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  1. #1
    Silence surpasses speech. duncan228's Avatar
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    Tim Duncan waves to his family before Wednesday's game. The Spurs lost to the Jazz, dropping them to 8-14 against teams with records better than .500. Of the Spurs' next 41 games, 28 will be against teams better than .500.

    Second half should be brutal for Spurs
    By Jeff McDonald

    Excluding utter catastrophe, Spurs forward Tim Duncan will get the one point he needs to celebrate his 20,000th NBA tally tonight. That is a virtual slam dunk, although given Duncan's repertoire, the milestone basket is more likely to come on a 15-foot bank shot.

    If only the rest of the Spurs' season could be so automatic.

    Heading into the second half, which they open with Game No. 42 against Houston at the AT&T Center, the Spurs are 25-16, good enough for fourth in the Western Conference and on trajectory for their 12th consecutive 50-win season.

    Congrats, Spurs. Now for the hard part.

    The Spurs' next 41 games appear to pose a greater threat than their first 41. Twenty-four of them are on the road, where they are 8-9 this season. Twenty-eight are against teams better than .500, against whom they are 8-14.

    The schedule sets up for a rugged march to the finish for the Spurs, who will need to improve just to equal their first-half mark.

    “The effort is there,” coach Gregg Popovich said. “We're playing compe ively, but we're not getting over that hump. As long as we stay dedicated to the fundamentals of the system, and are patient with each other, we'll get there.

    “If we lose those things, then we have a problem.”

    For much of the Popovich era, the Spurs have been a renowned second-half team, pacing themselves to peak in March and April. In the ultra-compe ive West, which features 11 teams above .500 this season, there is danger in resting too much on the past.

    If the Spurs win at the same rates against over-.500 teams and sub-.500 teams in the second half as they did in the first, their final record projects to 47-35. Last season, Utah snuck into the playoffs as the West's eighth seed at 48-34.

    It would be a fool's exercise to project the Spurs, participants in every postseason since Duncan arrived in 1997, out of the playoffs in January. Still, that projection illustrates how razor-thin the margin for error is heading into the second half.

    “I look at us like a college freshman team almost,” Popovich said. “We've lost a lot of our corporate knowledge. We haven't played well. We've been inconsistent.”

    At times, the Spurs have swung wildly from one extreme to another within the course of the same game.

    Case in point, Wednesday's 105-98 loss to Utah, when the Spurs fell behind 12-0, took a 14-point lead with a 25-0 run, then faltered to the finish.

    The good news for the Spurs is they believe there is more room for improvement this season than in others.

    “I think we'll be OK,” said DeJuan Blair, the Spurs' rookie starting center. “There's a little buzz we have right now, but we'll come around.”

    Blair says this with confidence, but nobody can be sure. For now, the only thing even remotely guaranteed is Duncan's next point.

  2. #2
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    Tim Duncan waves to his family before Wednesday's game. The Spurs lost to the Jazz, dropping them to 8-14 against teams with records better than .500. Of the Spurs' next 41 games, 28 will be against teams better than .500.

    Second half should be brutal for Spurs
    By Jeff McDonald

    Excluding utter catastrophe, Spurs forward Tim Duncan will get the one point he needs to celebrate his 20,000th NBA tally tonight. That is a virtual slam dunk, although given Duncan's repertoire, the milestone basket is more likely to come on a 15-foot bank shot.

    If only the rest of the Spurs' season could be so automatic.

    Heading into the second half, which they open with Game No. 42 against Houston at the AT&T Center, the Spurs are 25-16, good enough for fourth in the Western Conference and on trajectory for their 12th consecutive 50-win season.

    Congrats, Spurs. Now for the hard part.

    The Spurs' next 41 games appear to pose a greater threat than their first 41. Twenty-four of them are on the road, where they are 8-9 this season. Twenty-eight are against teams better than .500, against whom they are 8-14.

    The schedule sets up for a rugged march to the finish for the Spurs, who will need to improve just to equal their first-half mark.

    “The effort is there,” coach Gregg Popovich said. “We're playing compe ively, but we're not getting over that hump. As long as we stay dedicated to the fundamentals of the system, and are patient with each other, we'll get there.

    “If we lose those things, then we have a problem.”

    For much of the Popovich era, the Spurs have been a renowned second-half team, pacing themselves to peak in March and April. In the ultra-compe ive West, which features 11 teams above .500 this season, there is danger in resting too much on the past.

    If the Spurs win at the same rates against over-.500 teams and sub-.500 teams in the second half as they did in the first, their final record projects to 47-35. Last season, Utah snuck into the playoffs as the West's eighth seed at 48-34.

    It would be a fool's exercise to project the Spurs, participants in every postseason since Duncan arrived in 1997, out of the playoffs in January. Still, that projection illustrates how razor-thin the margin for error is heading into the second half.

    “I look at us like a college freshman team almost,” Popovich said. “We've lost a lot of our corporate knowledge. We haven't played well. We've been inconsistent.”

    At times, the Spurs have swung wildly from one extreme to another within the course of the same game.

