Hello Spurs! Is it Danny Green you are looking for?

By Kurt Sorensen / Roar Guru

During Game two of this NBA finals series a friend made the throw away remark about San Antonio Spurs sharp shooter Danny Green’s resemblance to the 80s crooner Lionel Richie.

Sure, I conceded, both men have ill conceived facial hair and a seemingly unflappable disposition. But for me that’s where the physical similarities end (though I have no way of knowing the breadth of Green’s singing talent).

However if you are talking metaphorical similarities, well I got a list of them longer than Lionel Richie’s hair care bill.

For starters Richie had plenty of hits, Dancing on the Ceiling, Hello and Three Times a Lady to name but a few.

But during the game three blow out win over the Heat Richie’s dubious basketballing doppelganger Danny Green rewrote a version of an even bigger hit in All Night Long.

The only music he used was the sound from snapping nets as Green rained down three after three after three all night long against a bewildered Miami audience.

While many of Richie’s pop hits are, in this writers humble opinion, at best insipid and at worst nauseatingly saccharine, Green’s stop and pop three point daggers have for Spurs fans been equivalent to anthemic renditions of inspiring war cries.

Danny Green has arrived in this series, shooting a blistering 70% from 3-point range on the way to averaging 18 points during this finals series, up from 10.5 during the regular season.

Belying the Spurs big three, Green may well prove the vital spark the Spurs need to catch fire in their search for a fifth NBA title.

For the past few games Green, along with Gary Neal, has picked up the scoring slack that a literally hamstrung Tony Parker and a quiet Tim Duncan let sag for the second game in a row.

Neal and Green scored 51 of the Spurs 113 points total on a combined 13-19.

It was Neal and Green, not Parker and Duncan, who were the Spurs in the Heats side early on, catching and shooting with a deadly accuracy not seen since Pat Garrett patrolled the Texan prairies.

While Neal caught fire early Green waited until the second half to meter out his 3-point blitzkrieg, eventually finishing with a game high 27 points on 7-9 from beyond the arc.

But for all the razzle-dazzle while shooting the lights out, arguably Green’s greatest contributions have come on the defensive end.

His ability to stay with a gliding Wade or bullocking LeBron has much to do with the Heats naval gazing on their stuttering running game and public discussions on how best to combat a stifling and frugal defence.

While no one should doubt the likelihood of a LeBron led resurgence in game four his and the Heat’s performance thus far has alarmingly resembled the most ineffectual aspects of the series loss to the Mavericks in 2011.

Any time James is found settling for 18 foot wing jumpers is concerning for a team that relies on its star dominator doing exactly that from 10 feet and closer.

James is at his most devastating when attacking the paint, but apart for a desperately brief period during the third quarter of game three this mode of attack was
non existent.

Ominously, LeBron has vowed to be better in game four.

The scary part for San Antonio is they know he can’t be much worse, a point that seems unfair to make about a player whose game included 15 points, 11 rebounds five assists and two steals, respectable statistics for any mere NBA mortal.

But Superman has proved on many occasions to be more than that, and right now the Heat need a super hero to once again inspire a performance that will come off the back of a curiously lacklustre post season effort.

Meanwhile, the Greg Popovich legend continues to grow.

Gary Neal and Danny Green, along with Kawhi Leonard, have become the latest personifications of the clichéd Spurs ‘system’ that is so ardently spruiked by coach ‘Pop’.

Popovich has carved out a sizeable reputation by taking unwanted, lowly or undrafted role players and turning them into essential, bona fide contributors.

It is a system that often sees San Antonio anointed the standard bearer to NBA small market success. Players are required to ‘buy’ into a culture of all for one and one for all, and are recruited on their willingness to do so.

Fittingly the leaders of this misfit band of bit part players have been the Spurs own version of the three musketeers.

For 12 years Messrs’ Ginobili, Parker and Duncan have guided less illustrious teammates through the rigours of an NBA season, and have three championships as reward.

They are now two games away from a fourth.

If Greg Popovich ever thought to give up coaching basketball he may well think of taking up marriage counselling, such is his success in marrying players like Danny Green and his fellow unheralded heroes to the Spurs system.

San Antonio is once again reaping the rewards of a relationship born on trust and perseverance, and come this time next week they may once again be Dancing in the Street.

The Crowd Says:

2013-06-14T06:45:29+00:00

Ian Whitchurch

Guest


Geez but this is a good final series. 2-2 after the Big Three came to play.

2013-06-14T05:30:39+00:00

Dean Vincent

Guest


Recorded the game but just saw the result on another website. Bugger! Sounds like LeBron was on fire too from what I've read. Looks like this one's going down to the wire too.....

2013-06-14T03:32:24+00:00

josh

Roar Rookie


Today, Wade's leading all comers with 32.

2013-06-13T23:43:25+00:00

Dean Vincent

Guest


Agree re Wade......he's been very poor throughout the whole finals. Bosh has also been inconsistent. Miami have looked very much a one-man team most of the time. Miller has come on like a sniper to fire a few three-pointers in and other players have had their moments but if LeBron is off his game no-one else is stepping up to the mark.

2013-06-13T23:29:24+00:00

astro

Guest


Yeah, 70% from 3 is just unbelievable. But how Miami have allowed Green to be so open is equally crazy! Wade has looked terrible in all 3 games, and just can't close out on him... The main question is what happens to Gary Neal next year! He's the next Trevor Ariza, Glen Davis, JJ Barea...role players who step up in a final series and are then massively overvalued by a moronic GM who hands out a ridiculous contract that the player can never live up to. Good for him!

2013-06-13T23:10:41+00:00

Adam

Guest


I am a massive Miami Heat fan and I think they are done and dusted. Pop has had great strategy and his team have executed it perfectly. If Miami play their best I have no doubt we will win series but Spurs strategy and exectution has pushed Heat away from their usual game. Hats off to Spurs but I must say I am bitterly disappointed that Miami havent shown more urgency in this series or the Pacers series for that matter. Nothing wrong with going to the paint and being fouled. LBJ can do that whenever he wants. He may get blocked sometimes, but attacking the rim opening up the 3 point line as he did late in Game 2 is the only way Miami can turn this around. Must get to the rim, get fouled & open up 3 point line who have to knock em down. Today, is THE day. If Miami go down 3-1, its curtains as no team in NBA finals history has come back from that deficit. If Miami can win today, then at the least Miami can go to South Beach to see if they can push it to a game 7. It's disappointing for a Heat fan, but I think Spurs will be too good again today. Too well coached to wander from their game plan.

2013-06-13T21:43:22+00:00

Dean Vincent

Guest


Nice article Really like the Spurs. They have a good mix of experience and youth and a great coach. Green has been outstanding all through the finals. Obviously his shooting in the last few games has been fantastic but his defence in the games against the Warriors was a major part of their success. He bottled up Stephen Curry which totally nullified a lot of their offensive play. Neal was also great the other day and Leonard's rebounding has been superb. Will be interesting to see how today's game goes, Miami have bounced back with a vengeance both against Indiana and in game 2 against the Spurs

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