Game rewind: A forgettable night in OKC

The Spurs’ road woes continued against Sunday after they dropped a 108-96 decision at Western Division leading Oklahoma City.

The Thunder produced a strong all-around performance as they put the Spurs away early in the second half. The final margin was closer than most of the second half. After leading wire-to-wire in their last two games, the Spurs led for 3 minutes, 39 seconds in Sunday’s game.

Oklahoma City was the better team Sunday night.

Here’s how they claimed their first victory over the Spurs in Oklahoma City since March 16, 2009.  

Game analysis: The Thunder’s bench was too much of a challenge for the Spurs, even playing on the third night of a back-to-back-to-back. San Antonio couldn’t match Oklahoma City’s athleticism as the bench repeatedly provided key plays that eventually put the game away.

Setting the stage: The Oklahoma City bench hit San Antonio with a 9-0 run to start the second quarter. Rookie guard Reggie Jackson started the spurt with a floating jumper, James Harden added a transition dunk and a deep three and Nick Collison finished it off with a nifty reverse layup to boost the Thunder’s lead to 33-22.

Where the game was won: After Richard Jefferson hit a 3-pointer to pull the Spurs  within 54-51 in the first minute of the second half, the Thunder erupted on an 11-3 run and the Spurs never closed  within seven points during the rest of the game.

Player of the game I: Kevin Durant didn’t hit his scoring average (26.2 points per game), but his strong all-around game of 21 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists was a key reason the Thunder was successful.

Player of the game II: Harden provided his accustomed lift off the bench, ripping the Spurs at the hoop and the perimeter in a 20-point effort that keyed the Thunder’s bench production.

 Player of the game III: The brightest spot for San Antonio was rookie forward Kawhi Leonard, who provided his first NBA double-double with 13 points and 10 rebounds. He even did a passable job defending Durant in the third quarter  in a game that should boost his confidence for future defensive challenges.

Most unsung: Collison not only produced 12 points and 10 rebounds, but he also was dominant inside hitting  6 of 7 shots from the field. Collison was active defensively and provided the most consistent play inside in Sunday’s game. Collison also led the Thunder with a plus-19 score.

Did you notice: Ike Diogu received his most extensive playing time of the season with nine minutes. Diogu was the center in San Antonio’s “small ball” team used in the fourth quarter, producing two points and a rebound. Most impressively, he was a plus-11 which led all the Spurs Sunday night.

Stat of the game: The Thunder became the league’s first team to win back-to-back-to-back games in three nights. Atlanta, Denver, Houston, Sacramento and the Lakers all had failed before them.

Stat of the game II: Oklahoma City hit 50.7 percent from the field and 86.2 percent from the line. The Thunder led the league last season, hitting 50 percent from the field and at least 85 percent from the line 14 times in the same game last season. The Spurs, by comparison, accomplished the feat twice last season.

Stat of the game III: During a 37-21 binge in the third quarter, Oklahoma City outscored the Spurs in fast-break points, 13-0.

Weird stat of the game: Danny Green erupted for a career-high 24 points Saturday night against Denver. Green didn’t score Sunday against the Thunder until he hit two 3-pointers during garbage time during the final 90 seconds of the game.

Weird stat of the game II: Oklahoma City led 104-81 with 3:38 left  before the Spurs closed on a 15-4 spurt to make the final score more presentable. 

Quote of the game: ”They kicked our butts in the third quarter. They did a great job,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich on the Thunder’s pivotal fast start in the second half.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs were on the back end of a back-to-back and will rest Monday before an approaching back-to-back Tuesday at Milwaukee and Wednesday at home against Houston. The Thunder finished their first back-to-back-to-back of the season. They will rest Monday before a back-to-back Tuesday at Memphis and Wednesday at New Orleans.

Injuries: Manu Ginobili missed his fourth game after undergoing surgery for a fractured fifth left metacarpal. DeJuan Blair and Tony Parker were both removed from the lineup with leg injuries that didn’t appear serious. They rested because the game was out of hand in the fourth quarter. Oklahoma City lost backup point guard Eric Maynor with a season-ending knee injury in their victory over New Orleans Saturday night. Rookie forward Ryan Reid missed Sunday’s game as he recovered from nasal fracture surgery.

Spurs notebook: Splitter’s free-throw work paying off

For Spurs center Tiago Splitter, shooting free throws was once an adventure.

As a rookie last season, he made just 54.3 percent of them, converting at just better than the rate of “heads” in a coin flip.

“I didn’t have a great mechanic,” Splitter said. “We tried to change it, and it wasn’t easy. You’re changing the way you shot your whole life.”

After a season working with shooting coach Chip Engelland, and a lockout-prolonged offseason spent honing his touch on his own, Splitter appears to be developing into a rarity among Spurs big men — a competent foul shooter.

Splitter is hitting 69 percent of his freebies heading into tonight’s game against Phoenix, having converted 20 of 29. Those numbers will never confuse him for Mark Price, but they do make him a more valuable weapon in the post.

With so much juking and junk in his post game, Splitter can count on drawing fouls and going to the line often.

“If he’s going to make his free throws, we can definitely pass him the ball inside,” point guard Tony Parker said. “He’s going to be a force down there.”

Splitter had made nine consecutive free throws before snapping that streak with a 4-of-7 showing in Friday’s 99-83 win over Portland. He hopes it is a sign that his new shooting mechanic is becoming second nature.

“Sometimes, you make them in practice, then you go to the game, and it’s different,” Splitter said. “You start thinking too much. Now, I just go there and shoot it.”

Talking ’bout practice: For the first time since the start of the regular season, coach Gregg Popovich was able to conduct a full-scale practice Saturday.

The light, 45-minute session was focused mostly on teaching and geared to younger players such as rookies Kawhi Leonard, Cory Joseph and Malcolm Thomas, as well as second-year guys such as Splitter and James Anderson.

“The young guys are still a little confused in the system,” Popovich said. “They need time in it. So the weight room and the film room and the court are all important places for education, and we were able to do all three today.”

Getting defensive: After the Spurs gave up 51.8 percent shooting in a 106-103 defeat at Milwaukee — a performance so porous they lost despite hitting 60 percent — Popovich challenged his players to become more defensive minded.

In the two games since, wins over Houston and Portland, neither opponent has shot better than 42.7 percent. The Blazers made just 40.7 percent of their shots Friday and were held to just 36 points in the second half.

“I like to think it’s increased focus and understanding of who we have to be and what we have to do if we want to win basketball games,” Popovich said. “We’re not an offensive juggernaut by any stretch, so we’ve got to guard people.”

That said, the Spurs do rank fourth in the league in scoring (100.8 points per game). Typically prolific Phoenix ranks 16th at 94.1.

Monday: Spurs (3-1) at Timberwolves (1-3)

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

STARTING LINEUPS

Point guard
Spurs: 9 Tony Parker (6-2, 11th yr)
Timberwolves: 13 Luke Ridnour (6-2, 9th yr)
Parker coming off two bad shooting games: 9 for 25 vs. Rockets, Jazz.

Shooting guard
Spurs: 20 Manu Ginobili (6-6, 10th yr)
Timberwolves: 4 Wesley Johnson (6-7, 2nd yr)
Ginobili missed only one shot vs. Jazz, a 3-pointer tipped by defender.

Small forward
Spurs: 24 Richard Jefferson (6-7, 11th yr)
Timberwolves: 8 Michael Beasley (6-10, 4th yr)
Beasley took 27 shots in season opener, scored only 24 points.

Power forward
Spurs: 21 Tim Duncan (6-11, 15th yr)
Timberwolves: 42 Kevin Love (6-10, 4th yr)
Love turned in 5th 30 pt/20 reb game of career vs. Bucks on Dec. 27.

Center
Spurs: 45 DeJuan Blair (6-7, 3rd yr)
Timberwolves: 31 Darko Milicic (7-0, 9th yr)
At 16.3 ppg, Blair No. 2 in Spurs scoring, behind Ginobili (19.8)

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

TIMBERWOLVES RESERVES
11 J.J. Barea, G, 6-0, 6th yr
22 Wayne Ellington, G, 6-4, 4th yr
3 Malcolm Lee, G, 6-5, 1st yr
52 Brad Miller, C, 7-0, 14th yr
14 Nikola Pekovic, C, 6-11, 2nd yr
15 A. Randolph, F, 6-11, 4th yr
9 Ricky Rubio, G, 6-4, 1st yr
44 Anthony Tolliver, F, 6-8, 4th yr
5 M. Webster, G/F, 6-5, 7th yr
7 Derrick Williams, F, 6-8, 1st yr

COACHES
Spurs: Gregg Popovich
Timberwolves: Rick Adelman

INJURIES
Spurs: Gary Neal (appendectomy) is not with team.
Timberwolves: Barea (strained left hamstring) is questionable; Lee (left knee surgery) is out; Miller (microfracgure surgery, left knee) is out; Pekovic (strained left adductor) is doubtful; Webster (back surgery) is out.

PROJECTED INACTIVE PLAYERS
Spurs: Gary Neal
Timberwolves: Lee, Pekovic

NOTABLE
Timberwolves, who beat Mavericks on Sunday night at Target Center for their first victory, are second straight opponent Spurs catch on second game of back-to-back set. … Adelman one of two active coaches with more victories (945) than Popovich. … Love went into Sunday night averaging nearly 38 minutes per game. Though Minnesota carries maximum 15 players, it suited up only 10 against Heat because of injuries.