This eleven game win streak has been magical. The Spurs fought for a hard-earned victory over the Utah Jazz Monday night. The Jazz played an extremely physical game, which our Spurs matched beautifully. Both teams played with playoff intensity, but the Spurs emerged victorious thanks to a total team effort.

Two nights ago, our Spurs found a way to beat the Clippers in miraculous fashion, but left wounded. Both Manu and Tiago will miss two weeks of action due to injuries they sustained in that battle. So, coming into tonight's game, I had prepared myself for the inevitable letdown. Utah is not a fun place to play, especially without one of our big men. Utah's strength is their inside play as they boast four quality bigs in Al Jefferson, Paul Millsap, Derrick Favors, and Enes Kanter. My thought was, Tim can only play so many minutes and there's no way Blair and Bonner are going to be able to keep the Spurs in the game.
What I failed to realize was that while Utah's bigs could dominate their one on one match-ups, the Spurs, as a team, would prove too much for them. The Spurs played tenacious team defense the entire game. They were everywhere harassing the ball handlers and making life as uncomfortable as possible for Utah's big men. Specifically, Kawhi Leonard played an outstanding defensive game. He had many defections that turned into points for the Spurs and kept many plays alive on the offensive end.
This game against the Jazz was on the verge of getting out of hand in the second and third quarters, but the Spurs managed to keep it close with timely defensive stops and clutch three point shooting. As much as this is going to sting, I have to give credit to Matt Bonner for keeping the Spurs in the game. Bonner made 5 of his 6 three pointers, all of them proving vital. He finished with 20 big points for the Silver and Black.
"This one of my five threes goes out to my No. 1 fan, Fred Silva."
But it was not, by any means, solely a Matt Bonner show. The entire team played well. Gary Neal hit shots every time the Spurs needed them. Kawhi played great defense. James Anderson came in and hit an important three pointer and also had an impressive driving layup deep in the fourth quarter when each team was doing everything possible to gain the upper-hand.
Danny Green couldn't make a basket, but was his usual productive self with his gnat like ability to hover around the ball and make good things happen. DeJuan battled Utah's bruisers all night and finished with 15 crucial points. Richard Jefferson was missing everything, 0 for 4, until the last two minutes of the game when he made a long two and the dagger three with less than ten seconds remaining that sealed the Spurs' victory.
Again, this was a total team effort and something truly special to witness. It's what makes team sports so intriguing. When everyone puts aside their own egos so that the team can reach its full potential and everyone on that team is just focused on winning games, it's simply incredible to watch unfold. Other teams attempt to buy their championship trophy. They go after the big free agents and think that if they throw enough talent into the pot, the trophy will emerge. When you watch this Spurs team play, you realize there's much more to it than just talent. It has to do with the personalities and culture of the team. You need leaders and followers. You need a solid foundation so that when you're down 10 in Utah without your best player and one of your two big men, your team doesn't panic. Rather than fold when faced with adversity, teams that are built like the Spurs rise to the challenge. It's just so gratifying to watch.
Duncan literally snuffed out any Paul Millsap-led comebacks.
Months ago we were pretty sure that the Spurs were an awful road team. We had statistics and our record to prove that much to us. But the Spurs were growing back then. A young team was taking its losses but learning from each one of them. Now, the Spurs have won 11 in a row, the last 7 of which have been on the road. That young team we were watching months ago is now blossoming. Injuries and the schedule have given their worst to the Spurs, but the Spurs refused to succumb to the excuses that they provided. The Spurs are are giving us nothing short of a fairy tale season to follow.
I like to believe that destiny favors teams that win in the right way. When Dallas played Miami last year, as much as I hate Dallas, I was rooting for them. They had a real team. Miami bought the best two players on Earth. To me, that's cheating. Fate should frown on cheaters. This year, the Spurs are destiny's choice. The Spurs have overcome every challenge set before them. While there is still a long way to go, how could destiny not be on our side? If destiny delivers the Spurs a healthy Manu for the playoffs, you just can't write a better script. At that point, it's out of our hands. I believe that destiny will continue to make this season a special one.
3.) Matt Bonner: 20 points on 5 of 6 three point shooting in 31 minutes.
Without Bonner's three point barrage, I think Pop would have waved the white flag early in the third. Bonner has been playing good basketball for about a month now; I finally have to list him as a "star." (I just hope he does this in the playoffs.)
