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1Parker1
05-15-2008, 02:48 PM
Facing elimination, Spurs knew Hornets would be trouble
By Marc Stein

SAN ANTONIO -- You probably didn't expect this so soon after Team Duncan so convincingly dispatched the Phoenix Suns.

You must be struggling to fully digest the reality that the defending champs can be eliminated in the second round Thursday night on their own floor.

You undoubtedly are still asking -- even after watching San Antonio get walloped in each of its road games in this series -- how the supposed playoff neophytes from New Orleans have shoved the Spurs into such a perilous position.

Yet we're guessing you'll be interested to hear who's not surprised by any of this.

That would be the Spurs.

It used to be the Dallas Mavericks who presented San Antonio's most uncomfortable matchup, as witnessed in the second round back in 2006, when Dallas won a Game 7 in San Antonio in the Spurs' most recent elimination game.

More recently, Phoenix could claim to be the Spurs' fiercest rival, with most of that animus spilling out of the bloody, chippy, unforgettably controversial second-round saga that the Spurs and Suns staged.

But that was last season.

No team has caused more unrest in Gregg Popovich's private thoughts this season than these pesky Hornets.

The Spurs were surely less than thrilled to see the Suns in Round 1, especially after going 0-2 in their first two looks at Phoenix after the Shaquille O'Neal trade. They will be grateful to get back to the Western Conference finals at this point -- given that the Spurs have never won a series from 3-2 down in franchise history -- but won't exactly be celebrating if Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol are there waiting for them.

That said …

No one has abused San Antonio in 2007-08, regular season and postseason, like New Orleans.

On a Saturday at home in late January, with the Hornets playing on the second night of a back-to-back, San Antonio absorbed a 24-point pounding. Some six weeks later, this time on the road and with neither team having played the previous night, San Antonio lost by 25.

So the Spurs' angst has little to do with their famed inability to win two titles in a row … or win it all in an even year … or get through a Joey Crawford-officiated game without some sort of run-in.

It's pretty much all about New Orleans repeatedly routing them, which is a new experience for the only team out West with unimpeachable championship cred.

Recognition is finally coming to Byron Scott (the NBA's newly minted Coach of the Year) and Jeff Bower (who just finished third in voting by his peers for the NBA's Executive of the Year award) for the team they've assembled around the imperious Chris Paul, but none of that is news in South Texas.

They're acutely aware down here that the Hornets don't simply rely on Paul's ability to score inside and outside, get to the line more than most little men and get his teammates involved while he's doing all that damage. They know New Orleans' weaponry extends beyond Paul and David West's ability to stretch the floor and bang inside like Tim Duncan.

Lots of us outsiders underestimated how the pieces that snap in so nicely around those two make containing Paul and West so problematic.

Bower has wisely flanked Paul and West with shooters you can't leave (Peja Stojakovic, Jannero Pargo and Morris Peterson) and with a big man (Tyson Chandler) who just keeps heading straight for the rim to open up more space. The Hornets, as a result, almost skunked Dallas because the Mavs didn't make Paul work enough defensively, couldn't deal with West one-on-one and failed to deter New Orleans from swarming Dirk Nowitzki with a punchless supporting cast. The Hornets have a 3-2 lead in this series because the Spurs are equally reluctant to expose themselves by double-teaming West and because West has been borderline unstoppable in support of Paul at home, as West underlined Wednesday night when he out-Timmy-ed Duncan in a 38-point, 14-rebound, five-block masterpiece.

In its two victories at home, San Antonio's trio of primary West defenders -- Kurt Thomas, Fabricio Oberto and Robert Horry -- sufficiently slowed and frustrated West for the Spurs to survive Paul's prowess. You figure there's a good chance it will happen again in Game 6, since San Antonio's dreadful third quarters seem to be a Bourbon Street-only issue and given that you've inevitably heard by now that the home team is a ridiculous 19-1 in the league's four second-round matchups so far.

