Game rewind: Rested TP heads to All-Star Game with a flourish

The extra night of rest clearly benefitted Tony Parker Thursday night in Denver.

After missing Tuesday’s blowout loss in Portland, Parker picked up where he left off earlier in the Rodeo Road Trip.

Parker wasn’t the Spurs’ primary scorer, but he still had a pivotal role in the Spurs’ 114-99 victory at Denver. 

He continued his recent spree of the best basketball of his career, notching 16 points and 12 assists. It marked his fourth straight game with double figures in scoring and assists — a feat he accomplished for the first time in his career.

“That’s the best I’ve ever seen Tony Parker orchestrate a game,” Nuggets coach George Karl told reporters after the game. “He was really great with his decisions and his passing.”

His passing helped DeJuan Blair match his career high with 28 points and Richard Jefferson notch 17 points in one of his three highest scoring games of the year.

Tim Duncan also was back. His return, along with the rest, helped the Spurs to their 12th victory in 13 games.

“It was great to have Tony and Tim back,” Blair told NBA.com after the game. “We fed off of them — or they fed off of me today.”

Here’s how the Spurs jumped on Denver for their best first half of the season and cruised to the victory to cap the Rodeo Road Trip.

The game, simply stated: The Spurs blitzed the injury-riddled Nuggets, pushing their lead to 28 points late in the first half before finishing off a convincing victory to punctuate the longest road trip in Spurs history.

Where the game was won: The Spurs started early as Duncan hit a 15-foot jumper and Jefferson added a 3-pointer to give them a 5-0 lead less than two minutes into the game. 

Blowing it open: After rookie Kenneth Faried pulled Denver within 7-6 on a layup, the Spurs erupted on a 19-1 run that included back-to-back three-point plays by Danny Green and a layup by Blair that gave them a 26-7 lead with 2:18 left in the first quarter.    

Player of the game I: Blair produced a career-high tying 28 points, 12 rebounds, three assists and two steals in his biggest offensive performance of the season.

Player of the game II: Gregg Popovich tried to give Duncan the fourth quarter off, although a late Denver rally ended those hopes. Duncan returned  to play 5:19 in the fourth quarter and finished with a strong all-around game with 18 points, nine rebounds, three assists and three blocked shots.

Player of the game III: Denver forward Corey Brewer  was shut out in the first half and was briefly taken to the locker room for treatment of an ankle injury. The rest apparently helped him as he returned to score all of his team-high 23 points in the second half, including 15 in the fourth quarter.

Most unsung: Jefferson had a strong night with 17 points and a season-high eight rebounds. He was a perimeter threat throughout the game, hitting five 3-pointers with one in at least every quarter.

Attendance: The Nuggets trotted out their old ABA uniforms and 18,875 turned out to watch them their old ABA rivals at the Pepsi Center. It was their sixth-largest crowd of the season and just below the building’s capacity of 19,155. It was also the Nuggets’ largest weeknight crowd since opening day.

Did you notice I: The best sign of the Spurs’ balance was apparent when every starter was in double  figures in scoring with 7 minutes left in the third quarter.

Did you notice II:  After struggling in the paint against Portland and the Los Angeles Clippers in their last two games, the Spurs made a concerted effort to go inside from the beginning of Thursday’s game against the Nuggets. San Antonio notched a 14-4 edge in the paint in the first quarter and a 12-4 edge in the second quarter en route to a 26-8 edge in paint points in the first half.

Did you notice III: In the final minutes of the game, Duncan briefly was on the court with rookie guard Cory Joseph and rookie center Eric Dawson. We likely won’t see that playing combination together very often.

Stat of the game I:  The Spurs finished off the Rodeo Road Trip 8-1, matching the team’s best RRT record in 2003.  It also tied the NBA’s best won-loss percentage on any road trip of at least eight games in league history.

Stat of the game II: Thursday’s win capped a recent surge where the Spurs have won 12 of 13 games and move ahead of Dallas by three games in the Southwest Division.

