You know, it really doesn't matter how good of a player Manu Ginobili is when San An only gives Tim Duncan 9 shots in a game, while Finley takes 10, Parker takes 16, and Ginobili takes 10, all in less minutes. Heck, BRUCE BOWEN took as many shots as Tim Duncan!
Duncan is going to get favorable calls against Kwame Brown and Andrew Bynum. Duncan missed 2 shots - 7 for 9 - and one of those was blocked by Bynum! Give Duncan the ball!
Caleb and I watched part of the game, and what we saw was too much Duncan facing up, and not enough of him posting up, plus too much of Duncan on the pick-and-roll with Tony Parker being unable to find him.
Parker, Bowen and Ginobili shot well - and the Lakers won. Duncan shot a god-like percentage, and the Lakers won.
A hint, because the Lakers and pretty much every other team in the league has figured it out, but apparently the Spurs haven't: if you want to win games, let your team's star do what he does best. For Duncan, that's post offense.
If I'm Popovich, I'm telling Duncan, "Taking 1 out of every 8 shots we get isn't enough. Try about one out of every four. You'll be on the free throw line a lot, and all of their bigs and a few of their littles will be in foul trouble. And anyone who doesn't focus on getting you the ball is going to be sitting."
Orlando is doing much the same thing with Dwight Howard. Heck, we blasted Kobe for doing this exact same kind of thing in the 2004 Finals - and Shaq wasn't performing nearly as well as Duncan or Howard! Why aren't we all over the case of various Spurs and Magic players?
If you have a big man, you use him until the other team figures out how to stop him. You don't help them stop him by not getting him the ball on the block!
Infuriating.