Mavericks rock Spurs 88-67, take Game 3

The AP reports: During a timeout early in the third quarter, Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and the rest of the San Antonio Spurs starters headed to the bench. They never returned. Humiliated since the opening tip, coach Gregg Popovich decided Game 3 of a first-round series against the Dallas Mavericks was a lost cause. Instead of hurting the Spurs with hard fouls—like Mavs center Erick Dampier threatened to do—Dallas slapped around San Antonio with tight defense, the return of Dirk Nowitzki’s shooting touch and the energy of their home crowd, producing an 88-67 victory Thursday night and a 2-1 lead in their first-round series… The Spurs’ backups weren’t much better, resulting in their fewest points ever in a playoff game.

InsideHoops.com notes: Dallas shot 47.2%, San Antonio just 32.1% and hit a disgustingly awful 2-of-17 three-pointers. Dallas had more rebounds, and double the assists San Antonio did… For the Mavericks, Dirk Nowitzki (8-of-12) had 20 points and 7 rebounds, Josh Howard (6-of-12) had 17 points, 8 rebounds, 2 steals and 2 blocks… For the Spurs, Tony Parker shot just 5-of-14 for 12 points and not much else. Francisco Oberto had 10 off the bench. No other Spurs even reached double digits. Tim Duncan shot 2-of-9 and did nothing.

Game 3: Pierce, Rondo lead Celtics over Bulls 107-86

The AP reports: Willing to defer in the first two games, Paul Pierce took the initiative and the Boston Celtics seized control. Pierce scored 24 points, Rajon Rondo added 20 and the defending champions beat the Chicago Bulls 107-86 on Thursday night to take a 2-1 lead in their first-round playoff series. The teams split two dramatic games in Boston, but this one never really was in doubt. The Celtics led by 11 after one quarter and 22 at the half on their way to an easy win behind Pierce and Rondo. Particularly Pierce… Rondo looked just fine for most of the night after spraining his right ankle in Game 2 and missing practice Tuesday. He hit eight of 15 shots, grabbed 11 rebounds, dished out six assists and collected five of Boston’s 16 steals, but afterward two teammates helped him down the hallway afterward. Even so, he insisted he’s OK… Ray Allen added 18 points after scoring 30 and hitting the tiebreaking 3-pointer to lift the Celtics to a 118-115 victory in Game 2 on Monday. Glen Davis chipped in 14 points, nine rebounds and six steals. And Boston hit 12 of 21 3-pointers—four by Pierce and three by Allen.

InsideHoops.com notes: The Bulls only shot 37.5%, while the Celtics shot 48.1% with an awesome 12-of-21 three-pointers… The Bulls dished just 14 assists for the game… Chicago had 22 turnovers, Boston just 13… The high scorer for Chicago was Ben Gordon, who had 15 on just 5-of-13 shooting. John Salmons had 14, and Kirk Hinrich had 14 off the bench… Derrick Rose shot just 4-of-14 for 9 points, just two assists and an awful seven turnovers.

Michael Redd says he still has game

michael redd

The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (Charles F. Gardner) reports: Michael Redd wants to dispel any doubts as he makes the long comeback from surgery on his left knee. The Milwaukee Bucks guard is already three weeks ahead of schedule, according to team doctors, and Redd is keeping his customary positive outlook as he enters the offseason and prepares to spend time at home in Columbus, Ohio. After all, it doesn’t do much good to dwell on the two freak incidents that limited him to 33 games during the season. “The one thing I get out of it, I land on Luke’s foot and twist my knee, and Nate Robinson jumps on my ankle,” Redd said. “My body’s not breaking down. I just had these freak accidents, man.” … Redd said he was not worried about any long-term effects when he returns for his 10th pro season, all with the Bucks, next fall.

Tony Allen received death threats in Chicago

The Boston Celtics are in Chicago tonight to play the Bulls in Game 3 of the NBA playoffs first round. The Boston Globe (Marc J. Spears) reports (via blog): There is extra NBA security in place near the Celtics bench tonight to keep an eye on guard Tony Allen, who has received death threats in his hometown, according to several sources. NBA sources said the Celtics and Bulls made sure there was extra security by their bench during Game 3 of a first round playoff series tonight to keep a protective eye on Allen. Sources also said Allen has been receiving the threats in Chicago for some time now.

