Dawson’s NBA debut ranks among S.A.’s best

Eric Dawson was thrust into the lineup quickly in his first game with the Spurs last week.

With Tiago Splitter and Tim Duncan out, the former Sam Houston standout notched nine points and grabbed six rebounds in 31:41 of playing time in the Spurs’ 137-97 loss Tuesday night at Portland.

He became only the third San Antonio-area high school player to see action for the Spurs, joining West Campus’ Devin Brown (132 games, 2002-05) and MacArthur’s Keith Edmonson (40 games, 1983-84).

Dawson became the 13th player from a San Antonio-area high school to log time in the NBA and the third in the past two seasons, according to .

Express-News staff writer Tim Griffin takes a look at how Dawson’s debut compares with those of other San Antonio-area players from the past:

Bo Outlaw, Jay: Scored 13 points in 22 minutes for the Los Angeles Clippers at the Los Angeles Lakers on Feb. 15, 1994. Outlaw averaged 5.4 points in 914 career games.

Shaquille O’Neal, Cole: Scored 12 points and grabbed 18 rebounds for Orlando against Miami on Nov. 6, 1992. O’Neal averaged 23.7 points and 10.9 rebounds in 1,207 career games.

Eduardo Najera, Cornerstone Christian Academy: Scored 10 points in 23 minutes for Dallas against Milwaukee on Oct. 31, 2000. Najera is averaging 5.0 points in 604 career games.

Eric Dawson, Sam Houston: Scored nine points and grabbed six rebounds in 31:41 for the Spurs against Portland on Feb. 28, 2012. Dawson is averaging 4.5 points after two games.

Askia Jones, Marshall: Scored eight points in 16 minutes for Minnesota at Denver on Nov. 4, 1994. Jones averaged 4.1 points in 11 career games.

Bob Kinney, Jefferson: Scored six points for Fort Wayne against the New York Knicks on Nov. 3, 1948. Kinney averaged 9.5 points in 118 career games in the Basketball Association of America and the NBA.

Fennis Dembo, Fox Tech: Scored four points in one minute for Detroit at Phoenix on Nov. 18, 1988. Dembo averaged 1.2 points in 31 career games.

Jeff Foster, Madison: Scored two points in three minutes for Indiana at Charlotte on Nov. 4, 1999. Foster is averaging 4.9 points in 763 career games.

Devin Brown, West Campus: Scored two points in four minutes for the Spurs at Memphis on Nov. 4, 2002. Brown averaged 7.2 points in 465 career games.

Keith Edmonson, MacArthur: Scored two points for Atlanta against Washington on Nov. 2, 1982. Edmonson averaged 6.0 points in 87 career games.

Ivan Johnson, Fox Tech: Scored two points in six minutes for Atlanta against New Jersey on Dec. 27, 2011. Johnson is averaging 4.8 points in 29 career games.

Robert Reid, Clemens: Failed to score for Houston at Kansas City on Oct. 21, 1977. Reid averaged 11.4 points in 919 career games.

Ben Uzoh, Warren: Failed to score in six minutes for New Jersey at the Los Angeles Clippers on Nov. 15, 2010. Uzoh is averaging 3.7 points in 44 career games.

tgriffin@express-news.net

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NBA players from San Antonio

With his debut last week, Eric Dawson became the 13th player from a San Antonio-area high school to log time in the NBA, and the third to see action for the Spurs. Express-News staff writer Tim Griffin takes a look at how Dawson’s debut compares with those of other San Antonio-area players from the past.

Askia Jones, who played for Marshall, is not pictured. Jones scored eight points in 16 minutes for Minnesota at Denver on Nov. 4, 1994. Jones averaged 4.1 points in 11 career games.


