Boston Herald

Spurs not done yet

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Ettore Messina was screaming at the Spurs, and Manu Ginobili loved it.

Before Gregg Popovich, Ginobili played in Italy for Messina, and yesterday he delivered a throwback performanc­e for his old coach to save the Spurs’ season.

Experienci­ng a flashback to his days playing for Messina in the Euroleague in his early 20s, the 40-yearold Ginobili scored 10 of his 16 points in the fourth quarter to help the Spurs beat the Golden State Warriors 103-90 in San Antonio. The Spurs avoided a series sweep as Popovich missed his second straight game following the death of his wife, Erin, on Wednesday.

In his 16th season in the NBA and perhaps the final home game of his career, Ginobili rebounded from a scoreless effort in Game 3 to help Messina capture his first playoff victory as a coach, albeit an unofficial one.

“For moments when he talks to the rest of the team, or when he gets upset and he yells at us, a lot of flashbacks,” Ginobili said, chuckling. “He’s very strict and he wants the team to play his way, so whenever we stopped executing the way we should have, the old himself comes back. It was good to see him coaching on this stage. Good memories.”

Ginobili played for Messina while both were with Virtus Bologna in 2000-02.

Kevin Durant had 34 points and 13 rebounds for the Warriors, who can wrap up the series in Game 5 at home tomorrow.

“You have got to give them a lot of credit,” Golden State forward Draymond Green said. “They came out and they probably played with more intensity this game than they did the entire series.”

LaMarcus Aldridge had 22 points and 10 rebounds to lead the Spurs, but they were willed to the finish by Ginobili, who has said he will decide in the offseason if he will return for a 17th season.

Ginobili was 3-for-4 in the final quarter, including making both of his 3-point attempts, and did not have a turnover in 61⁄2 minutes.

Golden State outscored San Antonio 29-21 in the third quarter and went on a 13-5 run beginning two minutes into the fourth quarter to pull within 88-86 with 6 minutes remaining after trailing by as many as 17.

Aside from Durant, only Klay Thompson (12) and Shaun Livingston (10) scored in double figures for the Warriors.

Wizards 106, Raptors 98 — John Wall took over down the stretch after Bradley Beal fouled out, having a hand in 10 of host Washington’s last 14 points and finishing with 27 points and 14 assists as the No. 8 seed came back to beat No. 1 Toronto and even the Eastern Conference firstround playoff series at 2-2.

The game was tied at 92 with about five minutes left when Beal — who led Washington with 31 points — drew his sixth foul on a play in which he and DeMar DeRozan collided while Toronto had the ball. Beal raced along the sideline, put his hands on his head, then returned to the Wizards’ bench area and threw a red towel before being restrained by teammates.

The Raptors went up by two, but Wall pulled the Wizards even with a layup that drew a goaltendin­g call, then put the hosts in front to stay by feeding Markieff Morris for a layup off the glass. As the final seconds ticked away, Wall held up two fingers on each hand. Yep, it’s 2-2, and the home team has won every game so far.

Toronto will host Game 5 on Wednesday.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? ALL TIED UP: LeBron James battles for the ball with the Pacers’ Lance Stephenson during the Cavaliers’ 104-100 victory in last night’s Game 4, which evened the series.
AP PHOTO ALL TIED UP: LeBron James battles for the ball with the Pacers’ Lance Stephenson during the Cavaliers’ 104-100 victory in last night’s Game 4, which evened the series.

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