The Palm Beach Post

SPORTS EXTRA

Spurs in a new spot: looking up at playoffs

- By Tim Reynolds

This is the worst season for the San Antonio Spurs in the past 21 years.

They’re on pace for only 46 wins.

ONLY 46 wins.

That’s a season fans in other many cities would celebrate wildly. Philadelph­ia hasn’t won 46 games since 2002-03, Minnesota not since 2003-04, Sacramento not since 2004-05. Detroit hasn’t had a 46-win season in the past decade. The Knicks have one in the past 17 seasons.

But this is San Antonio, the silver-and-black standard for the league, where winning 55 or 60 games and making a deep playoff run is considered as much of an annual rite as the rodeo and the Texas Folklife Festival. And even after a blowout win over Orlando on Tuesday night, the Spurs (38-30) entered Thursday’s home game against the Pelicans still on the outside of the playoff picture in the Western Conference.

No need to panic just yet. The Spurs were a mere one game in the loss column behind Oklahoma City, which was the No. 4 seed as of Wednesday. Still, this is a most unusual situation for San Antonio.

“Everybody tries to be the best they can by playoff time,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “That’ll be our goal too, to be in the playoffs and be as good as we can possibly be.”

Here’s how good the Spurs have been for so long: This will be the first season since 1996-97 where San Antonio won’t finish with a winning percentage of at least .600.

This has been such a strange year for the Spurs. Kawhi Leonard has barely played because of a leg injury, and the Spurs still aren’t sure when he will return to the court — though there are indication­s it could be very soon. San Antonio has used 23 starting lineups, none for more than 12 games, most being used for three or fewer. It’ll be an interestin­g finish. “It might look a little odd,” Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. “But we know the Spurs well enough that in these exact type of situations is when they respond the most. When there’s the most adversity, when people count them out and it looks bleak their culture, the coaching, the leadership, the veteran experience they have on that team tends to respond in a way that most organizati­ons don’t respond in these type of circumstan­ces.”

The week ahead:

Some of the games to watch over the coming week:

■ L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City, today: Remember when many thought Doc Rivers and the Clippers gave up on this season? No one told them.

■ Denver at Memphis, Saturday: The start of a seven-game, 14-day trip that may decide if the Nuggets are going to the playoffs or not.

■ Houston at Minnesota, Sunday: The teams have met three times already this season, with the Rockets winning by exactly 18 points in each.

Stephen Curry turned 30 on Wednesday, and if Ray Allen’s career is any indication, then the Golden State star is only halfway to what will eventually be his career total for 3-pointers made.

Allen made 1,486 3-pointers before turning 30, and 1,487 more after that birthday on his way to the NBA record.

Entering Wednesday, Curry had 2,126 3-pointers, which — not surprising­ly — is by far the most for anyone before turning 30.

Steph at 30:

 ??  ?? Running back Jordan Scarlett, who missed last season for his role in Florida’s credit card fiasco, is back. Fans hope the time off won’t slow him.
Running back Jordan Scarlett, who missed last season for his role in Florida’s credit card fiasco, is back. Fans hope the time off won’t slow him.

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