Spurs memory No. 24: Ice’s clandestine arrival enables Spurs to turn the corner

Gervin’s under-the-radar entrance boosts team’s credibility 

Date: Thursday Feb. 7, 1974
Place: HemisFair Arena, San Antonio
Score: Utah Stars 86, San Antonio Spurs 83.

George Gervin’s importance  to the Spurs franchise and San Antonio sports can’t be underestimated.

“George Gervin was to San Antonio what Babe Ruth was to New York,” the late Spurs owner Angelo Drossos once said.

And he was  right.

Gervin was an unheralded player with little national notoriety with the Virginia Squires after he was signed  out of the Eastern League. His salary soared from $500 a month to $40,000 per year when he joined the American Basketball Association.

While with the Squires, Gervin came under the tutelage of Julius Erving. The skinny kid from Detroit, who might have packed 170 pounds on his 6-foot-7 frame, averaged 14.1 points in 23 minutes with the Squires as a rookie behind Erving.

Gervin’s improvement was noticeable as he averaged 25.4 points in his second season with the Squires.  

But despite that productivity, Virginia owner Earl Foreman was looking at his bottom line when he sold Gervin’s contract to the Spurs on Jan. 13 for $225,000. The trade would become effective on Jan. 31.

The sale was nullified by ABA commissioner Mike Storen, the father of ESPN sports anchor Hannah Storm. Storen believed that Foreman was stripping his team of one of its major assets in Gervin and would diminish its value  if his contract was sold.

Despite Storen’s edict, Drossos and the rest of the Spurs ownership were adamant about bringing Gervin to San Antonio. They checked him into a hotel and kept him hidden from snooping reporters who tried to prove rumors about him already arriving in San Antonio.

After Storen’s declaration, the Spurs ownership sought an injunction on Feb. 5 before U.S. District Judge Adrian Spears that would prohibit him from playing with anybody but them. The team kept Gervin holed up in San Antonio in a kind of basketball limbo.

“It was kind of different because I was a basketball player and I couldn’t play,” Gervin told the San Antonio Current in a 2005 interview. “I remember going to Utah with Virginia, and Angelo sent me 10 Western Union telegrams saying you can’t play for Virginia, you belong to the San Antonio Spurs and if you play for them we’re gonna sue you.

“Angelo Drossos was a hard business man. So I flew from Utah to San Antonio where I stayed at the Hilton there for a month without playing – just waiting on the judge to rule one way or another.

The inactivity was a little unusual for Gervin.  

“Yeah, it was weird, man,” Gervin told the Current. “I was like a fugitive from basketball. Bird Averitt, who was a teammate of mine at the time, used to come by and we’d shoot around some. But it was a dead time for me. I was glad when they finally ruled and I became a San Antonio Spur.”

 So was the team and Coach Tom Nissalke, whose team was floundering with a 30-29 record when Gervin joined them for a Feb. 7 game at HemisFair Arena against the Utah Stars. Gervin started slowly, scoring only 12 points on 5-for-16 shooting from the field in San Antonio’s 86-83 loss to Stars in his first game.

 But it was only the beginning. Gervin blossomed into the first Hall of Fame player in the history of the franchise, leading the league in scoring four times and playing in 12 straight All-Star games.  

They said it, part I: “San Antonio will have to learn to obey the rules of the league just like all the rest of the other teams in the league,” ABA commissioner Mike Storen, to the San Antonio News about the proposed sale of Gervin to the Spurs.

They said it, part II: “I intend to make sure that George Gervin remains a Squire until when and if a new organization takes over ownership of the organization,” Storen, on his reasons for nullifying the sale of Gervin to the Spurs.

They said it, part III: “I’m happy to be here and ready to play. I don’t think it will be that big of an adjustment. I don’t know the exact plays and all that. But I know how to play basketball.” Gervin to the San Antonio Light about his readiness to play before initially suiting up with the Spurs.  

They said it, part IV: “He’s the one player I would pay to see play,” former Los Angeles Lakers general manager Jerry West, on Gervin’s unique basketball ability.

They said it, part V: “You don’t stop George Gervin. You just hope that his arm gets tired after 40 shots. I believe the guy can score any time he wants to.  I wonder if he gets bored out there,” former NBA coach Dick Motta, on Gervin.

