SAN ANTONIO (AP) -- The Oklahoma City Thunder
wanted something to stop the James
Harden talk.
This probably wasn't what they had in mind.
Tony
Parker sank a 21-footer as time expired and the San Antonio Spurs won a
thrilling rematch of the Western Conference finals, beating Oklahoma City 86-84
Thursday night. The All-Star calmly pulled up for the game-winner after losing Russell Westbrook on a
screen and then shooting high over Serge
Ibaka, the NBA's leading shot-blocker last season.
Under the basket, Kevin
Durant stood frozen in disbelief. Conspicuously absent was Harden, who was
crucial in the nail-biters like this during that Spurs series that sent the
Thunder to their first NBA Finals.
Following the trade that sent the Sixth Man of
the Year to Houston, and Parker's dagger made for two stunners this week for the
Thunder.
And the season is just getting started.
''It was definitely odd not playing and
practicing with him,'' Westbrook said of Harden. ''But we still need to find a
way to win.''
With Ibaka charging at full steam, Parker swished
the last of his 14 points from the left wing before breaking into a sustained
scream while his teammates mobbed him in front of the Thunder bench.
''I was like, I have to shoot fast,'' Parker said
about eluding the outstretched arm of the 6-foot-10 Ibaka. ''He was coming very
fast.''
Durant led all scorers with 23 points and began
his sixth NBA season by becoming the second-youngest player behind LeBron James
to reach 10,000 career points. Durant, however, stood silent under the basket
for several seconds after Parker's shot before walking off the court.
''We lost him. We didn't get him in time, but he
still made a tough shot over Serge,'' Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. ''It's
not an easy hand to shoot over.''
The defending West champions broke up their Big
Three by trading the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year to Houston on Saturday. Harden
had 37 points and 12 assists in a brilliant debut with the Rockets on Wednesday
night.
Speaking before the season opener, Brooks
acknowledged Harden's performance before saying his team was moving forward.
Until Parker's game-winner, it was almost as if
nothing had changed for Oklahoma City.
Tim Duncan led the Spurs with 20 points and eight
rebounds. Parker also had 11 assists and hit a 3-pointer with 28.4 seconds left
that tied the game at 84 and set up his buzzer-beater on the next possession.
Durant also had 14 rebounds. Russell Westbrook scored 18
points, but made a poor pass on the Thunder's final possession that gave the
ball back to the Spurs with 5.9 seconds left, giving Parker plenty of time to
set and release his shot.
The Thunder are starting anew with newcomers
Kevin Martin and Jeremy Lamb, who along with draft picks, are what the Thunder
got in exchange for their third-leading scorer. Small-market Oklahoma City
wasn't willing to offer Harden a maximum contract, and the No. 3 overall pick
in the 2009 draft wouldn't accept its lesser offer.
On Wednesday, Harden had agreed to a five-year,
$80 million extension with the Rockets. That night, he stepped into Houston's
starting lineup and became the first player in NBA history to have more than 30
points and 12 assists in a debut with a new team.
Asked before Thursday's game whether the
second-guessing had begun, Brooks didn't linger on the topic.
''He's played good basketball. He had a good
game,'' Brooks said. ''We're real focused on our group, our guys and moving
forward.''
Westbrook, who took responsibility for losing
Parker on the screen on the game's final play, acknowledged the first game
without Harden didn't feel the same.
Martin had 15 points and was Oklahoma City's only
bench player in double figures. But backup Eric Maynor made his own big
contribution, hitting a half-court heave to tie the game at the end of the
third quarter.
Spurs guard Manu Ginobili missed his second game
with back problems and could make his season debut Saturday against Utah.
Parker played 35 minutes and scored 23 points in
Wednesday night's season-opening win at New Orleans. He played another 35
minutes against the Thunder, more than what Spurs coach Gregg Popovich would
prefer for his Big Three on back-to-back nights this early in the season.
''Down the stretch, you think he might be getting
a little tired on the back-to-back,'' Popovich said. ''Be he had his legs on
the shot and did a great job.''
NOTES: Spurs C DeJuan Blair made his season debut
after Popovich kept him on the bench Wednesday, which prompted a clearly
frustrated Blair to take to Twitter after the game. Blair, who started 62 games
last season but was stuck on the bench by the playoffs, insisted he wasn't
complaining but at one point tweeted, ''I'm might not b tall enough.'' ...
Duncan surpassed Charles Barkley for 17th on the NBA's career rebounding list.

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