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some_user86
11-10-2007, 03:12 AM
Spurs: Trademark night by Bowen propels Spurs

Web Posted: 11/10/2007 01:16 AM CST

Mike Monroe
San Antonio Express-News

NEW ORLEANS — Just in case anyone had forgotten what matters most to the Spurs, Gregg Popovich made it clear after his team's 97-85 victory over the New Orleans Hornets.

On whom did Popovich lavish his highest praise?

Not Tim Duncan, whose 24 points and 12 rebounds the coach at least allowed represented Duncan's best performance of the season.

Not Tony Parker, who scored a season-high 27 points, on 11-for-20 shooting, and added eight assists.

“I thought Bruce Bowen was just tremendous,” Popovich said after the Spurs remained tied atop the NBA's Southwest Division by going to 5-1 for the young season.

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Bowen took only three shots in 32 minutes, 14 seconds. He made only one, a 3-pointer. He had only four rebounds and a single assist.

But Bowen had a much better game than did Hornets forward Peja Stojakovic, who Bowen pestered from baseline to baseline and start to finish.

There are plenty of credible NBA experts who believe Stojakovic is the league's best shooter, a two-time winner of All-Star Weekend's 3-point contest. Just four days ago he set a Hornets franchise record by nailing 10 %3-pointers in a victory over the Lakers in Los Angeles. He entered Friday's game averaging 16.6 points.

Against Bowen on Friday night, Stojakovic made a single shot — a layup. He took only six shots, and by the second half Hornets coach Byron Scott had pretty much seen enough. He played the veteran a mere nine minutes.

“People only notice offensive guys,” Popovich said, “but Bruce held Peja down, and that was really important for us tonight, because Peja has been doing some great things from 3 (-point range).

“Peja is a great shooter and it was important for us tonight to limit that, and Bruce was fantastic.”

At 6-foot-10, Stojakovic has a physical advantage on the 6-7 Bowen, but the Spurs' defensive specialist has proven to better, and bigger, players that he can limit them.

“He's a talent,” Bowen said. “I tend to end up with guys with different forms of talent.

“It's all about preparation. Peja is a very good player, and when you go up against a good player you try your best to limit some of the things that they're effective at. It's not necessarily that I did this or that to stop him.”

The Spurs would have been vulnerable had Stojakovic gotten hot on Friday. Their scoring leader through their first five games, Manu Ginobili, struggled through the first half, bothered by a tight quadriceps.

New Orleans took advantage of Ginobili's 0 for 4 first half, leading by as many as nine points. But Stojakovic missed five of the six shots he took in the half, or the Hornets' lead could have been greater.

Popovich had Ginobili on the court to start the second half for a second consecutive game and the Spurs got their offense untracked. Ginobili scored 10 points in the period, and before it ended the Spurs had opened a lead as large as 21 points.

“Manu Ginobili's competitiveness in the second half was really great,” Popovich said. “It was also Timmy's best game of the season, so the Hornets caught us on a pretty good night.”

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LINK: http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/basketball/nba/spurs/stories/MYSA111007.07CspursGAMER.en.35cbe78.html

picnroll
11-10-2007, 07:39 AM
Peja is a set shooter and a coming off screens shooter who is not fast. If Bowen is focusing on stopping Peja and can't it's time to retire.

xapatan2
11-10-2007, 09:30 AM
Peja is a set shooter and a coming off screens shooter who is not fast. If Bowen is focusing on stopping Peja and can't it's time to retire.

Thats's for sure !

But i have the feeling that Pop wants his Bruce to have the DPOY this year, maybe the last year posssible for him ( wich would be fair ), so Pop might be in "Promotion and Marketing Mode"...

my feeling

Xap'

2centsworth
11-10-2007, 10:01 AM
Bowen is a huge piece of the puzzle.

SouthernFried
11-10-2007, 10:12 AM
Set shooter or no, Bowen stopped him. That's his job. A job, it seems, that other teams don't seem able to do.

I have to admit, after the game, I was giving kudo's to everyone but Bruce. I wasn't even paying attention to what he was doing. I didn't realize he did anything special 'till Pop said something (ya' think Pop realized this?)...and I usually pay attention to what Bruce is doing. So many other's were having great games, I just lost track of him.

So Kudo's to Bruce...and to Pop for letting us not forget what this team's foundation is. Defense.

SF

duncan228
11-10-2007, 10:15 AM
It's just like Pop said. "People only notice offense."
Or they only watch the ball and miss most of what's actually going on.

timvp said it in his wrap up, Bowen was the quiet star of the game.

He's such an important part of what we do that one of this board's topics of conversation on a regular basis is the concern about his age and how the Spurs ever replace him. You don't find defensive specialists of Bowen's callibur often.

We have our "big three." I think "big four" is not a far stretch.

ManuTim_best of Fwiendz
11-10-2007, 03:44 PM
Bowen seems to have started off pretty consistent in stopping the key players so far. He does such a good job, I don't even notice anymore.

nfg3
11-11-2007, 10:35 AM
Bowen the "quiet star" - nice! Goes with our SI label "The Quiet Dynasty"

I, like others at times, seem to either not truly appreciate hiin or take for granted his contributions on the court. We all talk about TD accomplishments and why we should appreciate him while he is still here. I think the same should be said of Bruce. He is an essential piece of the puzzle. There has been many a night that without his D the Spurs wluld have lost.

Kudos to Pop for pointing that out.