They said it, part VI: “This is just another step in our effort to bring major caliber sports recognition to San Antonio,” Drossos to the San Antonio News about the Gervin acquisition.

They said it, part VII:  “When did I decide to start him? When I heard he could play for us. We’re talking about the No. 4 scorer in the league. I’m not going to sit him on the bench,” Nissalke on the reason why Gervin got so much playing time with San Antonio immediately after his arrival.

The upshot: Gervin developed  into the most  prolific scorer in San Antonio franchise history. His importance to the Spurs was immediately underscored after he arrived. The Spurs won 13 of their last 19 games to earn a playoff spot. Gervin averaged 22.3 points and 9.5 rebounds during the rest of the regular season with the Spurs. San Antonio’s late charge boosted them to the playoffs where they lost in the first round in seven games to defending ABA champion Indiana in the first round. The Spurs would qualify for the playoffs in 10 straight seasons and 11 of the 12 seasons Gervin played on the team.

Previous memorable  Spurs moments:

Previous Spurs most memorable moments:

No. 25: Barkleywith series-clinching shot.

No. 26: Silas becomes first Spur.

No. 27: Robinson makes history with .

No. 28: after crucial 1999 victory at Houston.

No. 29: on Halloween night.

No. 30: Torrid San Diego shooting

Locked-out players find unlikely refuge in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS — The shot, launched somewhere from the vicinity of half court, ripped through the net just after the halftime horn sounded, and an entire bench went wild.

Three players in red jerseys hooted and hollered and cheered at the apparent 11th-hour bucket. On the floor, five other crimson-clad players exchanged high fives.

Then, an official put an end to the low-grade pandemonium.

Signaling the Hail Mary had been released too late to count, the referee waved off the basket. Several players protested. One, Cleveland point guard Mo Williams, jokingly pointed to an invisible JumboTron above, beseeching the official to consult the replay.

The punch line: In the tiny Impact Basketball gymnasium, where a collection of NBA players have gathered to while away the league’s labor impasse with organized pickup games, there were no replays, or video screens or any other trappings of a real live professional basketball game.

There weren’t even enough fans — just a couple dozen on this particular Wednesday afternoon — to constitute a crowd.

“This isn’t the NBA,” says Joe Abunassar, the Las Vegas-based trainer who dreamed up what has come to be informally known as “The Lockout League.” “But this is as close as these players are going to get for now.”

As the NBA’s summer of discontent stretches toward fall, jobless players have found a haphazard basketball oasis at Abunassar’s facility a stone’s throw from the famed Las Vegas strip.

By the time the two-week Impact Competitive Basketball series ends Friday, organizers say at least 75 NBA players will have participated, many of them Abunassar clients. Included on that list are Spurs guard James Anderson and rookie small forward Kawhi Leonard, the 15th pick in the June draft.

“Any time you can get a lot of guys like this together and get some good run in, it’s helpful,” Anderson said.

For players, the draw of Abunassar’s event was simple: Unlike the various pro-am leagues around the country, the Lockout League is open only to NBA players.

“There’s no other place they can go to play against 35, 50 NBA guys on a daily basis,” Abunassar said.

A former college assistant whose list of training clients has included All-Stars such as Chauncey Billups and Kevin Garnett, Abunassar didn’t set out to become a key figure in the NBA’s ongoing labor imbroglio.

It just sort of worked out that way.

What is happening this month at the Impact facility in Vegas is simply a supersized version of what happens there every day. Players train in the morning, then play 5-on-5 games in the afternoon.

The NBA lockout just provided Abunassar with a deeper talent pool from which to fill out his post-lunch rosters.

“It’s the same concept we’ve been doing for 15 years,” he said. “Now we’ve just invited more people and made it kind of an event.”

In the court of public opinion, it’s difficult to say which side of the NBA’s labor dispute benefits most from the Lockout League.

Players can point to high turnout as evidence they just want to play, even if they have to pay their own way to Vegas to do so.

“We love playing the game,” said Washington guard John Wall, last season’s Rookie of the Year runner-up and one of the headliners at Impact. “It’s tough during the lockout, but we’re just trying to get better and work on our game.”

