Game Day Preview: Spurs vs. Suns

Written by Robby Lim on .

SAN ANTONIO SPURS (2-1) vs. PHOENIX SUNS (1-2)
TEAM LEADERS

Points Rebounds Assists
SPURS Manu Ginobili 19.7 Tim Duncan 8.7 Tony Parker 7.3
SUNS Jason Richardson 18.3 Robin Lopez 8.3 Steve Nash 6.7

The San Antonio Spurs will continue their road trip as they visit the Phoenix Suns at US Airways Center. The Suns swept the Spurs in last seasons' Western Conference semifinals matchup, so expect the Spurs to play hard and try to get some payback.

The Suns (1-2) are coming off a 114-106 loss against the Los Angeles Lakers while the Spurs (2-1) won their last game against the Los Angeles Clippers 97-88.

The Spurs might face the Suns without George Hill who suffered an injury after receiving a hard foul from Clippers' Craig Smith. If Hill cannot play, Gary Neal and James Anderson could see more playing time. It would be interesting to see if Tiago Splitter will get more action in this game.

The Suns will meet the Spurs for the first time since Amar'e Stoudemire signed with the New York Knicks, but they will have some frontcourt help from their newcomers Hedo Turkoglu and Hakim Warrick.

Keep an eye out on Tim Duncan. He could leave Phoenix as the second leading scorer in Spurs' history. Duncan is 23 points shy of matching George Gervin's total of 20,708 for second in franchise history.

KEYS TO THE GAME

SPURS:

Offense
-- Against the Suns' thin frontline, Duncan could have a great game. Also, the Spurs are sharing the ball well and averaging 27 assists in the first three games (good for third in the NBA). Tony Parker, Richard Jefferson and Manu Ginobili are leading the teams' offensive attack and Neal and Anderson are hitting their outside shots.

Defense -- The Suns are a team that can score and it will be key for the Spurs to contain Steve Nash and his play-making ability. The Spurs have to dictate the tempo of the game to keep the Suns off-balanced and try to take away the Suns' running game.

SUNS:

Offense -- The Suns' offense starts with Nash, but he gets a lot of help on offense. Entering the game against the Spurs, five Suns players are averaging in double figures.

Defense -- The Suns have to be wary of the Spurs' outside shooters especially if they opt to double Duncan down low. Also, containing Jefferson, Parker and Ginobili will be key.

INJURIES

Spurs -- George Hill - trapezoid muscle (day-to-day), Matt Bonner - sprained right ankle (out). 

Suns -- Josh Childress - sore hip (day-to-day)

PREDICTION: Last seasons' playoff ouster is still fresh on the Spurs' minds. Expect them to play hard and bring their game against the Phoenix Suns who are still integrating new players on their rotation. This will be a close one, but exciting if the Spurs continue to run-and-gun. The Spurs should win it by seven points or less.

A Wing and a Prayer

Written by Nick Kapsis on .

To know inward is to have the ability to look outward. To know is to acknowledge what you do and do not have or have the knowledge for. It’s having the intellectual curiosity or need to ascertain the requisite resources to enlighten or inform. To know is to have the tried and true, the answer to the question. Knowing is after the fact.

Each year brings its own set of question marks. Some more than others and others easier to define, but question marks nonetheless. They’re questions that can’t be answered, only addressed: “Have we covered all of our bases, has this team the potential to be its own answer?” The key is to give yourself a genuine and legitimate opportunity, not guarantee an outcome.

The San Antonio Spurs managed to capture four championships over a ten-year stretch while giving themselves a genuine and legitimate opportunity to win as many as seven or eight. They had the foundation of David Robinson, the greatness of Tim Duncan, arrivals of stars in Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili and the complimentary “glue” surrounding them all along the way.

All teams have pieces to create a framework, the Spurs’ fortune came from the foundation for which theirs was built -- the humility and selflessness of Robinson gave way for Duncan’s greatness to thrive undeterred, and it provided the conditions for which a system could be built. The questions could now be defined and the pieces could now be put into their rightful place. The Spurs became tried and true.

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Parker: "It was dirty."

Written by Jeff Garcia on .

During last night's San Antonio Spurs victory over the Los Angeles Clippers, George Hill was driving for a layup when Clippers' Craig Smith laid a hard foul on Hill in the second quarter which sent Hill hitting the floor hard.

Smith was given a flagrant-2 foul and was ejected from the game. Hill sat out the rest of the game with a spasm in his right trapezius muscle.

Tony Parker weighed in on the hard foul and had this to say:

“It was dirty,” Parker said after the game. “Just a dirty play. It was dangerous. Just no need to do that.” (Express News)

Got to agree with Parker. Indeed it was a bit too much from Smith. As the replay shows he wrapped his hands around Hill's neck and seems to not be going for the ball.  The ejection was appropriate.

