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  1. #1
    Don't stop believin' Dex's Avatar
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    Knicks Let Spurs Slip Away in the Fourth Quarter

    By HOWARD BECK
    Published: November 11, 2008

    SAN ANTONIO — The dictionary does not have an entry or the proper spelling for the word Mike D’Antoni used to describe the horrors he has endured at AT&T Center. When prompted for his memories, he could only muster a nasty shriek: “Auuugghhhh!”

    The San Antonio Spurs have that kind of effect on people. They ruined many springs for the Phoenix Suns and were partly responsible for D’Antoni leaving Phoenix for New York.

    The Knicks are not the Suns and the Spurs are not exactly the Spurs at the moment, but the outcome Tuesday night was all too familiar — cool efficiency from Tim Duncan, timely shooting from Michael Finley and Bruce Bowen, and a 92-80 victory for San Antonio.

    “We just weren’t sharp,” D’Antoni said after the Knicks let a close game slip away in a ghastly fourth quarter. “We had chances.”

    This was, in fact, the best chance the Knicks have had in years to beat the Spurs. Their All-Star guards, Manu Ginóbili and Tony Parker, are out until December because of injuries. Their championship core is aging. They had lost four of their first five games.

    But the Spurs ran their offense through Duncan, and he dominated the game without even trying. He finished with a near triple-double: 23 points, 9 rebounds and 7 assists.

    “He ain’t getting older, he’s getting better,” Zach Randolph said of Duncan. “He’s a tough player.”

    Bowen and Finley, championship veterans who are now coming off the bench, hit critical 3-pointers in the fourth quarter as the Spurs (2-4) pulled away.

    The Knicks (4-3), carrying the momentum of a three-game winning streak, were still high after Sunday’s victory over Utah. A win here would have cemented their progress. Instead, the Spurs gave D’Antoni nasty flashbacks and probably made him a little wistful for his old roster.

    The Knicks converted just 38 percent of their field-goal attempts and are now 0-3 when they fail to score 100 points. They had a 4-point lead in the second quarter and a 6-point lead early in the third, but never found a way to break the game open against the Spurs’ still-stingy defense.

    “Once you put them in a hole, they could’ve crumbled a little bit,” D’Antoni said. “But we just couldn’t get a lead, and it’s easier to shoot when you’re up than when you’re down.”

    The Knicks fell behind by 7 points in the third quarter, tied the score at 64-64, then disintegrated. Bowen hit a 3-pointer at the third-quarter buzzer, igniting a 14-0 burst that put the game away. The Knicks opened the fourth quarter with five missed shots and three turnovers.

    Jamal Crawford led the Knicks with 28 points, but he was held to one field goal by Bowen in the fourth quarter. Randolph was the only other Knicks’ starter to score in double figures, finishing with 15 points and 13 rebounds. But he missed 11 of his 18 field-goal attempts as he tried to match Duncan shot for shot.

    So the Knicks wasted a rare chance to beat the Spurs in a rare vulnerable moment and lost to them for the seventh straight time.

    At tip-off, the Spurs were nearly unrecognizable, with Roger Mason, Ime Udoka and the rookie George Hill standing alongside Duncan. Coach Gregg Popovich started Udoka over Bowen in attempt to spark the lineup.

    Udoka did not make a shot until early in the third quarter, after missing his first eight. Mason hit his first shot in the final minutes of the period. But he finished with 7 points in the fourth.

    The Spurs are again looking like a team in its twilight. But then, they are written off nearly every year at this time. D’Antoni knows them too well to believe it.

    “If you also look at the banners, every two years they seem to put one up,” he said. “And this is the year that they don’t have one up there. You know that Popovich and Duncan will figure it out. And Parker will eventually get well and so will Ginóbili. And by the end of the year they’ll be there. That’s a sure thing.”

    REBOUNDS

    Danilo Gallinari’s back troubles have flared up again, casting doubt on his rookie season. Gallinari stayed in New York to have a magnetic resonance imaging test. Results were not immediately available. “His back just flared up again,” Mike D’Antoni said. “He was making progress, and then one morning he said he couldn’t put his pants on.” Team officials are hopeful that Gallinari can avoid surgery, but they cannot rule it out. “I’m worried about it at this point,” D’Antoni said. ... If there were any lingering doubts that Stephon Marbury has no future with the Knicks, D’Antoni dispelled them Tuesday when he activated Eddy Curry, who has a sore knee, rather than Marbury, to take Gallinari’s roster spot. “I just think it’s better that I’m going to play my guys,” D’Antoni said. “So there’s no reason to change course right now.” ... David Lee has a bone spur on his left ankle, a painful injury that might help explain his slow start to the season. Lee said the pain is manageable and that he does not expect to need surgery. But, he added, “I’m sure it’s not going to be real comfortable at times.” ... Although they are out of the rotation, Marbury and Curry were included on the All-Star ballot, which was released Tuesday. Jamal Crawford and Zach Randolph are also listed.

