Capturing lightning in a bottle: Remembering Pecherov and Paspalj

Only hard-core NBA fans remember much about the career of Oleksiy Pecherov.

During his three-season career in the NBA, all of his five career starts came in the first eight days of November 2009.

Sure, they came on a miserable Minnesota team and most people weren’t watching that closely. His team would win only 15 games that season.

But in a game on Nov. 4, 2009, against Kevin Garnett and the Boston Celtics, Pecherov erupted for 24 points and eight rebounds in 34 minutes. It marked the only time that Pecherov would ever score more than 15 points in his career.

Danny Chau of Hardwood Paroxysm.com lists Pecherov’s big game for journeyman NBA players.

Pecherov’s might be the most stunning. It sparked a memorable line from Brendan Jackson on Celtics Hub.com afterwards:

“I just can’t fathom how a guy like this, that was guarded by Kevin Garnett, was able to have a game like this,” Jackson wrote after the game.

A similar game never came again. And Pecherov soon was out of the league.

Chau’s list is pretty complete, although he doesn’t mention one of the most memorable footnote players in Spurs history and his one shining moment.

That would be Zarko Paspalj, the chain-smoking 6-foot-9 power forward from Montenegro who played with the Spurs in the 1989-90 season. Paspalj’s big game came on Jan. 20, 1990, when tossed in 13 points — the only double-figure scoring game of his career — in 14 minutes in a 126-99 loss at Denver.

Paspalj grabbed four offensive rebounds and blocked two shots in the game against the Nuggets. He never had more than one blocked shot in any of the other 22 games of his NBA career. He produced 11 offensive rebounds in the remaining 168 minutes of his brief career with the Spurs.

Obviously, the cigarettes must have prepared him for Denver’s altitude for that big game.

Mike Monroe: HOF committee ensures ABA gets its due

Something amazing happened at the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1993.

Enshrined were two players who had begun their careers in the American Basketball Association and remained in the league until it ceased to exist and four teams were taken into the NBA.

Then, Julius Erving and Dan Issel were part of an eight-person enshrinement class in Springfield, Mass. They weren’t the first players to enter the Hall after having graced ABA courts, but their ABA tenures were longer and more integral to their careers thanks to predecessors Rick Barry and Connie Hawkins.

Erving and Issel were among the select ABA players who proved to the basketball-loving world that some of the most talented players in the game used a red, white and blue ball.

“I’m so happy to go in with ‘Doc,’” Issel said. “And I was proud we were the first two inductees who started our careers in the ABA and went all the way to the end of the league.”

Two more ABA stars — Spurs great George Gervin and Denver’s David Thompson — were enshrined in 1996. Artis Gilmore, the ABA’s first truly great center, should have been right with them. Somehow, he was not, and nobody can cite a good reason for his exclusion.

On Friday, the “A-Train” will take his place alongside Erving, Issel, Gervin, Thompson, Hawkins and Barry after being ignored by voters for nearly 20 years, along with every other person from the renegade league.

Thankfully, the Hall finally is making amends. Erstwhile Suns owner Jerry Colangelo, Hall of Fame chairman of the board, deserves much credit for convening a new committee to screen and recommend players, coaches and contributors from the ABA for induction.

Naturally, the announcement of Gilmore’s election both astonished and gratified the ABA-ers who preceded him in the Hall of Fame.

“When I read that Artis was being inducted, I was shocked to realize he wasn’t already in,” Issel said. “I’m really excited to hear about this (ABA) committee. I admit I am terribly biased because I love the ABA and we had some phenomenal players that came into that league, Artis being one of them. You can’t convince me that the last four or five years of the ABA we weren’t playing as good a brand of basketball as the NBA.”

Artis Gilmore’s 24,941 points rank 20th on the NBA/ABA all-time scoring list, between Jerry West and Patrick Ewing. (Express-News file photo)

Exhibit A for Issel’s contention: Though only six teams, with 10 players per roster, remained at the end, 10 of the 24 players in the first post-merger NBA All-Star Game were ABA “alums.”

Issel and Gilmore were the top scorers for the Kentucky Colonels team that breezed to the ABA title in 1975. He believes those Colonels could have beaten the NBA champion Warriors in a seven-game series, and a lot of us who were around the ABA shared that belief, and still do.

“People who don’t think the ABA was a good league should go back and check the exhibition scores between the ABA and NBA (in 1975 and 1976),” said Hubie Brown, who coached Gilmore and Issel to that ABA title in 1975. “People will be shocked to see how the ABA dominated.”

When the Spurs made the transition into the NBA, Doug Moe was their first head coach, but he was an ABA-er, start to finish.

