lefty
12-17-2006, 06:04 PM
http://www.nba.com/features/mcmenamin.html
SECAUCUS, N.J., Dec. 16, 2006-- It was about time.
Every week I scribble a list of the things that I notice and the top 10 make my column, while the rest that didn't make the cut get moved to the top of next week's list.
"Nobody is talking about San Antonio" has now been recycled three times and I can't ignore it anymore.
Forget Phoenix and Dallas' win streaks. Forget Utah's fast start. Forget Orlando leading the East.
Let's talk Spurs basketball.
San Antonio has the best record in the league at 18-6 for the same old reasons: Tim Duncan is back from his foot pain and he upped his offense to a career-high 57 percent field goal percentage resulting in 21.0 points per game after a putting in a career-low 18.6 per last season; Tony Parker is matching his 18.9 points per game from last season and shooting 50 percent from the land of three; and Manu Ginobili continues to be a matchup nightmare on the wing with his wondrous ratio of drives to jumpers.
The Spurs are also averaging 100.2 points per game (ninth in the league) and only giving up 90.3 (second in the league), giving them the top differential in the league at +9.9.
If that wasn't enough, the two-man tandem of Francisco Elson and Fabricio Oberto, (or, as I like to call them, "Francisco Oberto"), is averaging 11.2 points and 10.5 rebounds between them which more than makes up for the void left by Nazr Mohammed when he left for Detroit.
Glad I could start the conversation.
SECAUCUS, N.J., Dec. 16, 2006-- It was about time.
Every week I scribble a list of the things that I notice and the top 10 make my column, while the rest that didn't make the cut get moved to the top of next week's list.
"Nobody is talking about San Antonio" has now been recycled three times and I can't ignore it anymore.
Forget Phoenix and Dallas' win streaks. Forget Utah's fast start. Forget Orlando leading the East.
Let's talk Spurs basketball.
San Antonio has the best record in the league at 18-6 for the same old reasons: Tim Duncan is back from his foot pain and he upped his offense to a career-high 57 percent field goal percentage resulting in 21.0 points per game after a putting in a career-low 18.6 per last season; Tony Parker is matching his 18.9 points per game from last season and shooting 50 percent from the land of three; and Manu Ginobili continues to be a matchup nightmare on the wing with his wondrous ratio of drives to jumpers.
The Spurs are also averaging 100.2 points per game (ninth in the league) and only giving up 90.3 (second in the league), giving them the top differential in the league at +9.9.
If that wasn't enough, the two-man tandem of Francisco Elson and Fabricio Oberto, (or, as I like to call them, "Francisco Oberto"), is averaging 11.2 points and 10.5 rebounds between them which more than makes up for the void left by Nazr Mohammed when he left for Detroit.
Glad I could start the conversation.