Spurs’ Ford back from D-League

By Jeff McDonald

T.J. Ford thoroughly enjoyed being a D-Leaguer for a day.

Of course, the seven-year NBA veteran didn’t have to endure a long, cramped bus ride, sleep in a less-than-five-star hotel or endure any of the other spartan accoutrements that accompany life in pro basketball’s minor leagues.

“It was just a practice,” Ford, the Spurs’ backup point guard, said of his one-day rehab stint with the Austin Toros. “I haven’t played a lot. I’m coming back from an injury. I think I had enough days off.”

Ford missed 22 games after suffering a torn left hamstring Jan. 10 in Milwaukee. He has totaled less than 30 minutes in three games since his return.

Under an NBA rule new for this season, teams are permitted to send veterans to the Development League, with the player’s consent. In years past, players with more than two seasons of NBA service time were ineligible for the D-League.

The Spurs assigned Ford to the Toros on Monday, in order to get him extra practice time on a day coach Gregg Popovich gave his team the day off.

Ford didn’t even have to leave San Antonio to join the Toros. They held their practice at the Spurs practice facility.

“It felt good to just come in a play, get up and a down and condition my legs, because it’s still a work in progress,” Ford said.

As expected, the Spurs recalled Ford on Tuesday, allowing him to practice with the team. He will be available with the Spurs tonight when the Spurs face New York.

Full strength at last: For the first time since Jan. 2, the Spurs will list no players on the injury report for tonight’s game against the Knicks. The entire roster – sans rookie point guard Cory Joseph, who is playing in the D-League – participated in Monday’s practice.

That includes power forward Tim Duncan, who has recovered from the stomach bug that limited him in Sunday’s loss to Denver.

Starting center DeJuan Blair played just four minutes against the Nuggets after suffering a knee contusion less than a minute into the game, but his sparing use was due to performance issues, not injury.

Discount double think: When Knicks forward Steve Novak knocks down a few 3-pointers in a row, he’ll often punctuate his scoring with a “title belt” celebration maneuver lifted from Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

The move has become known as the “discount double check,” after Rodgers’ series of commercials for State Farm.

In San Antonio, where Novak finished last season and was briefly in training camp with the Spurs in December, his former teammates don’t have to wonder how such showmanship might have gone over with Popovich.

“Not very well,” Matt Bonner said with a laugh. “I’d expect to hear a (substitution) horn at the next dead ball, for sure.”

Bonner, who ranks just behind Novak as the NBA’s fourth-most accurate 3-point shooter, says he has no plans to develop his own signature celebration move.

“I thought about doing like a tai chi move, but that didn’t pan out,” Bonner said. “My first thought after I make a shot is to get back on defense.”


jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Thursday: Spurs (23-10) at Nuggets (18-16)

Time: 8 p.m.
TV: FSNSW
Radio: WOAI-AM 1200, KCOR-AM 1350

STARTING LINEUPS

Point guard
Spurs: 9 Tony Parker (6-2, 11th yr)
Nuggets: 3 Ty Lawson (5-11, 3rd yr)
Lawson (ankle) did not play in Wednesday game at L.A. Clippers.

Shooting guard
Spurs: 4 Danny Green (6-6, 3rd yr)
Nuggets: 6 Arron Afflalo (6-5, 5th yr)
Green scored 16 points and played 30:37 of blowout loss in Portland.

Small forward
Spurs: 24 Richard Jefferson (6-7, 11th yr)
Nuggets: 13 Cory Brewer (6-9, 5th yr)
Jefferson had season-high-tying 19 points in last meeting with Denver.

Power forward
Spurs: 21 Tim Duncan (6-11, 15th yr)
Nuggets: 35 Kenneth Faried (6-8, 1st yr)
Faried had season-high 14 boards Monday vs. T’wolves, outrebounding Kevin Love.

Center
Spurs: 45 DeJuan Blair (6-7, 3rd yr)
Nuggets: 25 Timofey Mozgov (7-1, 2nd yr)
Mozgov (ankle) started and played almost 23 minutes Wednesday game at L.A. Clippers.