2.) Tim Duncan: 20 Points, 7 Rebounds, 3 Assists, 1 Steal and 1 Block in 38 Minutes.
Tim looks younger to me. Did he sneak away to Germany when no one was looking? Al Jefferson is one of the best big men in the league and Tim had no problem keeping up with him. Tim greatly negated Jefferson's outstanding game which allowed the Spurs to come away with the victory.
1.) Tony Parker: 23 Points, 11 Assists, 6 Rebounds, and 3 Steals in 38 Minutes.
I don't think I've ever seen Tony play with this much confidence. When he misses, he has a look of disbelief. "How did that not go in? I make everything!" The 23 points are expected at this point, but his improvement this year has been to his all-around game. 11 assists, 6 rebounds, and 3 steals. He's not only scoring; he's doing everything he can on both sides of the ball to help the Spurs win. This 11 game win streak is greatly due to Tony's outstanding play.
Check out what Utah fans are saying at SBNation's Jazz blog, SLC Dunk. Here's your box score and some game highlights.
3 recs | 69 comments
I have the same three stars though I have the old guy at #1. Timmeh was unbelievable, especially on D. Whole team played very solid D when Timmeh was on the floor. This win was very impressive. Even more impressive to me seeing that you listed Red Rocket among the three stars. Rec’d.
Kondor - February 21, 2012
In the Box Score Timmy had only 1 block … i Feel like he blocked more shots, but i dont remember the exaclty when
cuentaluis1 - February 21, 2012
I was sure Timmeh had at least three blocks …
Kondor - February 21, 2012
This is easily one of the best paragraphs I read about the Spurs and sports in general recently. This is so true, and captures the essence of the Spurs basketball perfectly.
Kondor - February 21, 2012
Hear hear.
J.R. Wilco - February 21, 2012
Completely agree.
silverandblack_davis - February 21, 2012
i couldn’t agree with you more.
i keep telling my friends this on why I am a solid Spurs fan, FOR YEARS.
blackhawkconvoy - February 21, 2012
Excellent!
Trey Felder - February 21, 2012
It was good to see the Spurs get some run these past 2 days on TV. Go figure, Spurs gotta go on crazy runs to get any attention.
TrooperJoe73 - February 21, 2012
Pop would disagree.
Kondor - February 21, 2012
The best team win so far this season. WITHOUT two of our biggest playmakers. This team continues to rise to the occasion and surprise me.
Nate_Mtz - February 21, 2012 via mobile
You know, without Jerry Sloan and Phil Jackson, does Pop really have any competition for “best coach in the league”?
doubleteapot - February 21, 2012
Well in the my TOP 5 I can mention
>Tom Thibodeau
>rick carlisle
>doug collins
>Lionel Hollins
But None of them are even close to Greg Popovich
*You forget to mention without Larry Brown
cuentaluis1 - February 21, 2012
I even think Pop is better than Larry Brown. Larry would NEVER trust young players, and NEVER adapted his systems to his personal or to a new era of basketball. That was the reason his last stint ended that badly.
Popovich can be stubborn, but evntually he always adapts.
Chilai - February 21, 2012
Yes, but i like how His passion always was to beat the lakers … even with the charlotte bobcats
cuentaluis1 - February 21, 2012
Sadly, the Coach of the Year is going to ….Vinny Del Negro
cuentaluis1 - February 21, 2012
Clippers fans would riot…and not in celebration.
SpursfanSteve - February 21, 2012
LOL
doubleteapot - February 21, 2012
I think Pop is better coach than Jerry, and he has rings to prove it. Phil, on the other hand …
Kondor - February 21, 2012
Pop had better players than Sloan. Also, Sloan’s best teams were in the Jordan era. Also, Phil always had way more talent than either of them.
Rings are not the only indicator of great coaching, or of great playing. Some luck, being in the right place at the right time, always plays a role.
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
No, they are not, but Jazz had some damn good teams. I can’t say Pop’s players have always been better throughout the years. Duncan was just that good. Then Manu came in. And then Parker, but Spurs didn’t have all 3 going at the same levels at the same time. If all 3 had been going at the same time, Spurs would likely have had at least one back-to-back championship by now.
Sloan’s teams were pretty good on D, but they were always more foul prone. Pop’s team adapted to the rules better, as seen by how many fouls they average.
