning 3-pointer with 5.8 seconds in overtime to boost the Spurs to a series-turning Game 5 victory at Detroit in the NBA Finals.

2007: Manu Ginobili erupts for monster scoring games of 26 points in a Game 5 victory and 33 in the series-clinching Game 6 triumph to help finish off Phoenix in the Western Conference semifinals. The series turns when Horry’s hip-check of Phoenix’s Steve Nash, sending Nash into the scorer’s table, sparks a rumble.

– Tim Griffin

Game rewind: Why Boris was ready for work as soon as he arrived

Boris Diaw had played only 24 minutes in two meaningless games with Charlotte over the last 2½ weeks.

For a competitor like Diaw, playing with the struggling Bobcats had gotten old very fast.

So when he started weighing different playing options around the league, San Antonio was attractive for reasons other than his friendship with childhood friend Tony Parker.

Even if it meant starting his Spurs career with three games in his first three nights with the team.

“Yeah,  I looked at the schedule and I said OK,” Diaw said. “They tell me when to come and I came.”

Leaving the league’s worst team for one of the best will make a player take some drastic steps sometimes.  

Diaw played 16 mintues against Dallas barely 24 hours after arriving in San Antonio Friday night. He played 11 more minutes in New Orleans Saturday before topping it with 27 minutes in the Spurs’ 93-76 victory over Philadelphia on Sunday.

“I’m learning to play with them and I didn’t get a chance to practice. And I played right away with three games in a row,” Diaw said. “But that’s the NBA. We know that and I’m just glad we took care of these three games.” 

With all of the Spurs’ shooting threats around him, Diaw doesn’t need the ball to be happy. He does the little things and had a box score chocked full of them Sunday night. Diaw took only three shots and scored two points. But he grabbed seven rebounds, had two assists and three steals.

He’ll be a handy piece for the Spurs during the rest of the season.

And he seems to be happy playing with the Silver and Black — even if it meant starting with one of those hated back-to-back-to-backs.  

 The Spurs claimed their seventh victory in their last eight games Sunday night with Diaw being a big part of it.

Here’s how they did it.

The game, simply stated: Despite playing in the final game of the dreaded back-to-back-to-back, the Spurs played lockdown defense again in the second half to cruise to an impressive victory against a playoff-quality foe in the Atlantic Division-leading Sixers.

Where the game was won: After Thaddeus Young’s layup pulled  the Sixers within 68-63 with 3:33 left, the Spurs hit them with a 20-4 spurt over the next 10 minutes to blow the game open. DeJuan Blair kick-started the surge with six of the points in an 8-2 run that closed the third quarter. And they put it away with a 12-2 blitz at the start of the fourth quarter with all of the points coming in the paint. Philadelphia was limited to one field goal during a span of 7:04 as the Spurs’ defense kicked in.

Philly’s early jump: The Sixers jumped into control with a run of 16 consecutive points late in the first quarter and into the start of the second quarter. The biggest reason was strong Philadelphia defense that caused the Spurs to miss eight straight shots and commit seven turnovers during a period of 5:06.

Weren’t they supposed to be tired?: The Spurs jumped on Philadelphia late in the first half with an 11-2 run capped by a driving layup by Ginobili that gave them a 29-18 lead with 1:28 left in the first quarter. Highlights included a 3-pointer by Matt Bonner and an 18-foot pull-up jumper by Justin Dentmon.

Player of the game I: Tony Parker always seems to get up for the Sixers and Sunday night was no different. Parker produced game-high totals of 21 points and seven assists and limited Jrue Holiday to 10 points on 5-of-14 shooting.

Player of the game II: DeJuan Blair dominated inside for the second straight night as he produced 19 points and six rebounds and gummed up the passing lanes to provide three steals.

Player of the game III: Kawhi Leonard provided his usual defensive lift and notched 11 points and 10 rebounds for his fourth double-double of the season. He was particularly active when the Spurs defense picked up in the second half, as well as scoring seven points and grabbing seven rebounds after the break.

