Spurs notebook: Healthy Anderson anxious to show his stuff

After missing most of his rookie season training camp, second-year Spurs guard James Anderson found waiting nearly two-and-a-half months for the opening of this season’s camp a mere inconvenience.

Now, with Gary Neal on the shelf after undergoing an appendectomy on Monday, Anderson figures more heavily in the Spurs’ early-season plans.

Anderson got off to a good start last season, making 10 of 20 on 3-pointers in the first six games of the season but appeared in only 26 games after a stress fracture in his right foot was discovered Nov. 11. He returned to the lineup Jan. 29 but played a limited role thereafter.

“We want to watch him play,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “We haven’t really seen him. He was hurt so much last year and missed camp and had such a spotty experience during the year. He’ll obviously get a chance to get out on the floor with Gary out. We’ll see what we see.”

Anderson played in a makeshift pro league in Las Vegas during the NBA lockout and reported to camp intent on proving himself.

“Anytime you get injured, it’s heartbreaking,” he said. “At the same time, you’ve got to take care of your body. That’s what this league is all about, taking care of your body.”

SHECKY POPOVICH: The Spurs coach went all stand-up comic on Neal on Tuesday, making light of Neal’s enforced idleness.

“They took out his appendix,” Popovich said. “He didn’t come to practice.

“Remember when we got our appendixes taken out? Next day, we were out shoveling snow. He gets his appendix out, he’s lying in bed: ‘It hurts, Coach. I can’t do anything.’

“I sent him a little card. It had a doe on it, a little deer. It smelled of flowers and everything. I wanted him to know we were thinking about him. If I was worth anything, I would have thought of sending ice cream with it, just to make him happier.”

The team’s medical staff won’t allow Neal to get back on the court until Monday.

“He’s probably going to miss three or four games, I’m thinking, something like that,” Popovich said. “Then he’ll be ready to go. He’s not going to forget how to shoot, but he was working really hard at the defensive end of the court, trying to improve the all-around part of his game, so that’s a tough break for him.”

MCDYESS DEADLINE: Center-forward Antonio McDyess remains a camp absentee while the club determines his contract status. Though the 16-year veteran announced his intent to retire after last season, he remains on the team’s roster, with half his $5.2 million contract guaranteed, even if he goes through with retirement.

The club has until Monday to decide if it is going to guarantee the other half of McDyess’ deal. It is possible his expiring contract could be used as part of a trade.

“We’re taking our time deciding how we want to approach the whole roster,” said Popovich, also the team’s executive vice president of basketball operations. “Every team is still looking around, making calls. We’re still looking around. It’s early. Things are starting to settle out, obviously, but things can happen to round out a roster.”

BUTLER WAIVED: The Spurs waived forward Da’Sean Butler. The club had signed him late last season after he was waived by the Heat. He did not play for the Spurs.

Appendectomy sidelines Neal one week

Spurs guard Gary Neal will miss at least a week of training camp after undergoing an appendectomy.

Neal began feeling pain in his abdominal region Sunday night. After consulting with team doctors Monday, a decision was made to remove Neal’s inflamed appendix.

The procedure went off without complication, according to a Spurs medical release.

Neal, 27, is entering his second season with the Spurs after earning first-team All-Rookie honors in 2010-11. He will be prohibited from physical activity for the next week, after which doctors will re-examine him and provide a more specific timeline for recovery.

A day before falling ill, Neal had been looking forward to completing his second Spurs training camp.

“It’s a great feeling to be a part of this for another year,” Neal said Saturday. “Hopefully, I can have another successful one.”

HOWARD IN THE MIX? The Spurs apparently haven’t abandoned their plan of adding another small forward, and perhaps replacing incumbent starter Richard Jefferson.

According to a member of Josh Howard’s camp, the Spurs tendered a formal offer to the Washington small forward over the weekend.

Considered among the top free-agent swingmen on the market, Howard’s list appears down to three teams, with Utah and Washington also possible destinations.

Howard’s representatives say the Jazz have also made him an offer, though — perhaps as a matter of semantics — Utah general manager Kevin O’Connor denied to the Salt Lake Tribune over the weekend talks had progressed that far.

Either way, Howard is scheduling a visit to Utah this week.

The details of the Spurs’ bid are unclear. They could offer a deal starting at a maximum of $5 million if they use amnesty on Jefferson to get below the luxury tax threshold.

The most they could offer otherwise would be a $3 million deal using the so-called “mini mid-level exception.”

ROSTER MOVES: The Spurs waived former UTSA guard Devin Gibson on Monday and signed small forward Gani Lawal and shooting guard Antoine Hood to the camp roster.

Lawal, a 2010 second-round pick of the Phoenix Suns out of Georgia Tech, could make an interesting addition to the end of the Spurs’ bench.

Lawal, 6-foot-9, logged just two NBA minutes as a rookie, and was just beginning to practice well when he tore knee ligaments in a team workout in January. He underwent surgery on the knee later that month.

Lawal, 23, made his return to the court in Poland during the lockout, averaging 16.5 points and 11.7 rebounds in 10 games.

Hood, 28, was a former All-Mountain West performer at Air Force. He has spent the majority of his professional career in the Czech Republic.

A DAY OFF: So far, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich has made good on his vow to take it easy on his team during the shortened training camp.

After putting players through the first two-a-day workouts Sunday, Popovich gave them Monday off. The Spurs will return to the practice floor this morning, with an eye toward Saturday’s preseason opener at Houston.

Spurs scramble to get back for camp

Several Spurs are lamenting the pitfalls of travel today on their Twitter accounts as they attempt to get back to San Antonio.

Training camp doesn’t officially start until Friday, but most  of the team apparently want to be in place a couple of days early for some individual work.

But as any astute traveler knows, it’s not nearly as getting from Point A to Point B as it used to be.

Gary Neal was lamenting the fact that his wife’s flight arrangements on team charter flights.