In case you missed it, take a look and leave us your thoughts.

Stats of the Game: Spurs vs. Clippers

Written by Robby Lim on .

statofgame10The San Antonio Spurs got their first road win of the new season by beating the Los Angeles Clippers 97-88 at the Staples Center.

It was the fourth straight loss for the Clippers (0-4) who played without Baron Davis. The Spurs (2-1) beat the Clippers for the 17th straight time.

Tiago Splitter played in his NBA debut in limited action and George Hill only played six minutes because of a flagrant foul committed on him by Clipper's forward Craig Smith. Smith was subsequently ejected from the game.

The Spurs used their depth to win this one and it's time to check on the numbers that stood out on the teams' recent win.

80 - The Spurs made 12-15 (80%) of their foul shots compared to the Clippers who only converted 8-16 (50%) of their free throws.

46.3 - For the first time in three games, the Spurs held their opponents to less than 50% shooting from the field, holding the Clippers to a 46.3% shooting from the field while making 48.1% of their own shots.

42.9 - After making just 23.1% of their three point attempts against the Hornets, the Spurs converted 9-21 (42.9%) of their three point shots against the Clippers. Including 4-8 (50%) from Gary Neal and 2-3 (66.7%) from James Anderson.

42 - The Clippers dominated the paint outscoring the Spurs 42-36 on inside points with Griffin and Kaman combining for 35.

32 - The Spurs bench outscored the Clipper's bench 32-7. Sixteen coming from Neal and eight from Anderson.

23 - Eric Gordon led all scorers with 23 points, including a career high 11 assists.

19 - Tony Parker led the Spurs with 19 points, 9 assists and 3 steals.

16 - Gary Neal provided the offensive spark off the Spurs' bench. He scored 16 points, grabbed six boards and dished out two assists.

10 - Tiago Splitter played 10 minutes and had 2 points, 2 rebounds and a steal in his NBA debut.

0 - DeJuan Blair went scoreless in 20 minutes of action and took just one field goal attempt, he had 5 rebounds, an assist and a block. Richard Jefferson had zero turnover in 31 minutes of playing time and added 18 points for the Spurs.

What's Next? The Spurs will continue their road trip on Wednesday when they visit the Phoenix Suns at the US Airways Center. The Spurs will be looking for some revenge after being swept by the Suns in the playoffs last season.

Ready, set, Tiago

Written by Nick Kapsis on .

via Jeff McDonald - Express-News

Forty months after the Spurs made Splitter the 28th overall pick in the 2007 draft, and after he spent his entire first NBA preseason on the shelf with a strained calf muscle, the 6-foot-11 Brazilian player has been cleared play in tonight’s game against the L.A. Clippers at the Staples Center.

Splitter will come off the bench, and his playing time will be limited, but for now, any minutes are good minutes for Splitter.

“Being off the court all this time, nobody likes it,” Splitter said after shootaround this morning at Santa Monica High School. “It’s passed, and that’s it. I’m going to get better every day, get in shape and be part of the team.”

I suppose one could wax poetic or speak to the excitement and anticipation of seeing Splitter don the Spurs' black and silver for his first official game, and maybe even speak to the fact that his debut being against the Clippers should present a decent opportunity to gauge him as an athlete and player (Kaman, Griffin, Jordan and Co. are about as good as you're going to get), but I'm not. I'm simply going to say:

Al Bundy

'Bout time . . .

Game Day Preview: Spurs vs. Clippers

Written by Robby Lim on .

SAN ANTONIO SPURS (1-1) vs. LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS (0-3)
TEAM LEADERS

Points Rebounds Assists
SPURS Manu Ginobili 22.5 Tim Duncan 9.5 Tony Parker 6.5
CLIPPERS Eric Gordon 16.7 Blake Griffin 11.0 Baron Davis 5.7

The San Antonio Spurs will visit Blake Griffin and the Los Angeles Clippers for their first regular season game on the road. Both teams are coming off losses.

The Clippers (0-3) were defeated by the Dallas Mavericks 99-83 while the Spurs (1-1) lost against the New Orleans Hornets 99-90 last Saturday. Their first loss of the new season.

The Spurs will try to bounce back against a young Clippers team who are still win-less after three games. However, the Clippers remains a dangerous team. The trio of Griffin, Chris Kaman and Eric Gordon has shown improvement and has anchored the teams' potent offensive attack.

This could also be the NBA debut for Brazilian big man Tiago Splitter. If Tiago plays, the Spurs will get ample help upfront, especially on the defensive side of the floor.

