Spurs plan to put Parker’s youth to the test

Tony Parker was just 19 years old in 2001 when, six games into his rookie season, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich installed him as the team’s starting point guard.

Parker has held the job ever since, creating the illusion he arrived not long after James Naismith hung the first peach baskets.

Though a fixture in the Spurs’ lineup since before he could buy a drink, Parker is not old. Playing next to 35-year-old Tim Duncan and 34-year-old Manu Ginobili, however, he is at times considered ancient by association.

“I’m just 29,” Parker insists. “I’m still young.”

With Ginobili out with a broken hand, T.J. Ford out with a torn hamstring and no other plausible point guard on the roster, the Spurs seem poised to put Parker’s youth to the test.

In the past three games, Parker has totaled more than 114 minutes, including 81 in a back-to-back against Milwaukee and Houston. He tallied at least 20 points and eight assists in each of those three contests, a nearly mandatory line given the Ginobili-sized hole in the nightly box score.

For his effort, Parker has been promised no rest on the horizon, and no hazard pay. He can expect another exhausting day at the office tonight at the ATT Center against Phoenix and Steve Nash, an opponent who traditionally brings out his best.

“Pop told me it’s going to be a lot more minutes,” Parker said. “I just have to be ready.”

Given Ginobili’s state of perpetual injury over the past four seasons, Parker has become the Spurs’ minuteman, ready at a moment’s notice.

It is no coincidence that Parker’s finest NBA season — a 2008-09 campaign in which he averaged 22 points and earned third-team All-NBA honors — came in concert with Ginobili being sidelined for all but 44 games.

“When Manu is out, I have to do double the job,” said Parker, who has averaged 17.1 points in 34 regular-season games against the Suns. “I’ve got to stay aggressive and be in attack mode the whole time.”

This season, Parker is averaging 15.9 points, his lowest clip since 2003-04. In seven games sans Ginobili, however, that average has leapt to 17.9.

Tony Parker, celebrating with Richard Jefferson, has logged more than 114 minutes in the Spurs’ past three games. (Eric Gay / Associated Press)

In further testament to Parker’s aggressiveness gone into overdrive, he has committed 13 of his 26 turnovers in the past three games.

“Tony’s a scoring guard,” Popovich said. “He’s always looking to be aggressive. I guess you see him being aggressive for more minutes now, since he’s playing more minutes.”

And Ford’s injury, suffered three games ago in Milwaukee, only amplifies the Spurs’ reliance on Parker.

Rookie Cory Joseph is the only other true point guard on the roster, and he is far from ready to be an NBA rotation player. For the past three games, shooting guard Gary Neal filled in gamely, if miscast, as Parker’s primary backup.

In Friday’s 99-83 victory over Portland, the Spurs’ reserves had them ahead by 14 points in the fourth quarter. Needing a ball-handler to deal with the Trail Blazers’ full-court pressure, Popovich had to re-insert Parker to close the game.

He immediately scored 10 consecutive points in a two-minute span to keep Portland at arm’s length.

“He’s doing just about everything for us,” Duncan said. “He’s continued to attack every time down the floor. He found a way to get things done.”

The trick now is to keep Parker from running into the ground for the next four to six weeks while his injured backcourt mates heal.

Especially in a condensed season like this one, Popovich is hyper-aware of the minutes logged by his older veterans, and the toll it takes on them. He is not concerned about Parker, because he doesn’t consider Parker old.

“He’ll play more minutes than Tim during this period when Manu’s gone,” Popovich said. “He’ll have the burden.”

It is a burden Parker is happy to shoulder, while he’s still young.

Kings put blemish on Spurs’ home record

By Jeff McDonald

For the second game in a row, the Spurs found themselves needing a must-have basket late in the fourth quarter, and for the second game in a row, coach Gregg Popovich called timeout to set something up.

For the second game in a row, Popovich put the ball in Danny Green’s hands and, for the second game in a row, asked him to be Manu Ginobili and create a play with Tim Duncan.

Unlike in Orlando, where Green found Duncan for the tying layup, this time Green lofted a floater over the Sacramento defense.

When the ball fell short of everything Friday, sealing an 88-86 loss to the Kings that was the Spurs’ first at the ATT Center this season, it felt like the opposite of déjà vu.

“Pop trusted me again,” Green said. “I hope I get another chance another time.”

Right up until the final horn, it felt as if the Spurs had never left Orlando. Against the Magic on Wednesday, they didn’t shoot well and turned the ball over at inopportune times, but still emerged with their first road win, 85-83 in overtime.

Against the Kings, the Spurs didn’t shoot well, turned the ball over at inopportune times and lost.

Tyreke Evans scored 23 points — including the game-winning jumper with 47.2 seconds to go — to go with 11 rebounds and seven assists as the Kings snapped a 12-game losing streak to the Spurs.

Sacramento had lost nine in a row at the ATT Center, a streak dating to April 6, 2006.

