Game rewind: TP’s fourth-quarter spurt ices victory

Game analysis: The Spurs’ bench came through with a pivotal performance to bail them out after early struggles. And after struggling to contain the athletic Trail Blazers in the first quarter, the Spurs limited Portland to 33.9 percent shooting during the rest of the game.

Where the game was won: After Nicolas Batum gave Portland a 67-65 lead 10 seconds into the fourth quarter, the Spurs hit Portland for 14 straight points and an 18-2 spurt that put the game away. The run was keyed by Kawhi Leonard who provided a 3-pointer and had a steal and a layup that was set up by DeJuan Blair’s rebound and long outlet pass.  By the time the run ended, the Spurs had an 83-69 lead that dropped below digits only once during the rest of the game. 

And don’t forget about this, either: Raymond Felton pulled Portland within 85-76 with 4:51 left on a jumper after earlier hitting a 3-pointer  on the previous possession. From there, Parker scored San Antonio’s next 10 points to ice the victory.

Player of the game I: Parker finished with 20 points and nine assists, mainly because of a strong fourth quarter where he scored 12 points in barely five minutes of game action.  

Player of the game II:  Tiago Splitter had one of his best career games, scoring 14 points on 5-for-5 field goal shooting, four rebounds and two assists and two blocked shots. His strong effort typified the lift the Spurs’ bench provided to the victory.

Player of the game III: The Spurs had no early answer for LaMarcus Aldridge, who started quickly with 14 points in the first quarter. The Spurs were aided as the game progressed by better defense and Aldridge’s foul trouble, which limited him to 29 points and seven rebounds. It could have been much worse.

Most unsung: Danny Green’s strong night was of the Spurs’ strong bench play. Green scored 13 points and grabbed six rebounds but more impressive was his plus-29 plus/minus score which was the best of the season for a Spurs player.

Did you notice: The Spurs committed 10 turnovers in the first quarter as Portland turned the mistakes into 15 fast break points on 7-for-7 shooting . The Spurs did a better job protecting the basketball during the rest of the game and Portland couldn’t get its running game going nearly as effectively.

Did you notice II: Spurs rookie forward Malcolm Thomas got his first NBA action during garbage time in the fourth quarter. Thomas grabbed an offensive rebound in two minutes of game action.

Stat of the game: The Spurs’ bench outscored their Portland counterparts, 45-17. The edge was 27-2 in the first half.

Stat of the game II: Parker produced 20 points and nine assists. Before Manu Ginobili’s injury, Parker was averaging 13.8 points and 6.5 assists per game. In the games since Ginobili was placed on the injured list, Parker is averaging 17.9 points and 8.0 assists. And in his last three games, he’s averaging 23.3 points per game with three  consecutive 20-point games for the first time since the final three games of the playoffs against Memphis last season.

Stat of the game III: With Marcus Camby out and Aldridge battling foul trouble, the Spurs were able to outrebound Portland, 50-36. The 14-board difference was only the third time since 1986 that the Spurs have outrebounded Portland by 14 rebounds or more. It was San Antonio’s largest rebounding margin against the Trail Blazers since they had a 27-rebound margin in a 106-75 blowout on Jan. 4, 2006.

Weird stat of the game: Maybe it was a weird Friday the 13th mojo at work. Or maybe Camby might be developing triskaidekaphobia, which is the fear of the number 13. Camby played 13 minutes, 13 seconds before his ankle injury Friday that idled him for the rest of the game.

Quote of the game: “We made easy buckets and we had great defense. If we play like this every night, it’s going to be tough to beat the Spurs,” Splitter, on the lift provided by the Spurs’ bench.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs will have one more game during their brief homestand, Phoenix on Sunday night before a back-to-back road trip with games at Miami on Tuesday and Orlando on Wednesday. The Trail Blazers began a six-game road trip that will continue with a back-to-back Saturday in Houston and upcoming games Monday at New Orleans and Wednesday at Atlanta. 

Injuries: Ginobili missed his seventh game after undergoing surgery for a fractured fifth left metacarpal.  Ford missed his second game with a torn left hamstring sustained Tuesday night in Milwaukee. Portland center Greg Oden remains out with a left knee injury. And Camby was idled late in the second quarter with a left ankle sprain and did not  return after failing to score and grabbing three rebounds.

Spurs’ gunners vow to keep firing

By Jeff McDonald

In the game’s most pivotal moment, the score tied in overtime and 39 seconds to go, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich drew up a play to free guard Gary Neal for a 3-pointer.

This would not have been a surprise last season, when Neal emerged from nowhere to become one of the NBA’s brightest shooting stars.

Wednesday in Orlando, with Neal having clanged 16 of his past 18 threes and all four attempts on this night, the scribbles on Popovich’s grease board came with a side shot of blind faith.

“They’re your shooters,” Popovich said. “You’ve got to stick with them.”

Freed both by Popovich’s X’s and O’s and the confidence his coach has in him, Neal buried the jumper, giving the Spurs a three-point lead en route to a gut-check 85-83 victory over the Magic.

In a season that started with an appendectomy, and also included a nasty run-in between a medicine cabinet and the top of his head, Wednesday’s late swish gave Neal hope that perhaps his luck has begun to turn.

“As long as I continue to take open shots, I’m sure the numbers will come back my way,” Neal said. “We’ve still got, what, 51 more games?”

When it comes to Neal and Matt Bonner — two of the NBA’s most dead-eyed shooters a season ago — the Spurs trust the numbers will eventually stop telling them lies.