KEYS TO THE GAME

SPURS:

Offense
-- The Spurs' offense starts with the 'Big Three', but Richard Jefferson is the teams' second leading scorer after two games, plus George Hill, DeJuan Blair and James Anderson can provide some offense. Also, expect a better game from Duncan on the offensive end after scoring just seven points in their loss against the Hornets.

Defense -- Defense has been the major issue for the Spurs, in the first two games, they are allowing their opponents to shoot 51.6% from the field. That only means they have to step up their overall defensive effort. Splitter's presence might ease the Spurs' woes in the interior.

CLIPPERS:

Offense -- Griffin, Gordon and Kaman are the center of their offense. But the Clippers have to shoot better from the field and from behind the three-point line to have a chance at beating the Spurs.

Defense -- The Clippers have enough big bodies to crowd Duncan and Blair inside the paint, it will be key for them to limit Tony Parker, Jefferson and Manu Ginobili's dribble penetrations .

INJURIES

Spurs -- Tiago Splitter - strained right plantaris muscle (probable), Matt Bonner - sprained right ankle (out). 

Clippers -- Randy Foye - hamstring (day-to-day), Craig Smith - back (day-to-day)

PREDICTION: The Spurs should focus and try to put the game away early and set the tone on defense to get back to the win column. The Clippers on the other hand, are a young team who will try their best to get their first season win at home.

The Spurs will have to use their experience and improve on defense to get it done. They will win this one and get back on the winning track, keeping the Clippers win-less after four games.

Stats of the Game: Spurs vs. Hornets

Written by Robby Lim on .

statofgame10San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich opted to bench Tim Duncan and Tony Parker for the entire fourth quarter with the Spurs trailing 76-60 entering the final period. As a result, the Spurs (1-1) lost to the New Orleans Hornets (3-0) 99-90 who remained unbeaten after three games.

It was the first lost of the season for the Spurs in only two games and it's too early to tell on how will the team fare for the rest of the season. For now, let's look at the numbers that stood out in this game.

63.6 - The Hornets had a great shooting night from behind the arc converting 7-11 (63.6%) of their 3-point attempts. The Spurs on the other hand, just made 6-26 (23.1%) of their 3 point shots.

50 - For the second straight game, the Spurs allowed their opponents to shot at least 50% from the field an indication that they need to improve a lot on defense. Also, the Spurs locked Tony Parker into a $50 million multi-year extension.

33 - The Hornets outscored the Spurs 33-18 in the third period that proved to be the turning point of the game.

38 - DeJuan Blair logged the most minutes in the game (38 minutes), and scored 4 points and grabbed 11 rebounds.

25 - Chris Paul had a game high 25 points to go a long with 7 rebounds and 5 assists in just 31 minutes of action.

23 - Manu Ginobili led the Spurs with 23 points and six assists in 37 minutes of playing time.

17 - The Hornets bench outscored the Spurs bench 35-25. With Marcus Thornton scoring 17 points off the bench.

2 - To sum up the Spurs woeful shooting from the floor, Tim Duncan (2-10), DeJuan Blair (2-10) and George Hill (2-7) only made two field goals each for the entire game.

What's Next? The Spurs will try to bounce back on Monday when they visit the Los Angeles Clippers at the Staples Center. This could be the NBA debut of Tiago Splitter.

On Parker’s extension

Written by Nick Kapsis on .

And just like that, the dishes are done, man.

Word broke today that Tony Parker and the San Antonio Spurs have come to an agreement on a 4-year, reportedly $50 million contract extension.

Unlike Manu Ginobili of a year ago, Parker wasn’t coming into camp off successive summers of surgery and rest and rehabilitation after significant injuries and with questions of his ability to return to form. He was coming off one of his most productive offseasons -- a summer away from his French team afforded him the opportunity to work on his body and game while managing plenty of rest.

Parker came into camp looking as fit as ever and with the gear he had lost last year due to nagging injuries. And with an impending CBA and enough evidence to suggest Parker was once again “Tony Parker,” the Spurs looked to waste no time.

$50 million over 4-years for Parker’s services seems quite the bargain in today’s NBA. And with his willingness to accept the offer so early on, forgoing next year’s free-agency in the process, this has to be a best-case scenario for everyone not named Steven Heumann (Parker’s agent). This is a vote of confidence on Parker’s behalf as much as it is him playing it conservative or even settling.

The Big Three will be afforded the rare opportunity to finish what they started, Parker will avoid the uncertainty of a new CBA (one in which salaries could be significantly slashed) and he’s given the confidence to know the franchise that gave him his start will continue to be his home.

The Spurs continue to be one of the shrewdest franchises going, once again finding a way to make sense out of cents. After plenty of criticism over the refinancing of Jefferson, there seems to be some method to the madness.

When the Spurs traded for and committed to the $29.4 million left on Jefferson’s contract last summer, they knew that it would make them a taxpayer for the next two seasons. The Spurs, nor anyone else, could have expected or believed a $15.2 million player-option would be opted out of.