Most unsung: Diaw only scored two  points, but he showed continued growth in the offense with two assists, three steals and also provided seven rebounds.

Attendance: Military Appreciation Night brought out more than just the helicopters and USAA  executives to the ATT Center Sunday night. Another sellout crowd of 18,581 attended. It was the Spurs’ 18th capacity crowd in 24 home games this season, including 15 of their last 17 home games and 11th in a row. Their last non-capacity game came Feb. 2 against New Orleans. 

Did you notice I: Ginobili said after the game that Popovich wasn’t too pleased with Duncan’s technical foul late in the second quarter. Maybe  the Spurs’ coach had something to do with Duncan’s listing in the official NBA box score available online. It listed the reason for Duncan’s absence as “DND (did not dress) — OLD.”

Did you notice II: Newest addition Dentmon showed some offensive pop in his first game by draining an 18-foot jumper barely a minute into his playing time late in the first quarter. But he also committed a cardinal sin in the Spurs’ philosophy when he lost the ball out of bounds with an absent-minded play with 34.9 seconds left. The game was settled, but a player  on a 10-day contract can’t ever take anything for granted.

Stat of the game I: The Spurs limited Philadelphia to 76 points. In each of the three games of the back-to-back-to-back, the Spurs held their opponents to less than 90 points. 

Stat of the game II: After missing 13 consecutive 3-pointers Saturday at New Orleans, Matt Bonner snapped the streak with San Antonio’s first 3-point attempt with 8:53 left in the first quarter.  

Stat of the game III: The Spurs are 24-1 at home against the Sixers since the start of the 1986-87 season, winning the last eight. The 76ers’ last win in San Antonio came on Jan. 3, 2004.

Stat of the game IV: Philadelphia was limited to a season-low 11 points in the fourth quarter on 19 percent field-goal shooting and six turnovers.

Stat of the game V: Spurs’ opponents have struggled shooting in the last three games. Dallas was limited to 31 percent shooting in the second half on Friday. New Orleans hit 38.5 percent in the second half, including 27.8 percent in the fourth quarter. And Philadelphia went 31.6 percent in the second half with 14 turnovers the Spurs turned into 19 points.  

Stat of the game VI: The Spurs rang up a 54-46 edge in paint points. Since a loss against Denver on March 4, the Spurs have reached at least 50 paint points in eight of their last 10 games.

Stat of the game VII: San Antonio’s 15 steals were a season high. And the 21 turnovers by Philadelphia, who leads the league in fewest miscues, was a season high.

Stat of the game VIII: The Spurs are the fifth NBA team to sweep a back-to-back-to-back this season.

Weird stat of the night I: Tim Duncan was whistled for his third technical  foul of the season, but his first in his career while wearing a sportscoat and slacks.  

Weird stat of the night II: Bonner scored eight points in the first 8 ½ minutes of the game, but only two afterwards.

Weird stat of the night III: Philadelphia missed its first seven 3-pointers before Jodie Meeks hit one with 3:17 left in the game.

Weird stat of the night IV: The Spurs produced 15 steals and they were shared among eight different players. Only Parker and James Anderson failed to produce one.

Not a good sign: Maybe it’s tired legs, but the Spurs’ league-leading 3-point shooting has disappeared the last two games. Over those games, San Antonio is hitting 19.1 percent after hitting 9 of 47 behind the arc. It’s the Spurs’ second-worst two-game stretch this season after hitting 7 of 42 (16.7 percent) against Orlando and Sacramento on Jan. 18 and Jan. 20.

Best plus/minus scores: Bonner was plus-23, Parker was plus-21 and Blair and Green were both plus-16.

Worst plus/minus scores: Dentmon was minus-9, Anderson was minus-3 and Stephen Jackson was minus-2. They were the only Spurs with negative scores.

