Friday, April 14, 2017

Grizzlies vs Spurs: The series that changed both teams


The seventh seed Memphis Grizzlies will take on the second seed San Antonio Spurs in the first round of the 2017 NBA Playoffs. It's their fourth time meeting in the post season, and the Spurs hold a 3-1 lead.

And while San Antonio has pretty much had their way with Memphis in the playoffs, it was the one that got away that changed both teams forever.

The Spurs were the number one seed in the Western Conference heading into the 2011 playoffs. The Grizzlies were the eighth seed. Not only was San Antonio prohibitive favorites to win the series, they were favored to sweep a young Memphis team that had not won a playoff game in three prior trips to the post season (0-12 from 2004-2006).

That's right...three appearances...swept all three times. Once by the Spurs in their first playoff appearance in 2004.

The Grizzlies ruffled some feathers in San Antonio heading into that 2011 playoff match up, when it appeared they purposely sat players late in the regular season to drop to the eighth seed.

Spurs swing man Manu Ginobili saw it as a sign of disrespect, saying..."They wanted us...now they got us".

Memphis shocked the sports world when they came away victorious, in San Antonio, in game one of that series. It was their first playoff win in franchise history...

But it wouldn't be their last.

The Grizzlies went on to upset the Spurs in six games in what became the coming out party for newly acquired journeyman power forward Zach Randolph. The Spurs had no answer for Z-Bo and the Grizzlies' aggressive style of play on defense.

The first series win in playoff history not only put Memphis on the national radar, but it also ushered in the "Grit and Grind" era that you see today. The core four of that magical run (Randolph, Marc Gasol, Mike Conley, Tony Allen) remained in tact over the years, and as a result the Grizzlies are one of just three teams in the league to reach the playoffs each of the last seven years.

That series also ushered in the "Believe Memphis" mantra, which can still be seen in the Grind House at every Grizzlies home game. Memphis saw their confidence soar through the roof, and while they haven't earned a trip to the Finals, they haven't missed the playoffs since. They have also been a consistent playoff thorn in the sides of Western Conference opponents since then.

Before that series the Grizzlies had zero playoffs wins under their belt. Since then they have 24, and a Western Conference Finals appearance.

As for the Spurs, the natural overreaction was talk of their demise. But the playoff loss was a blessing in disguise for them, too.

A couple of months later San Antonio made a draft day trade with the Indiana Pacers for the rights to Kawhi Leonard. A versatile forward that could get his own shot while shutting down the most potent scorer for the opposition.

This move was important because the lack of a player with his set of skills ultimately cost the Spurs that series. Memphis clamped down on San Antonio bigs Tim Duncan and Antonio McDyess, forcing their perimeter players to beat them off the dribble...something Ginobili and point guard Tony Parker were unable to do.

With Leonard transitioning into the focal point of the team the Spurs rebounded by making back to back Finals appearances in 2013 and 2014, narrowly losing the title in seven games before dominating the LeBron James led Miami Heat to win it all the following year.

Coincidentally enough, Kawhi was the Finals MVP that season.

Today, Leonard is not only the best two-way player in the league, but he is now considered a top five player overall. All Star appearances, first team All NBA, first team All Defense, multiple Defensive Player of the Year awards, and MVP candidate this year. Kawhi does it all.

And here we are again, the Spurs are once again the heavy favorite to knock off the Grizzlies. Can Memphis find lightning in a bottle one more time? We will start to find out Saturday night at 7:00.

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