NBA Basketball
Scoreboard|Postseason|Stats|Standings|Teams|Players|Player News|Injuries|Transactions
92
Final 1 2 3 4 Tot
Houston 21 24 21 26 92
San Antonio 29 28 30 27 114
114
Preview | Box | Play-by-Play | Recap 
Final Boxscore

Rockets-Spurs Preview

According to STATS
According to STATS

Houston Rockets at San Antonio Spurs

  1. Since April 2011, the Rockets are one of just two teams (Clippers) that have beaten the Spurs three times during the regular season.
  2. On Tuesday night against the Lakers, the Rockets attempted 101 shots from the field on their way to a 107-105 victory. This marked just the second time the Rockets have attempted more than 100 shots in a game over their last 200 games.
  3. While the Spurs have lost just once (13-1) when allowing 100 points or fewer this season, they are just 2-3 when allowing more than 100 points.
  4. The Spurs are dishing out 24.5 assists per game this season, while their opponents are picking up 20.0 assists per game. That 4.5 assist per game differential is the largest in the NBA this season.
  5. Toney Douglas came off the Rockets' bench to score 22 points against the Lakers on Tuesday, after scoring a total of 22 points over his previous four games.
  6. After shooting less than 50 percent from the field in nine of his first 10 games this season, Tony Parker has shot above 50 percent from the field in each of his last seven games.

By TAYLOR BECHTOLD

STATS Writer

(AP) -- Fine or no fine, Gregg Popovich isn't likely to change his philosophy on resting starters throughout the season.

So far, the San Antonio Spurs' bench has been ready to answer the coach's call.

The Spurs, though, won't get a break in the schedule Friday night when they host the Houston Rockets, losers of five straight on the road.

San Antonio's reserves nearly led the team to a win at Miami on Nov. 29 after Popovich sent four starters home to rest before the nationally televised contest.

Popovich, whose team was later fined $250,000 for his action, went to his bench out of necessity on Wednesday night.

With Danny Green (hamstring), Stephen Jackson (finger), Kawhi Leonard (knee) and Patty Mills (ankle) out because of injuries, the Spurs displayed their depth again in a 110-99 victory over Milwaukee.

Gary Neal started in place of Green and scored 22 points, Tiago Splitter finished with 15, Manu Ginobili had 11 and Matt Bonner added a season-high 12 rebounds off the bench.

Even with Neal moving into the starting lineup, San Antonio's bench had 40 points, 25 rebounds and 13 assists, and fueled a late 36-13 run that keyed the team's seventh win in eight games.

The Spurs (15-4) rank near the top of the Western Conference in bench scoring at 39.8 points per game. They'll continue to need a complete team effort with this contest starting a stretch of three games in four nights.

"They're talented," said Tony Parker, who led the starters with 22 points. "They showed it in Miami and they showed it again. Pop is always trying to do stuff to make sure our bench is performing."

Tim Duncan, who had 17 points and 10 rebounds, and Bonner led an impressive performance on the boards. San Antonio outrebounded Milwaukee 53-36, including 28-17 in the second half.

The Spurs hope to match that effort against the Rockets (9-8), who rank near the top of the NBA in rebounding (45.2 per game). Omer Asik ranks third in the league with 12.1 per contest.

The Rockets also received a boost from their bench on Tuesday night. Toney Douglas scored a season-high 22 points, Greg Smith added a career-best 21 and Carlos Delfino had 15 in a 107-105 win over the Los Angeles Lakers.

"We had a lot of guys struggle, but our bench was good," said interim coach Kelvin Sampson. "There is a lot to be said about having guys on the bench that you trust that can come through."

James Harden, the team leader with 23.6 points per game, will try to break out of a 13 for 51 (25.5 percent) shooting slump over his last three games.

After averaging 23.0 points in his previous three games, Patrick Patterson is also looking to get back on track after a six-point effort on Tuesday.

Houston shot just 37.6 percent from the field - including 7 of 34 (20.6 percent) from beyond the arc - against the Lakers after shooting 50.3 percent in its previous four games.

While the Rockets have averaged 111.7 points in winning five of six, all five of those victories have come at home. They're just 2-5 on the road and haven't won there since the second game of the season.

Houston, which split the four-game series with the Spurs last season, will try to avoid a sixth straight loss in San Antonio.

Updated December 7, 2012

w3 © 2013 by STATS LLC and Associated Press.
Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.