Owners, meanwhile, can point to the league’s lack of accoutrements as a testament to their irreplaceable role in the NBA experience.

If the lockout really does lay waste to the NBA as we know it, basketball’s post-apocalyptic world, as presented at Impact, looks like this: No coaches, no public address announcer and, most chilling of all, referees in short pants.

And forget TV revenue. The games are not televised, though organizers are soliciting sponsorships in hopes of eventually streaming some of them online.

The Impact facility itself seems an unlikely location for a bootleg basketball league. For a speakeasy, it remains heavy on the kitsch. Smaller than a high school bandbox, the gym is the centerpiece of a multi-use Funplex that includes batting cages, a rock-climbing wall and a Go-Kart track.

It’s difficult to imagine, say, Kobe Bryant spending a season here.

For the players at Impact, however, the Lockout League was never about the size of the crowd or the quirkiness of the venue.

“Typically, this time of year we’re with our respective teams, getting ready for training camp,” said former Spurs guard Roger Mason Jr., recently of the Knicks. “You’re playing 5-on-5. You’re getting competitive games in. We have to replace that somehow.”

At times, the games at Impact might devolve into ragged, defensively challenged affairs better suited to the local blacktop. Occasionally, players have cranked the intensity up to NBA levels.

On one such occasion, T.J. Ford and Dahntay Jones, teammates in both Indiana and Vegas, left the floor after a 125-124 loss bickering over a failed last-second play. It was as if the miscue had just cost the Pacers a playoff game.

“Guys out here have pride,” said Mason, who was on the victorious team that day. “You always want to win.”

With his Lockout League, Abunassar figures he already has won. His motivation was never about gate receipts — he says any revenue the event generates beyond operating costs will be donated to charity.

His goal was simply to provide fertile ground for basketball to flourish, or at least not wither completely, while the NBA remains on hiatus. That mission accomplished, Abunassar says he plans to hold monthly Lockout Leagues until the work stoppage is over, and might resurrect the idea next offseason even without a labor dispute.

If nothing else, Abunassar’s league has answered the question: What would happen if you stripped away all the bells and whistles of an NBA game — dance teams, JumboTrons and yes, coaches, crowds and paychecks — and simply played basketball for the purity of it?

At least one man is pleased with the answer.

“It’s gone better than I ever could have expected,” Abunassar said. “We’ve had so many guys show up. They’re happy. We’re happy. It’s been good.”

1 of 24 | Share

James Anderson at Impact Basketball


James Anderson warms up prior to an Impact Basketball game in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson warms up prior to an Impact Basketball game in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson warms up prior to an Impact Basketball game in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson warms up prior to an Impact Basketball game in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


Players compete during an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


Players compete during an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


Players compete during an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)


James Anderson competes in an Impact Basketball game on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Isaac Brekken / Special to the Express-News)

  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • Impact basketball
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • Impact basketball
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • Impact basketball
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson
  • James Anderson

Fisher’s text reportedly implores players to prepare for lockout end

After intensified negotiations last week between NBA commissioner David Stern and the players’ union, another sign could be indicating we are pointing to a settlement of the lockout soon.

The immenently plugged-in Sam Amick of SI.com reported over the weekend that one league source claims that union president Derek Fisher indicating that some progress had been made and imploring them to be physically prepared just in case the season started on time.

And ESPN.com’s Chris Broussard reported that NBA deputy commissioner Adam Silver — commonly thought to be the second-most important negotiator for the ownership group behind Stern — with Wasserman Media Group CEO Casey Wasserman.

In addition to being one of the top agencies representing players in the NBA, the Wasserman Media Group relies heavily on an agent who has been known to be more pushy than the rest during a lockout landscape.

Arn Tellem – who represents a league-leading 34 NBA players, including 10 All-Stars — drew the ire of commissioner Stern and NBPA executive director Billy Hunter during the 1998-99 lockout for taking a more extreme position than most of his colleagues.

Tellem hasn’t changed much since then and is said to be a big supporter of decertification.

So if there has been progress made in negotiations, a high-ranking official like Silver checking in with one of the staunchest potential impediments certainly is interesting.