Eric Dawson (right), Sam Houston: Scored nine points and grabbed six rebounds in 31:41 for the Spurs against Portland on Feb. 28, 2012. Dawson is averaging 4.5 points after two games. (Rick Bowmer / Associated Press)


Devin Brown, West Campus: Scored two points in four minutes for the Spurs at Memphis on Nov. 4, 2002. Brown averaged 7.2 points in 465 career games. (Tom Reel / San Antonio Express-News)


Fennis Dembo, Fox Tech: Scored four points in one minute for Detroit at Phoenix on Nov. 18, 1988. Dembo averaged 1.2 points in 31 career games. (Associated Press file photo)


Keith Edmonson, MacArthur: After his Purdue days, scored two points for Atlanta against Washington on Nov. 2, 1982. Edmonson averaged 6.0 points in 87 career games. (Express-News file photo)


Jeff Foster, Madison: Scored two points in three minutes for Indiana at Charlotte on Nov. 4, 1999. Foster is averaging 4.9 points in 763 career games. (Douglas C. Pizac / Associated Press)


Ivan Johnson, Fox Tech: Scored two points in six minutes for Atlanta against New Jersey on Dec. 27, 2011. Johnson is averaging 4.8 points in 29 career games. (John Bazemore / Associated Press)


Bob Kinney, Jefferson: Scored six points for Fort Wayne against the New York Knicks on Nov. 3, 1948. Kinney averaged 9.5 points in 118 career games in the Basketball Association of America and the NBA. (Express-News file photo)


Eduardo Najera (center), Cornerstone Christian Academy: Scored 10 points in 23 minutes for Dallas against Milwaukee on Oct. 31, 2000. Najera is averaging 5.0 points in 604 career games. (Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press)


Shaquille O’Neal (top), Cole: Scored 12 points and grabbed 18 rebounds for Orlando against Miami on Nov. 6, 1992. O’Neal averaged 23.7 points and 10.9 rebounds in 1,207 career games. (Steve Simoneau / Associated Press)


Bo Outlaw, Jay (right): Scored 13 points in 22 minutes for the Los Angeles Clippers at the Los Angeles Lakers on Feb. 15, 1994. Outlaw averaged 5.4 points in 914 career games. (William Luther / San Antonio Express-News)


Robert Reid, Clemens: Failed to score for Houston at Kansas City on Oct. 21, 1977. Reid averaged 11.4 points in 919 career games. (Express-News file photo)


Ben Uzoh, Warren (left): Failed to score in six minutes for New Jersey at the Los Angeles Clippers on Nov. 15, 2010. Uzoh is averaging 3.7 points in 44 career games. (Pat Sullivan / Associated Press)

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How Spurs became Team Tony

ORLANDO, Fla. — Spurs point guard Tony Parker was sitting in a hotel ballroom earlier this weekend, immersed in the drudgery of his fourth NBA All-Star media day, reflecting on the unlikely journey that got him here.

Specially, he recalled a disaster of a pre-draft camp in Chicago more than 10 years ago that had nearly derailed his career before it began.

Then 19, Parker arrived at the workout not so fresh after a 12-hour flight from Paris and walked directly into a booby trap. His practice partner that day, a Spurs staffer and nondescript former NBA player named Lance Blanks, had been dispatched with explicit instructions to give the skinny kid from France the business.

“I was terrible,” Parker remembers of that day in 2001. “Lance was beating me up. He was playing no defense, just fouling me like crazy. I didn’t play well. They almost didn’t draft me.”

It took a second workout in San Antonio a few weeks later — plus some cajoling from general manager R.C. Buford — to get coach Gregg Popovich on board with selecting Parker 28th overall.

Even then, Popovich didn’t have high expectations once Parker arrived at training camp.

“At the time, I just wondered if he’d be able to make our team,” Popovich said.

Ten-plus seasons later, Parker has long since cleared that low bar. On the cusp of turning 30, Parker landed in Orlando in the midst of his best professional season, having tugged the Spurs to a 24-10 record despite missing star guard Manu Ginobili for all but nine games.

Tonight at the Amway Center, Parker will make his fourth All-Star appearance. In Spurs history, only Tim Duncan (13), David Robinson (10) and George Gervin (12, including three in the ABA) have made more.