    Case in point, Wednesday's 105-98 loss to Utah, when the Spurs fell behind 12-0, took a 14-point lead with a 25-0 run, then faltered to the finish.

    The good news for the Spurs is they believe there is more room for improvement this season than in others.

    “I think we'll be OK,” said DeJuan Blair, the Spurs' rookie starting center. “There's a little buzz we have right now, but we'll come around.”

    Blair says this with confidence, but nobody can be sure. For now, the only thing even remotely guaranteed is Duncan's next point.
    This quote really worries me even more than I was worried before..get a clue Pop..

  3. #3
    Veteran Danny.Zhu's Avatar
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    This quote really worries me even more than I was worried before..get a clue Pop..
    I think that just meant there will be no trade.

  4. #4
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    I think that just meant there will be no trade.
    LOL screw that. I would like a trade right now .

  5. #5
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    btw this is complete and utter bull from Pop.

    I don't like what he is saying. He is being way too soft.

    This is also making me think when is it time to start holding the coaching stuff accountable. It sounds to me like he is being too soft for too long. What exactly are they teaching the team because it looks like they don't even know how to run a fast break and the confusion on the court at times seems like the coaches are doing a poor job and don't have the team prepared properly.

    Is Pop's systems really that complicated? Is it the players that are not picking it up?

  6. #6
    @Kap10Jack Blackjack's Avatar
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    “The effort is there,” coach Gregg Popovich said. “We're playing compe ively, but we're not getting over that hump. As long as we stay dedicated to the fundamentals of the system, and are patient with each other, we'll get there.
    This seems like a really lame and soft attempt to reach his players (the Jefferson's of the world) through the press. 'Stay dedicated'? that would infer that there was proper implementation. No, Pop, they need to get dedicated and play disciplined. Ya know, 'Spurs basketball'?

    They're simply having these streaks and getting these leads by out-talenting people; it comes too easy at times. Then, when they hit a rough spot, they fall apart because they haven't been going about breaking down a defense and opponent in a consistent and disciplined fashion. Ya know, 'Spurs basketball'?

    They get lax, fat, take poor shots and compound matters worse with mental errors on both ends of the floor; even showing, at times, a willingness to exchange baskets. Ya know, 'not Spurs basketball'?

    FMSLL...

  7. #7
    Ghost of Mr. K SenorSpur's Avatar
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    Pop is full of - especially with his "loss of corporate knowledge" excuse.

    He's sold his soul out for more offense and married himself to the "small-ball" concept and wonders why his teams get wiped out on the glass and in pick-n-roll situations.

    He's overrelied on his vets and underutilized the potential contributions of a younger, supporting cast, while watching his teams get run out of the gym by younger, more athletic teams, who push tempo at every opportunity.

    For years, he's continued to cast his lot on older, injury-prone, players, who can barely manage to even attend back-to-back games, much less play in them. At the same time, he's sent subtle signals that the 1st half of the season is not as important. Now he wonders why this new roster is off to a slow start.

    He's allowed his stubborness and ego to get in the way of logical, basketball decisions. He fails to realize that it's quite possible the decisions made over the offseason were not the correct ones.

    GMAFB!

  8. #8
    Gettin' Old ffadicted's Avatar
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    Good article, and I agree with Pop, just stick to it and it'll come around eventually. Plus, a series of difficult games and the rodeo trip coming up should be perfect to act as a way to get the spurs over the top. I'm saying spurs finish with 55 wins, let's see what happens

  9. #9
    I put the "F-U" in fun easy7's Avatar
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    Second half should be brutal for Spurs = Spurs need to get their head out of their ass, pronto.

  10. #10
    Love and Basketball MateoNeygro's Avatar
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    51-31 is my guess and it's completely random and based on no knowledge of the upcomming schedule. I have faith and will continue to until we aren't playing in late May and June.

  11. #11
    The Dude minds DPG21920's Avatar
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    Second half? The first half was brutal

  12. #12
    Veteran Chomag's Avatar
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    Second half? The first half was brutal
    And thats with it being the easiest, if not the easiest schedule in the league this season.

    How some can say nothing is wrong I just don't know. Maybe some very thick blinders,or ear plugs?

    Spurs season is not over there is still hope, but to say nothing needs fixing it might as well be.

  13. #13
    Believe.
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    Second half should be brutal for Spurs = Spurs need to get their head out of their ass, pronto.
    Putting your head up your ass is impossible. Trust me.

  14. #14
    The Dude minds DPG21920's Avatar
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    I don't think anyone denies there is something wrong, the debate is with regards to how bad is it and what are the odds this team can contend.

  15. #15
    Veteran hater's Avatar
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    And thats with it being the easiest, if not the easiest schedule in the league this season.

    How some can say nothing is wrong I just don't know. Maybe some very thick blinders,or ear plugs?

    Spurs season is not over there is still hope, but to say nothing needs fixing it might as well be.
    Lakers had easiest 1st half by far. 2nd half is gonna be even more brutal for them

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