Buck Harvey: The way Parker has come to see his Games

LONDON — These were supposed to be Tony Parker’s Olympics. He was supposed to be the host, in Paris, his name in lights in the City of Light.

Instead, he’s teasingly close to his homeland, leading a splintered French team, knowing these will likely be his only Olympics.

But he walked along the Thames Thursday night seemingly OK with that, and what happened last month had something to do with this.

Parker thinks sitting in the dark for a week may have changed the way he sees things.

In many ways, these are still his Olympics. He attended a marketing extravaganza Thursday night in a large building turned into something called “Club France,” and he was clearly the headline performer.

“This has been crazy,” Parker said as he went from interview to dignitary to sponsor, but there was little reluctance. The same Parker who likes to duck out of the Spurs locker room was around as long as necessary.

This fits with a child of the 1992 Dream Team. Parker was mesmerized then, and no one caught the attention of the 10-year-old as Michael Jordan did.

Parker didn’t know much at the time. He just knew he wanted to do that.

He was short and skinny and already working on a floater to score over the big kids. Within nine years, Parker was not only in the NBA, he was also playing with David Robinson, a Dream Team member.

What followed is sometimes overlooked in San Antonio. Parker became the best basketball player in the history of his country, and his status rose accordingly. In 2005, when Paris battled London for the right to be the Olympic host for 2012, Parker traveled with the French delegation to make the final pitch.

London won, and Parker made headlines. He said the decision proved the IOC was “Anglo-Saxon. They prefer the English.”

He later backtracked, saying he had been quoted out of context. But maybe the comment simply reflected the disappointment. Paris, after all, had been considered the favorite.

So Parker could have hung on to all of this, especially given the context of his career. These are his first Olympics and likely his last. In four years Parker will be 34 years old with 14 years of NBA grind on his body.

This one chance isn’t a good one, either. France’s best big man, Joakim Noah, never fully healed from a late-season injury and isn’t here. Nicolas Batum, because of insurance reasons, joined the team just 10 days ago. And Parker is struggling to adjust to goggles.

The best non-American point guard in the Olympics also faces this trio in his opening game Sunday: Chris Paul, Deron Williams and Russell Westbrook.

But Parker shrugged Thursday and acted as if life couldn’t be better. He’s staying in the village, with fellow Spur and French teammate Boris Diaw again as a roommate, and he’s already shared a meal with Patty Mills (Australia) and Tiago Splitter (Brazil).

He’s looking forward to his first opening ceremony the way 30-year-old multi-millionaires rarely do, and he doesn’t see his relationship with France ending. After his playing career is over, he says he wants to be president of the French national team.

Parker knows the odds are against his team now, but he said this is why he loves sports. Anything is possible, he said, and his dream is modest.

“All I want is a medal,” he said.

It’s an attitude that can be traced to that night in New York. Parker was in the wrong place, and a piece of glass also ended up in the wrong place. After eye surgery in Paris, he was ordered to stay inactive and keep light out of his hotel room for a week before flying back to San Antonio.

Parker said he could do little else but think, and here is what stuck with him: “Life can change, just like that.”

Life did change. These aren’t his Olympics. But he’s at someone else’s, and he sees that isn’t so bad.

bharvey@express-news.net

Twitter: @Buck_SA

Game rewind: Slumping Bucks add to Spurs road woes

It was one of those nights for the Spurs.

After getting strong offensive efforts from Tim Duncan and Tony Parker to start the game, the Spurs appeared ready to snap the nagging road losing streak that had dogged them since the start of the season.

But the Spurs discombulated down the stretch, allowing the Bucks to snatch a victory away despite San Antonio leading for much of the second half. The Spurs squandered a seven-point lead — their largest of the game — early in the fourth quarter.

Game analysis: The Spurs received strong efforts from Duncan, Parker and Kawhi Leonard throughout most of the game, but it wasn’t enough as they couldn’t hold off Milwaukee’s fast-closing duo of Stephen Jackson and Brandon Jennings.

Where the game was won: The Spurs squandered two chances to win or tie in the final minute.  Trailing 104-103, Parker was stripped by Jennings, who finished the play with a  transition dunk giving gave them a 106-103 with less than 50 seconds. And after San Antonio had won a jump ball with 15 seconds remaining, Gregg Popovich couldn’t get his team to call a timeout.  Parker fed the ball to Richard Jefferson, who missed a 3-pointer as time expired for the final margin.

