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duncan228
04-01-2009, 12:01 AM
Lightning strikes again: Spurs fall to Thunder (http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/spurs/Lightning_strikes_again_Spurs_fall_to_Thunder.html )
Jeff McDonald

Very much in spite of themselves, and in spite of a 96-95 loss to Oklahoma City, the Spurs clinched a playoff berth Tuesday.

There is no telling who the Spurs will play in the first round, but this much is for certain: They can be glad it won't be the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Propelled by a scorching first half — and after surviving the Spurs' parting shot — the Thunder, last place in the Northwest Division, left the AT&T Center with their second win over the Spurs in 15 days.

“We're really struggling right now, going through a bad time,” said forward Tim Duncan, whose Spurs slipped into a third-place tie behind Denver in the Western Conference. “It's not a good time of year to be going through that. We have to take personal responsibility and change what's happening.”

Devoid of a win over Oklahoma City, the Spurs needed either a Portland victory over Utah or a Denver win against New York in order to clinch their 12th consecutive postseason bid. They got both of those, ensuring the foregone conclusion of a playoff trip.

But for the Spurs, searching for momentum with eight games left in the regular season, that's hardly the point right now.

The Spurs trailed the Thunder (21-53) by as many as 17 points in the third quarter, which should have been a familiar number. That was the Spurs' largest lead in a game March 16 at Oklahoma City, one they ultimately gave away in a 78-76 defeat.

This time, it was the Spurs who came roaring back, but not quite all the way. Three times in the fourth quarter, the Spurs pulled within one. The last of them came with 35.9 seconds to go, when Duncan tapped in his own miss to make it 96-95.

Duncan blocked Jeff Green on the other end, setting the Spurs up with a chance to win.

The play that unfolded looked like nothing Gregg Popovich would draw up, even after too many glasses of wine.

Manu Ginobili nearly threw the ball away looking for Tony Parker. Oklahoma City's Russell Westbrook batted it into the corner, where Ginobili tracked it down with about four seconds left, nearly falling out of bounds.

At this point, the Spurs coaches began hollering for someone to call timeout. Nobody did.

Ginobili saved the ball to Duncan, who swung it to Michael Finley with 1.9 seconds remaining. Finley actually got a good look at a 19-footer, but it hit the back rim as time expired.

As it did, the Thunder had just their seventh road victory this season. The Spurs got another sour defeat in a month overflowing of them.

The Spurs finished the month 9-8, their worst record in March since 1996-97.

“We've been up and down,” Popovich said. “Some nights we've played well. Other nights are like tonight.”

Kevin Durant pumped in 31 points to lead the Thunder. Westbrook added 16 points and 10 assists.

Duncan had 21 points and 12 rebounds for the Spurs, while Ginobili scored 17 in his first start since Dec. 9.

For the second game in a row, the Spurs were cockeyed from the 3-point stripe. A game after going 7 of 29 in a loss at New Orleans, they were 8 of 25 against Oklahoma City.

When their latest off night was over, the Spurs were left to ponder the Thunder's sudden mastery of them. They have one week to find an answer.

Then, they head to Oklahoma City to finish the season series against their newfound nemesis.

mytespurs
04-01-2009, 12:26 AM
So the Spurs dropped to third in the WC behind Denver???!!

Well, here's some small consolation......when the Spurs won their last championship, they went into the playoffs as a third seed correct?

tp2021
04-01-2009, 12:35 AM
Very much in spite of themselves, and in spite of a 96-95 loss to Oklahoma City, the Spurs clinched a playoff berth Tuesday.

Man, they sure backed their crappy asses into the playoffs, didn't they?

duncan228
04-01-2009, 02:12 PM
The other side.

Thunder 96, Spurs 95: Kevin Durant, OKC stun San Antonio (http://newsok.com/durant-okc-stun-san-antonio/article/3358038)
By Mike Baldwin

SAN ANTONIO — If Denver or Houston finishes with the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference, the Nuggets or Rockets might want to send Thunder players a small token of their appreciation.

Oklahoma City’s 96-95 win in front of a sellout crowd Tuesday night at AT&T Center was the Thunder’s second win over San Antonio in two weeks.

"This is a big win for us,” said Kevin Durant, who scored a game-high 31 points. "Coming into a building where the Spurs have won so many championships, to get a win, it’s a real confidence-builder.”

The Thunder’s biggest road win of the season wasn’t secure until Michael Finley missed a 17-footer at the buzzer to end a frantic final 20 seconds.

Oklahoma City, 7-30 on the road, hadn’t beaten an above-.500 team away from the Ford Center all season.

That no longer is the case. This road win was against the Spurs, who clinched their 16th consecutive playoff berth despite the loss and have won three of the past six NBA titles.

"San Antonio is a great team that can do great things in the playoffs,” said Russell Westbrook, who had a double-double. "We did a great job of playing our game tonight.”

In a few early season road games — two in Dallas being the best examples — the Thunder built a double-digit second-half lead but couldn’t close it out. This time, OKC answered the Spurs’ big run.

Trailing by 17 points with 5:15 left in the third quarter, the Spurs clawed to within 82-81 with 10:17 remaining in the game. But they would never regain the lead.

Oklahoma City responded with a 10-0 run to rebuild the lead to 92-81. Even when the Spurs made a late-game run, the Thunder had three big defensive stops down the stretch. San Antonio scored only one field goal the final 2 1/2 minutes.

"Early in the season when teams made a run, we sort of got put back on our heels and threw us for a loop,” said Jeff Green. "Now, we’re learning how to put teams away, convert on the other end, make plays and get big stops.”

Unlike a defensive war two weeks ago in the Ford Center, this one was a shootout early before defense once again proved to be the deciding factor. After shooting 63.6 percent the first quarter, the Spurs shot 41.4 percent the final three quarters.

"We got stops,” Durant said. "We contested shots. We wanted to keep Tony Parker out of the lane, pack it in on him and get out to the shooters as quick as possible. They hit some big shots, but we did a good job (defensively) for the most part.”

In a tightly bunched battle for the No. 2 seed, the Spurs have lost twice to the Thunder in March and play OKC one more time next week in the Ford Center.

"Obviously, this is a tough loss,” said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich. "We’ve been playing up and down. Some nights we play really well, and some nights are like tonight. The common denominator is we’re not hitting our jump shots. We had the same problem (Sunday) in New Orleans.”

Yuixafun
04-01-2009, 02:36 PM
What a garbage headline.

It's something a highschool newspaper might run with.