Buck Harvey: New call: Someone missed on Joseph

When last seen in public, Cory Joseph looked stunned.

Five seconds?

How was it possible?

That play, in effect, ended Texas’ season.

What comes next is another call, but this one will take years, not seconds.

Someone made a mistake with Joseph.

Joseph won Saturday, at least. He was introduced along with the Spurs’ other first-round draft pick, Kawhi Leonard, and Joseph came across as bright-eyed and professional.

Some of the Spurs’ brass kidded him about wearing a tie and shiny, black shoes to the press gathering. But it was sweet; this is what teenagers wear to their first job.

Joseph is just 19, as is Leonard, and that’s part of the inherent promise both have. That’s also the reason, however, the Spurs’ move last week so risky.

There’s no guarantee either will translate to the NBA game. So why replace George Hill, just entering his prime, with uncertainty?

Hill might not have a full set of point-guard skills, and he sagged against Memphis. But anyone who plays defense and is capable of 29 points in a playoff game will likely be even better in his fourth and fifth seasons.

Money is naturally part of the equation. When the Spurs found there was so much interest for Hill last week, they concluded his price will be high when he becomes a free agent in a year. He’s a nice player at $2 million a year, not so much at $7 million.

Almost everyone in the organization said they would have done this deal no matter the economics, but that’s what they have to say. This is their reality, and adapting to it is their only choice.

Maybe they brilliantly did last week, especially if one fix follows. From what the Spurs have seen already, Leonard’s shooting motion isn’t a tear-down. The Spurs see a workable starting point.

Joseph needs tweaking, but not much. The concern with him has been whether he has NBA quickness, and a spring workout in New Jersey seemed to calm most fears.

Until then, it was unclear why he had chosen to enter the draft. After all, T.J. Ford, Daniel Gibson and D.J. Augustin didn’t leave Texas after one year. Why should someone who often looked like just another guy?

The UT coaches used to joke about how Joseph played hunched over. Did he really play 6-foot-3? More telling, he rarely seemed to create the way an NBA point-guard prospect should.

R.C. Buford joked Saturday that Joseph might keep his Austin apartment and commute. Maybe that’s not a bad idea — if the commute is a short one to the Toros’ gym.

But the Spurs tracked all of this, and they weren’t discouraged. Joseph plays defense. He shot over 40 percent from the college 3-point line. And he had Hill-like dunks.

As for his lack of zip: If Joseph gets an angle, said one Spurs scout, he has enough quickness and size that defenders can’t cut off his driving lane.

The Spurs say they were not alone in this analysis. While most mock drafts rated Joseph somewhere in the middle of the second round, the Spurs insist he was in play from No. 25 to No. 35.

The Spurs also point to what Joseph did in mid-December. Then, in Greensboro, N.C., against North Carolina, in just his 11th college game, Joseph had 21 points and no turnovers in 35 minutes.

Here is how he broke the tie with about three seconds left: He dribbled full-court to the foul line, where he pivoted and made the jumper.

So why didn’t Joseph show more of this over the next few months at Texas? If he becomes a serviceable backup to Tony Parker, Rick Barnes will hear the question.

Barnes will hear about this draft, too. Three of his players went in the first round, with two of them rising higher than anyone expected. Since 1999, eight college teams have had at least three players drafted in the first round, and every team but Texas made at least the Elite Eight.

Five made the national championship game. Three won it.

Coincidentally, a play involving Joseph is a primary reason Texas didn’t advance. On an inbounds play in the final seconds against Arizona, an official quick-counted the critical five-second violation.

“I watched (the replay) a few times,” Joseph said Saturday, “but you have to put it behind you.”

Now, an NBA career is in front, as is a judgment. Either the Spurs made a mistake drafting Joseph, or Barnes made one for not doing more with him.

Both can’t win this.

bharvey@express-news.net

Parker says he saw Hill as his ‘little brother’

By Jeff McDonald and Tim Griffin
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Speaking to a French website Monday, point guard Tony Parker said he would miss backup George Hill, who was traded to Indiana on draft night for a package that included Kawhi Leonard.

“I have confidence in (the front office’s) ability to make good choices,” Parker told 20minutes.fr. “It was still very difficult to separate from George Hill, because everyone loved him. Personally, I considered him my little brother. But the NBA is a business.”

In the same interview, Parker reiterated his desire to join the French national team for the ?EuroBasket tournament in Lithuania in August, but says he will not play if a lockout prevents him from obtaining insurances against injury.

