First Round: Grizzlies stun the champs, force a 7-game war. (4-3, Spurs)

The Spurs found themselves on the edge of elimination in the first round, stunned in complacency and disbelief as the bloodthirsty Memphis Grizzlies stole Game 1 on the road, pulled off a home rally in Game 4 & shocked the world in Game 5, winning again in San Antonio. An almost too-tough test for the defending champions eventually righted its course as the Spurs won a close Game 6 & Game 7 in a blowout, marking the first series since the Lakers & Jazz years ago to go the distance. The Grizzlies, being 1 of 5 teams to defeat the Spurs this season, nearly had the biggest defeat of San Antonio in over a decade, beating them 3 more times (4 total) which is just one less than the rest of the league!

"They are going to be dangerous soon, and I plan to retire before then," Coach Popovich said after San Antonio's Game 7 victory. "I want to commend them on a great season and one hell of a series. They play beautiful basketball, but so do we. I'm very proud of our team for digging down deep and remembering how to play this game, especially Murray & Fred. They made history, and we can't understate that."

Coach Pop was speaking to Dejounte Murray, who looked more like Jamal Murray in the playoffs last season. Dejounte dropped 60 points in Game 5 in a crushing defeat, a career-high mark, and then he did it again, sensationally scoring his way past the previous record set by Michael Jordan. Murray scored a phenomenal 71 points in Game 6 on a night with his team facing elimination and only him having the hot hand. For years now, both Spurs fans and league analysts have debated "who's the leader" between Murray, Ingram & Drummond. Dejounte clearly convinced the critics and silenced the skeptics with, "Oh, it's me."

Then, Game 7 happened. Fred VanVleet crushed ex-Spur Joe Harris' previous Playoffs record of 12 three-pointers, hitting 19 of his own for a career-high 62 points after another season of 50% from deep. Meanwhile, he tied Allen Iverson with 10 steals in a playoff game as the Spurs blew out Memphis, 112-141. "He was struggling early this series, so we put KCP in, and it lit a fire under him," Coach Popovich spoke as Kentavious Caldwell-Pope outplayed VanVleet in the first two games, with most critics saying KCP should've closed out Game 1 and maybe in hindsight the Spurs would've avoided this seven-game war.

The Series:

The Grizzlies won Game 1, 140-132.

The Spurs won Game 2, 118-134.

The Spurs won Game 3, 106-96.

The Grizzlies won Game 4, 112-132.

The Grizzlies won Game 5, 133-127.

The Spurs won Game 6, 140-125.

The Spurs won Game 7, 112-141.

Brandon Ingram scored 27 points in Game 7, struggling with his shot for most of the series. Jarren Jackson, Jr played phenomenally for Memphis, proving to be the difference maker in Game 4 and again in Game 5, in which Jonas Valanciunas & Ja Morant both nearly fouled out, with Game 5 being the worst collapse in the 4th Quarter of the two "had it, then lost it" outings for the Spurs. Ja Morant is on the cusp of superstardom, turning in a stellar series with several 20+ scoring performances.

P.J. Tucker played a great series for the Spurs and without his effort, they may have not gotten any farther, as Tucker shot 60% from 3PT range, scoring 18 points in Game 2 and 12 in Game 7. Andre Drummond went to war against Valanciunas, as both men tallied nearly 20 rebounds every game, with Dre averaging 14.4rpg so far with 2.6 blocks per game. His scoring will need to improve as he only had 7.9ppg in this tough series.

Spurs finish season strong on second 24-game win streak, tie own record of 77-5.

The silver and black Alamo City of champions finished the season in historic fashion, tying their own personal league record with 77 wins and just 5 defeats between two amazing win streaks. Evan Fournier had 41 points, 7 rebounds & 5 assists in a blowout win over the Rockets.

Most spectacularly, the Spurs downed the 76ers in a must-see season-ending clash of titanic proportions. Philly led for most of the game, but the Spurs had a 38-23 burst in the 4th Quarter to carry the day. Brandon Ingram had 34 points, with Evan Fournier scoring 19 and a go-ahead 3PT bomb in the final minute. Fred VanVleet notched 23 points, hitting five 3PT daggers. Andre Drummond had 15 points & 13 rebounds. Dejounte Murray dished 15 assists with 11 points & 7 rebounds.

In defeat, the 76ers had 29 points from James Harden. Julius Randle & Tobias Harris combined for 41 points, but both men missed go-ahead jumpers late. Clint Capela had 20 points, but Ben Simmons was contained nicely to just 8 assists & 5 points with 3 turnovers.

Jabari Parker had his best scoring performance since being signed by San Antonio with 30 points in another easy win past Houston, and Mike Muscala had 23 points. P.J. Tucker scored 17 points, but saddened the Spurs faithful by announcing his retirement at season's end. Tucker has surged lately this season after re-signing on a 2 year deal. The Pacers lost a close game next, with Dejounte Murray scoring 34 points. In the final game of the season, Andre Drummond had 25 points & 12 rebounds with 4 blocks.

The 76ers finished 67-15, leading the east with the Celtics at 57-25 behind them. Out west, the Lakers & Warriors both finished 62-20. In a controversial decision, Andre Drummond took MVP honors for the second time in three seasons over much-favored candidate Luka Doncic, Giannis Antetokounmpo (who did win DPOY) & LeBron James.

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