NBA teams all get set to shop

NBA free agency begins at 11 p.m. today. Priority No. 1 for the Spurs? Re-signing 36-year-old, self-declared “Spur for life” Tim Duncan to a deal that will take him to the end of his career.

The Spurs also have to weigh offers to Boris Diaw (unrestricted) and Danny Green and Patrick Mills (restricted), then consider offers to other free agents.

Nets point guard Deron Williams is the prime prize on the unrestricted market. He asserts he will either be the centerpiece of a restructured roster as the team moves to Brooklyn or continue his career in his hometown of Dallas.

Express-News NBA beat writer Mike Monroe breaks down the top of a free-agent marketplace that will generate rumors by the thousands before teams can actually begin signing players July 11:

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Tim Duncan, Spurs
Position: Forward/center
What to expect: He’s made it clear he wants to finish his career in San Antonio. The value of his final contract is the tricky part. He made $21.2 million (pro-rated) last season. What’s his value at age 36?

Deron Williams, Nets
Position: Point guard
What to expect: The top prize in this free-agent derby, definitely at max money. He says he has narrowed his choices to the Nets and Mavericks. Best guess: There’s no place like home — and for Williams, that’s Dallas.

Kevin Garnett, Celtics
Position: Forward/center
What to expect: Like Duncan, Garnett is 36, with a chronically painful right knee. If he decides to keep going, it’s hard to see him starting over in a location other than Boston.

Jason Kidd, Mavericks
Position: Point guard
What to expect: He’s 39, but so smart he is still effective, but at what price? He took a big salary hit when he re-signed with Mavs in 2009. He will take another to re-sign with the Mavs.

Steve Nash, Suns
Position: Point guard
What to expect: He has been fiercely loyal to the Suns but finally seems ready to move. Does Canada’s all-time greatest player want to finish his career in Toronto? Probably not if the Suns improve enough to satisfy him and convince him to stay.

Ray Allen, Celtics
Position: Shooting guard
What to expect: Watching him struggle with sore ankles in the playoffs was painful. If surgery works, he has still got the league’s sweetest shot. Seems headed for the sun, either Phoenix or Miami.

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George Hill, Pacers
Position: Point guard/shooting guard
What to expect: Already turned down a $6 million extension from the Pacers and definitely would prefer to return to the Spurs. Hard to imagine Indy letting him walk without compensation.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA

At No. 59, Spurs select Missouri guard Denmon

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Spurs draft pick Marcus Denmon


Kansas State guard Jacob Pullen (0) shoots over Missouri defenders Marcus Denmon, left, Laurence Bowers and Matt Pressey, right, during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Feb. 26, 2011, in Manhattan, Kan. Pullen scored 24 points in the game. Kansas State defeated Missouri 80-70. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner) (AP)


Missouri’s Marcus Denmon, left, shoots past Colorado’s Keegan Hornbuckle, right, while scoring two of his game-high 21 points during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2010, in Columbia, Mo. Missouri won the game 92-63. (AP Photo/L.G. Patterson) (AP)


Missouri’s Marcus Denmon celebrates after making a shot during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against Kennesaw State, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Columbia, Mo. Missouri won the game 104-67. (AP Photo/L.G. Patterson) (AP)


Missouri’s Marcus Denmon, right, dunks the ball over Texas’ J’Covan Brown, left, during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, Jan. 14, 2012, in Columbia, Mo. Missouri won the game 84-73. (AP Photo/L.G. Patterson) (AP)


Missouri guard Marcus Denmon (12) goes to the basket in front of Oklahoma’s Cameron Clark (21) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Norman, Okla. on Monday, Feb. 6, 2012. Missouri won 71-68. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

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By Jeff McDonald

A year ago, the Spurs did something on draft night uncharacteristic of them, making a bold move up the order to nab Kawhi Leonard.

Originally taken by Indiana at No. 15, the San Diego State small forward became the Spurs’ highest-drafted rookie since Tim Duncan.

The latest NBA draft followed a more familiar script for the Spurs.

Owning only the second-to-last pick Thursday — No. 59 overall — the Spurs were not expected to select a player likely to improve what is already one of the NBA’s deepest rosters.

It would be optimistic to expect Marcus Denmon, the high-scoring Missouri guard whose name the Spurs waited nearly 4????1/2? hours to tab with their lone pick, to make much of an impact immediately.

“The expectations weren’t overwhelming,” Spurs general manager R.C. Buford said. “We really like the pick and look forward to bringing him in and seeing how he is.”

Having traded their first-round pick to Golden State as part of the Stephen Jackson deal in March, and lacking the assets if not the desire to move up, the Spurs settled for a one-player draft Thursday.

Denmon’s strengths are evident in his scoring numbers.

A 6-foot-3 scorer, the 22-year-old led Missouri at 17.7 points per game last season, tied for second in the Big 12 behind Texas’ J’Covan Brown, and shot better than 40 percent from 3-point range. Denmon also averaged 2.1 assists and five rebounds.

“The guy can shoot the ball,” Buford said.

Denmon’s downside, meanwhile, can be measured by a ruler.

“It would help if he’d grow 3 or 4 inches,” Buford said.

