Lots of shouting
Beginning with a Rafer Alston turnover that saw him benched less than four minutes into the game, Alston shouted at Juwan Howard. Howard shouted at Alston. Alston then began shouting at Jeff Van Gundy, before Mutombo began barking at McGrady, with McGrady going back at Mutombo and trainer Keith Jones rushing between them, if only to interrupt long enough to get something else accomplished with the time out Van Gundy had called.
"I heard guys yelling at each other," McGrady said. "I was just trying to calm guys down. Dikembe was trying to stop me from calming everything down. I don't know what happened. But it was a bad time to go at each other's throats."
By then, the Rockets had made one of seven shots, the Spurs seven of eight, and San Antonio sprinted to a 14-5 lead to send the Rockets into their wild, emotional and frazzled timeout.
The Spurs led 18-5 moments later, shaking the Rockets to distraction. They had nine turnovers in the first quarter.
And if the timeout squabble was far from unique, it did underscore how entirely the Spurs dominated.
"I'm not concerned with the reaction," Van Gundy said. "I'm concerned with us not being as good, having a game that could stand up. Our at ude had nothing to nothing to do with it. We had a little temper tantrum over there. I'm concerned with our game, not our response.
"This was not a game lost to lack of energy or lack of readiness. This was a game lost due to getting our heads handed to us by a team playing superior basketball."