INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (May 10, 2008)-Target Chip Ganassi Racing teammates Scott Dixon and Dan Wheldon survived the drama of Pole Day at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and qualified 1-2, respectively, for the 92nd Running of the Indianapolis 500. Dixon, who was fifth on the starting grid mid-afternoon, pulled his qualified time from his first attempt and put in another four-lap effort around the historic 2.5-mile oval. Minutes later, he had taken the PEAK Motor Oil Pole Award presented by AutoZone from the grasp of Team Penske’s Ryan Briscoe with a 226.366 mph average. Dixon held the $100,000 check aloft.
“It hasn't really sunk in yet,” said Dixon, who has two poles and one victory in 2008. “It means a lot. It's not just for me, though. I think a lot of it, and I think (team owner) Chip (Ganassi) and probably (team managing director) Mike (Hull) and (chief mechanic) Ricky (Davis) have touched on it already, but it's the hard work that goes into it. Indy, for our team, I think our development and working toward this race started well early in the winter. I think Chip Ganassi and Mike and all the guys in the team are adamant on putting up a strong fight for this year's 500."
Wheldon had earned the third starting position on the grid, but at 5:38 p.m., he waved it off to challenge Dixon for the pole. Although he fell short of the pole, Wheldon took second, knocking Briscoe to the outside of Row 1.
"It's a real tribute to the team," said team owner Ganassi, who celebrated his third pole start at Indianapolis (Bruno Junqueira in 2002 are Arie Luyendyk in 1993). "Every team works hard in the off-season to get better, and you're charged with making your team better than the other guys who make their team better. T his is the payoff."
The San Antonio Spurs are trying to hand the New Orleans Hornets their second consecutive loss and extend a seven-game winning streak against the Hornets in New Orleans tonight. New Orleans matched last season's start for the best in franchise history with four straight wins before falling 93-90 to the Portland Trail Blazers on Wednesday. The Spurs, meanwhile, bounced back from their first loss with an 88-78 win over the Miami Heat on Wednesday.
Peter Finney, a writer for the New Orleans Times-Picayune paid great tribute to the Spurs today. What a good sport.
Finney wrote, "Let's all stand and applaud. How about a Big Easy welcome to the Invisible Dynasty that goes by the name of the San Antonio Spurs? The Spurs win by making plays that don't show up on "SportsCenter." They win with defense, by getting the ball to the open man, by wearing you down with basic fundamentals. Whatever happens tonight, win or lose, the Hornets will learn from the experience."
What a great article from the oposition's press? WOW! Do you think maybe, just maybe, Katrina changed the paradigm on how things are viewed in the Crescent City?
Imagine, remembering that sports are for fun. What a display of sportsmanship that is far to lacking these days. Thanks Peter.
The Hornets have one of the Western Conference's most potent backcourts. Third-year point guard Chris Paul dropped 21 assists on the Los Angeles Lakers in New Orleans' Tuesday night victory. Shooting guard Morris Peterson, signed as a free agent this summer, is finding his comfort zone. Backups Bobby Jackson and Rasual Butler are solid and consistent.
Considering he had just pulled down 14 rebounds in the San Antonio Spurs' 88-78 victory over the Miami Heat at the American Telephone and Telegraph Center on Wednesday, it seemed fair to ask Francisco Elson if Heat center Shaquille O'Neal, all 7-foot-1 and 325-plus-plus-plus pounds of him, had been less of a challenge than the Houston Rockets 7-6, 310-pound Yao Ming.
"Shoot," Elson said, with a note of derision and a glance of astonishment. "That's a big job right there."
Not only did Elson defend O'Neal, he actually outplayed him. Elson finished with an 11-rebound advantage on O'Neal and did solid defensive work on the former MVP, as well.
"I thought Francisco did a good job all the way around," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "He worked very hard on Shaq. That's a tough job to give to anybody. So I thought doing that and still concentrating on the boards was really great on his part."
"We know Miami is a very good rebounding team, especially with Shaq on their team," said Elson, who played the entire fourth quarter while Tim Duncan rested on the bench. So we boxed out very well and everybody got down and rebounded."
Elson also rediscovered his shooting stroke, making 6 of 11 shots and scoring a season-high 12 points.
Miami played its fourth-straight game without Dwyane Wade, their leading scorer last season. He is recovering from offseason surgeries on his knee and shoulder.
It should come as no surprise that the Heat haven't been very good without him. At 0-4 this season and 0-7 in the preseason, Miami hasn't won a game — postseason, exhibition or otherwise — since beating Indiana on April 13. Unofficially, the Heat are on a 17-game losing streak. Wade has been medically cleared to return to the court, but the date for his debut remains tentative.
"Hopefully, things get better when Wade comes back," O'Neal said. "He's a great player, and he's going to make everyone else better."
In the meantime?
"We need everyone else to step up their game and play harder," O'Neal said.
Ricky Davis (14 points) and Udonis Haslem (10) answered O'Neal's plea to an extent, but it wasn't enough to help Miami avoid its 20th loss in 21 trips to San Antonio. With the top scoring option in Miami's offense floundering, the Heat remained flummoxed. The 78 points they scored Wednesday brought down their league-worst scoring average to 82.8.
