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TUESDAY, MAY 21, 2013

Posts Tagged ‘TONY PARKER’

grizzlies spurs

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — On the best playoff run in their short history, the Memphis Grizzlies refuse to be satisfied with just reaching their first Western Conference final.

The San Antonio Spurs? Well, they know time is running out for a team that has done so very much in the NBA playoffs yet last celebrated a championship in 2007.

Blowing a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals a year ago to Oklahoma City has driven the Spurs since training camp, and now they are back with Game 1 on Sunday against Memphis determined not to waste another chance.

“We understand as a team that those opportunities are very rare, and we have another great one right now,” Spurs guard Tony Parker said Saturday. “We have home-court advantage against a very good team, so we have to take full advantage of it.”

The Grizzlies are the former expansion franchise that started off in Vancouver before moving to Memphis, and they started by setting the NBA record for postseason futility while losing their first 12 playoff games.

Coach Lionel Hollins, who won an NBA title in 1977 as a player with Portland, has his Grizzlies believing they can win one, too. The No. 5 seed in the West ousted first the Clippers, then the Thunder by winning eight of its last nine games, including three of four on the road.

“We’re just worried about going forward,” Grizzlies guard Mike Conley said. “We’re happy to be here, but we’re still focused on bigger things, and we got another tough opponent.”

That would be the Spurs with Tim Duncan, Parker and Manu Ginobili who swept the Grizzlies out of their first postseason in 2004. When Memphis finally won a postseason series, they beat the Spurs in six games in 2011, kicking off that series by winning the first game in San Antonio. Ginobili said the Spurs were not at their best that series and struggled to stop the Grizzlies’ big men in Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph.

“We started with the wrong foot, we lost the first one and they got stronger and confident, and that’s how they beat us,” Ginobili said.

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carmelo-anthony-knicks

GREENBURGH, N.Y. — Pablo Prigioni could return to the starting lineup. Jason Kidd will remain in the rotation.

Whichever players are on the court for the New York Knicks when they try to save their season Thursday night, coach Mike Woodson just wants them to shoot with confidence.

“All you can do is continue to shoot and you shoot the next one, you’ve got to feel good about that it’s going to go in,” Woodson said Wednesday at practice while players took some jumpers that, indeed, did go in. “Right now we’re kind of looking over our shoulders.”

And right at a daunting situation.

The Indiana Pacers can eliminate the Knicks in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals Thursday. Only eight NBA teams have overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a series, and it’s doubtful any of them looked as hopeless offensively as these Knicks.

Averaging 88.3 points on 41.2 percent shooting in the series, the Knicks believe things can be different back on their home floor, though the Pacers looked perfectly comfortable at Madison Square Garden while winning Game 1.

“Every game is huge, it doesn’t matter whether it’s 0-0, 3-1. It doesn’t matter,” Indiana coach Frank Vogel said following the Pacers’ 93-82 victory in Game 4.

More Prigioni would likely mean less of Kidd or J.R. Smith, the two Knicks in the deepest slumps. Kidd is 0 for 7 and scoreless in the series, part of a 0-for-16 skid that began with Game 3 against Boston in the first round. The 40-year-old point guard, surely headed for the Hall of Fame, is 3 of 24 in the postseason and hasn’t scored since hitting a 3-pointer against the Celtics in Game 2 on April 23. Yet he will get another chance Thursday.

“I’ll never kick J-Kidd to the curb, man,” Woodson said. “I mean, Kidd has been a positive for our club, our franchise, and these players that play around him. And we all still believe in Kidd. My thing is, I think he still does some of the intangibles — they might not show up in terms of scoring the ball — to help you win.”

Smith is 18 of 64 (28 percent) in the series and after Game 4 said he was to blame for the Knicks’ problems. Woodson disagreed — “I’m the head coach of the team, blame it on me,” he said — and Smith was alternately hard on himself and confident Wednesday.

