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duncan228
11-23-2010, 06:53 PM
More national coverage.


Spurs back on top of NBA with scorching start (http://www.yorkdispatch.com/prosports/ci_16692592)
By Paul J. Weber

SAN ANTONIO—Tony Parker's private life has been splashed across tabloids after splitting from his TV star wife. Tim Duncan is playing the fewest minutes of his career and coach Gregg Popovich's big summer addition can't find his way off the bench yet.

Yet here are the San Antonio Spurs, back atop the NBA.

"The Lakers are the back-to-back champions. The Celtics are the Eastern Conference champions. We got to respect them," Spurs guard Manu Ginobili said. "We're just looking at them, trying to learn and be as good as them."

Through the first month, no one has been good as the Spurs.

Their NBA-best record of 12-1 is the best start in franchise history, surpassing even how they began their four championship seasons. Their 11-game winning streak is their longest in nearly three years, and they can stretch it to a dozen Wednesday at Minnesota.

They've won while Parker and Ginobili—arguably the best backcourt in the West so far—have turned Duncan into the team's fourth-leading scorer. They've won without needing Tiago Splitter, their heralded new 7-footer who has barely cracked the rotation.

After winning 50 games last season and needing a late surge just to secure the No. 7 playoff seed—the lowest of the Duncan era—the Spurs didn't make any big summer adjustments. Duncan merely got older, swingman Richard Jefferson worked harder and the front office finally signed Splitter, their 2007 first-round pick from Brazil who had played several years in Spain.

Parker didn't play overseas to recover from a slew of injuries. Ginobili rested, too. Signing both to extensions are the biggest moves the Spurs have made in the last eight months.

So far, that seems to be all they needed.

"They've always been real good. But one of the three main guys have been hurt a lot the last three years, and that's not the case anymore," Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said before Orlando lost to San Antonio on Monday night. "We're seeing them at their best."

Ginobili is averaging a career-high 20.4 points per game, a resurgence for the 33-year-old who was so bothered by ankle problems the last two years that the Spurs waited until the end of last season to extend a new deal. He and Parker have taken over while Duncan's numbers have plummeted to 13.8 points and 9.2 rebounds per game, putting him on pace to not average a double-double for the first time.

He's done so with a career-low 29.1 minutes per game.

"Timmy's taking a little bit of the back seat so we can save him for the playoffs," Parker said.

Parker is on a pace for perhaps his best season in his 10 years in the NBA, averaging 19.5 points and a career-best 7.8 assists. He's had no drop-off since his split from "Desperate Housewives" star Eva Longoria, who filed for divorce in Los Angeles last week after three years of marriage.

Parker, 28, hasn't spoken about the breakup aside from a few, clipped statements to a horde of reporters outside the Spurs' locker room a week ago.

Jefferson, who broke off an engagement with his fiancee before joining the Spurs last season, said people are often too quick to chalk up personal issues as potential distractions.

The job, Jefferson said, is sometimes the only refuge.

"I've gone through personal issues myself. Sometimes basketball, those couple of hours you're on the court, that's the only time you're focused on that," Jefferson said. "I'm not surprised by how well (Tony's) playing. If anything, this is when you become more focused on your game."

After beating the Magic, Ginobili wouldn't declare the Spurs the best in the league.

"It's too early to tell. What we know we're winning games that last year we would have lost," Ginobili said. "But it's too early. Thirteen games so far. We've got a long way to go."

ShoogarBear
11-23-2010, 07:00 PM
They've won while Parker and Ginobili—arguably the best backcourt in the West so far

And with whom would the argument be exactly?

Man In Black
11-23-2010, 07:16 PM
Well, they're wont to tell you that any team that has a Bean, or a Paul, or a Roy with some other scrub playing alongside are just as good.

duncan228
11-24-2010, 02:19 PM
San Antonio is back — and interesting this time (http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2010/11/24/san-antonio-is-back-%E2%80%94-and-interesting-this-time/)
Kurt Helin

The San Antonio Spurs, even at their peak, felt like your father’s favorite team — quiet and efficient. Good defense, methodical pace, the backboard is your friend. Fundamental. Controlled. That’s not bad, I love my father — I wish I were more like him in a lot of ways — but that doesn’t mean I want his style.