"Unfortunately, our second option is on the bench," Miami coach Pat Riley said, in reference to Wade.
The last time the Heat beat the Spurs on the road, Miami's rookie guard Daequan Cook was in the fourth grade, Jason Williams had yet to transfer to the University of Florida and Penny Hardaway was on the way to his third All-NBA team. In other words, it has been a while.
''You don't have to tell me,'' Riley said before Wednesday night's game. ``It's been tough for us here the past 20 games. But you never know in this league -- with the expected and unexpected.''
''It's frustrating and nobody likes to lose,'' said Haslem, who also had nine rebounds while helping to limit Duncan to 12 points. ``It's not a good feeling. It's not where we want to be or hoped to be. But you have to look at the big picture. We still have a lot more basketball to play. No sense whining and holding your head down.''
Things won't get any easier for the Heat, which returns home Friday to play the Suns and then plays 11 of the next 16 on the road. Those aren't exactly ideal conditions to cure lingering defensive problems and scoring droughts that have plagued the Heat. Miami hasn't been able to generate offense late in the shot clock or stop others from doing so.
''We're just not playing a whole 48 minutes,'' said Davis. ``But it's always discouraging when you're losing games. It doesn't matter if it's one, five or 10. We just have to keep talking, keep working on it.'
'''What was good enough to win tonight became flat and soft,'' Riley said ``The bottom line is we need to play defense for four quarters.''
Bonzi Wells had 15 rebounds on Tuesday night to help the Houston Rockets over the San Antonio Spurs 89-81. Afterward, Wells reiterated that rebounding was his thing.Yao Ming added 13 rebounds. Tracy McGrady had nine rebounds. Houston controlled Tim Duncan and outrebounded the sluggish Spurs 55-28.
"It was a huge advantage that we gave up. It's pretty hard to win like that."
- Manu Ginobilion the Rockets 55-28 rebound advantage.
The Rockets had 25 offensive rebounds, part of the reason they outscored the Spurs 21-3 on second chances. The Rockets finished the first half with a 34-15 rebounding advantage.
"I think we all understand how good we can be," McGrady said. "If we can do this on a consistent basis, then we would be tough to beat."
San Antonio's Tim Duncancalled it a "very, very, very bad rebounding night" for his club — yes, he used three "verys" — and still probably understated the case.
"If they get 20-some-odd second shots," Duncan said, "it starts and ends right there."
"That was one of the keys tonight to win the game," Yao said. "If you look at field-goal percentage (40.7 percent), we were not shooting that well. But we had ... almost 20 (more) shots with offensive rebounds — Chuck (Hayes, who had four offensive rebounds), Bonzi (who had seven) and me (eight) — some on my shots that I missed and (were) put back in. That's about how hungry we were to win the game."
With the victory, the Rockets (4-1) ruined the Spurs' perfect start. The Spurs (3-1) are trying to rebound — in every sense of the word — tonight against the Miami Heat at the A####mp;T Center.
Sir Charles Barkley screams his name in admiration mocking arena announcers. Manu has game.
Manu Ginobili scored the final nine points including seven straight free throws willing the San Antonio Spurs past a young but fast and talented Memphis Grizzly team 104 - 101 in Memphis, Tennessee on Wednesday night.
Down the stretch, the San Antonio Spurs showed why they are the NBA champions, and the Memphis Grizzlies are a team with some growing to do. When his tired team needed a lift on the second night of a back-to-back, Ginobili had the legs to provide it, scoring 30 points to help the Spurs fend of####rizzlies team looking to fend off a bit of its own bad history.
Manu saved his best for when the Spurs needed him most. His driving, twirling, twisting layup over Darko Milicic, spun with the English of a pool shark, broke a 95-95 tie with 32.4 seconds remaining. Ginobili charged into a thicket of opposing players, slid his body between two of them, and — while nearly directly under the backboard — flipped the ball backward and rimward. It rolled around the iron before dropping through, giving the Spurs the last lead they would need. Ginobili could rest on the plane ride home.
"The difference in the game was that Manu Ginobili willed it," Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich said. "He just willed it. He saved the day for us."
Ginobili made five of the Spurs' 12 3-pointers, hit 13 of 14 free throws and had seven assists. Ginobili added drawing a late charge from Grizzlies forward Rudy #### to preserve the Spurs' lead.
In Miami last week, Ginobili checked in about halfway through the first quarter. Before long you could hear oohs and aahs coming from the Heat fans, as Ginobili basically took over the game. His aggressive drives to the basket resulted in seven free throws....he hit every one. Before departing the game for good early in the fourth quarter, the lefty from Bahia Blanca scored 22 points in under 19 minutes of play. Ginobili joked with reporters that he doesn't have any bruises on his body just yet, so he may not exactly be in mid season form.
After putting an extra dash of wear and tear on Ginobili's battered body last season, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich had two offseason orders for his human bruise of an off-guard. Take it easy. And call me in September.
For Ginobili, who scored 16 against the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday night, his offseason conditioning program where he did little during August and started training in September is providing early dividends.
"I feel great right now. It seems to be paying off,'' Ginobili said. "I don't know what that means a few months from now, but right now I feel really fresh.''
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