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duncan228
04-19-2009, 12:00 AM
Mavs use Spurs strategy to their advantage (http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/spurs/Mavs_use_Spurs_strategy_to_their_advantage.html)
Mike Finger

Dirk Nowitzki was outflanked, hemmed in by a defender on either side, and Jason Terry wasn't much freer. Every time he turned, he found another white jersey, so when the Dallas Mavericks needed big shots in the first game of the playoffs Saturday, they turned to Brandon Bass, and to Erick Dampier, and to J.J. Barea.

The Spurs, of course, were delighted.

“That was our whole strategy,” forward Matt Bonner said.

“We did what we were supposed to do,” added Drew Gooden.

“If they were going to win,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said, “we wanted those people to do it.

“And they did it.”

In the end, the Spurs' 105-97 defeat in Game 1 of the Western Conference quarterfinals was not a matter of their failure to carry out a game plan, but rather an example of the Mavs following Popovich's orders even better than his own team did.

So, Popovich wanted Brandon Bass to take a bunch of 15-foot jumpers? Bass obliged, and hit 7 of 9 shots.

So, Popovich wanted his defenders to hound Nowitzki and let Dampier run unfettered? Dampier did exactly that, making 5 of 6 field-goal attempts and grabbing 11 rebounds.

So, Popovich wanted the ball away from Terry and in the hands of Barea, the shortest, least-experienced guy on the floor? Barea gladly took it, and spearheaded the fourth-quarter run that put Dallas in control for good.

“Frankly,” Mavs coach Rick Carlisle said, “the way they were playing (Nowitzki) allowed us to get offense in other ways.”

Shortly after Nowitzki picked up his third foul early in the second quarter, the Spurs led by 13 points. Then the onslaught of the Mavs' role players began. Bass hit a shot from the free-throw line. Then a 13-footer from the baseline. Then, on the next possession, Barea swished a 19-footer from the wing.

And before the Spurs could catch their breath, the Mavs were back in the game.

“When I got out there,” said Bass, whose 14 points helped Dallas' reserves outscore the Spurs' bench 39-14, “we needed some type of spark.”

The Mavs received that and more, particularly from Barea. Not only did he score nine of his 13 points in the second half, he hounded Tony Parker and drew two charging fouls (“Just staying on his you-know-what,” as Josh Howard put it).

“I just tried to bother him,” Barea said.

He bothered more than only Parker. During a 21-6 run to start the fourth quarter, Barea made play after play, whether it was dumping a perfect pass to Bass for a dunk, pulling up for a jumper or driving to the basket and drawing contact for a 3-point play.

“We were putting him in positions he had to make decisions,” Spurs guard Michael Finley said, “and he made good decisions.”

duncan228
04-19-2009, 03:32 AM
The other side.

Opening statement: Dallas Mavericks take Game 1 (http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/spt/stories/041909dnspomavslede.eb45153f.html)
By Eddie Sefco / The Dallas Morning News

SAN ANTONIO – Before anybody accuses the Mavericks of thievery, Josh Howard has something to tell you.

"We didn't steal anything," Howard said. "We just played a good game and got a good win."

The Mavericks didn't feel like they stole Game 1 against the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday. Their 105-97 victory at AT&T Center wasn't a heist. It was about as thorough a playoff road victory as you can get when the teams are close to evenly matched.

The Mavericks had lost their previous nine playoff road games and hadn't won on the road in the postseason since the Western Conference finals in 2006.

Who'd have thought it possible? The Mavericks were a timid road team all season. Suddenly, they came out with the passion and grit that usually belongs to the Spurs. The Mavericks may not be in control of this best-of-7 series. But they certainly sent a loud, clear message to many of their doubters.

"It's a matter of us going out and proving not only to everybody else, but also to ourselves that we can compete on a high level," the Mavericks' Jason Terry said.

And they did it with Howard, J.J. Barea, Brandon Bass and Antoine Wright doing the yelling.

For once, Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Kidd and Terry didn't have to be otherworldly for the Mavericks to be a salty outfit.

"It's huge to start off like this," Bass said of taking the home-court advantage away in Game 1. "The momentum is on our side. We've just got to keep it going. That's what it's going to take for us to be successful. The bench has to come in and give us something. That's why we were able to get the win."

Wright had a 3-pointer and a three-point play in the fourth quarter while Barea and Erick Dampier each a pair of scores in a 14-3 binge that freed the Mavericks to a 95-83 lead with under five minutes left.

Dampier and Barea were doing the bulk of the work. Barea was chewing up the Spurs the way Tony Parker usually knifes through the Mavericks.

Dampier was doing a wonderful job on Tim Duncan and finished with a double-double. On perhaps the signature moment of the night, Dampier slammed a point-blank shot from Duncan into the crowd. Duncan ended up on his backside out of bounds, complaining that no foul was called.

"Duncan played great," said Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle, acknowledging Duncan's 27 points and nine rebounds. "But there were a couple of key stops that we were able to get. Damp put his body in the right position and he battled.

"Antoine's six points in the fourth quarter really gave us a lift. And Bass' stretch of shot making and defense in the first half, along with that big shot he hit in the last minute, those were all decisive plays. Our bench came up big."

Down the stretch, the Mavericks held tough. The Spurs pulled within 95-88, but Nowitzki came through with a couple of baskets and the lead was back to 99-89 with under two minutes to go.

Michael Finley canned a 3-pointer with 1:09 to go and the Mavericks – clearly not wanting to take any chances – called timeout. Then Bass coaxed a 14-foot jumper to curl into the net, clinching things.

Carlisle gave a little fist pump – a rare show of emotion for him during a game – as the Mavericks won for the second time in a row on San Antonio's court in the playoffs. They closed out the 2006 second round with a Game 7 win at AT&T Center.

"We're a humble team, but we're a hungry team," Carlisle said. "We know San Antonio is going to come back, but we kept battling, even when things weren't going so well in the first half."

41times
04-19-2009, 09:53 AM
The spurs did exactly what they wanted to do, force somebody other than Dirk or Terry to beat you. Enter Jho, Bass and Barea.

The question is can those 3 beat you 3 more times? TBD.

Spursmania
04-19-2009, 11:13 AM
The spurs did exactly what they wanted to do, force somebody other than Dirk or Terry to beat you. Enter Jho, Bass and Barea.

The question is can those 3 beat you 3 more times? TBD.

Probably not, but Bonner can:lol

Findog
04-19-2009, 11:18 AM
The spurs did exactly what they wanted to do, force somebody other than Dirk or Terry to beat you. Enter Jho, Bass and Barea.

The question is can those 3 beat you 3 more times? TBD.

If the Spurs continue to play heavy denial defense on Dirk and Jet, those other three guys are going to continue to get good looks. And if they continue to sufficiently punish San Antonio for that, then the Spurs are going to have to make adjustments and that'll open things up for Dirk and Jet.

How many minutes did Dirk play? They "held" him to 19 when he had to sit out a huge chunk of the first half with foul trouble. 19 and 8 on 7-15 shooting with the role players bukakking the Spurs? I'll take that.