NBA playoffs: Spurs rout Thunder in West finals opener

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SAN ANTONIO — The San Antonio Spurs were planning to attack the lane whether Oklahoma City big man Serge Ibaka was playing or not. The fact that the Thunder’s athletic defender was absent only made things easier for them.

SAN ANTONIO — The San Antonio Spurs were planning to attack the lane whether Oklahoma City big man Serge Ibaka was playing or not. The fact that the Thunder’s athletic defender was absent only made things easier for them.

Tim Duncan scored 27 points and San Antonio took advantage of Ibaka’s absence to dominate the paint, beating the Oklahoma City 122-105 on Monday night in the opener of the Western Conference finals.

Tony Parker did not appear limited by a hamstring injury, scoring 14 points and having 12 assists in 36 minutes.

“We always want to try to penetrate,” Parker said. “We always want our ball movement, that’s how we play — kick and pitch and stuff like that. You know, obviously it’s a little bit better with (Ibaka) not being in the paint, but we’re still going to try to penetrate and make stuff happen.”

The Thunder got their usual offensive outputs from All-Stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, who scored 28 and 25 points respectively. But Oklahoma City’s remaining starters, Nick Collison, Thabo Sefolosha and Kendrick Perkins, combined to score five points with 13 rebounds and one assist.

But it was defensively where the Thunder struggled without Ibaka, who will miss the remainder of the postseason after suffering a calf injury in Oklahoma City’s series clincher against the Los Angeles Clippers.

The Spurs had 66 points in the paint and shot 58 percent from the field. It was the highest shooting percentage allowed by the Thunder in the postseason since relocating from Seattle.

“We’re a no-excuse team,” Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks said. “Serge is out. He’s not coming back. We have to play better. We have to play better. If we expect to beat one of the best teams in basketball, and a very good offensive team, we have to play and we’re not going to make an excuse.”

The Spurs fed Duncan early with Ibaka out, and the veteran responded by shooting 6 for 7 in scoring 12 points in the opening quarter.

Parker, who suffered a Grade 1 left hamstring strain in San Antonio’s series clincher against Portland, drove the paint and dished to Duncan early before looking for his own shot midway through the quarter.

“That’s part of our game plan,” Duncan said. “He knew that they weren’t going to let him shoot the ball like he did in the last series. They were going to try to take that away from him, so he knew he was going to have to be an assist man.”

Parker scored all but two of his points in the first half as the Spurs beat the Thunder for the first time this season.

Even though San Antonio improved to 7-1 at home in the playoffs, winning their past five games by an average of 20.6 points, Monday’s victory was not easy.

The Spurs also still remember what happened in the 2012 conference finals, when the Thunder won four straight to rally from an 0-2 deficit.

“We knew that we have to play our best game to compete against them, and I think it’s great to have an appropriate fear,” Parker said. “They played great against us in 2012, and we know that we have to be perfect. They’re younger than us and more athletic, and so we have to be more perfect.”

San Antonio played nearly perfectly offensively and still rallied to take a 76-75 lead on Westbrook’s 17-foot jumper with 5 minutes left in the third quarter.

“We don’t believe in moral victories,” Durant said. “Third quarter was obviously our best quarter, but we didn’t close it out well. It’s Game 1, we’ve got to make adjustments and be better for the next game. We’re not taking no moral victories out of it.”

EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS

INDIANAPOLIS — LeBron James is ready to help the Miami Heat get even against the Indiana Pacers.

After spending Sunday night and Monday morning sifting through Sunday’s Game 1 loss, the Heat are ready to start over in Game 2 today.

The changes start with James.

“My approach is the same every game, try to put pressure on the defense, try to get to the free-throw line to help us win,” James said. “I got to the rim, I got my shots going, but I’ve got to do a little more, too.”

While Heat coach Erik Spoelstra acknowledged the tape was every bit as bad as it looked in person, he didn’t drop any hints about what might change.

To the Pacers, that means one thing: Expect James to do even more than he usually does. Nobody understands that better than Paul George.

Over the past two years, these teams have met 15 times with George has usually drawing the seemingly impossible task of defending James.

He’s seen it happen up close — as James got past him for the winning shot in Game 1 of last year’s conference finals — and from afar, such as last week when James almost single-handedly sent Miami past Brooklyn with 49 points in Game 4.

“He (James) will shoulder everything. I think he’s going to be much more aggressive with the ball,” George said.

“I think he’s going to be looking to make more plays, looking to shoot more shots and really looking to get guys going.”

The Associated Press’ Michael Marot contributed to this report.