The pratfalls of constantly needing your fragile ego stroked.“I just find it quite funny that when you’re up 20 that you do it,” Shaq said after Game 4. “It still shows me that I’m the most feared 36-year-old guy on the planet.”
That's just sad.
Damn, it's good to be a Duncan fan.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/c....b30c891f.html
Buck Harvey: Shaq walks away, and it's personal
San Antonio Express-news
Shaquille O’Neal walked down the court with some grace. No more words, no more bravado.
He reached out with his fist, and there was Tim Duncan with his, and their fists tapped.
Then O’Neal walked away, having not only lost a game but also a personal battle with the other great big man of this era.
Now Duncan, after a series that was far tighter than the 5-game length suggests, is in position to become the greatest.
Duncan had a few things going for him in this first round, such as the best point guard. Tony Parker took over again, almost as well as he did in Game 3 in Phoenix, and the contrast to Steve Nash was just as startling.
Nash ended with five turnovers while making only 4 of 16 shots, and a final moment ruined the Suns. Then, down by only two with 24 seconds left, an inbounds pass glanced off his hands and out of bounds.
But that was merely one of a seemingly thousand critical plays, with Duncan being involved in most. He defended Shaq and Amare Stoudemire, and he piled up 29 points and 17 rebounds, and he stayed out of foul trouble.
The best big man? There was never a doubt, when once there was a lot. Duncan and Shaq have been the standard of excellence in the league, and a common statistic says how much. Since Michael Jordan retired, one or the other has been in every NBA Finals.
For Shaq, there’s a lot of symmetry involved. He came out of a San Antonio high school, after all, and he persisted in creating a rivalry with another Spurs big man, David Robinson.
But ultimately, Duncan became Shaq’s adversary. Shaq eliminated Duncan three times (2001, 2002 and 2004), and now Duncan has eliminated Shaq three times (1999, 2003 and this season).
They’ve also won four les each, and Shaq has been well aware of this. When he arrived in Phoenix two months ago, he told one teammate of his goal.
“I need to get my fifth ring,” Shaq said, “before Duncan gets his.”
Duncan has to do a few things before he gets his fifth. The younger Hornets have routed the Spurs a few times this season, and the Spurs won’t have the home-court advantage.
Then there’s Chris Paul: Parker will find he’s not a 34-year-old Nash.
But Duncan, not Shaq, is the one with the chance now, and Tuesday outlined a reason. There’s a 15-foot shot called a free throw, and Gregg Popovich asked Shaq to make a few.
“I just find it quite funny that when you’re up 20 that you do it,” Shaq said after Game 4. “It still shows me that I’m the most feared 36-year-old guy on the planet.”
What it really showed after he missed 11 free throws Tuesday: Shaq is one of the worst-shooting 36-year-old guys on the planet.
The strategy didn’t say much about Popovich’s confidence in his defense. But it was theater every time Shaq went to the line, with the crowd howling.
Shaq has always said he makes them when he has to. Memphis’ John Calipari coincidentally said the same this month in San Antonio, and that didn’t work out, either, in the Final Four.
The Suns were once one of the best free-throwing shooting teams in the league. Shaq made them one of the worst. At halftime, the Spurs had made all 12 of their attempts; the Suns, with twice as many attempts then, scored one fewer point at the line.
In the past, a few teams have hacked Duncan the same way. But he got past those yips, which is fitting. The most complete big man in this era has gotten past everything.
He saved Game 1 with his 3-pointer, and a similar touch was required for the finale. He threw in a 20-footer over Shaq in the middle of the fourth quarter to pull the Spurs within one, then Parker found him for a score.
Minutes later, with the score tied and the 24-second clock running down, Duncan threw in a one-hand runner, and the Spurs would never trail again.
With that, Duncan’s spotless record in the first round remained intact. With that, Duncan heads toward New Orleans with his first repeat possible.
With that, he’s left Shaq behind.
The pratfalls of constantly needing your fragile ego stroked.“I just find it quite funny that when you’re up 20 that you do it,” Shaq said after Game 4. “It still shows me that I’m the most feared 36-year-old guy on the planet.”
That's just sad.
He did lose once in the firs tround to PHX but Dunc was hurt
great article nonetheless
Very nice article Buck![]()
The "fist tap" the article describes:
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It's not really accurate to compare Duncan FT's shooting with Shaq's...
Duncan once shot 80% from the FT line for a season...whereas Shaq legitimately has sucked at the FT line from day 1. It's not mental with him...he's just a ty FT shooter because he's a ty shooter period.
I'd describe Duncan's struggles at the FT line as more of a mental thing(arguably due to the fact that he got humiliated in the playoffs the year he shot 80% from the stripe)....because Duncan is a great shooter with an effortless stroke.
“I just find it quite funny that when you’re up 20 that you do it,” Shaq said after Game 4. “It still shows me that I’m the most feared 36-year-old guy on the planet.”
Ahhh right
More then anything Spurs killed the tempo with Hack- a Shaq, although I do not agree with Pop to go with that strategy every game and so constantly.
So Tim should make some rythym when he makes the shot with his mentality, like Amare doing it. No fluid move when Tim atempting FT.
It was even worse in 2003 when he basicly turned off the legs going into the line.
Im glad Duncan followed one of his big shots with a series win this time.
Thanks duncan228, I enjoy both their expressions![]()
If the Spurs and Lakers play the WCF, against who'll Shaq be rooting for?![]()
He does not watch games if he's not playing in it, that's what he said.
But I hope he will get past three more Playoffs rounds!
I hope he gets past a lot more playoffs rounds than that![]()
Ah im gonna miss Shaq.
Let me re-phrase the question.
What'd Shaq prefer: Kobe winning his 4th and 1st without him or Tim winning his 5th?
........In the past, a few teams have hacked Duncan the same way. But he got past those yips, which is fitting. The most complete big man in this era has gotten past everything.
Shaq thinking "I respect you, but I don't have to like you"
Tim thinking "I respect you, but I don't have to like you"
I know I'm in the minority, but I feel sorry for Shaq, and not just in a suns homer way.
Congrats Tim and the Spurs, but its hard to watch one of the NBA's greatest players who had given his new franchise such high hopes, fail so hard. I knew he had it coming to him after running his mouth and not respecting the Spurs. I shouldn't feel bad for him though I guess. He can always go crying to a big pile of money.
Shaq and Duncan are now 12-12 against each other in Playoff games.
Gotta respect both and Shaq played some fine defense this series - Duncan was just too deterimined.
Shaq pissed me off wit his comments and his lack of commitment to defense and FT shooting but I dont ever recall him missing so many layups and post-ups ...that is sad...he was once the most dominant inside presence but he was NEVER a better all-around player than Tim ...that is why Tim will be better than shaq at the same age ...
Exactly. Sure it may sting to him in the moment, but i think the fact that he is sleeping on million dollar sheets and wiping his ass with hundreds, probably makes up for it.
Sort of unfair that Shaq, past his prime, has been labeled Duncan's rival, beause IMO presently Duncan >> Shaq, a big margin . IMO Shaq's rivarly days were over after his prime. Duncan's true rival should have been KG, but he unfourtanely(sp) sucks.
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