Spurs memory No. 30: Torrid San Diego shooting spoils Spurs’ first game

Late San Diego blitz ruins Spurs’ opening ABA game

Date: Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973
Place: The Arena, San Antonio
Score: San Diego Conquistadors 121, San Antonio Spurs 106.

The Spurs’ team history began with a whimper with the kind of debut that was anything but memorable.

San Diego erupted for 48 points in the final quarter, storming back from a deficit at the start of the fourth quarter to claim a 121-106 victory over the Spurs in the team’s first regular-season ABA game. San Antonio blew a 77-73 lead coming into the final quarter.

San Antonio coach Tom Nissalke’s team struggled defensively as Stew Johnson torched them for five 3-pointers and Bo Lamar added two more in the Conquistadors’ victory.

San Diego coach Wilt Chamberlain had hoped to be playing for the Conquistadors after jumping from the Los Angeles Lakers. Instead, he watched from the bench in his first regular-season game. San Diego assistant Stan Albeck was involved in directing the game for the Conquistadors, foreshadowing his association with the Spurs later in the team’s history.   .

Johnson finished with 38 points and Lamar added 30 to pace San Diego. Rich Jones led the Spurs with 25 points and Joe Hamilton tallied 20 points and a game-high 10 assists.

The game nearly never came off as a strike between ABA owners and players was averted only a few hours before the opening tip-off. ABA players won the right to fly first class on all trips of longer than an hour. NBA players already had that perk at that time for all flights.

The Spurs led for most of the game before San Diego’s late charge. The game was actually much closer than the final margin as San Diego scored 10 points in the final 90 seconds, including a 3-pointer by Billy Shepherd at the final buzzer.

San Diego blistered the Spurs from outside throughout the game, hitting 8 for 11 from 3-point territory in the game.

The game attracted a crowd of 5,879 — seventh largest for a basketball game in San Antonio at that time.

They said it, part I: “They’re more willing to shoot the 3-pointers than most teams are, and when they hit them like they did tonight … ” Nissalke breaking off in mid-sentence his comments about the Conquistadors’ torrid outside shooting.

They said it, part II: “They have spirit and togetherness and are good 3-point shooters,” Chamberlain to the San Antonio Light about his team’s shooting performance. He had been with the team for only the previous 10 days.

They said it, part III: “It’s a long season. In a business like this you can’t let yourself get too far down when you lose, nor can you get too sky far up when you win. It’s a game in which too many things can happen,” Nissalke to the Light about the Spurs’ late collapse.

They said it, part IV: “The new San Antonio Spurs have promising young backcourt men in James Silas and lefthanded rookie Bird Averitt, last year’s top college scorer from Pepperdine. They also have a quality forward in Rich Jones, but for the Spurs to improve significantly center Bob Netolicky must stop playing defense like Santa Anna.” Sports Illustrated’s preview of the Spurs  in their Oct. 15, 1973 issue.

The upshot: The Spurs and Nissalke didn’t forget San Diego’s late run at the buzzer in the opening game.  San Antonio won the next four games against the Q’s and seven of the next eight. The Spurs claimed the season series over San Diego, 8-3. The Spurs lost their first four games in franchise history before notching a 116-106 victory over Virginia on Oct. 16, 1973, for the first victory in team history. Their fortunes changed after George Gervin was acquired from Virginia later in the season, paving the way for a playoff march that saw them win 11 of their last 15 games. They lost in seven games to ABA defending champion Indiana in the first round of the playoffs. Chamberlain and the Q’s won a one-game tiebreaker over Denver to qualify for the playoffs and then lost in six games to Utah in the first round of the playoffs.

McDyess No. 213, Tiago 226th in ESPN.com’s NBA top 500

Two key inside players for the Spurs’ present and future are ranked closely in ESPN.com’s most recent entries on its countdown of the top 500 current players in the NBA.

Veteran forward/center in the poll of 91 experts who were asked to gauge each player on a 1-through-10 point basis.

Tiago Splitter, who eventually will be asked to replace McDyess in the Spurs’ rotation checks in at No. 226.

