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View Full Version : Spurs Win Ugly, Take 3-0 Series Lead



canihavu
06-13-2007, 12:25 PM
Spurs 75, Cavaliers 72
Jun 13, 1:20 AM (ET) Email this Story

By TOM WITHERS

Box Score | Recap | Game Log

CLEVELAND (AP) -Substance over style. That's the San Antonio way.

The Spurs may be boring. They might not make TV ratings soar. And they certainly aren't America's team.

Maybe they should be.

Rude and ruthless, the Spurs ruined Cleveland's 37-year wait to host the NBA finals on Tuesday night, beating the Cavaliers 75-72 in Game 3 to move within one win of a fourth title.

Bruce Bowen, the defensive stopper, emerged as an unlikely offensive star as the Spurs, who despite not nearly playing up to their usual standards, won anyway to take a commanding 3-0 lead in a series few are watching.

No team has ever come back from an 0-3 deficit. It doesn't look like the Cavaliers will be the first, but they may become the first finals sweep for the Spurs, who are shooting for their fourth title since 1999.

"Oh, it's great, beautiful ... we didn't play good," guard Manu Ginobili said. "We won in a tough arena like this one and we are just one game shy of making it."

Tony Parker scored 17 points and Tim Duncan had 14, but Ginobili, who scored 25 in Game 2, had just three - all free throws in the final 10.4 seconds - to hold off the Cavaliers and crush the hopes of their rowdy, towel-waving crowd, who had never before seen their team play a finals game in person.

Cleveland's chances, and maybe their last hopes of extending the season, ended when LeBron James, who led the Cavaliers with 25 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, was short with a 3-pointer in the final seconds.

Bowen, who had just nine points in the first two games, scored 13 and Brent Barry made three 3-pointers for the Spurs, who can all but plan their victory parade on the scenic Riverwalk back home.

"It doesn't change at all," Duncan said of the Spurs' attitude. "We need to get one more, and that's it, however it comes. We know they're going to come out this next game, they don't want to get swept."

The Spurs can wrap up their third title in five years with a win in Game 4 on Thursday night. If they do complete the eighth sweep in finals history, they'll join the Boston Celtics, Los Angeles Lakers and Chicago Bulls as the only franchises to win four or more titles.

The grind-it-out game tied for the second-fewest points in NBA finals history, matching San Antonio's 80-67 win over the New York Knicks in 1999.

James, the 22-year-old who saved Cleveland's franchise, couldn't rescue this series.

He scored 12 points in the fourth quarter, threatening to take over as he did in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals against Detroit, with drives through the teeth of San Antonio's smothering defense.

But James had several layups dance off the rim, and he got little help from his teammates as the Cavs went just 3-of-19 on 3-pointers and failed to take advantage on a night when the Spurs were not themselves.

"Game 3 is usually the toughest game possible," Duncan said. "And Game 4 brings a whole other challenge. It's a little bit of desperation. It's a little bit of laying it on the line."

All James can do now is try to prevent a sweep by the Spurs, who are 48 minutes from adding a 2007 title to the ones they captured in 1999, 2003 and 2005. Every other year, it seems to be San Antonio's turn, and this one is no different.

James scored seven straight points as the Cavs cut a 10-point lead to 69-67 with 1:22 remaining on another layup by Cleveland's star. But Parker countered with a 3-pointer before Sasha Pavlovic hit a deep one for the Cavs to make it 72-70 with 48.1 seconds remaining.

Parker, so dominant in Games 1 and 2, made a turnover but the Cavs failed to capitalize. James, criticized early in the playoffs for being too unselfish, passed to Anderson Varejao and the mop-topped Brazilian, nicknamed "Wild Thing," flung up a wild shot that wasn't close.

James expected a return pass, but it never came.

"I was definitely going to get it back from Andy, but Andy made a good move," James said. "He just over shot it. I wanted to try and get a better look, but it was just miscommunication."