Even after going 2 for 17 from long range in Orlando, the Spurs rank fifth in the league in 3-point accuracy (38.3 percent) heading into tonight’s home game against Sacramento. Surprisingly, that percentage is being dragged down by two of the team’s best 3-point shooters.

After leading the NBA last season at 45.7 percent, Bonner has started 17 of 47 (36.2 percent) from long range this season. Neal set Spurs rookie records for 3-pointers made (129) and accuracy (41.9 percent) last season, but has made just 28.6 percent (10 of 35) as a sophomore.

For both players, the game has become an exercise in forgetfulness.

“You’ve got to take the shot, regardless of what your prior history in that game is,” said Bonner, a career 41.2-percent 3-point shooter.

For a player whose usefulness is often measured in stark terms of black and white — did the ball go in or didn’t it? — shrugging off failure can be easier said than done.

“I definitely struggled with it earlier in my career,” Bonner said.

He seemed to again in Orlando. After Bonner missed his third 3-pointer, a wide-open look midway through the fourth quarter, he barked at himself in frustration.

Adding to the insult, moments later Ryan Anderson hit a 3-pointer in Bonner’s face to bring the Magic within two points.

In slumps like these, it helps to have a support network, and both Bonner and Neal have fans in high places. In addition to Popovich, Spurs captain Tim Duncan and point guard Tony Parker expressed confidence in the team’s two wayward gunners.

“We’ve got some of the best shooters in the league, and we know it,” Duncan said. “If they start taking bad shots, contested shots, then we have something to complain about.”

Said Parker: “Even if they miss 15 in a row, I’m still going to pass the ball to Matt Bonner or Gary Neal if they’re open.”

When Neal buried the go-ahead 3-pointer against the Magic, salvaging a 1-for-5 night, nobody understood his relief more than Bonner.

The sharpshooting big man doesn’t think there is anything mechanically flawed with his own shot.

“They’re all in and out,” Bonner said.

Still, Bonner admits it would be nice to have a breakthrough moment like the one Neal enjoyed Wednesday. Subtract a 17-point night he posted in a win over Dallas on Jan. 5, when he made 5 of 9 from distance, and Bonner is 12 of 38 from beyond the arc.

And yet, the chances will keep coming. Like Neal before him, Bonner vows to keep shooting.

“That’s your role on the team,” Bonner said. “Everybody on the team expects you to take that shot. If you don’t, it screws everything else up.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Saturday: Nuggets (6-2) at Spurs (5-2)

Time: 7:30 p.m.
TV: FSNSW
Radio: WOAI-AM 1200, KCOR-AM 1350

STARTING LINEUPS

Point guard
Spurs: 9 Tony Parker (6-2, 11th yr)
Nuggets: 3 Ty Lawson (5-11, 3rd yr)
Parker only Spurs player to score in double figures in all seven games.

Shooting guard
Spurs: 14 Gary Neal (6-4, 2nd yr)
Nuggets: 6 Arron Afflalo (6-5, 5th yr)
Neal (4 of 7 3s, 12 points) solid vs. Dallas in second career start.

Small forward
Spurs: 24 Richard Jefferson (6-7, 11th yr)
Nuggets: 8 Danilo Gallinari (6-10, 4th yr)
At 13.6 ppg, Jefferson is Spurs’ 2nd-leading scorer among active players.

Power forward
Spurs: 21 Tim Duncan (6-11, 15th yr)
Nuggets: 31 Nenê (6-11, 10th yr)
If Nenê (heel) can’t play, Kosta Koufos would start in his place.

Center
Spurs: 45 DeJuan Blair (6-7, 3rd yr)
Nuggets: 25 Timofey Mozgov (7-1, 2nd yr)
Blair has totaled 18 points, 16 rebounds in three games this month.

SPURS RESERVES
25 James Anderson, G, 6-6, 2nd yr
15 Matt Bonner, C/F, 6-10, 8th yr
1 Ike Diogu, F, 6-9, 6th yr
11 T.J. Ford, G, 6-0, 8th yr
4 Danny Green, G/F, 6-6, 3rd yr
2 Kawhi Leonard, F, 6-7, 1st yr
22 Tiago Splitter, C, 6-11, 2nd yr

NUGGETS RESERVES
11 Chris Andersen, F/C, 6-10, 10th yr
13 Corey Brewer, F, 6-9, 5th yr
0 DeMarre Carroll, F, 6-8, 3rd yr
35 Kenneth Faried, F, 6-8, 1st yr
5 Rudy Fernandez, G/F, 6-6, 4th yr
7 Al Harrington, F, 6-9, 14th yr
41 Kosta Koufos, C, 7-0, 4th yr
24 Andre Miller, G, 6-2, 13th yr

COACHES
Spurs: Gregg Popovich
Nuggets: George Karl

INJURIES
Spurs: Manu Ginobili (fractured fifth metacarpal) is out.
Nuggets: Nenê (bruised left foot) is day-to-day.

PROJECTED INACTIVE PLAYERS
Spurs: Cory Joseph, Ginobili
Nuggets: Jordan Hamilton, Julyan Stone

NOTABLE
Spurs are 5-0 at ATT Center for first time since 2007-08, when they opened with a franchise-record 13 straight wins at home. … Only one opponent (Golden State) has scored more than 90 points on Spurs’ home floor this season. … Nuggets rank first in NBA in points in paint (52.3) and fast-break points (25.0), second in points off turnovers (23.7). … Denver is 1-1 on second nights of back-to-backs this season.