The post notes that McDyess once was one of the most valuable players in the league before injuries wreaked havoc on his knees. He was once involved in a trade to New York where Denver received Nene, Mark Jackson and Marcus Camby in exchange for him.

And Splitter’s development in the playoffs against Memphis in points, rebounds and shooting percentage are mentioned as prime reasons for his ranking.

The Spurs are planning for a lot of development from Splitter over the next several years.

And they wouldn’t necessarily mind having McDyess around for a little while longer to help in the transition.

Spurs’ Neal not built for indoor streetball

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

WASHINGTON — Even before he walked into that humid, jam-packed locker room in the nation’s capital Saturday, Gary Neal knew he was out of his element.

With no Gregg Popovich around to call his number and no Manu Ginobili to set him up, Neal figured his chances of standing out in the exhibition between two legendary summer pro-am leagues — Los Angeles’ Drew League and the D.C.-based Goodman League — were slim.

His spot-up game and role-player mentality aren’t built for streetball, even streetball played indoors.

“No, not at all,” said Neal, a Spurs guard and Baltimore native who played for the Goodman team. “My point guards are (Denver’s) Ty Lawson and (Washington’s) John Wall. Just have to hope they’re in a distributing mood.”

They weren’t. Neal finished with six points, 38 shy of the 44 pumped in by NBA scoring champ Kevin Durant, who earned MVP honors in Goodman’s 135-134 victory.

As the NBA’s Lockout Summer swelters into its second month, this is what passes for basketball at its apex. It is a standing-room crowd of about 2,000 wedged into a Division-III bandbox at some place called Trinity University, 4 miles north of Capitol Hill and two levels above the campus swimming pool.

It is a trash-talking emcee, Goodman League commissioner Miles Rawls, chattering through free throws when he wasn’t hawking highlight DVDs — entitled, appropriately enough, “No Lockout” — like a P.T. Barnum of the pick-and-roll.

It is the mild-mannered Durant, the only NBA All-Star on either roster, flexing for the crowd after a coast-to-coast drive.

It is streetball legends named “Money Mike” (no last name) and Baby Shaq Jones filling out the end of the bench.

It is showmanship above all else, and in that, Saturday night delivered.

“We put on a show,” said Wall, who added 28 points to the Goodman win. “That’s what it’s all about. It’s not about money. It’s about loving the game and wanting to play the game.”

Of course, not everybody wanted to.

Wizards swingman Nick Young, reportedly miffed because he wasn’t named the Drew League’s regular-season MVP, didn’t show. Neither did Kobe Bryant, whose presence was rumored after he dropped 43 points and the game-winning jumper in a Drew League game last week.

“We tried to get him,” said Drew Leaguer DeMar DeRozan, a Toronto Raptors forward. “You pretty much have to catch Kobe at the right time and the right place.”

Like a good Spur, Neal wasn’t built for this circus.

Neal, who made the leap from the undrafted scrap heap to first-team All-Rookie last season by staying within himself, couldn’t have felt further from San Antonio had he gone back to Europe.

Minutes into his first appearance, Neal buried the kind of off-balance, guarded 3-pointer he hit about 129 times last season. In the fourth quarter, he added a transition three to a Goodman rally.

In between, Neal might as well have been a paying customer. Certainly, nobody was going to call a play for him, because neither team was running any.

Neal was there at Trinity mostly because he had nowhere else to go.

“I’m pretty much just trying to stay in shape,” Neal said. “If I had to pick, I’d rather be back in San Antonio, getting instruction from the coaches and things like that. Games like this are everywhere now, so you just try to stay active.”

In a way, Neal has been with the understated Spurs too long to shine in a game like this. All-star games, as a rule, are built for dunkers and speedsters, and Neal is neither.

The game opened with a Drew League alley-oop, from Milwaukee’s Brandon Jennings to Washington’s JaVale McGee. Moments later, Wall hooked up with Durant for an answer. And so on and so forth, until the final horn.

In the end, Saturday’s exhibition wasn’t an apples-to-apples replacement for NBA basketball. But for Neal, a Spur out of water, at least it was something.