Spurs Beat Heat, ‘Game Over’ In First Quarter
Tim Duncan is not known for his trash talking. Chances are he never will be, but for one night it was wonderful to see the irrepressible swagger and confidence that comes with being a champion on full display when San Antonio obliterated Miami in the first quarter of what would become a full-fledged 125-95 blowout victory.
I get it, though. It’s one game -- especially for the Spurs who went up 36-12 by the end of the first quarter. For Miami it’s another example of everything that is wrong with that team in South Beach. Not even the ghost of Mike Bibby could save them. Not even a stupid flagrant foul from Erick Dampier could slow down the Spurs. Nothing. Miami relies on Wade and James to penetrate and get the occasional three from one of those 12th men they have masquerading as role players, but the good teams are putting the clamps on that and forcing them to shoot jumpers. As we’ve seen recently by LeBron’s knack for missing big shots at the end of close games against quality teams this season, the whole jump shot thing is not working out so well for the Floridians.
On another high note, Tony Parker returned from his calf injury MUCH earlier than expected and was able to start the game. He finished with 15 points and eight assists in 23 minutes of action. He was also on the receiving end of Ericka’s flagrant stupidity. Luckily, TP was able to walk it off and not sustain any other injuries.
Eight Spurs finished in double figures, and the Spurs bench outscored Miami’s “bench” 58-26. The Spurs shot a ridiculous 56% from the floor including a franchise best 17 three-pointers in the game, going 17-of-28 from long range as Miami constantly failed to close out on the Spurs shooters. I know the Spurs won’t hit 17 threes in every game, but the bottom line is that they executed and played as good a game as can be played last night. Now bring on the Lakers.
Notable Spurs Stat Lines
Matt Bonner: 18 points, 5 rebounds, 6-of-7 from downtown including 4-of-4 in the first quarter.
Manu Ginobili: 20 points, 7 assists, 3 rebounds, 2 steals. Part of Miami’s game plan had to involve containing Manu to some degree. We see how that went.
Tim Duncan: 11 points, 14 rebounds, and a “Game Over” for good measure.
Gary Neal: 16 points on 7-of-8 shooting off the bench. What a great pickup this cat turned out to be.
George Hill: 11 points, 4 assists, 3-of-6 from downtown.
Richard Jefferson: 11 points on 4-of-7 shooting along with some other odds and ends. I ain’t mad at ‘em though. As a matter of fact, he has fit in much better this year and I love the fact that he is not a selfish player who demands 20 shots a game.
DeJuan Blair: The Grizzly Blair finished with 10 points and 6 boards.
Oh and by the way… from Dictionary.com
drub
I would say that the Miami Heat Dwyane Wade and Friends were just beat with the Ugly Stick, perhaps the entire Ugly Tree. And they can expect another drubbing on March 14th.
Highlights Below:



 It’s not looking good for the home team right now. Road records, trades, winning streaks…. none of that matters if you can’t get it done in the post-season. The Dallas Mavericks should know that better than any other team, but they still fall apart every year to the point that I’m starting to think they are cursed. Well, forces of darkness aside, the forces of San Antonio took a commanding 3-1 lead in this series with a well fought 92-89 victory. It was close but the Spurs get the W on Tim Duncan’s birthday (34 years old) despite Tony Parker’s best efforts… five turnover having… anyway.
You may or may not remember this, but on October 13th, just before the start of this season,
The Spurs lost to the Mavericks 112-103 after they blew a 10-point 4th quarter lead by getting outscored 42-23 in the final period. Yes, you read that right, 42-23. That’s insane. Not just losing the lead but giving up 42 points in a quarter. The game was wack from the jump though with DeJuan Blair getting whistled for two fouls in the first minute of the game, Pop getting ejected soon after for arguing with the inept refs, and Dirk going into God Mode in the 4th quarter. The Spurs shot well for the most part, hitting 52.6% from the field in the game, and both teams went 7-of-15 from downtown. The Spurs shot one more free throw than the Mavs but made one less. The Mavs out-rebounded the Spurs 39-32 including a 12-5 edge on the offensive glass. The Spurs committed 12 turnovers in the game. The Mavs had 7. But it really all came down to that brutal 4th quarter when Dirk, after missing 13 of his first 16 shots of the game, went bonkers and started hitting everything regardless of what the defense threw at him. So I can’t really blame it on the refs even if Zach Zarba is an idiot and Joey “I Want To Destroy Tim Duncan” Crawford was on hand.
The Spurs lost to the Mavs in OT last night even after holding them to less than 40% shooting for most of the game. The Spurs played some good defense, but there were still some glaring problems, namely injuries, interior defense, and turnovers. I won’t play the injury card since the Mavs were without
Facebook
Twitter
Recent Comments