“If there’s no insurance, I won’t play, because the Spurs are No. 1 on my list,” Parker said. “But if I’m insured, I’ll definitely play.”

Earlier this month, Parker said in San Antonio that he was looking forward to playing for the French national team for the first time in his professional career.

“Playing with the national team is always something I wanted to do,” Parker said. “I’ve never been to an Olympics. In talking to Manu (Ginobili), I know it’s a great experience.”

UT gaffe won’t define Spurs’ Joseph

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Maybe he could have been a little more proactive about getting the ball in bounds. Maybe he could have been a little quicker in calling timeout.

Given a do-over, Cory Joseph certainly would have done something to change what became the unfortunate enduring moment of his one-season college career at Texas.

Absent the ability to time-travel, Joseph has settled on the next-best option for dealing with crushing defeat.

“The Arizona game?” asked Joseph, the former UT point guard turned Spurs’ first-round draft choice. “I can’t dwell on it. I put that one behind me.”

With all that now lies ahead of Joseph, the 19-year-old taken by the Spurs with the 29th overall pick in last week’s draft, letting go and moving on seems to be as sound a strategy as any.

Selected a little more than an hour after the Spurs dealt backup point George Hill to Indiana, Joseph arrives in San Antonio with what appears to be a clear shot at earning minutes behind Tony Parker.

His ability to forget the infamous and controversial five-second call that all but ended UT’s NCAA tournament run in March will be almost as critical as his aptitude in picking up the complexities of a Spurs playbook notoriously hard on rookies.

“A game is a game,” Joseph said. “You love to play, and you live and die by it. But after it’s over, you just have to let it go.”

In tabbing Joseph the franchise’s first UT draftee in 24 years, the Spurs were willing to overlook his final collegiate moment and focus on others that had come before.

There was the game-winning shot that beat North Carolina in December. And there were smaller, almost imperceptible strides he made throughout the season.

Though the 6-foot-3 Joseph never quite lived up to billing as the nation’s seventh-ranked recruit, he did lead UT in assists (three per game), steals (37) and 3-point percentage (41.3) to go with his 10.4 points per game.

With an adopted son playing at Texas, Spurs general manager R.C. Buford perhaps saw Joseph more than any other NBA executive. What caught his eye was something that also must warm the cockles of coach Gregg Popovich’s heart.

“He was as committed to playing defense as any guard we saw,” Buford said.

Like San Diego State small forward Kawhi Leonard, a fellow 19-year-old the Spurs obtained from Indiana in the Hill trade, Joseph fits with the Spurs’ stated mission of returning to their defensive roots.

It’s a facet of the game Joseph said his father, David, stressed from the time he was a child.

“Locking a man down to zero points is better than you scoring 50,” said Joseph, the Spurs’ first draft pick from UT since Raynard Davis went in the seventh round in 1987. “My dad tried to instill that into me from an early age.”

Longhorns coach Rick Barnes says he was impressed with how Joseph grew as a leader and decision-maker during his short time in Austin.

“Cory has a quiet confidence about him, and he does all the little things that help a team,” Barnes said. “We would have loved the chance to work with him at Texas for a longer period of time, as we understand that he is just beginning to develop into the type of player we know he can become.”

Joseph, who won’t celebrate his 20th birthday until Aug. 20, comes with a maturity and poise that belies his callow age.

A Toronto native, Joseph left Canada just before his junior year of high school to attend Findlay Prep, a burgeoning basketball factory in Henderson, Nev. He came as part of a package that also included Tristan Thompson, who was drafted fourth overall by Cleveland last week.

“I got the business aspect of basketball since I was young,” Joseph said. “I had to leave my friends and family, which is a hard thing to do. It was hard on my mom and my family to let go of me, but it’s part of your dreams. It got me exposure.”

As hard as Joseph tries to forget it, what happened the night of March 20 in Tulsa, Okla., will always be part of his past.

It doesn’t matter that replays indicated Jim Burr, the official who whistled Joseph for the critical five-second call, was wrong.

Joseph will never completely erase his final memory in a UT uniform. He can only hope to make some new ones, some better ones, with the Spurs.

CORY JOSEPH

2011 draft: 29th overall

College: Texas

Position: Point guard

Birthdate:
Aug. 20, 1991

Height, weight: 6-3, 185

College averages: 10.4 ppg, 3.6 rpg, 3.0 apg, 41.3 3-point pct.

Rundown: Didn’t quite live up to billing as nation’s No. 7 recruit in lone season at UT, but impressed scouts with defensive toughness and decision-making ability. Perimeter shooting a plus, but needs to improve finishing at rim.