Stat of the game III:  San Antonio produced 31 points in the first quarter, marking their second big start against the Nuggets this season after scoring a season-best 37 points against them in San Antonio on Jan. 7. The Spurs also tied their season best with 34 points in the second quarter en route to a season-best 65 points in the first half.

Stat of the game IV: The Spurs’ 65-39 halftime lead (26 points) was tied for the biggest halftime lead of the season. They had a 26-point halftime lead against Dallas (55-29) on Jan. 5.

Stat of the game V: A key for the Spurs during the Rodeo Road Trip has been their quick offensive starts. The Spurs hit 52 percent from the field in the first quarter and 54.5 percent in the second quarter. They accomplished at least 50 percent shooting in both quarters four times during the nine-game swing.

Weird stat of the game I: During a stretch of 17:37 including the final 7:26 of the Nuggets’ loss to the Clippers Wednesday night and the first 10:11 against the Spurs, Denver hit 2 of 28 shots from the field (7.1 percent)

Weird stat of the game II: The Nuggets are 9-8 at home this season after losing eight games there during the entire season there last year.

Weird stat of the game III: For the third time in his career, Blair matched his career high with 21 field goal attempts. In those three  games, Blair has averaged 27.6 points per game.

Weird stat of the game IV: The Spurs matched their largest lead of the season at 28 points at two junctures of the second quarter. Their other 28-point lead came Jan. 5 against Dallas.

Weird stat  of the game V: The Spurs never trailed in the game, marking the fifth time this season they led wire-to-wire. The most recent game where they never trailed was Feb. 15 at Toronto.

Not a good sign: After dominating the game in the first half, the Spurs struggled in their transition game and in stopping Denver’s transition game in the second half. The Nuggets outscored the Spurs in fast-break points in the second half, 16-4.

Best plus/minus scores: Green was plus-20, Duncan was plus-18 and Parker was plus-12.

Worst plus/minus scores: Joseph was minus-2 and James Anderson was minus-1. They were the only San Antonio players with minus scores.

Quote of the game:  ”Considering what they had to go through, not just with injuries but the schedule they just had, having to play tonight, it wasn’t a fair fight,” Popovich, to reporters on playing the injury-depleted and road-weary Nuggets.

How the schedule stacks up: After the All-Star break, the Spurs start a seven-game homestand with games Wednesday against Chicago, March 2 against Charlotte and March 4 against Denver. The Nuggets return to host Portland on Wednesday before traveling to Houston on March 2 and the Spurs on March 4.

Injuries: Manu Ginobili (strained left oblique muscle) and Tiago Splittler (strained right calf) missed their third games (Spurs 2-1) since they were injured Saturday at the Clippers. T.J. Ford missed his 24th game (Spurs record 18-6) with a torn left hamstring. Kawhi Leonard experienced tightness in both calves after playing 2:05 in the first quarter and did not return. He is still expected to play in the Rising Stars Challenge Friday night in Orlando. Denver played without G Rudy Fernandez (lower back strain), F-C Danilo Gallinari (sprained left ankle), F-C Nene (left calf strain) and G Ty Lawson (left ankle sprain).

Rose, Deng answer call for Bulls at AT&T

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Bulls 96, Spurs 89: Feb. 29, 2012


FOR SPORTS – Chicago Bulls’ Derrick Rose shoots over San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker during first half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


FOR SPORTS – Chicago Bulls’ Derrick Rose shoots around San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan during first half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


FOR SPORTS – Chicago Bulls’ Joakim Noah looks for room around San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan during first half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker gets around Chicago Bulls Derrick Rose, during the first half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker gets pressure from Chicago Bulls Derrick Rose during the first half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Danny Green keeps the ball away from Chicago Bulls C.J. Watson during the first half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — Chicago Bulls Derrick Rose grimaces after collision in the first half against the San Antonio Spurs at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Danny Green, left, and Tim Duncan pressure Chicago Bulls Carlos Boozer during the first half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Richard Jefferson looks on as Chicago Bulls Luol Deng celebrates a three-pointer with 39.6 seconds left in the game at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. The Bulls won 96-89. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Tim Duncan walks back to the bench after missing the second three-pointer in a row late in the fourth quarter against the Chicago Bulls, at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. The Bulls won 96-89. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — Chicago Bulls Derrick Rose drives to the basket past San Antonio Spurs Tim Duncan and DeJuan Blair during the first half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — Chicago Bulls Derrick Rose cuts through the defense of San Antonio Spurs Danny Green, left, and Tim Duncan during the second half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. The Bulls won 96-89. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