“It’s probably the biggest win of the year for us,” said Kings guard John Salmons, who made two of his three field goals in the final 2:12.

Tony Parker scored 24 points and Duncan added a 10-point, 10-rebound double-double despite playing only 5.5 seconds of the fourth quarter for the Spurs, who started 9-0 at home before Friday’s loss.

Just as the Spurs knew they weren’t going to go 0-33 on the road, even after an 0-5 start, they also knew they were unlikely to go 33-0 at home.

“It was just one of those ugly games we couldn’t pull out,” guard Gary Neal said. “Orlando was the same way. We just happened to pull that one out.”

The Spurs (10-6) opened the game as if still stuck in Orlando, missing 11 of 19 shots and giving away four turnovers and six offensive rebounds in the first quarter.

Midway through the second quarter, Sacramento pushed its lead to 15.

The Kings (6-10) still led 73-67 heading into the fourth. The Spurs did not take their first lead until Tiago Splitter spun past DeMarcus Cousins for the last of his 10 points to make it 74-73 with 9:52 left.

“We dug ourselves a hole, not rebounding well, not getting back on ‘D,’?” said Popovich, whose team looks for road win No. 2 tonight in Houston.

The Spurs followed a 2-for-17 3-point effort in Orlando by starting 2 for 19 Friday, finally breaking through with a 3-for-7 fourth quarter.

The misses weren’t limited to beyond the arc. Green and Neal combined to shoot 7 of 23. Parker was 8 of 18. Richard Jefferson went 2 for 8.

“We couldn’t hit a shot,” said Parker, whose team endured its worst shooting night at home this season (37.8 percent). “It’s tough to win shooting 38 percent.”

When Matt Bonner hit his lone 3-pointer of the game and Parker followed with his first three of the season, the Spurs had an 82-78 lead with 4:57 to go.

Then, momentum swung again. Salmons hit back-to-back jumpers to tie the game with 1:23 to go. Evans followed with the go-ahead basket.

The Kings managed more points in those crucial 85 seconds than they’d scored in the previous 8:48.

That set the stage for Green’s shot at some Orlando déjà vu. Except with just 5.5 seconds to complete the play, Green wasn’t sure he could shuttle the ball to Duncan.

“My last couple shots had been high and long, so I tried to shoot it high and soft,” Green said. “I just didn’t get a good grip.”

Two nights after an ugly first road win, the Spurs had returned for an ugly first home loss.

jmcdonald@express-news.net

– Photos by Tom Reel/Express-News

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Kings 88, Spurs 86: Jan. 20, 2012


Tony Parker emphasizes contact from Jimmer Fredette in the first half as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tim Duncan leans back to get a shot off against J.J. Hickson in the first half as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPORTS Tiago Splitter reverses under the hoop to score against DeMarcus Cousins as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


DeJuan Blair goes to the board with a shot against Jason Thompson as the Spurs lose to Sacramento 88-86 at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Gary Neal turns the corner on J.J. Hickson as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Gary Neal turns the corner on J.J. Hickson as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tiago Splitter gets fouled by DeMarcus Cousins in the second half as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Richard Jefferson pumps a three pointer as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Matt Bonner hooks in a shot against DeMarcus Cousins as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tony Parker is pressured under the basket by Tyreke Evans as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tony Parker cradles the ball in the lane against J.J. Hickson as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPORTS Tim Duncan shoots around Jason Thompson in the first half as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


ony Parker dishes away after driving into the lane against Tyreke Evans as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


SPORTS Greg Popovich argues a call with the referee as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tim Duncan pulls down a defensive rebound as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Danny Green gets in the way of Tyreke Evans as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Kings guard John Salmons is pressured by Tiago splitter and Richard Jefferson as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tony Parker instructs Danny Green as they walk back on the court as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Richard Jefferson clears a defensive rebound as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tim Duncan pulls down a defensive rebound as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Danny Green gets in the way of Tyreke Evans as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Kings guard John Salmons is pressured by Tiago splitter and Richard Jefferson as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Tony Parker instruct Danny Green as they walk back on the court as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Richard Jefferson clears a defensive rebound as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


The Silver Dancers perform as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


The Silver Dancers perform as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


The Silver Dancers perform as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


The Silver Dancers perform as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


DeJuan Blair comes out to guard Tyreke Evans as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Kawhi Leonard shoots free throws in the first half as the Spurs play Sacramento at the ATT Center in San Antonio on January 20, 2012 Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)

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What the Spurs and Nuggets said after Saturday’s game

The Spurs and Nuggets were talkative after San Antonio’s 121-117 victory Saturday night at the ATT Center.

The folks from the Spurs media service were ready with these quotes from both locker rooms.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich

(On Richard Jefferson’s late block and then coming back for the three)

“It was a good play.  He’s been shooting the ball well.  He’s playing aggressively and he’s got a lot of confidence.  He’s been a big part of winning ball games.”

(On Danny Green…have you been surprised with what he’s been able to do?)

