how appropriate that right before easter weekend, he rises from the dead...
GIN-OH-BLEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!
http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/27694/ginobilis-night-but-anybodys-seriesQuote:
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Ginobili's night ... but anybody's series
By Marc Stein
SAN ANTONIO -- He went hunting for a weakside block when the ball went inside to Zach Randolph on the game’s first possession. He quickly got reacquainted with the AT&T Center floor by flinging himself after countless loose balls. He even let Tim Duncan lift him up off that floor with a strong tug on his heavily padded right arm.
The only visible caution from Manu Ginobili on Wednesday night? You finally saw some after he drew a crucial charge with one of his signature sales jobs in crunch time on Tony Allen.
Marching back to the San Antonio Spurs’ bench after getting back to his feet, with San Antonio up six late in an eventual 93-87 triumph, Ginobili perched his left hand up high for all the congratulatory high-fives from his teammates and pointed his right arm out wide. Away from traffic.
Otherwise?
There's pretty much nothing Ginobili avoided in a must-win Game 2 over the Memphis Grizzlies. He jumped right into the traffic from the opening tip and thrived in conditions that were not coincidentally frantic from start to finish, ultimately overcoming his wayward shooting to spark desperate San Antonio in his first real basketball in about 10 days.
“Manu elevated their team and the crowd was much more electric,” Grizzlies swingman Shane Battier said after the West’s No. 8 seeds were denied a 2-0 fantasy lead over their 61-win hosts, playing from behind for much of the second half in Ginobili’s return from a badly sprained right elbow. “But Manu is Manu. He could be in a body cast and he’s still gonna make plays.”
The Spurs are grateful that it’s only a bulky black-and-blue brace encasing much of Ginobili’s right arm. Thankful because (A) Ginobili admittedly hates wearing the thing and (B) San Antonio barely squeezed out a W it had to have even with its leading source of spirit restored … and despite the fact that the Spurs had more success defensively against Randolph and Marc Gasol than Gregg Popovich could have dreamed coming in.
In its historic Game 1 victory -- which you surely haven’t forgotten was the first playoff victory in the team’s 16-season history in Canada and Graceland -- Memphis became just the seventh foe in 176 playoff games in the Popovich era to shoot better than 50 percent from the field and 50 percent from the 3-point line. In Game 2, San Antonio tried to force the ball out of Randolph’s hands with swarms led by a much-improved Antonio McDyess and perhaps benefited from the rhythm-disrupting effect of Randolph’s early foul trouble, too. The Grizzlies’ big men labored to a combined 23 points on 7-for-23 shooting, after Randolph and Gasol rumbled to a highly efficient 49 points in the series opener.
Throw in the Grizzlies’ collective 39.8 percent shooting as a team -- lowlighted by some rushed hoists by O.J. Mayo and an all-around lack of patience undoubtedly brought on by the struggles to get Randolph and Gasol in the favorite spots -- and you’d have expected the Spurs to cruise. But they didn’t. Even after Ginobili drew that seemingly game-sealing charge on Allen with 2:26 to play, Memphis still managed to draw within 89-87 with 14.4 ticks to go on Sam Young’s 3-point heave.
So …
You inevitably came away from Ginobili’s big evening -- 17 points, seven rebounds, four assists and four steals standing out more than his six missed free throws, five turnovers and 5-for-13 shooting from the floor -- marveling at the Grizzlies’ defiance as much as Ginobili’s resilience. The Grizz, with so little working, had plenty of chances to go away. But they wouldn’t.
There was the sequence in the third quarter when Ginobili stepped up at midcourt to rake the ball right away from the advancing Mike Conley and then sail in for an uncontested dunk after McDyess flattened Battier, Memphis’ only defender between Ginobili and the bucket, with a crunching open-floor screen. You thought then, with the Spurs’ lead extended to 56-48 and the noise rising, that the playoff neophytes might finally get rattled. Yet Memphis responded with the next seven points and refused to let the Spurs see any scoreboard daylight until the final two minutes, when San Antonio finally established an 89-81 cushion after the Allen charge … only to let one more lead slip.
Questions persist about whether Memphis has the requisite discipline to beat a team that can carry out a defensive game plan with San Antonio’s precision. We’ll likewise have to see how the inexperienced Grizzlies cope with Games 3 and 4 at home with their fans suddenly expecting something … and with Grizz coach Lionel Hollins making the unexpected postgame admission that those two games are essentially must-wins if his guys are serious about getting to Round 2.
Hollins, though, also uncorked a bold one-liner to illustrate just how much the Grizzlies believe they belong right where they are, all tied up with the West’s winningest team. While the Spurs were peppered with questions postgame about whether they’re already prepared to anoint Memphis as the toughest No. 8 seed they’ve ever seen, Hollins was naturally asked about Ginobili’s impact on proceedings.