Also, Pop is probably the best at making adjustments, especially with the out of time out plays.
grego21 - February 21, 2012
Even more impressive to me than the 15 points Blair had were the 2 or 3 charges he drew. He made a few sloppy plays on offense, but for the most part over the past couple weeks his defense has been significantly improved. He’s starting to get in position and the officials are finally starting to give him some respect.
SpursfanSteve - February 21, 2012
Blair has always played well against Utah. They’ve always been a good matchup for him. To me, the Portland game, with Aldridge back poses a bigger challenge, as they’ve always been a team that doesn’t match up well in recent years just like the Grizz.
But still. Significantly improved is still bad, unless we compare relatively to his own past nights. Also, 4 turnovers is not acceptable for a guy who is not a ball handler, like Neal, Green, Duncan and Parker. His turnover per minute ratio isn’t that good. It’s at 0.070. Not good considering his 21.6 mpg average.
For comparison sake, TP is at 0.074, TD at 0.063, Manu at 0.066 (in limited minutes). Ford and Splitter leads the team at 0.116 and 0.083 respectively. Green and Neal, the pseudo PGs are at 0.054 and 0.048 . He negates a lot of the good things he does in this realm that hurts the offense a lot.
There’s a reason why Blair was a -9 in the game and is -30 for the season. This game was a good start, but he needs to show it against more teams, more often.
Good article by Zach Lowe on SI about the Spurs, but this is worth noting since it has some key stats in there…
Now for argument sakes, both guys get a lot of help defense, so that’s not all on Blair or Bonner, but it shows why Blair can’t play big minutes and the team stays successful (consistently).
grego21 - February 21, 2012
Link:
http://nba-point-forward.si.com/2012/02/20/monday-musings-believing-in-the-spurs/
grego21 - February 21, 2012
I read this, too. Good article by a sports journalist who actually seems to know something about the game he is covering! But one thing I want to add is that we are kind of talking about team defense as if that’s a pejorative term: Sure, Bonner is a decent defender when he gets help. But another way to look at this is that the Spurs are just playing better team defense. The amount of pressure the perimeter guys put on the ball, the way they can direct the dribblers, they amount of help they provide digging down on the post player—all this stuff makes a difference on your post defense. Matt Bonner, or whomever is down there, is not defending on an island, but rather as part of a team concept that the Spurs, top to bottom, seem to be executing better this season. I know ten years ago we had twin towers in David and Tim protecting the rim, but that is not the only way to defend effectively. I don’t think we have to have a lock down post defender to have a defense that can succeed come playoff time. Heck, look at this year’s Mavericks, who are defending very well without Chandler. A team that trusts each other on defense with all five guys playing in a unified way is what is needed more than anything.
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
Zach is one of the best and most sensible out there, unlike that dude from Hardwood Paroxysm.
silverandblack_davis - February 21, 2012
I agree. The team defense is strong. With fast and long wings like Green and Leonard, they make a huge difference. I think Bonner has improved as well, so it shows.
My problem has to do with how drastically different Blair’s numbers are, especially since these are not based off much Blair/Bonner ball, this season. Blair almost always plays with Duncan, so yeah..
grego21 - February 21, 2012
Hurray! Sammiches all around.
eastbaysd - February 21, 2012
Great job Fred.
And I never thought I’d see the day when you gave Bonner one of the three stars, but I agree with you that he’s been playing about as well as I think he can.
J.R. Wilco - February 21, 2012
Best season of his career on both ends. Yep, on the defensive end.
grego21 - February 21, 2012
Yep.
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
I think the world just turned upside down.
silverandblack_davis - February 21, 2012
I saw a pig flying the other day.
grego21 - February 21, 2012
I saw Bonner going for 20 points not too long ago.
silverandblack_davis - February 21, 2012
call me when bonner goes to the Three-Point Shootout thats more impossible
cuentaluis1 - February 21, 2012 via mobile
Good article Fred. Rec’d
grego21 - February 21, 2012
Spurs at Blazers will be on NBATV tonight! Be There or Be Square!
eastbaysd - February 21, 2012
This is the worst for me – no League Pass, no TV … the only option to watch it is by crappy unreliable internet feeds.
Kondor - February 21, 2012
(preaching to the choir) All I am going to say is Leonard is something special. Once he gets a jump shot, look out. To me, he’s untradeable, unless you are getting something spectacular back int he deal which is included in.
He’s going to be super scary next year.
grego21 - February 21, 2012
This
SleepCrack - February 21, 2012 via mobile
lucky for you guys the team failed to get the memo that they were over the hill and it was time to suck… seriously though this must be one of the quietest 11 game win streaks in the league. I just came by to check out PtR, I had no Idea Ya’ll were rolling like this. and YES! I’m Jealous as hell.
