-Tim Duncan did a lot of good in this game. He hit 5-of-9 shots from the field, grabbed 13 rebounds, blocked three shots and didn't have a turnover in 37 minutes of work. His defense was as good as could have been expected and he took advantage of his touches. That said, the fatal flaw of his outing was his free throw shooting. He was 5-for-12 from the line and his misses seemed to demoralize both himself and his team. After shooting 72.5% from the line in the regular season, he has hit less than half of his freebies in the postseason. I usually don't harp on missed free throws but his misses really seemed to hurt everyone's aggressiveness. Even with the misses at the line, it would have been a good idea to give Duncan more touches. He was producing well in all areas -- except for one.
-In the first half, DeJuan Blair played very well. He was rebounding, scoring and just playing with smarts on both ends of the court. The second half was a different story. When switched off onto smaller players on the defensive end, Blair got lit up. He just couldn't handle what was asked of him; guarding small guards out on the perimeter isn't where Blair makes his living. On the night, Blair finished with six points, six rebounds and a blocked shot in 11 minutes.
-I'm still shaking my head over the gimmick defense Pop went with in this game. To defend Phoenix's countless pick-and-rolls, Pop decided the Spurs should switch on all picks. The results were disastrous. The strategy forced Duncan and Blair to spend way too much time defending point guards. Once those guards got into the paint, the Spurs were forced to collapse -- which resulted in the Suns going 15-for-26 on three-pointers. When the Suns weren't hitting open threes, they were beating the bigs to the rim for easy looks. It might have been a decent gimmick to give the Suns a different look for a few minutes ... but for an entire game? Very questionable decision and it blew up in Pop's face. And while I was a proponent of putting Parker back into the starting lineup, that decision also backfired. I thought Pop had coached very well in the playoffs up until this game. He tried to get tricky and now the Spurs are staring into the abyss that is a 3-0 impossibility.