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Updated: May 13, 2005, 6:57 PM ET
Tough Tim spurs on teammates![]() AP The Spurs are a protective bunch, especially when little Tony Parker is endangered. SAN ANTONIO -- Manu Ginobili had the most points and Nazr Mohammed had the most rebounds, but it would be comical to call anyone other than Tim Duncan the offensive and defensive leader of the Spurs Tuesday night. When the Sonics futilely tried to avoid a second decisive loss by rattling the Spurs' collective cages, Duncan did more than refuse to back down. He took the fight -- in pure basketball terms -- to the Sonics, putting Jerome James, Reggie Evans and Nick Collison all in foul trouble while letting it be known he wouldn't tolerate any of the other Spurs being manhandled, either. "The most laidback superstar I've ever seen or played with," as veteran teammate Tony Massenburg describes him, made his presence felt when Rashard Lewis swiped at Ginobili after a whistle already had been blown for a tripping foul on Jerome James in the final minute of the second quarter. Duncan stepped up to Lewis and said, "You don't need to be doing that." When James knocked down Ginobili on a second-half drive, Duncan stepped up to him, too, wordlessly letting him know his foul wasn't OK, either. The air was so thick with off-the-ball acrimony that as the teams left the floor for halftime, referee Bob Delaney stood at midcourt and watched the players leave, looking for potential trouble spots to be dealt with in the second half. Duncan nearly became one of those spots by the end of the third quarter. After Tony Parker picked himself up after a thwarted drive holding his eye, Duncan scored on a driving floater while being sandwiched by James and Evans. He then ran back on defense and yelled at coach Gregg Popovich, "Hey, I'm getting one!" Meaning either a hard foul or a technical, or both. He never got the chance, in part because Evans flopped to draw a foul on Glenn Robinson. Which only steamed Duncan more. Popovich, understanding his star needed to vent, called for Five-Down, a basic post-up for Duncan. Evans knocked the first entry pass out of bounds. Duncan glared at Popovich and whirled his finger in the air, demanding the play again. This time he got the ball, backed Evans down and wheeled into the paint, scoring on another floater while drawing a foul on Evans that sent him to the bench. Sonics coach Nate McMillan apparently sensed Evans was a marked man and didn't play him the entire fourth quarter, even though he had only four fouls. James was next on Duncan's to-do list. This time he posted up on the right block, worked his way to the paint and faked the floater. James bit hard and Duncan spun the other way for an uncontested four-footer off the glass. For what it's worth, Ray Allen tried to lead the Sonics in similar fashion, ignoring the taunts of Spurs' fans who took exception to Allen's publicized complaints about Bruce Bowen's defensive tactics. One woman in a courtside seat held up a sign that read, "REF! REF! BRUCE IS LOOKING AT ME!" with an infant wearing Allen's 34 jersey. The officials, though, had their eyes on Bowen, who was limited to 17 minutes, picking up his second foul on Allen less than five minutes into the game. He logged barely more than a minute in the third quarter before picking up Foul No. 4. Allen's shooting form is so pristine that he generally only misses long or short, but the ankle he sprained in Game 1 clearly affected him in the first quarter when he repeatedly hit side iron on his jumper and even let Bowen drive by him for a layup. Allen hung in there, finishing with 25 points, but his cool demeanor in response to the wisecracks from the stands -- "Put on a dress!" -- and his smooth, lightning-quick points couldn't inspire Seattle the way Duncan's glares and bump-and-grind buckets did San Antonio. "It makes you really glad when an All-Star steps up and defends you," Ginobili said. Leading in ways that don't show up in the box score is what the Spurs hoped for from Duncan once David Robinson and Avery Johnson left, but a player either has those ingredients or he doesn't. There were doubters for a while, but game by game, season by season, he has let a little more of his fiery side show. That's why, even though his offensive numbers were at career lows this season across the board, he was more of an MVP in my mind than when he won the award over Jason Kidd three years ago. Great players do what they do best. MVPs do what best meets their team's needs. For Duncan, on this San Antonio team, it means taking names as much as dishing out numbers. When asked if he went out of his way to challenge the Sonics for manhandling Ginobili, Duncan said, "Nope. Just being me." It certainly looked like it. • Talk back to Ric Bucher, Marc Stein and the Daily Dime gang
• Dimes Past: May 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10
Sore Points ![]() Nobody's lining up to give them the Willis Reed Award, but on Tuesday Antawn Jamison and Ray Allen earned Dime shoutouts for their gritty games. The Wizards' Jamison left Sunday's Game 1 loss to the Heat with knee tendinitis after scoring only 13 points, his condition a major concern. But in 41 minutes on Tuesday, Jamison put up 32 on 11-for-22 shooting, including four treys in eight tries, in the Wizards' 108-102 loss.