Quote of the game: “I don’t think people are talking enough about the Spurs as far as being a championship team,” Philadelphia coach Doug Collins, who said this before the game. The Spurs then notched a 17-point win over Collins’ team – permitting 11 points in the fourth quarter on the back end of a back-to-back-to-back with their two top centers out of the lineup.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs have approaching road games Tuesday at Phoenix and Wednesday at Sacramento before returning home Saturday against Indiana. The Sixers have games Tuesday against Cleveland and a back to back Friday at Washington and Saturday against Atlanta. 

Injuries: Duncan (rest), Tiago Splitter (mid-back spasms) and Gary Neal (left mid-foot sprain) did not play. Philadelphia played without All-Star guard Andre Iguodala, who missed his first game of the season with left patella tendonitis.

Kobe misses first 15 shots but bounces back at end

Kobe Bryant never had endured a game quite like the one he had Saturday afternoon.

Bryant was shut out through the first three quarters, missing his first 15 shots  from the field.

But after that frigid shooting start, Bryant rebounded to hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with 20 seconds left to lead the Los Angeles Lakers’ 88-85 victory over New  Orleans.

Bryant scored all 11 of his points in the fourth quarter, finishing with a historically struggling 3-for-21 shooting effort against the Hornets.

He missed his first seven 3-pointers before finally sinking his game-winning shot. It was the worst start to a game in Bryant’s career, having previously missed his first 13 shots against the Spurs on Dec. 28, 2010.

“I couldn’t put the ball in the ocean,” Bryant told reporters after the game. ”But I’m stubborn. You have to have that kind of attitude, that kind of determination or stubbornness. That’s what gets teams over the hump to win multiple championships.

“If I were to miss that shot, everybody would have killed me.”

Bryant, 33, ranks third in the NBA with an average of  38.6 minutes per game. He said the extended minutes caused by the league’s compact 66-game has caused  him to be fatigued and the results were seen in Saturday’s game.

“Fatigue might have something to do with it, but I had good shots,” Bryant told ESPN Los Angeles. “You figure ways to work through it. I have a great team here and a lot of support. I really pushed myself defensively tonight to get after the guys, so sometimes you have to sacrifice a little bit of the offense and the stamina that you have to defend. That’s what we believe is going to get us to the championship.”

Despite his struggles, Bryant’s big shot pulled the Lakers to the victory — even if he belonged more under the Duds lists than the Studs for Saturday’s action.     

STUDS

Los Angeles Clippers G Chris Paul: Went for 26 points and six assists after returning from an elbow injury earlier in the Clippers’ victory over Utah.

Los Angeles Clippers F Blake Griffin: Muscled for 24 points, eight rebounds, six assists and was a team-best plus-17 in the Clippers’ victory over Utah.

Philadelphia F Elton Brand: Notched 25 points, 10 rebounds, five assists, three blocks and was plus-11 in the Sixers’ victory over Atlanta.

New Jersey G Deron Williams: Filled the box score with 19 points, six rebounds, 15 assists, three steals and was plus-5 in the Nets’ victory at Sacramento.

San Antonio F Tim Duncan: Went for 23 points (including 9 for 9 from the foul line), 11 rebounds, two blocks, two assists and was plus-7 in the Spurs’ triumph over Indiana — their seventh straight victory.

Atlanta F Josh Smith: Produced 34 points, nine rebounds, five assists, two steals and was plus-2 in the Hawks’ loss at Philadelphia.

DUDS

Los Angeles Lakers G Kobe Bryant: Went 3 for 21 from the field after missing his first 15 shots with a turnover in the Lakers’ victory over New Orleans.

New York G Landry Fields: Clanked through a 2-for-8 shooting effort with six turnovers in the Knicks’ victory over Cleveland.

Cleveland G Lester Hudson: Hit 2 for 8 from the field with four turnovers and was minus-6 in the Cavaliers’ loss to New York.

Philadelphia C Spencer Hawes: Struggled through a 2-for-7 shooting night with four turnovers and was minus-3 in the Sixers’ victory over Atlanta.

Milwaukee G Monta Ellis: Went 2 for 12 from the field with three turnovers in the Bucks’ loss to Memphis.