Spurs thump Thunder to take Western Conference lead

5/30/2014
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook, left, and San Antonio's Kawhi Leonard chase a loose ball during the first half of Game 5 on Thursday night.
Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook, left, and San Antonio's Kawhi Leonard chase a loose ball during the first half of Game 5 on Thursday night.

SAN ANTONIO — Tim Duncan had 22 points and 12 rebounds, Manu Ginobili scored 19 points, and the San Antonio Spurs rolled to a 117-89 victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday to take a 3-2 lead in the Western Conference finals.

Kawhi Leonard and Danny Green each had 14 points, Boris Diaw added 13, and Tony Parker scored 12 for the Spurs, who are a win away from returning to the NBA finals after losing in seven games to Miami last year.

Kevin Durant scored 25 points, but Russell Westbrook had only 21 points and seven assists after finishing with 40 points and 10 assists in Game 4.

Game 6 is Saturday in Oklahoma City.

The Jekyll and Hyde series continued between the last two Western Conference champions, as the road team has been thumped in every game of the best-of-seven series.

After losing twice in Oklahoma City by an average of 11 points, San Antonio upped its winning margin in San Antonio to 26.7 points.

“We played so much harder, sharper, smarter, everything we talked about,” Ginobili said.

San Antonio outscored Oklahoma City by 10 points in both the second and third quarters, allowing both teams to sit their starters for much of the fourth.

Serge Ibaka, who dominated the interior in Oklahoma City, was held to six points and two rebounds.

“We have to regroup and come back better in a few days,” Thunder coach Scott Brooks said.

The Spurs started Matt Bonner in place of Tiago Splitter to draw Ibaka out of the paint and it worked early. It also helped defensively, as Ibaka attacked Bonner but missed his first five shots on a series of running hooks.

San Antonio’s crowd was raucous from the start, booing Westbrook heavily during pregame introductions and erupting joyously when Green scored the team’s first points on a 3-pointer 1½ minutes into the game

Oklahoma City withstood the early barrage, going on an 11-2 run for its largest lead of the game.

San Antonio kept Westbrook out of the paint early, but that only opened up the lanes for Reggie Jackson, who made his first five shots.

Three-point shooting got San Antonio back into the game, as Patty Mills and Green closed the first with consecutive 3s to tie the game at 32-all.