A lack of size is the primary reason he tumbled to the end of the second round.

Buford said Denmon could project as a point guard in the NBA but was hesitant to pigeonhole him there before first seeing him on the Spurs’ practice court.

“I’m not comparing him to Gary Neal,” Buford said, referring to a similarly sized guard who has found a role as a shooter off the Spurs’ bench. “But the knock on Gary was that, for his size, people wanted him to be a point guard. He’s figured out a niche.”

Denmon’s first NBA test is likely to come next month at the Las Vegas Summer League. Given the dubious history of late second-round selections, it might be something for Denmon to make the Spurs’ roster.

If there was a chance for the Spurs to make another Leonard-like splash, it fizzled early Thursday.

Explorations into moving up in the draft, reportedly with fourth-year center DeJuan Blair as bait, proved fruitless.

“We had some conversations throughout the draft, throughout the days in preparation for the draft,” Buford said. “As we got into the draft, we really felt we were better off with who we had and where we were.”

With Thursday’s draft completed, Buford and the Spurs management team will pivot quickly to free agency, which begins Sunday.

The most notable name on the Spurs’ free-agent to-do list is Duncan, now 36 but still in many ways the centerpiece of the franchise. The resolution of Duncan’s contract situation — how much and for how many years — will set the stage for the rest of the Spurs’ summer.

Other Spurs who will enter the free-agent rolls this weekend are Boris Diaw, Danny Green, Patrick Mills and James Anderson. The Spurs have already made qualifying offers to restricted free agents Green and Mills. The Spurs have a chance to match any other offers they receive.

The Spurs might also look to entice Slovenian big man Erazem Lorbek, a sidepiece to last year’s draft-day deal with Indiana, from his team in Spain.

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Spurs see even 59th pick as chance to improve

By Jeff McDonald

Tonight, just after 6:30 local time, the NBA will commence its annual draft from Newark, N.J.

Unless a meteor strikes the Prudential Center right around then, the New Orleans Hornets will make Kentucky forward Anthony Davis the No. 1 pick.

From that point forward, an hours-long waiting game will begin for the Spurs, who own just one pick — No. 59 — after trading their first-rounder to Golden State as sweetener to the Stephen Jackson deal in March.

The team’s brain trust will spend the interim doing what it does every year: playing a real-life form of fantasy basketball.

“I think you prepare as if you had every pick in the draft,” Spurs general manager R.C. Buford said. “We’re not preparing only to be ready to make the 59th pick.”

That due diligence was in play in 1999, when the Spurs struck Spindletop by nabbing future All-Star guard Manu Ginobili at No. 57, long after all but the geekiest of draft geeks had stopped paying attention.

It was in play again last season, when San Diego State small forward Kawhi Leonard dropped to No. 15, and the Spurs deftly engineered a trade with Indiana to get him.

And it will be in play again tonight, even as the Spurs enter the draft with a pick doubtful to provide immediate impact for a team that finished with the Western Conference’s best record two years running.

“I think you always approach the draft looking to improve your team,” Buford said. “You have to be prepared to react to whatever strategic opportunity presents itself.”

If the Spurs remain at No. 59, the player selected there is mathematically most likely to wind up one of three places: overseas, the NBA Development League or the waiver wire. Just uncovering a future rotation player would represent a win.

Fans waiting on another late-round lightning bolt, like Ginobili, would be better off playing Powerball.

The odds of a player of that caliber slipping into the 50s are miniscule compared to 1999, when the Spurs helped pioneer the draft-and-stash approach to international blue-chippers.

The scouting landscape has changed since then, as has the technology — ever hear of YouTube? — meaning even mediocre players in Europe have difficulty falling through the cracks.

“Today, most of the league people have a better feel for the (international) game than they did then,” said one rival Western Conference executive, who wished not to be named while talking about another team’s draft prospects. “San Antonio was ahead of the curve.

“(Now) it’s very hard for a guy to slip through, especially a guy who can be an impact player here. They’re going to be known.”

In 2012, a future star such as Ginobili probably would be scouted into the lottery.

“It’s just a different era, with people who make it their business to scout internationally,” another rival executive said. “Everybody has an international scout, and everybody goes over there.”

Despite the long odds stacked against them tonight, Buford and his front-office team soldier on, kicking the tires on prospects they might not get the chance to draft.

At the recent NBA combine in Chicago, Spurs representatives took time to interview a handful of likely lottery picks, including Connecticut 7-footer Andre Drummond, who is projected to go in the top 10.

They have also heavily scouted St. Bonaventure power forward Andrew Nicholson, who is expected to go toward the end of the first round.

The team also reportedly worked out a slew of prospects more apt to be available late tonight, among them Pittsburgh point guard Ashton Gibbs, Syracuse combo guard Scoop Jardine, Georgetown guard Jason Clark, Missouri State forward Kyle Weems and Purdue forward Robbie Hummel.

As past drafts prove, there is no guessing what kind of curveballs tonight’s extravaganza will provide. All Buford can promise is the Spurs will be ready for whatever happens, or doesn’t.

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN
Staff writer Mike Monroe contributed to this report.