Toronto Star

Spurs stay upbeat with Warriors poised to sweep

Tonight could mark last time Ginobili plays for San Antonio

- TIM REYNOLDS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

San Antonio’s sense of humour was still there Sunday.

Gregg Popovich predicted that Golden State stayed out way late after winning Game 3 of the Western Conference final, celebratin­g with burgers and sundaes before spending Sunday playing poker. Manu Ginobili, amid plenty of questions about whether his career is ending, said the Spurs planned to lose the first three games of this series simply to make their comeback look more impressive. The laughs seemed helpful. The reality is that Golden State is just better, especially against a seriously undermanne­d Spurs team.

All jokes aside, the Spurs — and everyone else watching this West final — know it’s just about over. No team has successful­ly rallied from 3-0 down in an NBA playoff series, and a San Antonio team that is without Kawhi Leonard, Tony Parker and now David Lee is facing that most precarious deficit. Game 4 is Monday in San Antonio, with Golden State now on the brink of clinching its third consecutiv­e trip to the NBA final.

“Circumstan­ces were such that we could be in a totally different position now,” said Popovich, the Spurs coach whose teams have been swept only twice in 52 previous series on his watch. “That didn’t happen. It’s called life. Slap yourself. Quit your crying and move on. Game 4.”

He’s right, of course. How different this could have been if Leonard didn’t reinjure his ankle when San Antonio was rolling with a 23-point lead in the third quarter of Game 1. The Spurs led by at least 22 points in each of their first four games against the Warriors this season. What they did against Golden State worked better than what anyone else did against Golden State. Then, thud. Leonard — who won’t play in Game 4 barring something “miraculous,” Popovich said — has been out since landing on Zaza Pachulia’s foot in a hotly debated was-it-dirty-or-not closeout by the Warriors’ centre. Game 1 changed in that instant, the whole series changed along with it and the Warriors will become the first team in NBA history to start a post-season12-0 if they win on Monday. “You know what the Spurs are about . . . They’ve got a lot of pride. These guys are pros, man,” Warriors forward Kevin Durant said. “We can’t come out here and feel like we’ve won already before the game has started. We’ve got to go take it.”

The Warriors have made it look easy, which is their normal. Combine the regular season and the post-season, and this Golden State team (7815, .839) has a better record so far than last year’s regular-season record-setting club (88-18, .830).

Ginobili helped keep San Antonio close in Game 3 with 21 points. He’ll likely get an emotional welcome Monday, just in case the veteran decides this season will be his last — a topic he wanted really no part of on Sunday, saying he’ll decide over the summer.

“This is getting a little weird,” Ginobili said after questions hinting at retirement. “It truly is.”

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