Battier says ‘magical run’ carried Grizzlies past Spurs in playoffs

Even a couple of months after the upset occurred, Memphis forward Shane Battier remains a little suprised the Grizzlies stunned the Spurs in the first round of the playoffs.

The Grizzlies’ six-game series victory over the Spurs was only the second time since the NBA went to a best-of-seven series for all rounds of the playoffs that a No. 8 seed toppled a No. 1 seed.

And it still is a, he said in an interview with radio station WFAN in New York City earlier this week. (Hat tip to Sports Radio Interviews.com)

“We knew that we had a favorable matchup in the Spurs,” Battier said. “Did we think we could beat them and take the Thunder in second round to seven games? I’d be lying to say I knew that was going to happen.”

The Grizzlies had never won a playoff game, much less a series before their matchup with the Spurs this year. But after splitting four games with San Antonio earlier in the regular season, Memphis has confidence coming into the playoffs, Battier said.

“We knew we had a chance against the Spurs. We felt that we matched up great against them,” Battier said. “We were younger and we were more athletic.

“After we won that first game in San Antonio, we all looked at each other and said ‘hey guys we can do this.’ We went on a magical run, the city was behind us, it was simply electric, and it was a fantastic lightning in a bottle run for us.”

It also didn’t hurt them that Manu Ginobili missed the first game of the series with what turned out to be a broken arm. But the Grizzlies took advantage of his absence in that game and held serve by winning the rest of their home games to claim the upset.

Battier said he hopes that the labor impasse between owners and players will be short. And he made an interesting comment that the NBA can’t go through an extended lockout like the NFL has endured.

“I’m cautiously optimistic that we will get something done before missing any games. We all know what’s at stake,” Battier said. “We can’t afford to go through what the NFL is going through and we can’t afford to lose the fans. I just think we have a perspective after going through this in ’99 that it’s in the best interest of everybody to hammer out a fair deal.”

S.A. sports bars especially fearful of losing Spurs games

By Tim Griffin
tgriffin@express-news.net

The NBA and NFL lockouts stretch on, potentially costing players and owners millions of dollars in lost revenue and wages during an extended work stoppage.

But the lockouts also have a human side that concerns local sports bar owner Steve Wilkinson about the very foundation of his business.

Wilkinson and other San Antonio bar owners are fearful of economic ramifications if games are missed as either or both lockouts endure.

“I’m sitting back wondering what I will do,” said Wilkinson, whose Fatso’s Sports Garden on Bandera Road is the oldest existing sports bar in the city after opening in 1986. “I will have to lay off people and maybe even close on Sundays. I’m just hoping these rich crybabies will figure something out.

“It’s beyond millionaires and billionaires in the leagues here. It’s my cooks and waitresses who will end up paying the biggest cost if this thing stretches on.”

Recent news about a potential settlement in the NFL lockout has heartened local bar owner Joey Villarreal. But both he and Wilkinson are worried about an extended NBA lockout that would cause them to miss Spurs games.

“Basketball will definitely affect us because in this city, everybody is a Spurs fan,” Villarreal said. “This isn’t like a lot of other big cities. ? Even people who make up my non-sports crowds are aware of the team and their games.”

Villarreal owns and operates three bars in town: Joey’s on North St. Mary’s and the Blue Star Brewing Co. and Joe Blue’s Lounge in the Blue Star Arts District on South Alamo. He said he would see an estimated drop in revenue of up to 25 percent for a big NFL “Monday Night Football” game.

But because of the diversity in his businesses and clientele, he hopes he will be able to withstand a business slump caused by a sports lockout.

“I’ve never been one who believed you should base your business on other people’s business, like a sports team or a league, because it’s not healthy,” Villarreal said. “We have to move on and find other ways to find customers.”

Villarreal even sees a potential for business growth if the lockouts linger.

“Let’s face it, maybe when fans won’t be spending a hundred bucks on a game, they will have a little extra money and want to do something else,” he said. “I don’t know.”

But local sports bars, which traditionally attract their largest crowds on NFL Sundays and nights of Spurs games, are dreading what could happen without live action during the next few months.

“You just cut back where you have to and become a chameleon,” Wilkinson said. “If I have to cut back on my labor or staying open for lunch or staying open on Sundays, I will. You know they are eventually settling. And after it happens, you just move on.”

An extended NFL lockout would be expensive for Wilkinson, but he’s confident of a quick settlement before the start of the season and knows he would have college football Saturdays in the fall.

But the loss of Spurs games and the NBA would be particularly devastating during winter months when pro basketball games are the backbone of his business.

“Basketball is steady and brings people in on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday nights during January and February,” Wilkinson said. “If the Lakers are playing a 9:30 p.m. game on Sunday, I know there will 20 or 30 people in here who will be watching and giving me a reason to stay open.”

Wilkinson and Villarreal endured the 1998-99 NBA lockout, which cost the Spurs 32 regular-season games. Their business losses were noticeable, although both said the Spurs’ first NBA championship later that season made up for any hardship they might have incurred earlier.

Economics have changed for Wilkinson since then. More sports bars across the city have provided a more competitive market with more entertainment options for his customers.

“I know the playoff run (in 1999) more than made up for the earlier losses. But this time, I’m a lot more worried,” Wilkinson said. “I’m not worried about the football (lockout) after reading and hearing the news the last week or so. But the NBA is different.”

As he braces for an extended NBA lockout, he fears his potential financial losses could be staggering.

“Not having the Spurs would be the difference in me scheduling one waitress or three for a game night,” Wilkinson said. “Having no Spurs will hurt us worse than pro football. Without that steady group of people coming in for every game, it’s gonna be tough.”

Kidd’s ex making the tabloids with Arizona Cardinals’ top draft choice

Even as her former husband is poised to make a deep run in the playoffs, Joumana Kidd is upstaging Jason Kidd.

The well-connected website Urban Takeout.com is reporting that Joumana Kidd, 38, has pounced on top Arizona draft pick Patrick Peterson of LSU.

Urban Takeout reports that the former Mrs. Kidd and Peterson were “at the NFL Player’s Association rookie party” before leaving together. Peterson was the fifth pick in the first round of the NFL Draft last week. 

Joumana and her son, T.J., became a frequent cutaway shot during the 2003 NBA Finals against the Spurs back when her former husband was playing for  the New Jersey Nets. They had a messy divorce in 2007 when Kidd of physically and mentally abusing him, threatening to make false domestic violence complaints against him to police and of interfering with his relationship with his three children.

 ”The defendant’s extreme and unwarranted jealousy and rage has left the plaintiff concerned about her emotional stability,” Kidd’s divorce papers said at the time.

He’s moved on and now has the Dallas Mavericks aiming for their first trip to the NBA Finals since 2006.

And it seems that Peterson has been drafted by the Cardinals and taken up with a cougar.