Ginobili was fouled, missed his first throw but finally got something to fall through the net to give the Spurs a three-point lead. James again got to the rim for a basket before Ginobili's two free throws gave San Antonio its final margin.

The Cavaliers changed their starting lineup as rookie Daniel Gibson replaced Larry Hughes at point guard. Hughes was bothered by a sore left foot, but Gibson, who has emerged as a star in these playoffs, didn't help much.

He went just 1-for-10 from the field and missed all five 3-pointers, unable to duplicate his 5-for-5 performance when Cleveland captured the Eastern Conference title in Game 6 against Detroit.

"I'd rather not give excuses for not making shots," Gibson said.

Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 12 points and 18 rebounds - 10 offensive - for the Cavaliers, who were hoping three straight games in their own building could help them get back into the best-of-seven series.

Instead, the Spurs have nearly wrapped it up.

The teams played an ugly first half - with Duncan and James watching a good chunk of it from the bench.

James picked up his third foul on a questionable push off near the basket, and moments later, Duncan was whistled for his third when he apparently brushed Ilgauskas' arm - TV replays showed he fanned - as the Cavs' big man dropped a shot in the lane.

Duncan's eyes bulged and he stared in disbelief before heading to the sideline - James was already sitting and snapping on his warmup - with 5:24 left in the second quarter.

The Cavs eventually built an eight-point lead without their superstar, but the Duncan-less Spurs got 3-pointers from Barry and Robert Horry, and Parker hit one of his teardrop floaters to put San Antonio ahead 40-38 at halftime.

Hughes was ineffective in Texas as Parker blew past him, spinning like a dust devil all over the AT&T Center's floor. But Gibson was able to stay in front of the Spurs point guard, who went scoreless until midway through the second quarter.

As he did when the Cavaliers returned from Detroit down 0-2 in the Eastern Conference finals, James arrived at the arena more than three hours before the opening tip to get in some extra shooting.

Wearing one of his popular sleeveless, black "Witness" T-shirts and silver sweat pants - ironically, Spurs colors - James worked up a healthy sweat while practicing 3-pointers, mid-range jumpers and free throws for 30 minutes.

"It's definitely a big game for us," James said in front of his locker. "It's either about changing the series around or doing the impossible."

And that's just what the Cavs are faced with. ^

Notes:

Among the courtside celebrities were a pair of famous Jims - Browns legend Jim Brown and Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, who sat next to each other. Also on hand were former Buckeyes center and likely No. 1 draft pick Greg Oden and Colts quarterback Peyton Manning. ... James entered Game 3 with the fifth-highest scoring average in playoff history, trailing Michael Jordan (33.4), Allen Iverson (30.0), Jerry West (29.1) and Tracy McGrady (28.8). ... The lowest-scoring finals game was Fort Wayne's 74-71 victory over Syracuse on April 7, 1955.

canihavu
06-13-2007, 12:26 PM
3 down, 1 to go...

White_Male_Canada
06-13-2007, 06:38 PM
" Turn out the lights...the parties over..."

trannybanger
06-13-2007, 09:55 PM
i think my post about the cavs taking it in 6 might have been just a bit ambitous

The Truth
06-13-2007, 11:00 PM
Well, at least we didn't pick the cavs to win it all.

canihavu
06-14-2007, 01:35 AM
" Turn out the lights...the parties over..."


I agree...

The Truth
06-15-2007, 06:13 AM
It's officially over. What an ugly series.

partlycloudy
06-15-2007, 06:27 AM
what a boring series...

qeuqheeg222
06-15-2007, 08:47 AM
lebron and the hype machine weren't ready fer that defense...look at the spurs aging yet very able depth!!!finley,horry,bowen,barry,all these bench warmers on geritol provided key moments for these guys throughout the playoffs..too bad the nba made detroit lose the conference finals(hoping,in the interest of a non defensive based championship) so they could hype lebron this year and give d-wade the year off..look at the ratings for this series some of the worst ever..cleveland,help all those poor souls who still live therein but yer team needs a bit more experience and a JUMP SHOT COACH...