Playoff Game Day Preview: Spurs vs. Suns Game 1
| TEAM LEADERS | |||
| Points | Rebounds | Assists | |
| SPURS | Manu Ginobili 19.0 | Tim Duncan 9.5 | Tony Parker 5.7 |
| SUNS | Jason Richardson 23.5 | Grant Hill 8.3 | Steve Nash 9.8 |
During their last two playoff encounters, the San Antonio Spurs have defeated the Phoenix Suns; in 2007 on their to way to their fourth championship and in 2008 when Tim Duncan made an improbable 3-pointer in the first game of that series.
However, these are not the same teams that met before, the Spurs now have Richard Jefferson, Antonio McDyess, DeJuan Blair and George Hill. While the Suns also improved their lineup by adding Jason Richardson and Channing Frye after missing the playoffs last year.
The Suns won the season series over the Spurs 2-1. Richardson had a surprising first round series leading the Phoenix Suns in scoring averaging 23.5 points and 6.8 rebounds in six games. He also shot 52.7% from the field and 51.2% from 3-point range.
On the other hand, the Spurs found out that they have another play-maker in George Hill. Hill had a solid first round series against the Mavs averaging 14.3 points as the Spurs' starting point guard.
On Defense: Just the same, as Duncan creates matchup problems for the Suns; Stoudemire is the main player to watch on a Suns lineup that plays at a quicker pace. Whether Antonio McDyess is up for another great challenge in defending a player like Amare remains to be seen. The Spurs should also be wary of the Suns' outside shooters and their up tempo game.
SUNS
On Defense: Besides Duncan, can the Suns contain Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker or George Hill? Tony Parker is a matchup nightmare for Steve Nash and Manu Ginobili, when he is on; can light up the scoreboard. Grant Hill will probably defend Manu and Jefferson on some cases. But George Hill could be the X-factor of this series. It will be key for the Suns to can limit the Spurs' inside points and the clog passing lines inside the paint.
The Suns have homecourt advantage, but that was the case the last time these teams met in the playoffs. Both teams are "well rested" and should do their best to draw first blood. Given the Suns impressive series win over Portland, this will be a close one but the Spurs will be able to steal Game 1 in Arizona, 102-99.








In last season's playoffs, the San Antonio Spurs were ousted by the Dallas Mavericks in five games in the first round. This time, the Spurs returned the favor, booting the Mavericks in six games. A Dallas team that hoped for a championship this season after adding key pieces (Caron Butler and Brendan Haywood) at the trade deadline last February.
In Game 4, Blair provided some instant offense and timely rebounds as he helped the Spurs preserve a seven point lead going into the final period. They won that game by three points 92-89. Blair's line for the game -- 7 points, 7 boards (5 offensive) on 3-4 shooting from the field. He also added an assist, a block and a steal without a single turnover in just 12 minutes of playing time.
Before this series started, I predicted that the
Nonetheless, the Spurs still have Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker -- the main core that has won three championships.
But Pop kept Blair in and he started the second quarter. Early, he missed a hook shot, but on the next Spurs possession he got his lone assist on a Tony Parker jump shot. Two Dallas possessions later, he fouled Brendan Haywood who was unable to connect on both free throws.
Still recovering from a broken nose in Game 3, Manu Ginobili still managed to start for San Antonio alongside Richard Jefferson, Tim Duncan, Antonio McDyess, and George Hill. The Mavericks gained the first possession as Dirk Nowitzki made the first shot of the night only to be answered quickly by Ginobili to tie the game 2-2.