Spurs take Monday off

After working twice on Sunday, the Spurs will rest today with no practices.

The veteran team has worked four times in the first three days since training camp began on Friday. Coach Gregg Popovich wants to give his team a chance to step back for a day before another surge this week.

With only two preseason games before the Dec. 26 season opener against Memphis, the Spurs will do the majority of their work at their practices. Their first preseason game is Saturday night at Houston.

It’s a good deal for the new players not to throw too much at them too quickly.

Spurs start preseason with clang

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

HOUSTON — There were no goosebumps Saturday night when Kawhi Leonard pulled on that black No. 2 jersey.

There was no tingle down the spine that often accompanies a dream come true. There were no tears of joy.

To hear the rookie forward tell it, pulling on an NBA uniform for the first time was much like pulling on a tool belt and hard hat.

“I felt like it was finally here,” Leonard said. “It was time to go out and do work.”

As the Spurs and their top draft choice learned in a 101-87 preseason-opening loss to Houston at the Toyota Center, there is still much labor to be done, and — with the shrunken exhibition season now half over — not a lot of time left to do it.

In many ways, Saturday went about as expected for a team playing a game on only seven days of practice, and with a pair of All-Stars (Tim Duncan and Tony Parker) resting comfortably back in San Antonio.

The Spurs missed 32 of their first 40 shots and fell into a 22-point hole in the second half before rallying to make a game of it.

Luis Scola led the Rockets with 20 points, and Jordan Hill posted a 17-point, 13-rebound double-double — not a great sign for a Spurs frontcourt that was physically abused by Memphis’ big men in last season’s playoffs.

“It’s not that easy the first game, especially after only a week,” said guard Manu Ginobili, who recovered for 16 points after a 2-for-10 first half. “We’re all a little rusty, out of shape and trying to connect.”

For Leonard and fellow first-rounder Cory Joseph, simply finding the right place to stand could be considered a minor victory.

With the lockout erasing the standard rookie offseason activities, Leonard has had a week to familiarize himself with the playbook. Compared to Joseph, a Canadian citizen who could not practice until Saturday morning’s shootaround while awaiting a work visa, Leonard is a seasoned vet.

Leonard scored two points, making 1 of 4 shots, and — not insignificantly — grabbed six rebounds in 23 minutes. Joseph scored four points, hit 2 of 7 field goals, and had two assists and no turnovers.

“It’s going to take them a while to get a feel, where to be on the court, when to insert themselves in the game, how to make everything click,” coach Gregg Popovich said.

For the Spurs, the game’s most heartening stretch came midway through the third quarter, when their youth brigade orchestrated a comeback.

In the span of a few minutes, Leonard scooped up a rebound and scrambled for his only basket. James Anderson finished an acrobatic layup for his only field goal (he was 0 for 8 otherwise). Tiago Splitter threw in a hook shot over Hill.

That helped kick-start a run that got the Spurs within 80-78 early in the fourth quarter. Watching the rally from the bench, Ginobili applauded.

“For most of the game, they (the young guys) played better than us,” said Ginobili, who team finished shooting 35.4 percent. “They did a good job hustling, moving the ball, getting layups.”

After a ragged start, Splitter finished with 13 points, including eight in the fourth quarter. Of course, given Splitter’s star-crossed rookie season, the fact he made it to the team plane after the game without pulling something was notable.

“He had such a tough year last year, injured most of the time,” Popovich said. “It was great to see him whole.”

All told, the Spurs left Houston feeling content about the trip and looking forward to a rematch in the preseason finale Wednesday in San Antonio. They know they will be a different team with their All-Star power forward and point guard.

“It wasn’t a great game,” Ginobili said. “But it wasn’t horrible.”

There is work to do, sure. But with eight whole days before Memphis visits the ATT Center to start the regular season, time left to do it.

Spurs set for a grueling slate?

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

After playing his fourth game in as many nights at the FIBA Americas Olympic qualifying tournament in Argentina in September, Manu Ginobili, the Spurs guard from Bahia Blanca, Argentina, acknowledged utter exhaustion.

“Can you imagine,” he said, “what Pop would say about having to play back-to-back-to-back-to-back?”

Ginobili and his Spurs teammates probably won’t have to speculate about coach Gregg Popovich’s opinion of back-to-back-to-back games, which will be part of the new schedule for a 2011-12 NBA season scheduled to begin Dec. 25.

Final details of a new, lockout-ending collective bargaining agreement still must be settled by negotiators and approved by both sides, but a new schedule is expected this week. Some details have been released, including the fact each team will play at least one set of three straight games.

Some may play as many as three sets of three in a row. There will be many more sets of back-to-backs.

For a team like the Spurs, with aging veterans among its key players, the grind will be especially difficult. Perennial All-Star and two-time Most Valuable Player Tim Duncan is 35, Ginobili 34. Richard Jefferson and Matt Bonner are 31. Point guard Tony Parker is just 29, but has been playing professionally since he was 15.

Popovich has been limiting Duncan’s and Ginobili’s playing time for several seasons. One expert on Popovich’s approach expects even more vigilance.

Mike Brungardt announced his retirement in July, after 17 seasons as the only strength and conditioning coach in franchise history. He was with Popovich in the 50-game lockout season of 1998-99, when the Spurs played three straight on one occasion and back-to-backs 10 more times.

“It’s going to be a situation where he has to monitor their minutes closely and probably be even more conscious of it,” Brungardt said. “Pop’s really good about sticking to a game plan with minutes for each player, adjusting as he goes. He’s got a great feel for players, always questioning, always staying on top of it. I know he’ll go into the season with a plan for exactly how he wants to approach every scenario.

“You always have to adjust on the fly. Things change. People get hurt. Some games become more important than others. But he will stay with his plan for the most part. He’s as experienced as anyone at dealing with a situation like this. He’s always done well in these types of scenarios.”

The schedule also will mean Matt Herring, who replaced Brungardt, will have to adapt his approach to keeping players at peak strength.

“When you compress that many games into that short a period of time, it’s going to be important not to overtrain guys,” Brungardt said. “I would assume that most teams will probably practice much less than in the past, simply because of the schedule. And even when they do practice, most practices won’t be as intense or as long.”

Brungardt is convinced most Spurs will be in good condition when camp opens. So is former Spur Bruce Bowen, who warns that players who neglected conditioning during the lockout will pay when camps open.

“Once they start playing, there’s going to be a lot of injuries,” said Bowen, 40, now an NBA analyst for ESPN. “I saw it last time. Some guys, especially young guys, just don’t stay in shape. They don’t know what’s about to hit them.”

Most of the Spurs have been diligent about staying in shape, according to Brungardt.

“I know Timmy is in great shape, and Manu and quite a few of the others,” he said.

Duncan has organized local workouts for many of his teammates during the lockout. Participants have included Ginobili, Parker, Tiago Splitter, James Anderson, Gary Neal, Danny Green, Da’Sean Butler and Kawhi Leonard.

“With a guy like him (Duncan) leading the way, those guys will be ahead of the curve,” said Bowen. “When the greatest power forward of all time is out there in the heat working, it’s hard for other guys to slack off.”