FOR SPORTS – Chicago Bulls’ Derrick Rose and San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan grab for a loose ball as San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker looks on during second half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. The Bulls won 96-89. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


FOR SPORTS – San Antonio Spurs’ Gary Neal shoots between Chicago Bulls’ Taj Gibson (left) and Chicago Bulls’ Joakim Noah during second half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. The Bulls won 96-89. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Tim Duncan reacts to a foul call during the second half against the Chicago Bulls at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. The Bulls won 96-89. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker gets the ball stolen by Chicago Bulls Ronnie Brewer during the second half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. The Bulls won 96-89. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


FOR SPORTS – Chicago Bulls’ Luol Deng celebrates after making a 3-pointer late in the game with the San Antonio Spurs Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. The Bulls won 96-89. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


FOR SPORTS – San Antonio Spurs’ Tim Duncan dunks ahead of Chicago Bulls’ Carlos Boozer during second half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. The Bulls won 96-89. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Head Coach Gregg Popovich yells during the second half against the Chicago Bulls at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. The Bulls won 96-89. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs from left, Gary Neal, Tony Parker and Matt Bonner protest a foul during the first half against the Chicago Bulls, at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)


FOR SPORTS – San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker looks for room around Chicago Bulls’ Omer Asik during second half action Wednesday Feb. 29, 2012 at the ATT Center. The Bulls won 96-89. (PHOTO BY EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS) (SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPURS — San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker gets caught up in the defense of Chicago Bulls Carlos Boozer, left, and Joakim Noah during the first half at the ATT Center, Wednesday, Feb. 29, 2012. Jerry Lara/San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Express-News)

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By Jeff McDonald

When it comes to setting a defensive game plan against the Chicago Bulls, it takes neither a rocket scientist nor a championship-winning basketball coach to identify their starting point.

It begins with the guy with No. 1 on his back, the ball in his hands and the MVP trophy on his mantle:Derrick Rose.

“We know who the most important guy to try to stop is,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said before tipoff Wednesday. “We also know we’re not going to stop him.”

Popovich’s prediction proved prophetic in Chicago’s hard-earned 96-89 victory at the ATT Center, especially late with the game on the line.

Rose found his way to 29 points, including back-to-back baskets in the final 1:46, as the Bulls welcomed the Spurs back from the rodeo trip and All-Star break with only their second home loss of the season.

“Down the stretch, Chicago showed why they’ve won all those games,” Popovich said. “They made shots and were real solid defensively.”

The Spurs’ first home game since Feb. 4 felt a little like, if not a heavyweight fight, than at least a middleweight one. Chicago (29-8) is the team considered to be the biggest threat to Miami’s Eastern Conference crown. The Spurs (24-11) are second in the West behind Oklahoma City.

For much of the night, it was a defensive struggle unlikely to drive ratings on the national broadcast.

The Spurs held the Bulls to 42 percent shooting. The Bulls held the Spurs to 43 percent.

Before the game, Popovich called Chicago, which came in allowing 88.1 points per game, “most likely the best defensive team in the league.” Nothing that happened Wednesday changed his mind.

It was the Spurs’ second-lowest scoring night at the ATT Center this season, better only than the 86 points they scored in their only other home loss in 2012, Jan. 20 against Sacramento.

When defense wasn’t enough to finish the Bulls’ victory, Rose took them the rest of the way.

Three times in the late moments, the Spurs climbed within three points, only to have Rose beat them back, directly or indirectly.

Rose’s impossible one-handed banker put Chicago ahead 87-82 with 1:46 left. His pull-up jumper made it 89-84 with 1:10 to go.

