Spurs move up in rankings/Lakers tumble

If the San Antonio Spurs expect to keep under the radar as they do each and every season, they’d better stop posting what little records are left to post.

The team has begun the 2012/13 NBA season with a franchise record-setting 4-0 record.  It seems strange that the former 4 time NBA Champions have never gotten off to  such a start but fans here are just a tad spoiled when it comes to the Spurs.  In recognition of their record, the Spurs have moved up to 4th in the NBA Power Rankings this week.  The Spurs’ arch nemesis, the LA Lakers (1-3) have dropped to 10th place.

Popovich will tell you that records don’t matter and the only thing that matters is “Pounding The Rock.” But to fans of the much maligned Spurs, it’s just another reason to love the team

Q&A with…Bill Walton

Besides his tragically short career, hoops legend Bill Walton was defined by his unbridled enthusiasm for life and the game he loves, leading him to utter in the history of sports broadcasting.

Now that he’s got a second lease on life, the Hall of Famer and former MVP is back to his typical joyous self.

“I’m the luckiest guy in the world,” Walton said Monday during his visit to San Antonio, where he participated in an educational seminar on the prevention and treatment of back pain and spine conditions. “I get to play in the game of life one more time. A miracle has happened.”

Walton is referring to the nine-hour procedure in early 2009 to insert four four-inch bolts, two titanium rods and a stabilizing cage into his collapsed spine, an injury that left him in such .

While his broadcast career might be over, Walton said his new passion is helping others receive treatment for their own back issues.

On an unrelated note, Bill had a typically Waltonian quote for Jeff McDonald’s upcoming feature piece on the Tim Duncan/Gregg Popovich partnership. A brief preview: “It’s a special relationship that is a model for what the world can be.” Should run this weekend so keep your eyes peeled.

Back to Bill…

How bad was your injury?

I spent three years on the ground. I was in unrelenting, excruciating pain that can only be described as being submerged in a vat of acid with an electric current running through it that I couldn’t get out of. I was just a pitiful ball of flesh writhing on the floor, begging for the pain to stop. My life was over.

How did it compare to some of your other injuries?

I spent a lifetime with bone and joint pain. There’s nothing like nerve pain. It never goes away and nothing can fix it. It destroys your life, it destroys the lives of everyone around you. It takes away the hope and the dream that tomorrow is going to be better. If you don’t have that, you don’t have much. You don’t have anything.

How do you feel today?

I am busier than ever, happier than ever. I haven’t been this healthy since high school. No pain, no medication. I had no idea what life was like without back pain. It’s a miracle what’s happened to me. So with the privilege and good fortune of health comes responsibility, duty and obligation to help other people have their dreams comes true.

How do you do that?

I spend a tremendous amount of my time working for the , an organization that provides support and advocacy for people whose lives have fallen apart because of their spine issues. And it’s just absolutely remarkable what is possible in the world today.

When you spend three years on the floor, you have a lot of time to think about what you are going to do if you ever get better. And so that’s why I go around the country. Health is the foundation of everything. Without it, nothing is attainable.

It’s an unbelievably emotional moment when I’m on the phone with people I don’t know, that they can do it. They can get through it. People are terrified about spine surgery. My spine surgery was fantastic. I’m all better. I don’t have any pain. A miracle has happened. So when I talk to people on the phone, they’ll often just break down and say, you’re the first person I’ve talked to who knows what it’s like.

When you have that unbelievable searing, scorching pain, running through your whole body, you never forget that. People who haven’t felt it have no idea. No idea. Now that I’m all better, the darkness is incomprehensible. But when you’re in that space, and your life is over, it’s very clear.

It’s every day and it’s all day. People need help. Nobody needed more help than I did, and I can’t tell you how many people called me to tell me I could make it. I didn’t believe it, but here I am today in San Antonio with the better way back. When you can move and are pain free and can think and dream, there are no limits.

Now that I’m back in the game of life, I’m ringing the chimes of freedom.

dmccarney@express-news.net

Twitter: @danmccarneySAEN

Curry or Brown — fortunately for the Spurs, it doesn’t really matter

Before we get started, let’s get something straight.

The Spurs’ season is not going to hinge on who they choose to fill their 15th roster spot. (If they choose anyone at all.)

In fact, this sort of decision doesn’t usually matter even on bad teams, let alone one that goes two-deep at pretty much every position, and is hoping to contend for the championship.

The only reason it’s become one of the main story lines of training camp is because, well, there hasn’t been much else to talk about with a veteran team that remains almost untouched from last season, when the Spurs took a 2-0 lead before crumbling against Oklahoma City in the Western Conference Finals.

That said, on to the battle that head coach Gregg Popovich has whittled down to two players with completely different backgrounds: Eddy Curry, the lottery bust battling to rebuild his once promising career, and Derrick Brown, a second-round journeyman just trying to get his career started.

Their playing styles and utility are equally disparate.

Curry, a classic back-to-the-basket center, still has a gift for putting the ball in the hole, as evidenced by his 68-percent shooting mark in the preseason. His aptitude at pretty much everything else that can be done on a basketball court ranges from adequate to non-existent.

An undersized tweener with a small forward’s body and a power forward’s mentality, the 6-7 Brown offers youth, athleticism and versatility. His 14-minute stint in Sunday’s loss against Orlando, during which he drilled a 3-pointer and a 20-footer, showed he might have even figured out how to hit a jump shot, in which case his value would soar.

If so, it still wouldn’t give him a single skill as discernible as Curry’s scoring ability. Which is probably why Curry dominated a recent Express-News poll about who the Spurs should take for their last roster spot. (He earned 976 votes to just 78 for Brown.)

Neither fills a glaring hole for the Spurs.

It would be one thing if Curry could help slow down the Lakers’ Dwight Howard and/or Pau Gasol. Defense and rebounding, however, have never been his forte. And while it certainly wouldn’t hurt to have another scoring option, it’s not like the Spurs struggled last season without him, leading the league in offensive efficiency and effective field-goal shooting.

It’s even tougher to see where Brown would fit in light of the abundance of bodies at his positions – Boris Diaw, Matt Bonner and DeJuan Blair at power forward, and Kawhi Leonard and Stephen Jackson at small forward. He has more room for growth – but not enough to avoid being let go by lowly Charlotte on two different occasions. (Although judging by the Bobcats’ track record, that might actually be a positive.)

Force me to choose, and I’d probably go with Curry. In addition to giving the Spurs another big body, it would be a hell of a story if he was able to pull himself back from the brink as a contributor with the NBA’s model franchise.

Fortunately for the Spurs, they’re in the position where picking whoever gets to sit on the end of their bench isn’t going to make much of an impact on their season.

dmccarney@express-news.net

Twitter: @danmccarneySAEN