2NASHTY - February 21, 2012
we are now 7-0? yikes!
GSG!
rank - February 21, 2012
Don’t look down!
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
Excellent Fred. You put air back into my tires and I’m rolling again.
indiancharlie - February 21, 2012
Anyone know why we’re suddenly giving up huge runs (17-0 and 13-0)? Not good for my blood pressure.
doggydogworld - February 21, 2012
Basketball is a game of runs—the important thing is how the team responds to an opponent’s run.
Trey Felder - February 21, 2012
This is a truism I remember from an old coach. Spurs did a great job of answering the Jazz last night, never losing their cool, just methodically chipping away.
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
0-13 at the start of the 3Q was probably instigated by the Korean Comics at the halftime. we are still looking for an absurd reason to explain 0-17 though. may be someone used the subject line or called the game in the game thread?
Kondor - February 21, 2012
Nice work Fred. A very encouraging win to be sure. I’ll be interested to see how our boys handle tonight, but last night was a good win in a tough place to do so. Jazz are an up and coming team and it’s always a nice win to beat a good team at home.
Big50 - February 21, 2012
Fred Silva, Feb 21st 2012
LatinD - February 21, 2012
I think this is the sign of the apocalypse
doubleteapot - February 21, 2012
Watching Stephen A and Skip talk spurs is great. Skip actually called the Spurs dangerous “because of players like Danny Green and Gary Neal that you just don’t know about because you don’t watch the Spurs.”
MiniMegaMoose - February 21, 2012 via mobile
Stephen A is the most irritating person ESPN has ever hired.
SpursfanSteve - February 21, 2012
they have fired him like 6 times
spursfan87 - February 21, 2012
I will take him over Bayless.
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
I like Skip, real Spurs fan.
spursfan87 - February 21, 2012
Yep, Skip is awesome. He might be crazy sometimes, but he knows what he’s talking about most of the time.
Marky G - February 21, 2012
lol, I just watched this. The way he laughed at Tiago was offensive and hilarious at the same time
Stephan A might be annoying but what ever happens now means nothing come playoffs time, especially if this team is not healthy. So I can understand his comments.
Besides, if they just agree all the time there is no show.
ironm8 - February 21, 2012
yea, i can understand his comments too and i appreciate him showing respect to the organization, to Pop, and Duncan. he can say that the Spurs won’t make it to the Finals, fine, that’s his opinion (i agree, there would be no show if both guys agreed all the time). however, the way he said that is what i didn’t like, saying it would be a joke if they would make it. as Skip said, the West is wide open, so the Spurs have as good a shot to win the West as anyone else.
RG8907 - February 21, 2012
I really tought it was just his counter to the “mindboggling confidence” showed by Skip.
S. A. Smith already tagged him as a homer so i guess that’s his way of emphasizing how he feels about this subject. Honestly? I understand him, cause he probably didn’t watch a single Spurs game this season, so he grabs a look at some box scores and see Neal or Bonner up there..then Thunder has Harden so he just rides their hype.
In some ways I agree, Spurs have a few big holes and when playoffs comes and intensity rises I just cross my fingers that this is more then just a hot-air balloon. Being healthy is also an issue.
ironm8 - February 21, 2012
i can understand that, but if Stephen A. is the “basketball analyst” he is, shouldn’t he have at least watched a Spurs game or two? lol. but you’re probably right because he covers New York and L.A.
no doubt, the Spurs have some holes, but so do the other teams in the West. Agreed, health, IMO, is the big factor, or at least one of the big factors.
RG8907 - February 21, 2012
I’m afraid that how has Smyth became an analyst is beyond me.
ironm8 - February 21, 2012
Is there a way we can get them to agree all the time?
Fred Silva - February 21, 2012
lol
ironm8 - February 21, 2012
Hah!
spursfan87 - February 21, 2012
+1
RG8907 - February 21, 2012
I’m hoping for this. I’m thinking if Bonner keeps this up. the world will end or something like that. It is 2012. So there won’t be any show any longer. Oh wait..!
grego21 - February 21, 2012
Stephen A. Myth as Skip would call him. lol.
RG8907 - February 21, 2012
Is Skip Bayless defending us? Ugh, has it come to that?
quincyscott - February 21, 2012
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