Flip Saunders Wizards interview, plus Ernie Grunfeld quotes

The Washington Wizards recently named Flip Saunders their new head coach. Here’s what Saunders said to the media about the team and his new job:

Saunders on if he studied the Wizards throughout the season: “I studied them a lot, but it’s tough to judge this team without a premier player like Gilbert (Arenas).  Then of course Brendan (Haywood) was hurt and he’s an anchor on defense, and (DeShawn) Stevenson was hurt.  You had so many injuries so it’s tough to really judge the team, but what you can do is evaluate the talent of the young players.”

Saunders on the young players: “I think the young players have a lot of potential.  I have a saying that potential is what you’re capable of doing, motivation determines what you do, and your character and attitude determines how well you do it.  With our young players it’s important for the coaching staff and the veteran players to help those players understand what time of character and attitude they need to be professional and be successful in this league.”

Saunders on Gilbert Arenas: “The thing I love about him more than anything else is his competitiveness.  I look forward to the opportunity to work with him.  I’m sure that I’m going to learn from Gilbert and he’s going to learn from me.  I know Gilbert wants to win more than anything.  In the texts and conversations that we had, that’s the main thing that we’ve talked about.  I think that he’s ready to take the step in order to do that and have people follow him.”

Saunders on what it takes to get a team to the conference finals: “I think the biggest thing is that when I say ‘team’ the word ‘sacrifice’ goes along with it.  You have to be willing as individuals to sacrifice any individual role you have for the team to have success.  I believe in teams with high assists and low turnovers.  I believe in what I call the hockey assist; sometimes it’s the assist that leads to the assist that’s the most important play.  Those are the things that as a coach you keep on driving into your team.  As you work with them and see the success of it, it keeps on growing.”

Saunders on defense: “From a technical standpoint, you have to be able to defend.  A lot is talked about the huge playbook that I have.  It’s about 60 percent defense and 40 percent offense.  People don’t talk much about what I do defensively, because offense is more creative at times, but when the players walk into that gym defense is going to be a priority.  If you talk to the coaches that have coached against teams that I’ve had, no one has ever said that our teams didn’t defend.”

WIZARDS PRESIDENT ERNIE GRUNFELD

Grunfeld on hiring Flip Saunders to be the 22nd head coach in franchise history: “This is a very exciting day for us.  This is a new beginning.  Flip was our top priority in this coaching search.  What we were looking for was someone with credibility, an NBA background, and experience in the regular season and in the playoffs.  Flip coached in the conference finals four out of the last five years that he coached in the NBA.  That’s what we want to get to and even higher than that.  He’s a well respected person and I think he’s a great fit for our team right now with the type of players we have.  He’s an X’s and O’s man.  He pays attention to detail and I think he’s extremely underrated on the defensive end.  We all know that we want to improve in that area.  He plays a fun brand of basketball.  He likes to get up and down the floor, which I think the players enjoy and the fans enjoy watching.  We’re looking to get back to where we feel we belong, and that’s the playoffs.  Once we get to the playoffs, we want to make some noise.  I think this is the man to lead us there.”

Grunfeld on hiring a new head coach: “This was a very wanted job.  A lot of people called who were interested.  Doing our due diligence we were able to make contact sometime around the All-Star break (in February).  There were a lot of people who called that had a lot of interest, but when we went through everything and did our due diligence, I felt like he was the top candidate.”

More on Saunders: “He brings the whole package to the table.  He brings credibility and a lot of knowledge, and with knowledge you get respect.  My biggest concern is to win basketball games.  You hire a coach and you let him coach.  Everybody has a little bit of a different system and everybody does things their own way, but the bottom line is to win games. He’s a veteran guy and I like the fact that he came up the hard way.  He coached in college and he coached in the CBA.  He was Coach of the Year in the CBA, and it takes a lot to coach in the CBA.  He paid his dues and when he came to the NBA he had a lot of success.  He’s had seven 50-win seasons.  We were looking for someone who is a winner both in the regular season and in the playoffs, someone who understands X’s and O’s, and someone who has coached elite players before.”

