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Differentiation

Game 6:  San Antonio 97 @ New Orleans 85

The Spurs-Hornets game felt like two separate games.  Pop spent the first half screwing around, going with one of his patented "let's try to dig ourselves a huge hole" lineups of Washington, Bowen, Udoka, Oberto and Elson for the first 3 minutes of the second quarter (they were -6 over that stretch).  Manu air-balled his first two shots and looked offensively skittish the remainder of the half.  Team defense was lackluster, allowing Chris Paul to get to any spot on the floor.


Manu trying to perfect his flying arabesque.  (AP Photo / Alex Brandon)

The second half, however, was a good old-fashioned beat-down.  For the second game in a row Pop went with Manu to start the second half and the rout was on.  Duncan was ruthlessly and effortlessly efficient, Parker was proving points in the paint with either his left or right hands, Manu was throwing passes through lanes unseen by mere mortals and Bowen took Peja entirely out of the game (he might as well have stolen his only pair of sneakers).  The Hornets were openly frustrated and at one point Paul gave somebody an on-court tongue-lashing.  In my opinion he needs to worry more about his own defense; Parker left him flat-footed multiple times.

In fact, Tony Parker once again far outplayed Chris Paul, to the point where I found myself wondering if the league-wide infatuation with CP3 is justified.  He's a good point guard, no doubt, but I think he gets too much credit for being a willing passer.  It's as if fans and pundits miss the pass-first point guard and therefore heap undeserved praise upon the first young "torch-carrier" they find.


Tony preparing to spin another layup off the glass.  (AP Photo / Alex Brandon)

Is it not a point guard's job to lead a productive offense by getting your most efficient scorers the ball?  Is it Tony's fault that he's an efficient scorer and one of the most deadly finishers in the game?  Should we blame Tony for Pop not running a fast break offense?  Shouldn't it be clear to most Spurs fans that Tony fits this team much better than Paul would?  Don't we take The Wee Frenchman for granted?  And wouldn't "The Oui Frenchman" be a little cleverer?

Tony doesn't get the fairest of shakes from Spurs fans because he plays with the most creative (if not the best) passing two guard in the game who, if anything, is too unselfish.  That pass that Manu made to Bonner... shit, it made me giggle.  The Gingerhead Man wasn't really even open.  It was more a confluence of simultaneous events that led to the possibility of an opening:  Manu's man put his hands down for a split second; Elson's man has his arms down and Bonner's man, though positioned between Bonner and Manu, has his back turned.  So Ginobili threads the ball between two Hornets to a spot where, if Bonner's paying attention, he should be able to catch the ball and lay it in.  There's no real passing lane; there's a hope, a whim, a fancy, a "wouldn't it be cool if this worked" chance...


In a word, art.

But let us also appreciate the work of another.  The fearlessness, the ability to alter, change and adjust in midair.  To maintain balance, to contort around an 82" moving obstruction, recalculate angles and trajectories to determine the necessary angular velocity of spin.  And to make it appear as if nothing amazing happened, to not even break stride.  Is it not also beautiful?  Does it not also make you smile?


French expressionism.



0 recs  |  Comment 7 comments

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Re: Differentiation
  I've been keeping quiet about this on any other blogs, but between Manu and Tony, the Spurs are becoming one of the most entertaining teams to watch.
  I used to tell people that the Spurs were fun to watch if you understood the game at all.  Now, I keep my mouth shut and let the heathen worship their false idols elsewhere.  LeBron?  Absolutely!  So what if he can't drive left or play defense?  That's only like, half the court and half the game!  Amare?  Unearthly athleticism, size, and grace...  Completely without parallel or precedent in the NBA - unless you count that boring-stiff-ass Robinson guy from SA a few years ago, which no-one does.  Or KB24?  Undoubtedly the best, all-time greatest H-O-R-S-E player of all time.  Actual team basketball?  That's another story...

Spurs fans have been completely spoiled by this team for the past decade... don't know what I'm going to do when this trio retires.

chaos... panic... pandemonium... my work here is done.

by rick2g on Nov 11, 2007 4:13 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Re: Differentiation
One of the things that I love about this blog is that the two main contributors have the ability to express my thoughts on the Spurs almost to a T, and sometimes even my biases.

I couldn't be happier with Tony and Manu right now, especially with Manu. There're some moments during the game when I wish Tony wouldn't have that urge to finish down below, but then he does it during a difficult moments in a close game and somehow pulls it off amongst giants, and you simply have to love him.

Despite his Frenchiness. And his wife. And his music.

At the risk of being mocked openly by everyone here... could someone teach me to insert photos into posts? HTML is not my forte.

I'll go look for a tutorial somewhere...

Nice post, Matthew, as always. Thanks for the YT links.

by LatinD on Nov 11, 2007 10:42 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Re: Differentiation
i had not seen that. truly sick.  

by booth52 on Nov 12, 2007 1:29 AM CST reply actions   0 recs

Re: Differentiation
Great post. THAT PASS! I have always thought the pass between Kobe's legs to Horry a few years ago was the best pass of all time. But the one to Bonner comes damn close. I've replayed it several dozen times and my jaw still drops every time. No one, NO ONE, even dreams the possibility of that pass. No one, NO ONE, dares even try it. There is an opening the exact size of the basketball, no more. Manu has to pass it from a very weird, uncomfortable, awkward angle, one from which it appears he can get no zip on it. Yet, there it goes, a hundred miles an hour, whizzing thru the air, right thru the needle hole. That, my dear friends, is truly one for the ages.

by agutierrez on Nov 12, 2007 8:30 AM CST reply actions   0 recs

Re: Differentiation
BTW: couldn't agree with you more about how chickenshit it was for Pop to mention the foul in the championship video. I wonder if he also belittled Tim about missed free throws or TP about turnovers, or did he praise Manu for hitting the three that gave us the lead on Dallas to begin with.
Don't know what motivates him but something is definitely driving him like never before.  

by agutierrez on Nov 12, 2007 11:06 AM CST reply actions   0 recs

TP
That last paragraph should be read w/ Bill Walton's voice cuz it's the kind of thing he would say.

by Gino20 on Nov 12, 2007 12:43 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Re: Differentiation
Just looked at THE PASS again. There are actually three Hornets between Manu and Bonner: Manu's man, Elson's and Bonner's. Bonner actually calls for the ball to be thrown in front of Elson just in front of the free throw line. But Manu sees that Elson is moving in that direction and will probably catch it instead. Also, if he throws it to Bonner there, the defensive player playing just to the right of the basket will have time to rotate and block the shot. So he throws it thru his man, behind Elson's (and the guy doesn't even react, it goes by him so fast) and in front of Bonner's man who's back is turned. As you say, no one else could even envision the possibility. Genius on the court. What a joy, thrill and honor to watch this man play. Onward.

by agutierrez on Nov 12, 2007 7:58 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

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