“You’re going to have those spurts during the regular season, but during the playoffs is when the good players become great,” Smith said. “Right now, me myself, I’m playing just as average as can be, but my confidence is still up there and my teammates still have the confidence in me, and a lot of guys talked to me today and told me to keep my head up and keep playing. That not only goes for me, it goes for the whole team.”

warriors spurs playoffs

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Forgive the San Antonio Spurs if they aren’t that excited about holding a 3-2 series lead over the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference semifinals.

After all, they’ve been ahead twice before.

If the Spurs want to close out the Warriors in Game 6 on Thursday night at rowdy Oracle Arena, they’ll have to do what neither team has in this series: win consecutive games. Golden State also is 4-0 after a loss in the playoffs.

“Nobody talks about getting this over with like you’ve got a rash,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “Like you can take a pill or put some cream on it, it’s going to be gone. This is a war. They’re a class team. They bust their (butts) at both ends of the floor. It’s not about getting rid of anything. It’s about going and playing and that’s about it.”

San Antonio has increasingly shown its veteran savvy the last three games, and Golden State has looked like it’s finally wearing down from all its injuries.

Tony ParkerTim Duncan and the rest of the Spurs overwhelmed the Warriors in Tuesday night’s 109-91 win in San Antonio. Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson – described by Coach Mark Jackson as the “greatest shooting backcourt in NBA history” — combined to score just 13 points on 6-of-22 shooting.

Curry has refused to use the left ankle he sprained late in Game 3 as an excuse, but anybody who has watched can clearly see he has been slowed by the injury. Thompson, who failed to even attempt a 3-pointer for the first time all season Tuesday, has been shut down by San Antonio since scoring 34 points in Game 2.

Neither Curry nor Thompson was made available to speak to reporters during the team’s light shootaround Wednesday in Oakland. The rest of the Warriors insist they’re not worried about the “Splash Brothers” or the team’s ability to respond.

“We’re never going to quit. We’re never going to die. We’ve got a lot of fight left. This isn’t the end,” Warriors forward Carl Landry said. “Actually, we’re excited about having the opportunity to play in a Game 6. Everybody in that locker room is excited and ready.”

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golden state warriors

OAKLAND, Calif. — His spirits down, his left ankle limp and his team’s season hanging in the balance, Stephen Curry wondered whether he could recover for the biggest game of his career until a text message popped up on his phone around 2 a.m. Saturday.

Curry called back his mother, Sonya, and vented his frustrations about his latest — and most inopportune — injury setback. Finally, she spoke up to calm his concerns.

“She just reminded me and battled tested me to rely on my teammates and support,” Curry said.

What followed was a Mother’s Day masterpiece.

Curry scored 22 points to go with six rebounds and four assists on a bum ankle, rallying the Golden State Warriors past the San Antonio Spurs 97-87 in overtime Sunday to even the Western Conference semifinal at two games apiece.

“It seems like every time you get on a roll and feel somewhat healthy there’s a setback,” said Curry, who shot 7 of 15 from the floor, including 5 of 10 from 3-point range. “And it just tests you. It changes your routine. It changes your outlook on the game, your preparation. You’ve got to deal with the injury and the adjustments your making as a team.”

Game 5 is Tuesday in San Antonio.

Curry and the Warriors overcame the obstacles with contributions from all over.

Harrison Barnes had 26 points and 10 rebounds, Jarrett Jack added 24 points in reserve and Andrew Bogut grabbed 18 rebounds to help Golden State erase an eight-point deficit in the final five minutes of regulation. The Warriors scored the first nine points of overtime to whip the yellow-shirt wearing crowd of 19,596 into frenzy and give this topsy-turvy series yet another twist.

Even Warriors coach Mark Jackson doubted whether Curry could play, especially after his star point guard took an anti-inflammatory injection in the morning to ease the soreness in his sprained ankle and still had trouble getting loose. Jackson cornered Curry outside the chapel service at the arena to see how he felt.

“He said, `I’m going to give you what I got, coach,’ That’s not the language he speaks. I knew right away that he was not 100 percent,” said Jackson, who conferred with general manager Bob Myers in his office before letting Curry play. “Once again, it’s that same spirit flowing through that locker room that refuses to quit.”