“I’m very happy about this new committee,” said Moe, who still resides in San Antonio. “I don’t know who decides these things, but I know there were a lot of players in the ABA who were every bit as good as any of the players in the NBA. You take a guy like James Silas, he never got a chance to prove how good he was because he got hurt his very first year in the NBA. But if this new committee is able to recognize him, well, that would be very nice.”

Issel hopes one of his old Colonels teammates, Louie Dampier, will be the next player put forward for enshrinement. Pacers fans hope it is Mel Daniels, the big man who twice was the league’s MVP and the leader of three ABA championship teams. They pull, too, for Bob “Slick” Leonard, the ABA’s all-time winningest coach.

These are great debates, 30 years too late in the arguing.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Who’s next?

Express-News NBA writer Mike Monroe targets five former ABA stars he believes should be in the Basketball Hall of Fame:

Ron Boone, PG: Dallas Chaparrals (1968-70); Utah Stars (’70-76); Spirits of St. Louis (’75-76) — Averaged 18.4 pts., 5.0 rebs. in ABA; four-time ABA All-Star; All-ABA (’74, ’75); member of ’71 ABA champion Utah Stars.

Mel Daniels, PF/C: Minnesota Muskies (1967-68); Indiana Pacers (’68-74); Memphis Sounds (’74-75); New Jersey Nets (’76-77) — ’68 Rookie of the Year; ABA MVP in ’69, ’71; five-time All-ABA team; member of Pacers’ three ABA title teams (’70, ’72, ’73).

Louie Dampier, PG: Kentucky Colonels (1967-76); Spurs (NBA, ’76-79) — All-time leader in points (13,276), assists (4,044), 3-pt. attempts (2,217) and 3-pt FGs (794); seven-time All-Star (’68-75); holds ABA record for consecutive FTs (57); member of ’75 ABA title team.

Bob “Slick” Leonard, coach: Indiana Pacers, 1968-76 — Overall ABA coaching record of 387-270 (.589 pct.); winningest coach in ABA history; coached Pacers to five ABA Finals, three ABA titles; ABA playoff record of 69-47.

James Silas, PG: Dallas Chaparrals (1972-73); Spurs (ABA ’73-76, NBA ’76-81); Cleveland Cavaliers (’81-82) — All-ABA (’75, ’76); averaged 18.1 pts. in four ABA seasons; nicknamed “Captain Late.”

Do the Spurs really have only the NBA’s 16th most talented roster?

The Spurs streaked to a 61-21 record during the regular season, ranking only a game behind Chicago for the league’s best record before they were upset by Memphis in the first round of the playoffs.

But if we are to believe CBS Sports.com blogger Ben Golliver, Gregg Popovich might have done it with mirrors last season.

Golliver has ranked every NBA team in terms of its roster composition.  Included with each team are its key assets (stars, emerging rookies, players with reasonable contracts), its key anchors (bad contracts, mismatched roster pieces, aging stars owed more money than they are worth) and roster questions (free agency decisions, roster construction questions). 

Golliver makes the supposition that  if a new NBA owner in an undisclosed location was granted the ability to poach an entire roster from a current team — taking with it all of the players and their contracts, but not coaches and management types — which one would be the most attractive? And what would the list look like?

Here’s what he has to say after ranking the Spurs as 16th among the 30 NBA franchises.

“16. San Antonio Spurs

“Assets: Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker, Tiago Splitter, DeJuan Blair, Kawhi Leonard

“Anchors: Richard Jefferson

“Questions: Age

“Analysis: Like the Celtics, the Spurs are about to enter a new franchise era. They’ve hedged against losing Duncan to some degree and have a solid crop of younger talent, although there’s not a star in the bunch. Parker was recently locked in to a fairly reasonable extension and will become the face — and motor — of the franchise, with Ginobili doing what he does best for the next few years. The 2011 playoffs felt like a slamming of the championship window, though. The best days are in the rearview mirror.”   

NBA champion Dallas is ranked  as only the league’s eighth best  roster.  And among playoff teams, only Boston (17th), Denver (22nd), New Orleans (24th) and Orlando (29th) ranked lower among playoff teams in Golliver’s roster rankings.

Golliver ranks the Los Angeles Clippers’ roster above the Lakers. And he has Miami ranks as his No. 1 pick.

This obviously underscores the high regard that the basketball acumen of Popovich and general manager R.C. Buford is regarded around the league.

But doesn’t it still devalue what the Spurs were able to accomplish for most of the last season, and also what the team has with young players like Leonard, Gary Neal, Blair and Splitter for the post-Duncan era?        

What about it Spurs Nation?

Is Golliver dissing your team?