“He’s their Tony Allen,” Hollins shot back, leaving the impression that he’s convinced he has every right to put them in the same sentence.
On this night? Not really. Allen actually shot the ball as well as anyone on the Memphis side, with 15 points on 7-for-13 accuracy, but this was vintage, game-changing Ginobili once he figured out how to cope with having “such a bulky thing” protecting his elbow.
“I took some risks,” Ginobili said. “I went for steals and rebounds. I didn’t play like I was worried [about] getting hit or anything happening.”
Said an admiring Randolph: “He’s left-handed like me. We’re both crafty. Lefties are all crafty. We special.”
San Antonio’s problem? What will be remembered as a Manu special -- Ginobili’s night -- doesn’t change the fact that this looks like anybody’s series.
Anything but a 1-versus-8 formality.
No argument from the Spurs’ Tony Parker, who said: “They love to play physical. They’re like the old Utah. They’re going to foul and grab and they’re great at it.”
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/recap;_ylt=AmTgZ2X38g1CaXFFnkAg7Ti8vLYF?gid=2011042024Quote:
Ginobili’s return sparks Spurs to even series
By PAUL J. WEBER, Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO (AP)—Manu Ginobili felt rusty. He played with a bothersome, bulky black brace on his sprained right elbow and didn’t shoot particularly well.
But it was good enough.
Making his playoff debut after top-seeded San Antonio dropped Game 1 without him, Ginobili scored 17 points and lifted the Spurs to a 93-87 win over the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night, evening the first-round series.
“It was uncomfortable,” Ginobili said of the brace, which he plans to continue wearing through this week and possibly beyond. “But I felt I did OK. I took some risk. I went for some steals and rebounds and it wasn’t that I played worried about getting hit or something.”
That much was clear as the 33-year-old dived and crashed to the court, looking as physically reckless as usual. He stayed questionable until just before tipoff, yet even with Ginobili, the top-seeded Spurs didn’t have it easy.
The Grizzlies opened the series with a stunner for their first franchise playoff win. And a 2-0 lead seemed possible down to the final seconds, when Sam Young hit a 3-pointer with 14.9 seconds left to cut the lead to 89-87.
It was the closest Memphis had been since trailing by three midway through the fourth. But George Hill sealed the win at the free throw line, and the Spurs assured that the series will come back to San Antonio.
Game 3 is Saturday in Memphis.
“Manu’s Manu, come on,” Grizzlies forward Shane Battier said. “I don’t care if he’s in a body cast, he’s going to be out there and he’s going to be a handful to deal with. That’s why he’s a great player.”
Young led Memphis with 17 points.
Tim Duncan had 16 points and 10 rebounds for the Spurs, and Hill and Richard Jefferson added 16 apiece.
But the Spurs didn’t win this game without Ginobili.
Exactly one week after spraining his right elbow in the regular-season finale, Ginobili finally returned after unsuccessfully lobbying Spurs coach Gregg Popovich to play in Game 1.
Ginobili struggled with his shot, going 5 of 13 from the field, but got to the foul line 13 times. He had seven rebounds and four assists.
“I haven t played in 10 days. It’s not that much, but when you come from 80 games, playing every other game, I was a little rusty,” Ginobili said. “Hopefully by the next one, I’ll feel better. Used to wearing the thing (brace). Truth is I didn’t feel I was having a good offensive game.”
Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol, who combined for 49 points in the opener, were far less dominant in Game 2. Randolph scored 11 points on 5-of-14 shooting and Gasol had 12 points, making just 2 of 9. Gasol had 17 rebounds.
Duncan fouled out of the game in 35 minutes, a sign that the Spurs were far more physical this time around.
“They clogged the paint up,” Gasol said. “They came at us from the weak side every time. They said, ‘Well, if you guys are going to beat us, you’re going to beat us with something else.”’
Tony Allen scored 15 points and Mike Conley had 13 for Memphis.
“They did a great job of taking Zach Randolph out of the game, and we took a lot of jump shots,” Allen said.
Popovich said following the morning shootaround that since Ginobili’s elbow was still sore, the decision came down to whether the ailing All-Star might hurt more than help.
Fearing an 0-2 deficit, the Spurs decided a sore Ginobili was better than none at all.
Despite the bulky brace on his non-shooting arm, Ginobili hardly played with caution. He crashed to the court at least a half-dozen times in the first half alone, charging to the basket with his signature recklessness, and diving for loose balls.
Ginobili was physical enough to fluster Allen, who cursed back down court after getting tangled with Ginobili, then greeted Ginobili for some more words when he returned to the bench.