Yet that would still leave a Game 7 roadie for the Spurs to win Monday night, in the building where they've lost by 19, 18 and 22 points in Games 1, 2 and 5.

There is one silver (and black) lining in that scenario for San Antonio. An unexpected three-day break between Game 6 and 7 would figure to help the older Spurs be at their freshest for the series decider and possibly give the care-free Hornets more time than Scott would prefer to start thinking about the enormity of the moment.

Yet it's also true that West (back) and Chandler (foot) can likewise benefit health-wise from such a gap … and that the gap exposes San Antonio to some brooding about its own ongoing struggles in New Orleans.

Says one veteran scout: "The Hornets play with such a chip on their shoulder. Especially at home. They look like they have no fear of the Spurs."

Which is nothing San Antonio didn't know, long before most of us realized it.

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/playoffs2008/columns/story?columnist=stein_marc&page=SpursHornetsGame6pre-080515

Manu's Bald Spot
05-15-2008, 03:00 PM
After watching them kill us in the regular season, I put the hornets up there on the list of teams that worried me most. They assembled a good starting 5 and a decent (but not great) bench and they match up pretty well with us, considering their youth and athleticism. We can still pull this out, but this is gonna be rough. Let's win game 6 fellas!

1Parker1
05-15-2008, 03:06 PM
That's why I don't think the Spurs can win this series. No team has ever blown out the Spurs so many times in the regular season and postseason in one year as these Hornets have. It's pretty remarkable.

Even in 06 when the Mavs had our #, those games were all pretty much close until the very end.

Brutalis
05-15-2008, 03:09 PM
Wanna make some sort of bet on who wins the series? :) I'll take the Spurs

1Parker1
05-15-2008, 03:12 PM
Wanna make some sort of bet on who wins the series? :) I'll take the Spurs



:lol I would expect I'll be seen around here as a "bandwagoner" or "not a real fan" just because I think the Spurs are outmatched this series and gave up a golden opportunity to put this team away and win the series.

What's the bet? Name it. :)

Don Quixote
05-15-2008, 03:12 PM
I'm not so sure. The Hornets will win one of the next 2 games.

Brutalis
05-15-2008, 03:20 PM
:lol I would expect I'll be seen around here as a "bandwagoner" or "not a real fan" just because I think the Spurs are outmatched this series and gave up a golden opportunity to put this team away and win the series.

What's the bet? Name it. :)

Well you didn't have much hope after game 2, not many did. And a lot of people thought the Hornets were capable of pushing the Spurs to the brink. I called it before the series that this would not be any sweep or easy quick series. And here we are 2-3 trying to save our ass tonight.

And you name it. I would have but I don't bet often. :toast

I have wore my black Spurs custom uni in all of the Spurs road losses and if we can win tonight, I am not wearing it on Monday. So we have a a great shot if we just take care of home court. :lol

Bartleby
05-15-2008, 03:27 PM
I'm not so sure. The Hornets will win one of the next 2 games.

I'm not so sure the Hornets will win one of the next 2 games.

1Parker1
05-15-2008, 03:31 PM
Well you didn't have much hope after game 2, not many did. And a lot of people thought the Hornets were capable of pushing the Spurs to the brink. I called it before the series that this would not be any sweep or easy quick series. And here we are 2-3 trying to save our ass tonight.

And you name it. I would have but I don't bet often. :toast

I have wore my black Spurs custom uni in all of the Spurs road losses and if we can win tonight, I am not wearing it on Monday. So we have a a great shot if we just take care of home court. :lol



I'll write "Bandwagnor" under my title and you write "Homer" under yours? :lol I don't bet often either so I'm just as bad as u on this.

Don Quixote
05-15-2008, 03:32 PM
ha ha. punctuation, I guess, is important.

Interestingly, early biblical texts, which were hand-copied in the original Greek and Hebrew, had no punctuation, either. That might lead to exegetical difficulties!

florige
05-15-2008, 03:34 PM
I REALLY hope Duncan rams it down West's throat tonight! Please!!!!