spursupporter
12-08-2005, 04:56 AM
Johnny Ludden
Express-News Staff Writer
Tim Duncan already had dunked over Alonzo Mourning, flushed a lob pass from Tony Parker and banked in another half-dozen shots. Then he decided to go Manu on Miami.
With the Spurs leading by double figures in Wednesday's fourth quarter and many of the 18,797 at the SBC Center filing out into the frozen night, Duncan decided it was as good a time as any for a behind-the-back pass to Nick Van Exel.
The ball, however, made it only as far as Duncan's right foot, deflecting off his shoe and skidding out of bounds. Duncan laughed. His teammates shook their heads.
Said Parker: "I told him just stay at center." :lol
Duncan put his guard skills on hold long enough to lead the Spurs to a 98-84 victory. He scored 28 points, took 16 rebounds and blocked four shots as the Spurs extended their winning streak to five games.
Manu Ginobili added 27 points, while Parker had 14 points and a season-best 11 assists. With those three going to the rim — and no Shaquille O'Neal to stop them — the Spurs outscored Miami 54-22 in the lane.
"We have to attack them in there," Duncan said. "We didn't force a whole lot. Not only the big guys inside, but Manu and Tony got in there a lot and drew some fouls and really slowed their guys down."
Miami was making its final stop on a five-game, nine-day trip, and with a sprained right ankle still sidelining O'Neal, the Heat have relied on Mourning.
He entered Wednesday averaging a league-high four blocks but didn't swat a single shot against the Spurs — the first time in 32 games he finished without at least one block. :elephant
Ginobili lofted an array of floaters and scoop shots over the arms of Mourning and Miami's other defenders.
"Manu is an exceptional finisher — one of the best in the league," Heat coach Stan Van Gundy said. "Duncan obviously is going to go over the top.
"It's a different world in here. It's a different world against the Spurs compared to the other teams we've played this year."
Duncan went to the bench after about seven minutes after picking up his second foul. The Heat took advantage, outscoring the Spurs 10-4 over the next seven minutes.
Unfortunately for Miami, Duncan did not spend the entire evening in a chair. He returned with 9:26 left in the second quarter and promptly tossed in a hook shot.
The next four minutes brought more of the same: a bank shot; a dunk off a nice pass from Nazr Mohammed; and a three-point play when he faked Udonis Haslem off his feet, drew a foul and banged in a 13-footer off the backboard.
If that wasn't enough to get everyone's attention, Duncan's next shot did. He caught a bounce pass in stride from Parker before throwing down a powerful dunk over Mourning.
The Heat focused on keeping Parker out of the lane, often chasing him with a pair of defenders off pick-and-rolls. Miami had other ways to deter Parker from getting to the rim: Michael Doleac cracked him across the head in the third quarter — a flagrant 2 foul that automatically resulted in the Heat center's ejection.
"There was one time where Parker had the ball about 2 inches off the floor on the dribble and was by everyone before we knew it," Van Gundy said. "He was tough to contain."
Bruce Bowen, meanwhile, did his best to corral Dwyane Wade. Wade scored 31 points, 15 of which came at the foul line.
He cramped up after landing on Bowen's foot late in the game. Bowen, who has been accused of stepping under shooters, crowded Wade after he released his shot but immediately apologized.
Said Bowen: "He told me, 'I know you're not like that.'"
After Wade helped reduce the Spurs' lead to nine points midway through the fourth quarter, Duncan went back to work. He spun by Antoine Walker on the baseline, then laid the ball through the rim as Wayne Simien fouled him.
It was the same move Duncan made after Orlando rallied in the fourth quarter Monday. It also produced the same result: The Heat made one final push but couldn't get close enough.
As for Parker's contention that Duncan should give up his point-guard aspirations?
"All of them are just jealous," Duncan said. "That's what it comes down to. There's a lot of jealousy on this team." :lol
Express-News Staff Writer
Tim Duncan already had dunked over Alonzo Mourning, flushed a lob pass from Tony Parker and banked in another half-dozen shots. Then he decided to go Manu on Miami.
With the Spurs leading by double figures in Wednesday's fourth quarter and many of the 18,797 at the SBC Center filing out into the frozen night, Duncan decided it was as good a time as any for a behind-the-back pass to Nick Van Exel.
The ball, however, made it only as far as Duncan's right foot, deflecting off his shoe and skidding out of bounds. Duncan laughed. His teammates shook their heads.
Said Parker: "I told him just stay at center." :lol
Duncan put his guard skills on hold long enough to lead the Spurs to a 98-84 victory. He scored 28 points, took 16 rebounds and blocked four shots as the Spurs extended their winning streak to five games.
Manu Ginobili added 27 points, while Parker had 14 points and a season-best 11 assists. With those three going to the rim — and no Shaquille O'Neal to stop them — the Spurs outscored Miami 54-22 in the lane.
"We have to attack them in there," Duncan said. "We didn't force a whole lot. Not only the big guys inside, but Manu and Tony got in there a lot and drew some fouls and really slowed their guys down."
Miami was making its final stop on a five-game, nine-day trip, and with a sprained right ankle still sidelining O'Neal, the Heat have relied on Mourning.
He entered Wednesday averaging a league-high four blocks but didn't swat a single shot against the Spurs — the first time in 32 games he finished without at least one block. :elephant
Ginobili lofted an array of floaters and scoop shots over the arms of Mourning and Miami's other defenders.
"Manu is an exceptional finisher — one of the best in the league," Heat coach Stan Van Gundy said. "Duncan obviously is going to go over the top.
"It's a different world in here. It's a different world against the Spurs compared to the other teams we've played this year."
Duncan went to the bench after about seven minutes after picking up his second foul. The Heat took advantage, outscoring the Spurs 10-4 over the next seven minutes.
Unfortunately for Miami, Duncan did not spend the entire evening in a chair. He returned with 9:26 left in the second quarter and promptly tossed in a hook shot.
The next four minutes brought more of the same: a bank shot; a dunk off a nice pass from Nazr Mohammed; and a three-point play when he faked Udonis Haslem off his feet, drew a foul and banged in a 13-footer off the backboard.
If that wasn't enough to get everyone's attention, Duncan's next shot did. He caught a bounce pass in stride from Parker before throwing down a powerful dunk over Mourning.
The Heat focused on keeping Parker out of the lane, often chasing him with a pair of defenders off pick-and-rolls. Miami had other ways to deter Parker from getting to the rim: Michael Doleac cracked him across the head in the third quarter — a flagrant 2 foul that automatically resulted in the Heat center's ejection.
"There was one time where Parker had the ball about 2 inches off the floor on the dribble and was by everyone before we knew it," Van Gundy said. "He was tough to contain."
Bruce Bowen, meanwhile, did his best to corral Dwyane Wade. Wade scored 31 points, 15 of which came at the foul line.
He cramped up after landing on Bowen's foot late in the game. Bowen, who has been accused of stepping under shooters, crowded Wade after he released his shot but immediately apologized.
Said Bowen: "He told me, 'I know you're not like that.'"
After Wade helped reduce the Spurs' lead to nine points midway through the fourth quarter, Duncan went back to work. He spun by Antoine Walker on the baseline, then laid the ball through the rim as Wayne Simien fouled him.
It was the same move Duncan made after Orlando rallied in the fourth quarter Monday. It also produced the same result: The Heat made one final push but couldn't get close enough.
As for Parker's contention that Duncan should give up his point-guard aspirations?
"All of them are just jealous," Duncan said. "That's what it comes down to. There's a lot of jealousy on this team." :lol