Popovich praises O’Neal for his style

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Shaquille O’Neal exited laughing at his official retirement news conference on Friday, and it was his humor and zest for life that Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said he most admired about the center who earned four championship rings during 19 NBA seasons.

“I always felt he had more fun than any NBA player of all time,” said Popovich, a Spurs assistant coach when NBA scouts first took notice of a Cole junior named O’Neal who was dominating Texas high school games in 1988 and 1989. “He seemed to enjoy himself more than any player. He competed to win, but his intelligence and humor were always there. He enjoyed the spotlight; he used it, he played with it and I always got a large kick out of it.”

O’Neal’s official announcement came Friday at his Orlando-area home, where the humor Popovich admired again was on display.

Hours after the Knicks announced that Donnie Walsh was stepping down as their general manager, O’Neal interrupted his announcement to take a fake phone call from the Knicks.

“Yes?” he said into the phone. “For real? You want me to apply for the Knicks general manager job? I’ll fly up right after the press conference.”

It was just such irreverence for a game too many take too seriously that Popovich appreciated.

“His personality was infectious and I thought his sense of humor was wonderful for the league and the fans,” Popovich said.

The Spurs’ coach said O’Neal is “in the conversation” when basketball historians debate the greatest centers ever to play the game, and Popovich credited him with changing the notion of how the game’s biggest players should approach the game.

“How a big man should play or how he has to play historically wasn’t true any more after Shaq,” Popovich said. “He was really complete. People never gave him credit for that, but he was a force offensively and defensively and he was a very willing passer and he would play with that, too. If you doubled him he could kick it to other people and he got better at that as time went by. He never got credit for being that complete type of player at his position.

“He obviously ranks amongst the best. He’s in the same conversation with all the other greats we know about over the years. I don’t try to rank them. The conversation is what it’s about.”

The first time Popovich saw O’Neal in person, during O’Neal’s college career at LSU, he came away astounded.

“I thought he was a phenomenon,” he said. “I couldn’t believe somebody was that big and that mobile, that those two would go together. At the same time he had great coordination. To be as big as he was and have that just amazed me.”

Popovich recalled how difficult it was watching his battles with the Spurs’ great big men, David Robinson and Tim Duncan, without losing focus on the rest of the game.

“I always had to make sure I didn’t get lost in just that dynamic because it was so easy to just be mesmerized by those people playing against each other and you could lose sight of everything else going on out on the court,” he said. “Your eyes just gravitated to those guys as the game progressed. You had to discipline yourself to think bigger than those two, but the game always seemed to revolve around them.”

Spurs links: Should the Spurs erect statues outside of the AT&T Center?

Blog brother Scott Bailey of the San Antonio Business Journal makes an interesting point about the Spurs that is topical considering the controversy of Kareem Abdul-Jabban and his long-promised statue at the Staples Center.

Bailey proposes , adding that his picks would be for monuments immortalizing George Gervin, David Robinson and Tim Duncan.

I’m curious is Spurs Nation believes if others would merit inclusion along with Bailey’s three no-brainers?

Would Gregg Popovich deserve a statue because of his direction of four championship teams?

How about Sean Elliott or James Silas?

This is an even bigger honor than having your roster number retired. 

And it would add something to the franchise and its storied history to have its pivotal figures cast in stone outside their home arena.

It’s a good idea, don’t you think? 

Here are a few other Spurs-related stories and blog posts heading into the weekend.

  • Andrew McNeill of 48 Minutes of Hell.comabout the Spurs’ future title hopes with their current roster.
  • John McMullen of The Sports Network writes that Scott Brooks sticking with Eric Maynor Thursday night reminded him ofinstead of Parker in the 2003 playoffs.
  • The wise men from Spurs Nation.com — Michael De Leon, Paul Garcia and Jake Faunce — take a look at for the Spurs this summer.
  • The Philadelphia Daily News’ John Smallwood writes about the for the Dallas Mavericks throughout Dirk Nowitzki’s career.
  • Wayne Vore of Spurs Planet.com describes two big decisions the Spurs face in .
  • Daniel Barber of Yahoo.com ranks Memphis’ victory over the Spurs among the so far this season.
  • If you’re planning a vacation this summer, Jen Westmoreland Bouchard of  for Reuters.com describes where Parker’s wax figure can be in the Ninth Arrondissement in Paris.
  • Jesse Blanchard of 48 Minutes of Hell.com writes how difficult it is to get  and how the Spurs’ as Duncan ages.  
  • David Breitman of “The Sports Show” at Comedy Central.com has a littlefor Parker’s comments about his team’s title competitiveness.
  • Big 50 of Pounding the Rock.com for the season and found the end of the Miami-Chicago game .
  • The guys at 48 Minutes of Hell check in with Sebastian Pruiti of for a .
  • Justin Biehle of Pounding the Rock.com writes that watching the playoffs without the Spurs can .  
  • The Australian newspaper The Warrnambool Standard ranks Parker among thefor rapping career.
  • Jason Rogers of Planet Spurs from European basketball to the NBA.

TD vs Joey Crawford ranked as one of NBA’s top 5 historical feuds

It wouldn’t seem likely for normally mild-mannered Tim Duncan to make a list chronicling the NBA’s top feuds.

But my blog brothers at Mancave.com have ranked Duncan’s disagreements over the years with NBA referee Joey Crawford rank among the .

That’s right. Up there with Kobe Bryant vs. Shaquille O’Neal. Reggie Miller vs. Spike Lee. And even Wilt Chamberlain vs. Bill Russell.

Here’s what Mancave had have to say about Duncan’s previous squabbles with Crawford, which culminated in their legendary disagreement in a game against Dallas on April 15, 2007.

Probably the least-expected feud of all time involves giant teddy bear Tim Duncan and controversial veteran referee Joey Crawford. Joey has been known for some pretty ridiculous calls—sometimes calling fouls on people that he committed. But at the top of the list has to be slapping two technicals on Tim Duncan within two minutes …  for laughing on the bench. Crawford was fined, but Duncan had to pony up $25,000 as well. Some choice words he had for Joey as he left the court were caught on camera.”

It still rankles Spurs fans to see Crawford on the sidelines.

And guess what. I’m sure it doesn’t make Duncan any happier to see Crawford demonstratively making his calls in Spurs games, either.

There are other great historic feuds involving the Spurs. From Rich Jones against all of his old teammates back in the day to Karl Malone vs. David Robinson. Manu Ginobili vs. Tony Allen has the makings for some future antipathy as well.

I’m curious Spurs Nation. What is your favorite feud involving the Spurs and an opposing player over the years? And give a reason or two why it’s your favorite.