On the Bulls’ next possession, after Gary Neal had sliced the Spurs’ deficit to 89-86, Rose passed out of a double-team at the top of the key. The ball swung to the 3-point arc, where Luol Deng swished his second long ball of the quarter to give the Bulls a 92-86 edge with 39.6 seconds to play.

“We made a couple of errors on a couple of guys, and they knocked down some threes,” Popovich said. “That’s the ballgame.”

The Spurs trailed by as many as 11 in the third quarter before turning an about-face behind Tim Duncan.

After starting the game 0 for 4, Duncan hit six consecutive shots in the frame, scoring 12 of his 18 points during a 15-3 run that put the Spurs into the lead.

“The effort was there,” said Popovich, whose team fell to 13-2 at home. “I’m pleased with that.”

Neal, who was a game-time decision due to a sore hamstring, kept the Spurs in the game down the stretch. He made a variety of tough shots on his way to a season-high 21 points off the bench.

“There were a couple of contested floaters that went in for me,” Neal said. “If those don’t go in, maybe I’m 5 for 15 instead of 9 for 15 and I’m not doing this interview.”

While Rose was carving them up, the Spurs’ own All-Star point guard struggled to return to regular-season form after the break.

Tony Parker finished with 11 points on 5-of-16 shooting, though he did log nine assists.

“I thought the whole team was rusty,” Parker said. “I was rusty, too. I didn’t do anything for four days, five days. Everybody was kind of rusty. We missed some easy shots.”

When the chips were down, Rose was not. Even as the Spurs knew what was coming.

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

– Photos by Jerry Lara and Edward A. Ornelas/Express-News

Pop sees bright side to rout

By Mike Monroe

DENVER — After their 137-97 loss to the Trail Blazers on Tuesday night, most of the Spurs decided the less said about the game, the better.

“They made about 18 3-pointers in the first quarter,” guard Danny Green said. “That just about sums it up.”

In fact, the Blazers made 8 of 10 on 3-point shots in the first period and 15 of 28 for the game, but Green’s point was taken.

With coach Gregg Popovich sitting his top scorer and assist man, Tony Parker, and his top rebounder and No. 2 scorer, Tim Duncan, there was only one thing Popovich cared about Tuesday.

“The only expectation I have is to play hard,” he said after the most lopsided loss for a Spurs team since March 5, 1997, when the Chicago Bulls scored a 111-69 victory.

And his assessment of the effort given by the nine players who saw action?

“They busted their butts,” he said.

Spurs rookie Kawhi Leonard logged a season-high 43 minutes and scored a season-high 24 points, and Popovich was grateful for the experience he was able to give the player the Spurs traded George Hill to acquire on draft night.

Leonard’s ability to learn on the fly after a short training camp and a compressed scheduled that has minimized practice time has been one of the surprises of the season, according to Popovich.

“Absolutely, without a doubt, the young guys picked things up more quickly (than expected),” Popovich said. “Kawhi still has a long way to go as far as understanding what’s going on, but his willingness to learn, his effort level and his ability to focus have been impressive. Same with Danny Green.”

Dawson’s debut: Eric Dawson, the 27-year-old, 6-foot-9 forward had waited a long time to make his NBA debut.

When it finally came, he logged nearly 32 minutes and produced respectable numbers. The former Sam Houston High School star scored nine points and grabbed six rebounds. He missed four of his first five shots but made all three he took in the fourth period.

Rested and ready: Popovich opted to keep the Spurs in Portland after Tuesday’s game, traveling to Denver at midday after a good night’s rest.

The Nuggets played the Clippers on Wednesday night in Los Angeles, chartering back to Denver after a game that tipped off at 8 p.m. Mountain time.

Rodeo trip rank: Regardless of the outcome of tonight’s game, the Spurs already are assured the second-best rodeo road trip since the annual trek began when the club moved into a new arena for the 2002-03 season. A victory tonight would match the inaugural rodeo trip in 2003 at 8-1.

The Spurs never have had a losing rodeo trip. The worst trip was 4-4 in 2007.

mikemonroe@express-news.net