Whether by dumb luck or some not-so-subtle prodding, Jefferson did decide to opt-out of his $15.2 million option. He was looking to secure as much guaranteed money as possible before the current CBA expired, and he was able to do just that -- to the tune of nearly $40 million.

RJ made out like a bandit, but the Spurs look to be in position to be more than all right.

What that opt out and extension did for the Spurs was two fold: they kept a talented player they believed could help in the program; and they managed to put themselves into a position to save $16-17 million, should they remain below the luxury-tax line.

With a lockout looming, it remains to be seen how many games will be played or dollars will be paid come next year. And with that prospect in mind, the Spurs jumped on an opportunity for guaranteed savings against the possibility of future cost.

And who knows, the Spurs just may find themselves in a better, more advantageous financial situation once the CBA’s renegotiated, or even two years from now. ... Should Duncan retire in 2012, they may only find themselves being a taxpayer for the 2011-12 season and no further. Two years of taxpayer status, once Jefferson was aboard, is what they expected all along.

In the end, this extension is a win-win. Parker’s given long-term security and the Spurs have given themselves the opportunity to keep a quality product on the floor for many years to come.

Score one for the fans.

Make that, a win-win-win.

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Spurs resign Parker

Written by Jeff Garcia on .

After a long summer of being involved in trade rumors, the San Antonio Spurs have resigned guard Tony Parker to a multi-year deal according to Humberto Cervera of News 4 WOAI. No contract details were given.

On media day, Parker avoided the question of signing an extension or testing the free-agent waters. This should take any pressure off Parker and the Spurs regarding his future in San Antonio.

UPDATE:

Parker's contract extension is for 4-years $50 million and said the following regarding the extension:

"I didn't mind playing through the year and be a free agent," Parker said. "But it was my first option and for my wife was to stay in San Antonio."

"It's home here," Parker said. "I love being with Pop. I love being with Timmy and Manu. I'm happy to keep the adventure going with them." (source abcnews.go.com)

Game Day Preview: Spurs vs. Hornets

Written by Robby Lim on .

SAN ANTONIO SPURS (1-0) vs. NEW ORLEANS HORNETS (2-0)
TEAM LEADERS

Points Rebounds Assists
SPURS Tim Duncan 23.0 Tim Duncan 12.0 Tony Parker 9.0
HORNETS David West 19.5 Emeka Okafor 8.5 Chris Paul 11.5

The San Antonio Spurs won their season opener over the Indiana Pacers 122-109 with their "Big Three" scoring at least 20 points a piece. They will try to start a winning streak of their own against their Southwest Division foe, New Orleans Hornets, who remain unbeaten after two games in the AT&T Center. The Spurs won the season series against the Hornets last season and are hoping to continue that trend.

The Hornets are coming off a thrilling 101-95 victory against the Denver Nuggets and will try to extend their winning streak to three games against a well rested San Antonio squad.

The Spurs will likely to continue to miss the services of Brazilian big man Tiago Splitter and Matt Bonner who is expected to be out up to two weeks after spraining his right ankle in the Spurs' season opener.

KEYS TO THE GAME

SPURS:

Offense
-- The Spurs used a balanced offensive attack on their season opener against the Pacers. It will be key for the Spurs to try and jump on their opponents early in game as the Hornets will play the second night of back-to-backs. Tim Duncan must establish his inside game and at the same time find open teammates to hit their outside shots.

Defense -- The Spurs need to be more consistent on defense and set the tone early. Though they did get the win over the Pacers, coach Popovich expressed disappointment over the lack of defense so expect a more concerted effort on defense. It will be key for them counter Chris Paul's play making ability. Paul has been a nightmare for opposing teams as he can score and get his teammates involve on offense.

HORNETS:

Offense -- It all starts with Paul, and he is getting plenty of help. After two games, four Hornets are averaging in double figures. David West has been anchoring the teams' inside offense while Trevor Ariza and Marco Belinelli has provided backcourt scoring.

Defense -- Limiting Duncan on the inside and defending the perimeter. The Spurs shot 45% from behind the arc entering this game. Also, transition defense seeing how the Spurs used more of a running game in their win over the Pacers.

INJURIES

Spurs -- Tiago Splitter - strained right plantaris muscle (out), Matt Bonner - sprained right ankle. 

Hornets -- None.

PREDICTION: The Spurs might have caught a good break as they will face a Hornets team that played their starters heavy minutes against the Denver Nuggets the night before. However, the Spurs should be wary of the Hornets' balanced offensive attack and try to establish their defense at the start of the game, and try to pull away early.

The Spurs will lean on their experience and depth against the Hornets and will get their second victory in as many games.

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