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Beyond the Arc Sports

Road Recap: Grizzlies 105, Pistons 91 — The Real Return of Quincy Pondexter

Quincy Pondexter made a promising return last night in Detroit.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Quincy Pondexter made a promising return last night in Detroit.

After a sleepy first quarter in the which the Grizzlies turned the ball over seven times and allowed 30 points to the Detroit Pistons, the team revved up its defensive intensity significantly, overwhelming the Pistons in the heart of the game with a 62-30 run in the second and third quarters.

Fourteen steals and seven blocks helping foster 24 fastbreak points was vintage Grizzlies basketball. Twenty-nine assists on 45 made field goals and balanced shooting (10 players with between five and 11 field-goal attempts) is new-look Grizzlies basketball. Put opportunistic defense and sharp, share-the-ball offense together and you get a blowout road win. (Extended garbage time made the final score look more reasonable.)

The best takeaways from the win, though, were the performances of Quincy Pondexter and Ed Davis. Pondexter got a few minutes in the penultimate game before the break, but didn’t look good. With a little more rehab/recovery time, Pondexter came back last night in true game shape. He knocked down a corner three, notched three steals, and was probably as effective on both ends as any Grizzlies player on the way to 10 points on 4-6 shooting in 22 minutes. Pondexter is both a better corner-three threat and a more physical, aggressive defender than either Tayshaun Prince or Austin Daye. His return will be very helpful for the Grizzlies and if he plays well, I think he could become a frequent fixture in closing lineups.

As for Davis, he got his longest run since joining the team — something abetted by the blowout — and was very productive, with 14 points on 6-7 shooting, four rebounds, and four blocks in 21 minutes. Davis showed his stronger-than-he-looks physicality with the blocks and power dunks and hit two of three on short jumpers that are more effective than fluid. He brings a different dimension to the team’s frontcourt rotation and hopefully this performance can help ease him into a larger role.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Post-Weekend Notebook: Griz Split with Pistons and Spurs

Mike Conley: Man of the Weekend

This weekend’s Grizzlies back-to-back got away from me a little bit. I was at Friday’s home game with the Pistons, a 90-78 win, but as a civilian, taking my soon-to-be-three-year-old son to his first game. And I watched Saturday night’s 99-95 overtime road loss to the San Antonio Spurs on DVR delay.

As a means of catching up, I’m re-purposing the Postgame Notebook format to look back on what happened in Griz World this weekend:

The Lead: The Grizzlies went 1-1 on the weekend while playing without Tony Allen, who was nursing a sore groin.

Friday’s home game against the Pistons was a rough repeat of the prior home games against the Cavaliers and Raptors: The Grizzlies played down to competition in the first half and then turned up their defense in the second to secure a double-digit win.

Saturday night, the Grizzlies played a very well rested Spurs team on their own home floor, on the second night of a back to back, and built a 15-point lead in the second half before succumbing to some combination of fatigue, poor execution, and questionable calls.

On the latter: The missed shot-clock violation near the end of overtime was clearly an official’s error, but one that was only harmful to the Grizzlies in retrospect. If Jerryd Bayless and Rudy Gay had connected on the subsequent long lead pass for a transition layup, the Grizzlies would have benefited from not having the violation called. As far Manu Ginobili grabbing Gay’s arm on his attempted catch of that pass, it was definitely a foul, but not all actual fouls are actually called in NBA games. For the Grizzlies, that was an infuriating non-call, but it wasn’t a terribly surprising one.

As it is, after 15 games the Grizzlies stand at 12-3 and still lack a bad loss: Single digits to the Clippers in their home opener. A narrow home loss to a deep, athletic Nuggets team on the final game of a three-in-four-nights set. And nip-and-tuck road overtime loss in San Antonio on the second of a back-to-back. That’s it. The Grizzlies are the last team standing this NBA season that has yet to lose a game by double-digits.

If you want to be concerned about something, you could point to the team’s 0-2 record in games that have come down to execution in the final couple of minutes. But two games — two! — is a pretty small sample size.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Game 14 Preview: Grizzlies vs. Pistons

A few hours late and a few hundred words short, but here are three quick thoughts on tonight’s Grizzlies game, which concludes a season-long five-game homestand:

1. The Suddenly Frisky Pistons: After an 0-8 start, the Pistons have rebounded to go 5-3 over their past eight. This run began with an 18-point road win over the Sixers and also includes a 20-point win over Boston and, most recently, a 40-point win — no typo! — over the Suns. So as the third “bad” Eastern Conference team the Grizzlies will have faced at FedExForum this week, the Pistons come in tonight in better shape than the Cleveland Cavaliers or Toronto Raptors did.

2. Present and Future in the Paint: With Pau Gasol’s recent struggles in Laker Land, the Grizzlies can reasonably claim to have the best frontcourt tandem in the NBA with Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol. But the Pistons might be able to lay legitimate claim to having the most promising young frontcourt tandem in the league in 22-year-old Greg Monroe and 19-year-old rookie Andre Drummond.