With Duncan at age 35 and slowing, and Ginobili these days spending more time in street clothes than in uniform, Parker has emerged as the lead horse of a team that still harbors credible NBA title aspirations.

“He’s been our everything,” said Duncan, who will miss the All-Star Game for the first time in his career. “He’s played MVP caliber, he really has.”

Ginobili put it even more starkly.

“This is Tony’s team now,” he said.

Parker has accepted the keys, in part because he has no choice. He hit the All-Star break averaging 19.4 points and a career-best 8.1 assists, and riding a streak of four consecutive points-assists double-doubles.

“With Manu out, I have to do a lot more,” Parker said. “I have to be in attack mode the whole time.”

Apart from the numbers, Popovich has been impressed by Parker’s decision-making and control of the game. Night in and night out, Parker seems to sense what the Spurs need, and gives it to them.

Some of Parker’s box scores this season have been mind boggling: 34 points and 14 assists at Toronto, 30 points and 10 assists against the Clippers, 20 points and a career-high 17 assists at New Orleans.

“It’s his most complete season as a point guard,” Popovich said. “When you consider all aspects of the game — offense, deciding when to score and when to involve people, what’s the time of game, what’s the score, what’s going on, who’s hot, who’s rolling, playing defense at the other end and then being a leader out on the court — he’s doing all of those things better than he ever has.”

That’s high praise for a player who already has an NBA Finals MVP (2007) and All-NBA mention (2009) on his résumé.

The telltale night of Parker’s season came Feb. 4 in a home victory against Oklahoma City, when he broke Avery Johnson’s franchise assist record — and for dessert, pumped in 42 points. Ginobili calls that the best game of Parker’s career, eclipsing even a 55-point night at Minnesota in November 2008.

“The game in Minnesota, he knew he had to score,” Ginobili said. “Against Oklahoma City, he was scoring, he was setting guys up. Every decision he made was the right one.”

Opposing coaches have begun to focus on Parker as the head of the Spurs’ snake. When a team faces the Spurs nowadays, limiting Parker’s penetration is typically the emphasis of the defensive game plan.

“Tony Parker is playing the best basketball he’s ever played,” Denver coach George Karl said. “There’s no question about that at all. Before, you always thought you could turn him over a little bit and force him into bad decisions. The games I’ve watched, I haven’t seen any of that.”

L.A. Clippers point guard Chris Paul, who will start ahead of Parker for the West All-Stars tonight, believes his Spurs counterpart has been annually underrated.

“Tony’s been doing the same thing he’s doing now for the past eight, 10 years,” Paul said. “When you know basketball, you appreciate it.”

Still, Parker could have envisioned none of this the day he arrived at Spurs training camp in 2001, still bruised from his pre-draft workout with Blanks.

“I thought if I could play like 15, 20 minutes and be a good player in the NBA, I’d be happy,” Parker said.

Over time, the goals changed, as did the expectations. Now, Parker is only the Spurs’ everything.

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Tony Parker career timeline

Express-News Spurs beat writer Jeff McDonald takes a season-by-season look at the point guard’s development, from teenage starter to four-time All-Star:

2001-02: As a 19-year-old rookie, installed as starting point guard four games into inaugural campaign, replacing Antonio Daniels.

2002-03: Started every game for a team that wins NBA championship, but is benched most fourth quarters against New Jersey in the Finals in favor of Speedy Claxton.

2003-04: Before the season, Spurs flirt with Nets All-Star Jason Kidd in free agency. Had Kidd come, Parker likely would have been pushed out the door.

2004-05: Helped earn Spurs’ third title with seven-game victory over Detroit, but still struggles with consistency in playoffs.

2005-06: Enjoyed a regular-season breakout, averaging 18.9 points en route to first All-Star appearance.

2006-07: Enjoyed postseason breakout, becoming first Spurs player other than Tim Duncan to earn Finals MVP, in sweep of Cleveland. Also garners second straight All-Star invite.

