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duncan228
04-25-2009, 01:18 AM
San Antonio at Dallas Preview (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/preview?gid=2009042506&prov=ap)
Game info: 4:00 pm EDT Sat Apr 25, 2009
TV: TNT
By Stephen Hawkins

Rick Carlisle remembers one of the most infamous NBA playoff blowouts—and what happened after it.

Within minutes of Dallas taking a 2-1 series lead against San Antonio with a surprisingly lopsided victory, the Mavericks coach and former Boston backup guard invoked the 1985 NBA finals in which the Celtics opened with a rout of the Lakers but lost the series in six games.

Carlisle’s message was the same in practice Friday, a day after Dallas led by as many as 36 points and held San Antonio to a franchise playoff scoring low in an 88-67 victory.

“I don’t think you need to tell stories, but the point has got to be made that it’s sitting there staring both teams in the face,” Carlisle said. “When either team has won, their next game has been abysmal. That’s the challenge for us because we know what kind of game they’re going to bring.”

The Spurs conceded a game, not the series.

“It was disappointing, surprising, especially with the standard we set here,” San Antonio defensive ace Bruce Bowen said. “This team has no choice (but to bounce back). We’re disappointed we came out with the effort that we did. … That’s incentive enough.”

With the Mavs up by 26 early in the third quarter, and a short turnaround to Game 4 on Saturday afternoon, Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and the other San Antonio starters went to the bench for good.

“We pulled the plug for that purpose,” coach Gregg Popovich said. “I’m sure a lot of people were shocked, like, ‘Hey, you can’t not try.’ It’s not about that. It’s a long process, and I think we have to hopefully try to be wise rather than foolishly brave.”

In Carlisle’s rookie season, the Celtics beat the Lakers 148-114 in Game 1 of the 1985 finals. But Los Angeles followed that Memorial Day embarrassment by winning the next two games and turning the series in its favor.

It’s proof that things can turn around quickly, and they already have in this series.

The Spurs fell flat in the fourth quarter of a Game 1 loss at home, then made up for it with a 21-point victory to even the series. Then they were so bad in Game 3 that Popovich didn’t even consider it a tough loss.

“A tough loss to me is both teams play their (tails) off and somebody makes a shot with 1 second left that’s contested or something. That’s a tough loss,” Popovich said. “(Thursday) was more of an embarrassing kind of loss where the other team dominated from the get-go and threw a punch and you never responded to.”

Dallas scored the first eight points and led 46-30 at halftime.

San Antonio shot only 32 percent (25-of-78) and was 2-of-17 from 3-point range after shooting 50 percent overall the first two games. Parker, who scored 38 points in Game 2, had only 12 this time—and that led the team. Duncan’s four points and two rebounds were his fewest in a playoff game.

“You know they’re going to be better. Pop’s probably chewing them out,” Dirk Nowitzki said. “It was a little too easier than we hoped.”

Bowen says the Spurs disrespected a franchise that has won four NBA titles since 1999. The defensive stalwart is tied for third with Parker on the franchise list for career playoff games with 120. He said Thursday night’s loss was “the worst because of all the things that you built here.”

The Spurs also want to even the series before Game 5 in San Antonio on Tuesday night.

At least their starters got an extended break, with Parker’s 21 minutes the most for the top five in Game 3. Combined with early foul trouble and the lopsided score, Duncan got a break for his sore knees by playing only 15 1/2 minutes.

“That’s like going through a shootaround almost. It’s nothing for him,” Carlisle said.

Mavericks guard Jason Terry was presented the NBA’s sixth man award Friday, getting the prize won last season by San Antonio’s Manu Ginobili.

But the Spurs are without Ginobili in the playoffs because of his right ankle injury. With that, and Duncan still sore, Parker knows he has to bounce back quickly from his bad game.

“We have no choice,” Parker said. “I’ll be very aggressive. I’ll be right back at it. … They’re going to come harder because they know how important it is to go up 3-1 and we know how important it is to try to even the series.”

Notes

Spurs:

G Tony Parker had 27 points of his 38 points in the first half. ... The Spurs avoided consecutive home playoff losses for the first time since 2002. ... Parker finished 16-of-22 from the field. He had 19 points in the first quarter alone, equaling the Mavericks' total.

Mavericks:

G Jason Terry finished with 16 points for Dallas, which suffered one of the worst losses in the playoff rivalry. ... Dallas failed to send the Spurs to consecutive home playoff losses for the first time since 2002.

Team Stat Leaders

Points

Tony Parker SA 22.0
Dirk Nowitzki Dal 25.9

Rebounds

Tim Duncan SA 10.7
Dirk Nowitzki Dal 8.4

Assists

Tony Parker SA 6.9
Jason Kidd Dal 8.7

Team Comparison
Team Record Standings PF PA Road/Home Streak L10

San Antonio 54-28 1st Southwest / 3rd West 97.0 93.3 Road 26-15 Won 4 6-4

Dallas 50-32 3rd Southwest / 6th West 101.7 99.8 Home 32-9 Won 2 7-3

duncan228
04-25-2009, 01:24 AM
Dallas Mavericks-San Antonio Spurs: Game 4 preview (http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/spt/basketball/mavs/stories/042509dnspomavscap.31ab72c.html)
By Eddie Sefco / The Dallas Morning News

Scouting the Spurs

They were so disgusted with the way they played in Game 3 that Bruce Bowen apologized to their fans. "All the things that we built here as far as the standard that you play with, to go out and have that type of performance was really disappointing," he said. "All I can do is continue to express that to our fans. We'll make sure we do a better job." ... They can start with 3-point shooting, which was 2-of-17 in Game 3 ... They made just 25 field goals in Game 3, matching a franchise playoff low ... Look for the Spurs to perhaps use Bruce Bowen earlier to defend against J.J. Barea.

Scouting the Mavericks

Since the list of things that went wrong in Game 3 is too short to fill this space, we'll go with all the things they'd like to have happen the same way, such as rebounding. Four Mavericks had at least seven boards in Game 3 ... They held the Spurs to the lowest field-goal percentage in franchise playoff history ... Dirk Nowitzki's offense perked up with a quick 20 points on just 12 shots in 27 minutes ... Brandon Bass has been a swing factor, averaging 10.7 points and four rebounds in 20 minutes per game. He also had two strong blocks on Drew Gooden.

shelshor
04-25-2009, 10:26 AM
Referee Assignments
Sat. Apr. 25
San Antonio @ Dallas: S. Foster, M. Callahan, Z. Zarba