National Notebook

NBA
Scores
Schedule
Standings
Statistics
Transactions
Injuries
Players
Message Board
NBA en espanol
FEATURES
Playoff Matchups
Lottery Standings
Power Rankings
NBA Insider
CLUBHOUSE


ESPN MALL
TeamStore
ESPN Auctions
SPORT SECTIONS
Tuesday, April 24
 
Minutes not a problem for aging, hungry Stockton

By Marc Stein
Special to ESPN.com

He is the unlikely 3-point marksman who just turned Game 1 of Jazz-Mavericks with a very rare triple.
John Stockton
Stockton enters his 18th year coming off 8.7 assists per game.

He is the undeniable medical marvel who, before sinking that shot, had to make pro sports' history by rebounding from three knee reconstructions.

He is Danny Manning, playoff hero du jour in Jazzland, understandably dissecting the play of ... John Stockton?

"Amazing," says Manning, who should know.

Manning is amused by all the media gnats who have swarmed since Saturday, as if he was back in Kansas, after the surprise three-ball that enabled Utah to pull out their series opener with Dallas and take a 1-0 lead into Tuesday night's Game 2.

Because ...

"If I'd have missed that shot," Manning points out, "I'm the goat."

The other reason is Stockton, now 39, without whom Manning couldn't have made such an impact with his first playoff 3-pointer since 1992.

We know that because the Jazz, in its 11 minutes sans Stockton in Game 1, got outscored by 17 points. In 13 straight third-quarter possessions without Stockton, Utah got points out of exactly one of them.
We've come to take Stock for granted. But we expect a lot out of him.
Malone on Stockton

With Stockton, conversely, the Jazz was able to overcome Karl Malone's basket-less stretch of almost 13 minutes, all against the out-of-mothballs Mark Bryant. Utah thus managed to turn back the post-season neophytes from Dallas who, for all they didn't have -- experience, rebounding or a bench contribution -- came within a minute of a memorable upset.

"I guess you have to say he's lost a little bit, but not enough to take him out of the top echelon of guards," Manning said. "Just look at his field-goal percentage (.504). His 3-point percentage (.462). His assists (8.7 per game). His steals (1.6).

"A lot of guys 21 would love to put up the numbers John's putting up at 40."

Said Malone: "We've come to take Stock for granted. But we expect a lot out of him."

Which could well emerge as Story O' The Series, in spite of Manning's storybook start. To keep disproving Steve Nash's bold boast that the Mavericks "are the better team," it appears as though the Jazz might have to play Stockton more than he's used to at this stage of his career. How Stockton responds to those expectations/demands potentially settles the matchup.

Manning
Manning

Malone
Malone

Utah's offense just doesn't function as fluidly with Jacque Vaughn running it. And, as Jazz coach Jerry Sloan admits: "They can make a lot of changes. We can't change a whole lot."

Dirk Nowitzki, for starters, can do considerably better than 2 for 9 from long distance. Juwan Howard is bound to exceed a double-bagel -- zero points, zero rebounds -- in his next fourth quarter. Don and Donnie Nelson, you figure, won't combine for three technical fouls to gift Stockton unearned free throws. Maybe most of all, the Mavericks won't surrender 19 offensive rebounds while settling for four points and four rebounds from their reserves.

Now you know why Dallas -- in its first playoff series since 1990 -- sounds so optimistic. There is so much room to improve after just a two-point defeat.

Sloan's only available tweak, meanwhile, might be increasing Stockton's workload, which clocked in at a modest 29.2 minutes per game during the regular season. In Game 1, Stockton logged 37 minutes -- a plateau he reached only three times in 82 games, each of those an overtime game.

The temptation Tuesday is letting Stockton go even longer, since the teams will have three full off days before Saturday's Game 3 in Dallas. Especially if Stockton comes anywhere close to replicating his 12 points, 18 assists and six rebounds.

"We've known that since John has been here," Sloan said of the Stock dip that grips the Jazz when its pushing-40 quarterback takes a blow. "This is not the first time it's come up."

Stockton, of course, doesn't have much to say on the subject. "I'm not even thinking about it," he said in response to the minutes question. Pressed further, as the gnats probed for just one usable quote, Stockton didn't exactly match Nash in the bulletin-board battle.

Stock's fearless prediction: "Game 2 will be tougher."

Said Nash, nothing less than respectful toward the player he's often compared to: "He's so smart and experienced, and he's got [options] A, B and C on every play. And they've been doing it for 17 years.

"In a lot of ways, you can make the case that he's their MVP."

In the opener, that was certainly the case. Apologies to Mailman and a marvelous Manning.

Carter
Carter

Around The League
A few Weekend 1 observations from the first round ...

  • Isn't it time Half-Man, Half-Amazing makes half his shots in a playoff game? Or at least close to half? The post-season shooting woes of Vince Carter are now a full year old. Vince McMahon wishes the XFL had this much staying power.

  • Isn't it time to question whether Pat Riley is the right coach for the Miami Heat? Riles blew up his roster after last spring's Knicks-induced early departure, but the new players aren't going any farther than the old ones. The Heat, embarrassing themselves and lots of folks (yours truly included) who picked them to reach the Finals, are about to lose in the first round for the third time in four springs. Riley's last title: 1988.

  • Isn't it time to call a Michael Jordan timeout? When I turn on NBC, I expect to hear about the playoffs and players actually in the playoffs. Not another mind-numbing Ahmad sitdown in which MJ hints at how he might not be able to resist the temptation to split time with Courtney Alexander. ENOUGH! "We're already got one Mike here," the Mavericks' Michael Finley joked. "We don't need another Mike. Besides, the other Mike is not coming back." Asked if he had insider information on his good friend, Finley added: "No, it's just a gut feeling."

    Marc Stein, who covers the NBA for The Dallas Morning News, is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.








  •  More from ESPN...
    Unrattled, Jazz outlast Mavs in frenzied series opener

    MARC STEIN ARCHIVE
    Want to take a look back at ...

    Marc Stein Archive

     ESPN Tools
    Email story
     
    Most sent
     
    Print story
     
    Daily email