2007-08: Builds on Finals performance, averaging 18.8 points and six assists.

2008-09: With Manu Ginobili limited to 56 games due to injury, Parker explodes for 22 points and 6.9 assists per game, both career highs, highlighted by a 55-point opus in double-overtime win at Minnesota in November. Named to third All-Star team, and draws All-NBA honors for first time.

2009-10: Injury-plagued, plays in only 50 games. Scoring average dips to 16 points, its lowest since 2003-04 season.

2010-11: A bounce-back campaign of sorts, he scores 17.5 points with 6.6 assists.

September 2011: At Eurobasket tournament in Lithuania, leads French national team to first Olympics berth since 2000.

2011-12 (so far): Carrying Spurs again with Ginobili out, he’s averaging 19.4 points and career-best 8.1 assists. Surpassed Avery Johnson as franchise’s all-time assist leader in win over Oklahoma City in February, scoring 42 points in process. Today will play in fourth All-Star Game.

Blair says team can’t afford to let up now

DENVER — No team in NBA history ever fared better in a stretch of nine consecutive road games than the Spurs did on the rodeo road trip that concluded Thursday with a 114-99 victory in Denver.

Awaiting the Spurs when this weekend’s All-Star break concludes: Seven straight at the ATT Center, where they are 13-1. It is the second-best home-court record in the league, behind only Oklahoma City’s 15-1 mark. The seven-game homestand is to begin Wednesday with a game against the Chicago Bulls, whose 27-8 record is second-best in the Eastern Conference.

DeJuan Blair, who matched his career high with 28 points to spark the Spurs to their 114-99 victory in Denver, said it was more important to focus on the game in Denver as the first game of the second half of the season, rather than the end of the rodeo trip.

“We’re playing great, and we’re ready for the second half of the season,” Blair said. “The first half is over and we played good. We went 8-1 on the road trip. It was pretty cool, but we’ve got to keep playing. The first game back is Chicago, so we know we’ve got to keep playing well and just play hard.”

Blair’s most productive game of the season on Thursday was tonic for the Spurs’ interior game that is missing second-year center Tiago Splitter, likely to miss the first three games of the homestand. He made 12 of 21 shots — season highs in both categories — and grabbed 12 rebounds in 35 minutes, another season high.

Coach Gregg Popovich was happy to see Blair’s aggression.

“He and Tony (Parker) worked really well together,” he said. “Tony got him in positions where he had the ball, but DeJuan’s a really unique player. You never know what you’re going to get, as far as how he’s going to score.”

Avoiding a bad conversation: Popovich found himself rationalizing his decision to rest both Tim Duncan and Parker in Tuesday’s blowout loss in Portland, but he had an easy answer for everyone who questioned it: Duncan’s chronically sore left knee, diagnosed with tendinosis and supported by a knee brace in every practice and game, simply can’t be overworked if he is going to be effective during the playoffs.

“Everybody is going to do it at some point this season,” he said, “and it’s based on minutes played. Sometimes, it’s just got to give, and you’ve got to sit them in hopes it will pay off down the road and Timmy won’t come to me and say, ‘My knee is hurting.’

“I don’t want to hear that statement, and if he plays every game, I will hear that statement before playoffs. I’m just trying to guard against it, and if I make an error I will make it in the direction of caution, rather than the other direction.”

Missing Orlando: Splitter said his strained right calf muscle responded well to treatment he has received while remaining with the team and its athletic training staff for the final three games of the rodeo road trip. His leg feels better than he anticipated a week after the injury occurred during the Spurs’ win over the Clippers in Los Angeles.

He had been selected to play in the Rising Stars Challenge, the first event of All-Star Weekend in Orlando.

“I will miss it,” he said, “but it is very important I continue to receive treatment on my injury. (Head athletic trainer) Will (Sevening) has done a great job, and it is improving a lot.”

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA