Silly String battle enlivens Utah-Spurs game

The Spurs and Utah were playing in a huge game Monday night for the Jazz in terms of playoff implications.

San Antonio brought a depleted roster to Salt Lake City and were ahead after three quarters. It would seemingly be a time when the volatility of the situation would have had true basketball fans squirming on the edges of their seats as they worried about their team’s playoff hopes and fervently rooted for a comeback.

But with the Spurs nursing a 68-64 lead after three quarters, Utah and its Jazz Bear mascot found a unique way to get the crowd going. They had a huge Silly String fight where 300 cans were reportedly used in one section.

Silly String fights must be something in the Utah collective ennui, if another video indicates anything. At , more than 8,000 cans were employed in what is billed as the world record for most cans used at one time.

So the 300 cans last night at the Energy Solutions Arena were kind of small potatoes, even if it was incorrectly billed on the You Tube tease as the world’s record for Silly String. But it still got the crowd going, as. 

Whether it helped spur the Jazz’s comeback victory, we’ll never know.

But it sure made for a sticky mess for the cleaning crew in the arena after the game.

New team, same results for ex-Spurs guard Hill

Walking across the stage at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., on draft night last June, Kawhi Leonard fitted an Indiana Pacers cap carefully over his braids, then shook hands with commissioner David Stern as photographers captured his first moments as an NBA player.

Within minutes he got an early lesson in the business of the league. He could keep the blue and gold Pacers cap as a souvenir if he liked, but his rookie uniform would be silver and black.

The Pacers had used their 15th pick in the first round to select him for the Spurs, the small forward from San Diego State was told. Leonard was the biggest piece of a package sent by the Pacers so they could acquire George Hill, a combo guard who had become one of the most popular Spurs, both to his coach and the team’s fans.

The stoic Leonard, 20 years old at the time, accepted the news with a shoulder shrug, determined to stay in a moment he described as “living the dream.”

For Hill, that moment was a nightmare, even if it meant returning to Indianapolis, where he had been a high school and college star. Hill could think only of his three seasons with the Spurs, during which he had gone from a relative unknown out of a mid-major college to a key reserve on a 60-win team.

Embracing San Antonio as if he had been born in the shadow of the Alamo, he envisioned a long career as a Spur.

The player Gregg Popovich called “Indiana George” returns tonight to ATT Center, playing much the same role for the Pacers he had with the Spurs: a backup at both guard spots and defensive stopper whose true value defies quantification.

Indicative of the respect he had earned from a coach not given to sentimentality, Hill got a phone call from Popovich alerting him about the draft night trade hours before it was announced.

The conversation was difficult on both ends.

“Emotions were bare,” Hill recalled. “Coach Pop explained the nature of the business, which I respected, and explained how difficult the decision was and how bad he felt. At the time, he said it was something he had to do for the betterment of the team.

“It was difficult to swallow, but from Day 1 he had been honest with me. It meant a lot that he had the respect to give me a heads-up.”

Popovich described the difficulty of the decision to send Hill to Indiana.

“On a scale of one to 10,” he said, “it was a 10 and a half.”

Fully recovered from a Jan. 31 chip fracture of the left ankle that sidelined him for 12 games, Hill enters tonight averaging 9.4 points on 46 percent shooting and 40.4 percent 3-point shooting for a Pacers team with the fourth-best record (30-20) in the Eastern Conference.

That he is playing well in an important role with his hometown team offers some solace for Popovich.

“We’re thrilled for him,” Popovich said. “I want nothing but for him to be successful, and our players want the same for him, and he has been.

“One thing that gave us a little bit of peace about it is that we were sending him back home. He’s back in his hometown, and he was doing some great community work there, just like he was here. It made it a little more palatable, knowing he was going back home.”

No Spur misses Hill more than DeJuan Blair, the starting center who found a best friend in the locker next to his at the ATT Center.

“I was in a cab in New York City when I heard the news,” Blair said. “I was devastated. I said a few curse words.”

Before tipoff tonight, Hill will share a hug with Blair and the other teammates left from his three seasons in black and silver.

“It’s going to be kind of weird,” Hill said. “You know I’m going to have fun out there. It will be good to see everyone again and see everyone smile, but emotional because you miss those guys. You’ve created a bond with them, but now you understand it’s a business, so you play it like a regular game and have fun.”

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA

Nash steamed Suns didn’t try to sign Diaw

Veteran Phoenix point guard Steve Nash may have been pushed to the brink of wanting to leave the Suns by his team’s apathetic pursuit of free-agent forward Boris Diaw.

The New York Post’s Peter Vescey reports that that his team didn’t try harder to sign Diaw, a former teammate, after he was bought out of his contract with Charlotte. Instead, Diaw ended up with the Spurs.

Nash and Diaw made a tight connection when they played together with Phoenix from 2005-08. And with the Suns battling for a playoff spot, Nash thought that Diaw was a player who could help get them there.

Nash, a two-time MVP, is an unrestricted free agent after the season. Some of the penurious ways of Phoenix owner Robert Sarver haven’t made Nash happy as the team has been dismantled from one that played for the Western Conference Finals in 2010 but failed to make the playoffs in either of the last two seasons. The Suns are 25-26 and are two games out of the final playoff berth with 15 games to play.

Vescey opines that Diaw might have viewed the Spurs as a better opportunity, as well as a strong confirmation of the Spurs’ willingness to contend for the title this season.

“In that case, there was no future in Phoenix beyond this season, but there is the real possibility of a championship to be won by San Antonio, in addition to a playoff platform for Diaw to improve his stained image,” Vescey wrote.