Spurs on the verge of collapse; Game 5 a major statement for Thunder

The San Antonio Spurs went into Game 5 knowing that the game that night was a “must win” though no one in the Spurs organization would actually say those words.  What followed was a convincing win over the elder statesmen of the NBA and more praise from Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich who earler called OKC Guard Kevin Durant the “argubly the best player on the planet.”

“It’s not like we’re playing the Sisters of the Poor,” Popovich said. “I don’t care who you are, you can’t turn the ball over 21 times for 28 points,” Gregg Popovich

For the Spurs to salvage this series, there is only one thing to do and that is win.

“In a nutshell, we have to go win one on the road. There’s not really nothing else to say,” Guard Stephen Jackson

Game 6 is set for Wednesday, 8pm in Oklahoma City.

 

OKC faces tough decision with Harden

Among other factors — mainly greed, greed and more greed — one of the primary motivations for last year’s lockout was to implement stricter financial punishments to narrow the gap between the NBA’s haves and have-nots.

So it comes as no small irony that one of the first victims of the league’s punitive measures could be the small-market Oklahoma City Thunder, who have assembled a ridiculous collection of elite young talent but will be hard-pressed to keep all their pieces together.

After rewarding cornerstones Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and Serge Ibaka to long-term contracts, there might not be enough cash left over to retain James Harden, last season’s Sixth Man of the Year and OKC’s main decision-maker down the stretch.

Without an extension by Oct. 31 he’ll be a restricted free agent next summer, which means the Thunder will have the right to match any of the substantial offers he’s likely  to receive on the open market. But as NBA.com’s David Aldridge examines in , they might not have the resources to do so. In doing so he compares their situation to that of the Spurs, who have had to routinely make difficult decisions over the years:

OKC is in the same relative position as the Spurs found themselves at the start of their dynasty. San Antonio made its choice, building a four-time champion around Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. Only Duncan got a max deal out of those three, and San Antonio has been able to keep its core together for a decade. But the Spurs had to let Stephen Jackson go to Atlanta in free agency in 2003, and it took them nine years to get him back. They had to let Hedo Turkoglu head to Orlando as a free agent in 2004, and, painfully, trade the rights to Luis Scola to Houston to keep their financial house in order.

On that note, perhaps Harden should take a close look at Parker and Ginobili, both of whom were rewarded with multiple championships for taking less than they would have gotten elsewhere.

But it’s also fair to put some of the focus on the  the NBA has put in place to limit massive overspending.

The Thunder did everything the old-fashioned way: i.e. they actually drafted and developed their key players, instead of poaching free agents and disgruntled superstars to form one of the so-called “Super Teams” that whipped so many into a frenzy. (Think Miami and the Lakers.) And yet they might not be able to reap the full benefits of their ingenuity should Harden walk.

If so, that would seem to be a classic case of unintended consequences for a new set of rules that were supposed to help, not hurt, small-market franchises.

Spurs sweep sets up match against either Lakers or Thunder (and we’re betting the Thunder)

“I don’t see nobody beating them,” Utah Jazz PF Al Jefferson

The San Antonio Spurs spent the weekend taking care of family business feasting on the Los Angeles Clippers in the second round of the 2012 NBA Playoffs for their second sweep while setting an NBA record as only the 12th team in NBA History to sweep the first two rounds as well as making the Top 10 List of NBA teams with the longest winning streak. But don’t tell Head Coach Gregg Popovich about a streak…he has no idea.

“It doesn’t exist for us,” coach Gregg Popovich said of the team’s 18th win. “We don’t talk about it. I’ve never heard anyone mention it except (in the media). It is not even a thought in our minds. Each game is a separate entity.”

The Spurs used their combination of basketball knowledge, execution and will to overcome a young Clippers squad. One thing for sure is that this Los Angeles team came to play unlike the other remaining Squad, the Lakers. The LA Clippers have played exciting basketball all year; the Lakers are hanging on by a Kobe thread and are one game away from Summer vacation.

“We had a good season,” Paul said. “I think it’s a good sign for our team, but there are no moral victories. It’s not like, ‘Oh, we made it to the playoffs and it’s all good and well.’ We feel like we should still be playing. We’re going to keep working. We’ve got some work to do. We obviously have got to get better.”

Whether the Spurs face the Los Angeles Lakers or the Oklahoma City Thunder, one thing is for sure, this Spurs club is just as good (or better) then their other championship squads and are for sure a much deeper team than those squads

“This year reminds me of when I was here the last time (2003),” said late arrival Stephen Jackson, who came in under the trade deadline. “It is a great team and great guys to be around. Nobody is worried about their personal game and everybody wants to just win. So it is still the same around here.”

The Spurs fly back home today and should arrive to a nice crowd to greet them at the San Antonio International Airport, get back home and watch the Lakers and Thunder beat each other up for the right to face them.

“I don’t see nobody beating them,” Utah Jazz PF Al Jefferson