And that style (or lack thereof) seemed to have finally caught up with them in recent seasons. They were destroyed in five games by the Mavericks last playoffs and it felt like time to consign this roster to the History Channel.

This season’s Spurs, these 12-1 Spurs? They are not your father’s team. They are winning and dynamic and a little reckless. Heck, they even have an off-the-court scandal (http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2010/11/17/tony-parker-comments-on-his-divorce-pulls-the-curtain-between-his-public-and-private-life/).

They are taking risks, playing at the seventh fastest pace in the league — four more possessions per game than last season, five more than the last time they won a title. For years now Gregg Popovich was giving lip service to the idea of playing faster, but this year everyone really bought in.

They can do it because they have the best backcourt in the league right now — Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. First and foremost, both are finally healthy. They also are being versatile — and versatility in the attack was something the Spurs lacked. Now this pair is slashing and creating finding holes in the opposing defense early in the clock before the defense sets. Parker is scoring nearly 20 points a game and still assisting on 40 percent of his team’s buckets when he is on the floor.

And they are doing it all with less Tim Duncan. Oh, he is still crucial — he is the defensive anchor and the primary rebounder. He remains one of the best centers in basketball (spare me that forward crap).

But he has gotten a step slower in recent years and now he is a supporting player in the Spurs offense, not the hub of all action. His offensive usage rate is the lowest of his career. This is not the “dump it in to Timmy” Spurs offense, they seem to be using much more guard action out of the sets they have always run. Richard Jefferson has found his comfort zone in the system, and that zone includes a corner three where he has been deadly this season.

All of this comes with the other signs of a more dynamic team — the attacking means they get to the line more. On defense they are pushing to get steals, with turnovers fueling the running game.

It is illegal to write a Spurs story without the phrase “if they stay healthy” because we are 13 games into the grind, and the grind has worn this team down the last few years. We get that.

But this start has to have you asking, “what if?” Because if one team could really challenge the Lakers in the West, it would be a team with championship pedigree. A team that knows how to get it done, even if they got it done differently in the past.

Frankly, if the Lakers are healthy it may well not matter. For anyone, East of West. But the Lakers have not been healthy at the end the last couple years either, and this year they may not get by that way. And if the Lakers are not right… why not the Spurs? This team is primed for one more run at a ring.

But when your Dad sees them play, he’s going to be shocked.

spursfan09
11-24-2010, 02:24 PM
Wait what was that again? Destroyed by the Mavericks in 5 games?

Bender
11-24-2010, 02:28 PM
They were destroyed in five games by the Mavericks last playoffs
??

edit: I'm too slow again...!

weebo
11-24-2010, 02:32 PM
Wait what was that again? Destroyed by the Mavericks in 5 games?

:lol I caught that one too. In any event, the biggest key to the Spurs resurgence has been health more than anything. Our big three, after the last few years, are finally healthy. The addition of some of the younger guys has also helped. Add to that RJ and Dice being in their second season and its shades of '03 all over again. :lobt2:

duncan228
11-24-2010, 03:08 PM
BLOGTABLE: Sizzling Spurs (http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2010/11/24/blogtable-sizzling-spurs/)
Sekou Smith
Hang Time Blog
NBA.com

On San Antonio: Can the sizzling Spurs really give the Lakers a run in the West?

David Aldridge: They’re one wing player short: someone who could team with RJ to make Kobe work for points. What’s Tayshaun doing?

Steve Aschburner: Sure the Spurs can push and even threaten the Lakers in the West. The pace of the playoffs suits them more than any other team – even though they’re winning games fast or slow this season, in both double and triple digits. They play as a unit better than the Lakers, even if they don’t have quite the same skill level or star power. Richard Jefferson is having the season he was supposed to have a year ago. Tim Duncan, despite reduced numbers, remains as dangerous in a playoff series as an alligator with only its eyes and nostrils breaking the surface. And if Andrew Bynum can’t return with any reliability for L.A. inside, the presumed size disadvantage diminishes. Key, as usual, is staying healthy and fresh enough until May.

Art Garcia: Um, yeah. The only other current collection of peers with a championship pedigree matching — surpassing? — the Lakers reside in South Texas. Timmy, Manu, Tony and Pop own 14 rings between them. They’re haven’t forgotten how to win — 12-1 anyone? The Spurs are deeper, with a younger and more dynamic supporting cast, and they play the best team basketball this side of, well, the Lakers.