Grunfeld on the focus during the offseason: “The next order of business is the draft.  We have the lottery on May 19th and then we find out exactly where we pick, and then of course in June we have the draft.  As Flip mentioned, we have six players on this team that are 23 years old or younger, so player development is crucial for us in the offseason.  It’s a difficult offseason and I think Flip is very much in favor of helping the players.  We have some very solid veteran players but we also have players that need that development, so we’re going to be focusing on that.  The thing you can control is player development, so we’re going to be focusing on that. After the draft, we’ll have summer league and we’ll continue to work and grow.  If the right opportunity comes along that we think will help us improve, then that’s something we’ll look at.”

Kings let Kenny Natt and entire coaching staff go

Sacramento Kings President of Basketball Operations Geoff Petrie announced today that the team has decided not to pick up the option on Kenny Natt’s contract for next season, thus relieving him of his coaching duties. In a related move, assistant coaches Rex Kalamian, Jason Hamm, Randy Brown and Bubba Burrage were also relieved of their existing coaching responsibilities.

There are rumors that Sacramento may have interest in former Washington Wizards coach Eddie Jordan.

The Kings are in rebuilding mode. They have a big-time scorer (Kevin Martin), a few decent young big-men (Spencer Hawes, Jason Thompson) and a well-paid point guard who underperformed this season (Beno Udrih), and not a lot else.

Live hawk got loose in Hawks arena during game

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Sekou Smith) reports: Spirit the Hawk, a bird from Zoo Atlanta, ignored his usual pre-game flight path in favor of a leisurely stroll around the arena that included stops in the stands, a trip to the top of the Jumbotron high over the center of court and finally a perch atop the camera on the shot clock above the basket in front of the Hawks’ bench. Spirit made a couple of trips back and forth to that final perch before the game officials stopped play with 8:48 to play in the first quarter to allow its handler, John Elmore, to retrieve the bird.

Playoffs: Jazz and Hornets in trouble

Detroit, New Orleans and Utah are in the unenviable position of trailing their best-of-seven series 2-0.

Not including this postseason, there have been 217 best-of-seven series in which a team has gone up 2-0. Only 14 times has the team trailing 2-0 came back to win the series. The last time this occurred was last year in the Western Conference semifinals when the San Antonio Spurs dropped the first two games against the New Orleans Hornets but recovered to win the series in seven games.

The Jazz’s attempt at joining that select comeback club begins tonight in Los Angeles (10:30 p.m. ET, TNT). Making the Jazz’s task that much more difficult is its opponent, the Lakers. When winning the first two games of a best-of-seven series, the Lakers are 37-1 all time; in franchise history, they are 56-37 in Game 3 of a best-of-seven series. And since moving to STAPLES Center in 1999, the Lakers have won 83 percent of their postseason games at home (55-11).

– NBA News

Game 3 is often must-win

Memo to San Antonio and Dallas, Portland and Houston, Boston and Chicago, Orlando and Philadelphia, and Atlanta and Miami: If you plan on advancing to the semifinals, winning Game 3 of your tied series is No. 1 on your to-do list.

All time in NBA postseason play, a best-of-seven series has been tied after the first two games 161 times. The winner of Game 3 has gone on to win the series 76 percent of the time (122-39). The home team’s record in Game 3 with series tied 1-1 is 89-72 (.553).

There are two Game 3s tonight that fall into this category. The Bulls host the Celtics (8 p.m. ET, TNT) and the Spurs visit the Mavericks (8:30 p.m. ET, TNT). At home, the Bulls hold an all-time postseason record of 105-34 (.755) – first among existing NBA franchises. Dallas is 41-26 (.612) at home in the playoffs. San Antonio (59-81, .421) and Boston (100-144, .410) have the second and third, respectively, best road winning percentages in the playoffs.

– NBA News