SPURS RESERVES
25 James Anderson, G, 6-6, 2nd yr
15 Matt Bonner, C/F, 6-10, 8th yr
23 Eric Dawson, F, 6-9, 1st yr
2 Kawhi Leonard, F, 6-7, 1st yr
14 Gary Neal, G, 6-4, 2nd yr
5 Cory Joseph, G, 6-3, 1st yr
22 Tiago Splitter, C, 6-11, 2nd yr

NUGGETS RESERVES
11 Chris Andersen, F, 6-10, 10th yr
5 Rudy Fernandez, G, 6-6, 4th yr
1 Jordan Hamilton, G/F 6-7 1st yr
7 Al Harrington, F, 6-11, 14th yr
41 Kosta Koufos, C, 7-0, 4th yr
24 Andre Miller, G, 6-2, 13th yr
31 Nene, F/C, 6-11, 10th yr
10 Julyan Stone, G, 6-6, 1st yr

COACHES
Spurs: Gregg Popovich
Nuggets: George Karl

INJURIES
Spurs: T.J. Ford (torn left hamstring) is out; Manu Ginobili (strained left oblique) is out; Splitter (strained right calf) is doubtful.
Nuggets: Danilo Gallinari (left ankle sprain) is out; Rudy Fernandez (lower back strain) is questionable; Ty Lawson (left ankle sprain) is questionable.

PROJECTED INACTIVE PLAYERS
Spurs: Ford, Ginobili, Splitter
Nuggets: Gallinari

NOTABLE
Nuggets are playing second game of back-to-back and had to travel back to Denver from Los Angeles, where they played the Clippers on Wednesday night. … Spurs won the first game with Denver this season, 121-117, at the ATT Center. … Tony Parker (All-Star Game) and Kawhi Leonard (Rising Stars Challenge) are to depart Denver after game for All-Star Weekend in Orlando.

– Mike Monroe

Editor’s note: The Nuggets’ record and status of Ty Lawson and Timofey Mozgov were updated following their 103-95 loss to the Clippers late Wednesday.

Ford joins Joseph, rehabs with Toros

For one day at the Spurs’ practice facility, the NBA D-League’s Austin Toros were loaded with NBA point guards schooled at the University of Texas.

T.J. Ford, the former All-American and a veteran of seven-plus NBA seasons, officially was assigned to the Toros for one day so he could go through a full practice session. He joined Spurs rookie and former Longhorns starter Cory Joseph, who was assigned to the Toros on Saturday to get playing time that would have been rare with Ford back on the Spurs’ active list.

Ford didn’t even have to pack an overnight bag to go to practice. The Toros came to San Antonio for the workout.

Ford has played in two games since returning to the lineup after missing 24 games with a torn muscle in his left hamstring and remains in need of conditioning and full-court game rhythm. He did not play in the first half of Sunday night’s 99-94 loss to the Nuggets and only 5 minutes, 46 seconds in the second half. He was productive enough in his short stay, making his only shot, grabbing three rebounds and getting one assist.

Gutting it out: Suffering a stomach ailment that his coach hinted was akin to food poisoning, team captain Tim Duncan gutted out 23:46 of play in the loss to the Nuggets.

Afterwards, Duncan said his energy level was “all right,” but coach Gregg Popovich made sure he didn’t remain on the court for long stretches. Duncan’s longest stint was in the fourth quarter, when he played the final 5:28.

Duncan milked 14 points and nine rebounds out of his 23 minutes but missed two free throws with 58.5 seconds left and the Spurs trailing 95-92.

Still the one: It had been two months since Manu Ginobili had played at the ATT Center, and it was hard to tell who was happier when he entered Sunday’s game with 5:45 left in the first quarter: Ginobili or Spurs fans who greeted his entry into the game with a rolling, standing ovation.

“It felt great,” Ginobili said. “I was excited enough for being back after two full months of not playing in this gym. It really motivated me and made me feel good. Of course, I’m always thankful to (the fans).

“First, you think about just coming back, starting playing, feeling the games, not just watching from the first row. I was happy enough to just be with the team, wearing the 20. It was a good moment.”

Ginobili expressed a grudging admiration for a play made by Denver’s Ty Lawson that was reminiscent of the all-out effort plays Ginobili often makes during crunch time. Lawson came from the perimeter to grab a rebound from Ginobili’s grasp after a missed Denver free throw with 4:18 left in a close game.

“I don’t know what kind of play it was,” he said, “but we didn’t see him. I was going to grab the rebound. He came from behind and snatched it. It was a good, hard play that he made.”

Blair update: Starting center DeJuan Blair played only 3:35 after banging knees with Nuggets center Timofey Mozgov early in the first quarter. The injury was termed a knee contusion, and Blair played briefly in the second half.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @monroe_SA