Even for all of theater Curry provided, the Spurs seized control of a sloppy slugfest at the start — then went cold shooting when it mattered most.

Tony Parker, wearing a black sleeve around his bruised left calf that, poured in 17 points on 6-of-17 shooting but never broke free the way he did in scoring 32 points the previous contest, saying the injury limited his ability to elevate. Manu Ginobili had 21 points and Tim Duncan added 19 points and 15 rebounds as the Spurs ran out of steam in the end.

“We put ourselves in a position to win the game and it’s frustrating because we feel like we gave it away,” Duncan said.

Golden State outshot San Antonio 38 to 35.5 to percent. The Warriors also outrebounded the Spurs 65-51.

“They did a good job in overtime. Just as simple as that,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said.

Ginobili hit a mid-range jumper and a 3-pointer, and Kawhi Leonard put back a rebound for an easy layup to put the Spurs ahead 80-72 with 4:49 remaining in the fourth quarter. With the series slipping away from the Warriors, their home sellout crowd sat down and fell silent for one of the few times in the fourth quarter all postseason.

Jack hit three jumpers and Klay Thompson added another to pull the Warriors even with less than a minute to play in regulation. After Parker provided a jumper to put the Spurs ahead 84-82, Thompson dribbled to his right and banked in the tying shot over Leonard with 30 seconds left.

Both teams missed shots to win in regulation, and the Warriors turned the extra session into a runaway.

Curry capped the overtime spurt with a floating layup, drawing a foul on Duncan to begin a three-point play that gave Golden State a 93-84 lead. San Antonio missed its first nine shots — and two free throws by Danny Green — to start overtime until Green’s corner 3 with 1:29 remaining.

By then, it was too late — Curry had taken control again.

“He’s a player that you may see him playing one leg, one arm, and you got to guard him,” Ginobili said. “So you got to respect him. He can really go off at any time.”

The upstart Warriors are once again on the brink of something big.

The franchise hadn’t won two games beyond the first round since 1977, when it pulled even with the Lakers in the conference semifinals through four games before losing in seven. This time, all the odds seemed against them again.

The tight turnaround from Friday night’s game to the early afternoon start Sunday surely didn’t help Curry’s cause.

Curry clearly favored his left ankle and never showed any burst off the dribble, often getting face-guarded by Spurs defenders and taken out of the offense. Some of his teammates even wondered whether he’d respond.

“Watching him warm up, I said, `Man, there’s no way this kid is playing,” Jack said. “Then watching him run around on one leg, he looked like Isiah Thomas against the Lakers in the finals, man. The performance he put on down the stretch, making plays, making shots, defensively, I sat back and was honestly in awe.”

With Curry quieted on the perimeter early and Bogut benched in foul trouble most of the first half, the Warriors missed 13 straight shots and went scoreless for 7:10. The Spurs scored 14 unanswered points during that spurt, Ginobili made his first four 3s and the Spurs later took a 41-30 lead midway through the second quarter on Green’s put-back dunk.

The Warriors had been 0-3 when trailing after three quarters this postseason until Curry and company came back.

Curry hadn’t checked in with his family when he spoke to reporters while soaking his feet in a bucket of ice in the locker room afterward. But he knew they were all watching from North Carolina with his brother, Seth, who was graduating from Duke.

“It was,” he said, “a big day for the Currys.”

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San Antonio Spurs v Golden State Warriors

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OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The San Antonio Spurs are suddenly the team with a relaxed point guard who can dominate, and the Golden State Warriors are back to worrying about theirs.

Tony Parker cracked jokes and declared he’d “definitely” start before he rested face down on a table for a massage on his bruised left calf during San Antonio’s practice at the University of San Francisco on Saturday. Stephen Curry never surfaced during the portion of Golden State’s light shootaround open to reporters at the team’s downtown Oakland headquarters, going through treatment on his nagging left ankle behind closed doors.

The Warriors said X-rays on Curry’s ankle were negative and no MRI exam is scheduled. Curry told a pool reporter in the afternoon that he’s hopeful to play — though remained murky about how much or how well — and is officially a game-time decision for Sunday’s critical Game 4 tilt of the Western Conference semifinals.

The Spurs lead the best-of-seven series 2-1.

“You never really know how it’s going to feel the next day,” Curry said. “You just keep with the treatment. Same ol’ story. I have the same answers.”

Just as this season began with questions about his troublesome ankles, the biggest game of Curry’s career is being overshadowed by questions about his durability.

Curry came off a curl and his left ankle — which he sprained in Game 2 in the first round against Denver but seemed to finally be back to full strength — landed awkwardly when he planted his feet to receive the ball with a little less than five minutes remaining. Curry hobbled around but stayed in the game, with nervous chants of “Curry! Curry!” breaking out among the yellow-shirt wearing sellout crowd of 19,596.

Curry limped out of the locker room and walked down a long hallway with his left ankle — not the twice surgically repaired right ankle that has sidelined him in past seasons — wrapped in black tape. Warriors coach Mark Jackson said Curry appeared in better spirits when the two passed each other at an intersection driving to practice in the morning and Curry waved and honked his car horn.

“I’ve been there where I’ve put my head down, didn’t want to talk to my coach,” Jackson said.

The tight turnaround between games likely won’t help Curry’s cause. Sunday’s game starts at 12:30 p.m. local time, giving him about 38 hours from the end of Friday night’s game to recover.

Curry said he’s not planning on receiving another anti-inflammatory injection to help ease the pain, which he did after Game 2 and before Game 3 against Denver for the first time in his career, because “you don’t want to get into that kind of habit.”

“I’m hoping my body responds on its own enough to eliminate that from the conversation,” he said.

The setback for San Antonio’s All-Star point guard seems far less severe.

Warriors center Andrew Bogut inadvertently kicked Parker’s calf in the fourth quarter. Parker came out of the game briefly, and trainers wrapped his leg as he sat on the bench.

Parker said the bruise “feels like a baseball in my calf” and limited his ability to elevate on shots when he returned. Doctors determined no X-rays were necessary, and he planned to spend the off day trying to loosen up the muscle, including working out in a pool.

“I just can’t see myself not playing,” said Parker, who scored 25 of his 32 points in the first half of San Antonio’s 102-92 win Friday night at Oracle Arena to regain home-court advantage. “I’ll definitely play.”

So much about this Western Conference semifinal has flip-flopped, and both sides remained cautious knowing it easily could again.

The Warriors led for 95 of 106 minutes in the first two games, leaving San Antonio with a disappointing split after blowing a 16-point lead in the final four minutes of Game 1 to lose in double overtime. Curry and backcourt teammate Klay Thompson took turns with scintillating shooting displays, then both went cold in Game 3 for the first time.

San Antonio outshot Golden State 50.6 to 39.3 percent by curbing Curry and Thompson on the perimeter, though the Spurs didn’t feel like they defended any differently.

“There’s no answer to anything like that,” Popovich said. “You just play the game. Some nights you shoot it better than other nights. They didn’t shoot it as well as they did, and we shot better. If there was a formula for that, everybody would be shooting 50 of 60 percent every night.”

If Curry can’t play or is limited, that surely wouldn’t bode well for Golden State’s chances of regain its streak shooting stroke.

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After a loss like that the Warriors might get swept… SMH !!!

SAN ANTONIO — Manu Ginobili’s 3-pointer from the wing with 1.2 seconds

left in double overtime lifted the San Antonio Spurs to a thrilling 129-127

victory over the Golden State Warriors and Stephen Curry’s 44 points in

Game 1 of their Western Conference second round series Monday night.

The Spurs trailed by 16 points with 4 minutes left in regulation before going

on an 18-2 run to close the fourth quarter and force overtime.

They trailed 127-126 with 3.9 seconds left in the second overtime before Gin-

obili hit his 3-pointer off a cross-court inbounds pass from Kawhi Leonard.

Golden State had one final chance but Jarrett Jack’s 3-pointer from the top

of the key was off.

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