I hate the Spurs more than anything in the world.
Right on par with the Lakers.
Probably even more at this point.
And I think this is as much of a dagger as a game one win can be...Phoenix's morale is gonna be shot.
What's wrong with the Spurs? They play the game straight. Nice comeback too.
Seems somehow wrong for this to be a firt round matchup.
What's wrong with the Spurs? They play the game straight. Nice comeback too.
Seems somehow wrong for this to be a firt round matchup.
This was an instant NBA classic
Is Bowen included in this statement? Ginobli's floppery puts even Vlade to shame. I CANT stand them either. At this point if WCF came down to Lakers v Spurs. I'd cheer for Lakers (stone me if you must)
Great game though.
The Phoenix Suns remind me a lot of the Kings when they were good. Both have a flashy style of play and have the same components player wise. They also have that aura about them that eventhough they are great in the regular season, one way or the other they are going to crap out in the playoffs. Its like Deja Vu.
Phoenix is more talented than this San Antonio team, and San Antonio needed a miracle three to win game one, but remember in 02 the Kings were overall the more talented team and LA needed a miracle three to win game four. It doesnt matter how you win the game or how lucky you needed to be, what matters is that you won.
I hate the Spurs more than anything in the world.
Right on par with the Lakers.
Probably even more at this point.
And I think this is as much of a dagger as a game one win can be...Phoenix's morale is gonna be shot.
That final decision to forgo the timeout and take it right to the rim was both a shining example of the the Suns' fatal flaw and of the Spurs' knowledge of how to exploit it.
D'Antoni also demonstrated his coaching ability by leaving Shaq on the bench on that final sequence even though it was under the 2-min mark. If I know Shaquille Rashaun, he wasn't too pleased at seeing Manu getting as much resistance in the paint at the 58th minute as he would have in the 1st minute.
No mention of them not fouling either of the two times the Spurs needed three to tie? That just killed me.
I just don't understand why no one in the NBA employs this strategy.
I think coaches just wanna let the chips fall where they may. They don't want to make a call and then something goes wrong which will be blamed on them forever.
If pressed, I could come up w/ at least 4 examples of games lost because of the primary team not securing the 2nd miss (whether the FT was missed intentionally or accidentally). I think that's the thought that terrifies coaches. They'll think "what if?" forever.
You watched the Lakers/Pistons game in '04. If the Lakers had used that Game 2 win to propel them to three more wins in a row, it would be directly related to the decision NOT to foul. I firmly believe that decision lost them that game, and against a team like the Lakers, it could have easily lost them the series.
I don't think not securing the 2nd free throw miss could be blamed on the coach, either. You put your three best rebounders/shot blockers on the free throw lane, and you tell them to box out like their life depended on it, don't foul on the rebound, and make sure you cover the shooter. It's not that big of a deal. If your players don't do their job, or if there's a miraculous series of events (Game 4, 2002 WCF) when there's nothing that you could have done differently, that's not the coach's fault, I don't think.
And if you can think of four instances where the 2nd miss wasn't rebounded by the defense and cost the game, I can think of 40 instances where the last second three pointer cost the game.
I mean, letting the chips fall where they may is not a good way to coach. You think the Lakers are paying Phil Jackson $10 million a year to let whatever's going to happen, happen? He's there to make those tough decisions and live with the consequences, but I don't think that type of decision, even if it costs your team the game or the series, would cost you your job. Not by itself.