  2. #2
    Old fogey Bender's Avatar
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    1st half Spurs vs 2nd half Spurs was like night and day. I wonder what the halftime break was like...?

  3. #3
    Don't stop believin' Dex's Avatar
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  4. #4
    Silence surpasses speech. duncan228's Avatar
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    Tim Duncan Can Still Beat The Knicks All By Himself
    By Patrice Evans

    Usually one wouldn't be surprised to see the San Antonio Spurs beat the New York Knicks like they did last night, 92-80. That's par for the course when one franchise has been the gold standard for success in the NBA over the past decade, and the other is currently paying Stephon Marbury $22 million dollars to sit on the bench.

    But if ever the Knicks were going to beat up on the Spurs, a team they play twice a year, last night should have been the night. They had a few things going for them:

    For one, the Spurs are on the downside of their dynastic run. Last year's NBA playoffs showcased a San Antonio team that, while still a legit contender, was beginning to show their age.

    For two, the Spurs, who are already sort of thin, were playing without point guard Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili.

    For three, the Knicks are an invigorated bunch, and were coming off a good win over a Jazz team with championship aspirations. They had all the momentum. Even accounting for a talent gap, young and healthy should be expected to prevail over old and injured.

    But alas, what D'Antoni and the boys received was a major smack down by the hands of Grandpa Duncan, who basically beat the Knicks by himself.

    Statistically, it wasn't even that prolific an effort; 23 points, 9 rebounds, 7 assists is good, not spectacular. Certainly not by Kobe, Lebron, Amare et. al standards. But Duncan led the team in minutes, points, rebounds, assists, and blocks while dominating a game that reeks of reality check for the new regime in New York.

    After going two games above mediocre for the first time in a few years, everyone was giddy. Now the fact that Deron Williams didn't play in the Utah Jazz game only casts a darker cloud over a team looking to forge a new iden y. Was that win an accidental fluke anomaly, or is can this team think about being compe ive with the big boys?

    Evidence by The Big Fundamental last night, the Knicks still have a lot more growing up to do.

  5. #5
    Can't Start Threads
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    Tim Duncan Can Still Beat The Knicks All By Himself
    By Patrice Evans

    Usually one wouldn't be surprised to see the San Antonio Spurs beat the New York Knicks like they did last night, 92-80. That's par for the course when one franchise has been the gold standard for success in the NBA over the past decade, and the other is currently paying Stephon Marbury $22 million dollars to sit on the bench.

    But if ever the Knicks were going to beat up on the Spurs, a team they play twice a year, last night should have been the night. They had a few things going for them:

    For one, the Spurs are on the downside of their dynastic run. Last year's NBA playoffs showcased a San Antonio team that, while still a legit contender, was beginning to show their age.

    For two, the Spurs, who are already sort of thin, were playing without point guard Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili.

    For three, the Knicks are an invigorated bunch, and were coming off a good win over a Jazz team with championship aspirations. They had all the momentum. Even accounting for a talent gap, young and healthy should be expected to prevail over old and injured.

    But alas, what D'Antoni and the boys received was a major smack down by the hands of Grandpa Duncan, who basically beat the Knicks by himself.

    Statistically, it wasn't even that prolific an effort; 23 points, 9 rebounds, 7 assists is good, not spectacular. Certainly not by Kobe, Lebron, Amare et. al standards. But Duncan led the team in minutes, points, rebounds, assists, and blocks while dominating a game that reeks of reality check for the new regime in New York.

    After going two games above mediocre for the first time in a few years, everyone was giddy. Now the fact that Deron Williams didn't play in the Utah Jazz game only casts a darker cloud over a team looking to forge a new iden y. Was that win an accidental fluke anomaly, or is can this team think about being compe ive with the big boys?

    Evidence by The Big Fundamental last night, the Knicks still have a lot more growing up to do.
    Thanks duncan228 for the post. And Ill add I had no idea you was a girl. Had I known you were a girl Id a never picked on ya. Im not someone who sugarcoats my words when it comes to the players or coaches of professional sports. But Ive never liked fans saying bad things about fans. This place is the first place Ive even been to as far as sportblogging. You get no lip out of me that much I can give you my word on.

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