INDIANAPOLIS -- Gregg Popovich's grand plan has produced plenty of wins.

The Spurs made it an even 1,000 for him Monday night.

San Antonio rallied from a 14-point fourth-quarter deficit and got an 18-foot baseline jumper from Marco Belinelli with 2.1 seconds left to give Popovich a milestone 95-93 victory at Indiana.

"I've been here a long time and I've had good players. That's the formula," Popovich said. "Getting the players is difficult, but I've been fortunate to have good ones. The time, that's the most important element. You have to be around for a while, I guess."

Popovich celebrated in his typical low-key way. He walked to midcourt, put an arm around Pacers coach Frank Vogel, hugged one of his former players and stoically strolled into the Spurs' locker room, though he later acknowledged he might drink some wine.

While Popovich does have five NBA championships, few midseason wins have come with this much fanfare.

Only two coaches, Phil Jackson and Pat Riley, reached 1,000 wins faster than Popovich. Only one other coach, Jerry Sloan, achieved the feat with one team. Sloan won 1,127 games with Utah. Popovich is 1,000-462 in 19 NBA seasons, all with San Antonio.

His regular-season winning percentage (.684) ranks fifth all time. His playoff winning percentage is seventh (.623), though only two men in front of him coached more than 100 postseason games, Jackson and Billy Cunningham.

Win No. 1,000 came on the most fitting stage for the Indiana native. Popovich was born in northwest Indiana and grew up playing high school basketball in Merrillville, Indiana.

But it was Popovich's players who wanted this win most -- and it showed as they erased a nine-point deficit over the final 5½ minutes.

Belinelli finally tipped the game with his jumper just before the shot clock expired, and George Hill's 3-pointer for the win bounced off the rim at the buzzer.

"A thousand wins, that's a lot of wins and I feel very lucky that I've been with him for a lot of them," Tony Parker said after scoring 19 points. "We've experienced so much stuff together. I'm just very happy for him."

The Spurs came back from a 79-65 deficit entering the fourth quarter, marking only the third time in Popovich's career that they won a game after trailing by at least 14 points entering the fourth -- the first since December 2010 against the Timberwolves. The other was at Phoenix in January 2005.

Popovich played this one with some caution.

After Sunday night's loss in Toronto, he deactivated Manu Ginobili and carefully tracked the minutes of Parker and Tim Duncan. Parker and Duncan, who had 15 points and eight rebounds, each played 30 minutes, 23 seconds and didn't enter the fourth quarter until just before the closing run began.

"We just weren't solid enough down the stretch and gave them too many extra possessions," Pacers forward David West said. "We're disappointed we let this game get away."

West finished with 10 points and a season-high 18 rebounds. Rodney Stuckey had 18 points as the Pacers' three-game winning streak came to an end.

The most frustrating part for the Pacers was that they had the double-digit fourth-quarter lead and still led 91-82 with 5:35 to go.

But Indiana managed only one more basket, a 20-foot pull-up jumper from Stuckey with 2:33 left.

In between, the Spurs' teamwork and ball movement, two of Popovich's trademarks, put the Pacers on their heels. Danny Green's layup and Kawhi Leonard's three-point play got the final rally started. When Duncan put in another layup and Parker made two free throws, the score was tied at 91 with 2:59 left.

After Stuckey's basket and Aron Baynes' tip-in with 56.7 seconds tied the game again, Belinelli made his shot. Hill did not.

"He probably downplayed it as much as I will," Duncan said. "It's another win. It'll look great when we look back on it."

Cavaliers star LeBron James was among several NBA players to tweet congratulations to Popovich on Monday.

76ers coach Brett Brown, a longtime Spurs assistant under Popovich, said after a loss to the visiting Warriors that the 1,000 wins didn't reflect "what Pop has done for me and so many others."

"But just to acknowledge the achievement of those 1,000 wins, you just can't believe the amount of work and detail that went into that number," Brown said.

Brown said Popovich's subdued reaction was a reflection of his personality.

"I remember staying up all night in the Cleveland Ritz after we swept Cleveland," Brown said. "The game was on again, we were in the lounge and nobody was there, and we ended up watching the game again. It's just part of the humility that he brings to the table that people who haven't spent enough time with him don't realize."

Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

 

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