![]() Likewise, Allen left Sunday's loss to the Spurs early, after spraining his ankle in the second quarter. He was a game-time decision on Tuesday, but hardly seemed to miss a step, playing 42 minutes and leading the Sonics with 25 points, nailing 3 of 7 3-pointers in another futile cause in Alamo town.
Jamison and Allen are two of the friendliest players in the game, known for their happy demeanor and articulate style with the media. If you think their gentle exteriors suggest a soft interior, Tuesday provided their gut response.
Not Larry Huge ![]() Heading into their series against Miami, the Wizards had to figure they could play the Heat close to a draw at shooting guard, as Larry Hughes' season numbers (22.0 ppg, 6.3 rpg, 4.7 apg) weren't far off those of Dwyane Wade (24.1, 5.2, 6.8). It didn't work out that way on Tuesday, as Hughes missed his first 11 shots while Wade dominated to the tune of 31 points and 15 assists. The 16-point disparity between the two was doubly distressing for the Wizards because they lost by only six. With Antawn Jamison gamely scoring 32 points despite a bum knee and the bench coming alive, the Wizards had a real shot to steal Game 2 if only Hughes had delivered.
They'll need much more from Hughes if they're going to climb back into the series when it shifts to Washington on Thursday.
Magic Flash ![]() Miami's Dwyane Wade may not do it the way Magic Johnson did, but on Tuesday the results were similar. In Game 2 of the Wizards-Heat series, Wade finished with 31 points, 15 assists and seven rebounds. The last player to rack up 30 points, 15 assists and five rebounds in a playoff game was Magic, on April 27, 1989. In fact, including Wade's feat, it has only been done 10 times in playoff history. |
Series Glance
Western Conference Semifinals Phoenix 1, Dallas 0 Game 2: Wed., 10:30 ET, at Phoenix, TNT San Antonio 2, Seattle 0 Game 3: Thurs., 10:30 ET, at Seattle, ESPN Eastern Conference Semifinals Miami 2, Washington 0 Game 3: Thurs., 8 ET, at Washington, ESPN Detroit 1, Indiana 0 Game 2: Wed., 8 ET, at Detroit, TNT Pic Of The Night ![]() (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee) Haywood's day at the Beach included six fouls and seven of 10 missed shots in the Wizards' 108-102 loss to Shaq and the Heat. Extreme Behavior
Tuesday's Best Manu Ginobili, San Antonio: You have to be pretty good to nudge Dwyane Wade from this cyperspace when Miami's Wade goes for 31 points and 15 assists in a Game 2 triumph over Washington. How good was Ginobili in San Antonio's Game 2 rout of Seattle? It's a great night when your sixth man rumbles for 28 points in 31 minutes and misses just two shots (both 3-pointers) all night.
Tuesday's Worst
Play of the Day
Mr. Outspoken -- Marc Stein Artest Time ![]() The Eastern Conference semifinal series between the Pacers and Pistons is shaping up to be a stinker. Detroit won the first game, 96-81, and it wasn't that close. The gap in talent between the teams appears to be just too wide. Stern can still do something to close it. Ron Artest's suspension cost him 73 regular-season games (and with them, $5 million of his salary). The Pacers' opening-round series with the Celtics conveniently went seven games. After Wednesday night's Game 2 of the Pacers-Pistons, Artest will have missed 82 games. Perfect. The tally is both significant and sufficient. It may not be the season but it amounts to a full NBA season. It's plenty enough punishment. Stern should let Artest make his playoff debut at home Friday night.
Let the bad boy back in for the good of the game.
Big Ben Fan
David (Michigan): Ken, after watching yesterday's Pistons-Pacers game, I can now I'm say extremely confident that Ben Wallace not only deserved the Defensive Player award, but that it wasn't even close. He is the most fun player to watch in all of sports on the defensive side. He makes everything look so easy!
Ken Bikoff: The great thing about Ben Wallace is that he realized early on in his NBA career that he wasn't going to be a great scorer, so he decided he would concentrate on defense and rebounding. It has paid off huge, and I don't understand why more players don't go that route. The NBA always has room for a hardworking guy who is strong on the boards and defensively. Dennis Rodman made a career of it. Jayson Williams was on his way to doing it. There always is a guy like this, but I think there should be more. Tyson Chandler could be the next great defender/rebounder if he puts his mind to it.
Hot Picks
Before Tuesday's games, we took a temperature reading of the fans of SportsNation, and here's what we found:
Which team is now your pick as the favorite to win the NBA title? |