Fran Blinebury: No question the Spurs are a real threat to the Lakers, much more than the Hornets.. For one, the trio of Duncan-Ginobili-Parker is all healthy together for the first time in several years. Last year’s acquisitions of Richard Jefferson and Antonio McDyess have had a year to adapt to the Spurs’ way of doing things and so they’re more comfortable and productive. In DeJuan Blair, Gary Neal and James Anderson, they have real depth. And in Tiago Splitter they’ve got another big defender against the Lakers’ front line.

Scott Howard-Cooper: The Lakers at their best beat anybody else at their best. But if San Antonio is going to continue to put pressure on defenses with this kind of scoring output, the threat grows. Everybody already knows the Spurs will rebound and play defense. This isn’t their ideal defensive start, but that isn’t usually much of a problem for them.

Shaun Powell: Yes, yes, yes. Tim Duncan is once again on auto-pilot until the post-season, while Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker are showing they still have what it takes to give the Spurs a legit Big Three. You also have to thank whoever woke up Richard Jefferson. But the question posed here is whether the Spurs can give the Lakers a run, not if the Spurs can beat the Lakers. A run? Yes, yes, yes. Beat? No, no, no

John Schuhmann: Give them a run? Sure. Insert standard “if they’re healthy” caveat here. Four weeks into the season, it seems like Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili still have plenty left in the tank. Richard Jefferson is much more comfortable this season, and that also makes a big difference. The Spurs are one of the few teams in the league that can be great on both ends of the floor, and they match up pretty well with the Lakers. L.A. is still better though.

Sekou Smith: Save the Geritol jokes, please. Yes they can. In fact, the Spurs, Mavericks and Thunder all look like they can give the Lakers a “run” in the West. I don’t know that any one of them looks like they could top the Lakers but they could certainly give it a shot. The Spurs’ hot start is only part of their appeal for me. All the ingredients are there. They have a core group that is just as or more accomplished than any other crew in the league, they have quality role players that know to stay in their lanes and they have Gregg Popovich on the bench. Obviously, they need Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili to stay as healthy as humanly possible. But all of their other working parts seem to be in order for at least one more title run.

Ginobilly
11-24-2010, 03:25 PM
"They've won while Parker and Ginobili—arguably the best backcourt in the West so far"

It only took how many years for Pop to finally start them together????????? like fuckin 8 years. I hope Pop doesn't do the same with Splitter and Duncan.

Trainwreck2100
11-24-2010, 03:35 PM
"They've won while Parker and Ginobili—arguably the best backcourt in the West so far"

It only took how many years for Pop to finally start them together????????? like fuckin 8 years. I hope Pop doesn't do the same with Splitter and Duncan.

he didnt have a choice the bench was shit

WildcardManu
11-24-2010, 03:44 PM
Splitter needs to start tonight and give Tim the night off so he can be ready for the Mavs on friday.

duncan228
11-24-2010, 04:18 PM
NBA Power Rankings: Surging Spurs (http://nba.fanhouse.com/2010/11/24/nba-power-rankings-surging-spurs/)
By Brett Pollakoff

The Spurs are the hottest team in the league, winners of 11 straight. The Thunder have won five in a row, including one on the road over the Celtics with Kevin Durant in street clothes. But it's the Lakers who find themselves back at the top of this week's rankings, based on their own five-game winning streak, along with a return to playing at a level of dominance we have yet to see from any other team this season.

2. Spurs (12-1) | Prev.: 2
San Antonio has every right to the top spot this week, after winning their 11th straight in impressive fashion over the Orlando Magic on Monday. The only issue is that it's tough to envision anyone beating the Lakers when they're firing on all cylinders as they have this past week, and it's going to be another 17 games before the Spurs have the chance to prove otherwise: they don't get to play L.A. this season until December 28.

http://nba.fanhouse.com/2010/11/24/nba-power-rankings-surging-spurs/

SA210
11-24-2010, 06:05 PM
"They've won while Parker and Ginobili—arguably the best backcourt in the West so far"

It only took how many years for Pop to finally start them together????????? like fuckin 8 years. I hope Pop doesn't do the same with Splitter and Duncan.