Spurs-Mavs notebook: Ginobili: Team not lost like 'everybody thinks'
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/b...k.d482829.html
Web Posted: 05/15/2006 12:00 AM CDT
Johnny Ludden
Express-News Staff Writer
The Spurs have long used experience to pull them through tough times, but they don't have much experience with their current predicament.
In their 33-year history, the Spurs have never won a best-of-7 series after trailing 2-1. They haven't even trailed 2-1 in a series since the Lakers eliminated them in the 2002 Western Conference semifinals.
"To win a championship," Tony Parker said, "there's a lot of challenge and adversity."
The Spurs have this going for them: They haven't lost three in a row this season.
"There's not much time to feel sorry for ourselves," Manu Ginobili said. "We just have to compete. We're not lost like what everybody thinks."
Being reserve helped: Whether it was coach Gregg Popovich's decision to move him to the bench or not, Ginobili said he regained some aggressiveness in Saturday's loss.
Popovich started Brent Barry in place of Ginobili, who scored 24 points off the bench.
"I don't know why, but I felt more willing to attack, more confident," Ginobili said. "I still missed too many shots, too many layups, but overall I felt better, more me."
No questions from Parker: Parker doesn't know why he wasn't on the floor at the end of Saturday's game. Nor did he ask.
"That's Pop's decision," he said.
Down a point with 7.9 seconds left, Popovich took Parker out of the game, and surrounded Ginobili with four shooters: Barry, Robert Horry, Bruce Bowen and Michael Finley. The plan was to space the court for Ginobili and let him create, but he never got the ball after Devin Harris knocked Horry's handoff away. The answer for everyone who asked this question.
'Tough breaks:' The Spurs weren't too happy with some of the calls in Game 3, but they didn't spend much time complaining Sunday.
"We've been having a lot of tough breaks," Horry said. "I've been saying that all day hoping you all would read into it, but I'm not going to go any further with that."
Mama Mia! Mavericks forward Jerry Stackhouse had to endure a lot of criticism for his play with two seconds remaining Saturday, when he intentionally missed the second of two free throws but failed to hit the rim. That gave the Spurs, trailing by one point and out of timeouts, a final possession and an out-of-bounds play to try and pull off a miracle.
Even Stackhouse's mother cut him no slack.
"You do something bad at the end of a game," Stackhouse said, "and your Mama, you want her to be like, 'It's all right baby.' But she was asking, 'What was you thinking about?' So I knew I screwed up a little bit last night."
How did Stackhouse respond to coach Mom's criticism?
"I said 'Happy Mother's Day,'" he said. "It was like 12:30 when I called her, so it was already Mother's Day."
Injury update: Mavericks forward Keith Van Horn, who is recovering from a broken hand, participated in a scrimmage Sunday, but coach Avery Johnson said he wasn't sure if Van Horn will be in uniform tonight.
Guard Darrell Armstrong, who banged knees with Manu Ginobili late in the third quarter Saturday, is listed as doubtful with a left-knee bruise.

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