“He’s an NBA player and he’s playing with confidence.  He’s been through a lot.  He’s been through a lot of trials and been denied many times over the last several years.  He’s a great example of sticking with it and not getting down on one’s self….continuing to play, improve, listen and right now he’s playing well and been a significant part of what we’ve done.”

(On Tim Duncan resting most of the second period…was that the plan?)

“You don’t plan for something like that ahead of time, you play the game and whatever the game dictates, that’s what you try to do.  Everyone is very different.”

Spurs guard Danny Green

(On his career-high in scoring)

“Luck and opportunity. A lot things went well. My teammates made the game easier for me. Tim led us and Tony does what he does, penetrate and kick. He got me a lot open shots and I played defense.”

 (On feeling comfortable…)

“I do more and more each game. I know the system well from being here last year. I’m starting to feel comfortable in it and comfortable playing my game now, so hopefully it’ll continue and stay consistent.”

 (On imagining these last three games…)

“I wouldn’t of thought that but I like I said, Manu is down and everybody has to step up their game. Luckily, I got an opportunity to do so and when I got in, I give as much effort as I can on defense. That’s my game and everything fell in place offensively. Tonight it did.”

Spurs forward Richard Jefferson

(On blocking a shot and scoring a three on the same possession…)

“They were running down our throats the entire game. The last two days, all coach was talking about was transition defense. They’re an aggressive physical team. After I got the block, I saw he was down and I just tried to sprint back. Fortunately, my teammates found me and I was able to knock it down.”

(On Danny Green…)

“He was impressive. His defense is what got him on the court, initially. He played great defense on Monta Ellis and he got the call against Jason Terry. Now he’s on the court. He’s starting to feel comfortable and starting to get his legs underneath him. Now, he’s able to hit some shots. He’s played great and without him, who knows what our record would be in the last three games.”

(On sharing the basketball)

“Everyone is going have to chip in when you’re missing Manu. There’s going to be a lot of teams that are going to have injuries with hamstrings and knees throughout the season because of the awkward start. The team that stays together, plays together and also have others step up are going to the be the team that prevails.”

Spurs guard Tony Parker

(On Jefferson’s play…)

“He did a great job. That was a great play and he’s been playing well since the beginning of the season.  He’s been knocking down shots and being ready and defensively that was a very, very good play. Big play in the game”

(On playing small with T.J)

“I think so. I would like to play with TJ. We did it against Golden State and it worked out very well. Tonight it worked it well. We’re going to go small. T.J can take point guard and I can chase somebody around.”

(On Danny Green…)

He played great. He was very aggressive. He shot the ball well. He’s going. He had more confidence. He’s improving game by game. That’s great with Manu out. If Danny can play consistently like that, it’s great for us.”

Denver Nuggets coach George Karl:

(Opening statement)

“I thought in the first 12-15 minutes of the game we did what we had to do.  We had opportunities to maybe come back and win the big game.  I was disappointed in our defense early in the game, as well as our mental effort.  We didn’t do anything.  We gave them lay-ups, we gave them shots, we turned it over, and we gave them offensive rebounds. We gave them everything early in the game. I think from early in the second quarter we played better then they did the rest of the way.”

 (When asked why he went small against the Spurs tonight)

“In general if the big guys aren’t giving me what I think they should be giving me, I would rather have playmakers that can make basketball plays.  It’s speed versus size. Sometimes size is needed on the court, but our size wasn’t creating anything for us.”

 (When asked about the play of Danny Green tonight)

“He shoots the ball pretty well.  He got to the rim more than I thought he would.  He played with composure. We realized midway through the third he was going to have one of those huge games.  Next time we’ll realize it a little earlier.”

Denver Nuggets guard Ty Lawson:

(Struggling with defense early on with improvements throughout the game)

“I can’t really put my finger on it. We just came out and started slow. The Spurs came out and knocked down shots and got everything they wanted. We kept trying to play catch up but with a team like San Antonio you just can’t do that.”

(Positives from tonight game)

“We played hard. Shows how much heart our team has. We battled back from almost 20 down to make it a game at the end. It shows a couple things went our way but also how much heart we have.”

 (On playoff football: Broncos or Steelers?)

“Come on, man. Broncos all day!”

 Denver Nuggets forward Corey Brewer:

(On Denver’s slow first quarter)

“We need to try and get out to a better start whether we are at home or on the road. We fell behind and started fouling.”

(Getting his number called after a slow start)

“Go make something happen, right away and just try to make stuff happen. I was trying to get us back into the game. With our team, we tried to cut it down and when we got it down to eight, it felt like we could win. We got it down to about six or seven.”

(On Danny Green’s play)

“He played great. He has to make his shots. He had one of his best games and it makes it tough.”

(Gallinari’s play)

“We need him to do that. He needs to be aggressive. Since he can be moved from the three to the four, big guys can’t guard him. That allowed for mismatches and chances to get buckets for us. Gallinari has been doing this night in and night out. He just has to be aggressive.”