Earning His Spurs: Part Four

Rarely can a player change the momentum of a game in 12 minutes of play, but in Sunday night's victory over the Dallas Mavericks, that's exactly what DeJuan Blair did. Blair finished the game with seven points, seven rebounds, one assist, one steal and one blocked shot.
Blair checked into the game with 1:52 left in the first to give Tim Duncan a breather. Right away, Blair missed an early lay-up against Brendan Haywood, but that would be Blair's only missed field goal of the night. With time running out in the first, Tony Parker made a strong move to lane but was blocked by Haywood. Blair recovered the loose ball and was able to find George Hill in the corner for a three as time expired. Blair's assist gave the Spurs a three point lead heading into the second quarter.
In every game this series, the team winning the first quarter has gone on to win the game. Recovering loose balls, or as Rick Carlisle called them in his post game interview 50/50 balls, would be a reoccurring theme for Blair the rest of the game.
Blair started the second quarter in place of Duncan. Three minutes into the second quarter, Blair made a tough, physical move on Haywood, using his body to push off him and creating enough space to finish with an easy lay-up over the bigger Mavericks center. Blair made the best of his minutes and gave Duncan needed time to rest.
Unlike the previous three games, Blair showed up big for the Spurs in the second half. He came in for Duncan with 3:13 left in the third and picked up were he left off in the first half. He recovered another 50/50 ball then scored another lay-up.
On the next Dallas possession, after a Ginobili loose ball foul, Blair picked off Caron Butler's inbound pass and knocked it to Richard Jefferson. Jefferson passed it to Ginobili who missed a contested lay-up, but Blair was there and grabbed another one of his five offensive rebounds, and got fouled going strong to the rim. Blair and Mavercks star Dirk Nowitzki got into it after Manu hit free throws for a technical on Nowtizki, but Blair made the right decision and calmly walked away, not risking the chance of getting a technical and giving the Mavs easy points.
When the fourth quarter started DeJuan Blair was still on the court, and Duncan was on the bench, resting his now 34-year-old knees. He grabbed his fourth offensive board off a missed Jefferson three, then passed it to Ginobili who was clotheslined by Edurado Najera. Najera was called for the flagrant two foul and ejected from the game. Ginobili made both free throws and the Spurs retained possession of the ball. Blair then grabbed his fifth rebound of the night and scored his sixth and seventh point on the tip in of a Ginobili miss. On the very next Mavericks possession, Blair blocked a J.J. Barea jump shot. But with tensions running high between these bitter two rivals, after a missed Tony Parker shot, Blair hit Jason Kidd across the face and was called for a flagrant one foul. Duncan came in for Blair at the 10:07 mark in the fourth.
Playoff basketball is extremely emotional, and Blair being the young player that he is might have got a little two emotional. But that's exactly what we want from Blair. A player who leaves it all out on the court and gives everything he has to the team.
Sunday night, that's what Blair did. He sacrificed his body and left it all out on the court in the little amount of time he had. I think we might see Blair play a couple more minutes per game. And I can't wait.







He even got the moniker "Big Shot Rog" because of his penchant for hitting game winners during the regular season. Most notably against the LA Clippers, Phoenix Suns and the LA Lakers.
The only way for Mason to earn more minutes is to make his shots when given the chance and maybe make a hustle play or two when he is on the floor. He has to make the Spurs realize that he really wants to help the team win.
After a slow start from both teams early in the 2nd, Dallas went on a 7-0 run to regain the lead 27-24. After a Antonio McDyess 20 foot jumper Dallas went on another 8-0 run to push the lead to 35-26 and forcing Coach Greg Popovich to call a time out to stop the run and talk it over. Coming out of the time out, Ginobili made a 4 foot runner to stop the bleeding, only to see Dallas go on another 8-0 run and then push the lead to 15 points, 43-28. The Spurs were getting out rebounded, outscored and simply outplayed. Had it not been for the great play of George Hill, he scored 13 points, the Spurs could have easily been down by 20 plus points. Dallas outscored the Spurs 31-17 in the 2nd quarter and held the lead at the break, 48-37.
Adjustments are what make the playoffs so great. Any team can flop a game, watch some tape, figure out what they need to do, and do it. But what separates a good team from a great team is that teams ability to execute the adjustments on court. That's why the spurs have been one of the best teams of the last decade. Gregg Popovich is one of the best coaches there is when it comes to playoff adjustments.
In his