Player of the game I: Jackson bounced out of a slump that had dogged him all season to score 34 points and provide eight assists. Coming into the game, he was shooting  32.0 percent from the field.

Player of the game II: Duncan had his strongest game of the season with 20 points, eight rebounds and seven assists and three blocked shots. It was his first game with at least 20 points, eight rebounds and seven assists since his vintage 21-point, 16-rebound, eight-assist, five-blocked shot game against New York last Jan. 21.

 Player of the game III: Leonard had the best game of his young NBA career with 19 points, three rebounds, two assists and four steals in 33 minutes. It may have shown enough to convince Popovich to provide him with his first career start while T.J. Ford recuperates. 

Most unsung: Milwaukee center Andrew Bogut spent most of Monday flying back from Australia after taking care of an undisclosed family emergency. Despite struggling in the first half to stick with Duncan and find his conditioning, Bogut played through his weariness and provided a strong second half. Bogut snatched seven of his game-high 11 rebounds in the second half, providing the Bucks with an inside presence that helped free Jackson and Jennings outside.

Did you notice: The Spurs led in the second half for the first time on the road this season and even had an advantage into the fourth quarter. In their three previous road losses, the Spurs had not led after halftime.

Stat of the game: The Bucks forced 16 Spurs turnovers and turned them into 25 points. Six of the turnovers came in the fourth quarter, including two in the final minute.

Stat of the game II: Milwaukee snapped a five-game losing streak with the victory.

Stat of the game III: The Bucks hit 9 of 14 3-point shots for a season-best 64.3 percent.

Weird stat of the game: The Spurs shot 60 percent from the field and still lost. An NBA team has shot 60 percent and lost only four times since 1999.

Weird stat of the game II: Since the 1999 lockout, the Bucks have beaten the Spurs 13 out of 25 times. Their victory Tuesday night snapped a four-game losing streak to the Spurs.

Quote of the game: ”It’s the worst defensive team we’ve ever had. We have a long way to go,” Popovich on his team’s defensive struggles.

How the schedule stacks up: The Spurs were on the front end of of a back-to-back and will play Houston Wednesday night at the ATT Center. The Bucks will rest until a  back-to-back with a Thursday game against Detroit and a Friday night game at Dallas.

Injuries: Manu Ginobili missed his fifth game after undergoing surgery for a fractured fifth left metacarpal.  Ford strained his hamstring late in the first quarter and did not return. Popovich said there is no timetable for his return. Milwaukee played without guard Mike Dunleavy (groin injury), forward Luc Richard Mbah a Moute (right knee tendinitis) and former Spurs guard Beno Udrih (left shoulder sprain).

Spurs assistant Brown leads Australia to an Olympic berth

Congratulations are in order to Spurs assistant Brett Brown who directed Australia to an the Olympic berth in the FIBA Oceania tournament.

Australia finished fourth in the Olympics in 1988, 1996 and 2000 and should have a good shot to surprise some teams next year in London.

They won the Oceania tournament without Milwaukee center Andrew Bogut, who didn’t play for the Boomers as he served as an assistant coach while recovering from an elbow injury.

“I think it’s relief, satisfaction, pride, a sense of accomplishment with the group,” Brown said. “It’s a fantastic group. It’s a fantastic accomplishment, there’s been a lot of work put into this by these guys. I look forward to moving forward with the group I think it’s got a lot of potential.”

Brown’s team did it in a way that mentor Gregg Popovich would have approved of.  

“We did it with our defense, we take a lot of pride in being a defensive program first,” Brown said. “In games like that if you don’t guard you have no chance.”

It seems like I’ve heard that comment a time or two from Popovich …

But Brown’s team did as expected by beating New Zealand with a strong effort from Kirk Penney, who was in the Spurs training camp last fall. Penney produced 17 points, five rebounds and four assists to lead the victory.

“Since I took the job I knew we had to beat New Zealand,” Brown said. “What they do on the world stage, they are very well organized, they get the most out of their talent, they play hard, I have a lot of time for them. I think our depth did ultimately wear them down.”