Spurs’ Leonard crams for NBA test

A month ago, Spurs rookie Kawhi Leonard was sitting in the bleachers at San Diego State’s Viejas Arena, watching his former teammates beat Southern Utah in their season opener.

He only wished it felt like he had never left.

“The lockout was tough, not just on me but on every rookie,” Leonard said. “I was ready to get started in the NBA.”

After 150 days of labor limbo, Leonard’s education as an NBA player began, finally, with the opening of training camp last week.

Between now and the Spurs’ Dec. 26 regular-season opener against Memphis, the 20-year-old small forward will be asked to cram nearly six months of NBA 101 into a little more than two weeks.

Obtained in a draft-night trade that sent popular guard George Hill to Indiana, Leonard — taken 15th overall — arrives as the Spurs’ highest-drafted rookie since Tim Duncan went No. 1 in 1997.

Though coach Gregg Popovich has sought to tamp down expectations for Leonard, the Spurs clearly did not part with a key rotation piece like Hill to bring in a player they did not think could contribute soon.

“Kawhi is what we expected, in that we knew he was a hard worker; that he was a committed player; that he responded well defensively, and rebounding-wise,” Popovich said. “Already he’s a little more explosive than we expected — the stops and starts, that sort of thing.”

Even without the benefit of summer league, offseason workouts with the Spurs’ player development coaches or even a full training camp, Leonard — 6-foot-7 with catcher’s mitt hands — can be expected to quickly work his way into the team’s muddled small-forward mix.

For now, 31-year-old Richard Jefferson is the apparent starter, with the Spurs still chasing at least one veteran — Washington’s Josh Howard — on the free-agent market.

In terms of learning curve, Leonard already is five days ahead of fellow first-rounder Cory Joseph, the Texas point guard the Spurs took 29th. A native Canadian, Joseph has yet to practice while clearing up immigration red tape.

With the Spurs hoping to get younger and more athletic — not to mention more defensive-minded — on the wing, Leonard should find a role relatively quickly.

“He has a knack for the ball, you can already see it,” said second-year guard James Anderson, who trained with Leonard in Las Vegas during the lockout. “His defensive tools will help us out. His youth, getting out and running the floor, it will bring us more firepower.”

Spurs rookie Kawhi Leonard (center) tosses the ball to Danny Green (left) as DeJuan Blair looks on at a recent Spurs practice. (Kin Man Hui / kmhui@express-news.net)

In two seasons at San Diego State, Leonard logged 40 double-doubles, second in school history behind Michael Cage. As a sophomore last season, he averaged 15.5 points and 10.6 rebounds as a second-team All-American.

The most daunting obstacle standing between Leonard and early playing time is the calendar.

One week after draft day, the NBA locked out its players. For the first five months of his professional career, Leonard couldn’t contact his new coaches, get into his new locker room or draw a paycheck. If he ever regretted his decision to leave school early for a lockout, Leonard would never admit it.

“I got drafted 15,” he said. “That was my dream growing up.”

In place of a proper offseason with Spurs coaches, Leonard worked out with future teammates such as Anderson and Jefferson, grilling them on the basics of the playbook. He also watched film of Spurs games, hoping to pick up pointers by osmosis.

“I’m just trying to learn the offense so once I get in the game, I won’t be clueless,” Leonard said.

His NBA career delayed for 150 days, Leonard is glad to at last be on the court for his first training camp. His college career is over, but for Leonard, the education is just beginning.

“I watched these guys growing up, and now I’m on the court with them,” Leonard said. “I just try to have fun and open my eyes and ears so I can learn a lot.”

McDyess sticks to retirement decision

The Spurs had hoped a short post-lockout season might help them convince veteran big man Antonio McDyess he could play one more season, even at age 37.

On Monday they officially gave up the quest.

With a deadline for fully guaranteeing McDyess’ $5.22 million contract approaching at the end of the business day, the Spurs waived the 6-foot-9 forward from Alabama.

“When a player gets to a certain age and certain circumstances in his life, he knows when it’s time to do certain things,” said Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, who said he spoke with McDyess last week. “He’s had a long time to think about it, all summer and fall. He finally made his decision.”

The club gets to remove $2.61 million from its player payroll, a significant factor since the Spurs likely will be over the NBA’s new luxury tax threshold this season.

McDyess made it clear during training camp for the 2010-11 season that it likely would be his last. When the Grizzlies eliminated the Spurs from the playoffs in the first round in April, he reiterated he would retire, regretting only how his career ended.

“This was not at all how I wanted it to end, but signing here was one of the best things I did in my career,” he said. “I wouldn’t trade these two years for the world, one of the greatest times of my whole career. I just wish we would have gone farther.”

McDyess averaged 5.6 points and 5.7 rebounds in 150 games in his two seasons in silver and black. His buzzer-beating tip-in produced a dramatic 89-88 victory over the Lakers at Staples Center in February, a play McDyess called one of the most memorable of his career.

Popovich remembered McDyess’ selfless approach to the game.

“He’s one of the great teammates that we’ve had in the NBA for the last 15 years. Everybody who has coached him or played with him will tell you that. It’s not just my opinion. He’s a wonderful, polite, great individual; really a special guy. He leaves a heck of a legacy, a fine reputation.

“He’s a really unique player, the way he plays defense, can shoot the shot, can guard a four or a five. You don’t replace a guy like that.”

NOVAK WAIVED: The Spurs also waived 6-foot-10 forward Steve Novak, who played 23 games with the club last season. Novak had signed a non-guaranteed contract on Thursday.

It appears the Spurs were complying with a request from Novak, who has an opportunity to sign a fully guaranteed deal with the Knicks if he clears waivers, according to Yahoo! Sports.

NEAL HOPEFUL: Shooting guard Gary Neal will visit his doctor today, hoping for clearance to begin conditioning work to get back on the court.

Feeling good one week after undergoing an appendectomy, Neal has not been allowed any physical activity since the operation.

“Hopefully, the doctor will let me start running,” he said. “I’m anxious to get back to work.”

Spurs don’t want just anybody at center

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

When Spurs coach Gregg Popovich looks at his roster as constituted, he sees what most analysts, scouts and fans in the stands do.

A giant question mark in the middle where the starting center should be.

Unlike many of those armchair pundits, however, Popovich seems to differ on the urgency with which that deficiency need be addressed.

“We probably could use another big in the rotation,” Popovich said. “But I don’t want to put someone there just to have a body there.”

Popovich has called the hunt for a reliable big man to plug next to an aging Tim Duncan the team’s No. 1 personnel goal.

Ten days into training camp, that search is still ongoing.

With the free-agent market for budget big men reduced to crumbs, and the trade market soft, the Spurs have so far been unable to lure outside reinforcements.

With the Dec. 26 opener against Memphis fast approaching, the Spurs appear prepared to start the season with the same frontline last seen getting skid-marked by the Grizzlies in April’s playoffs — minus Antonio McDyess, who appears intent on retirement.

The roll call of available free-agent centers who might fit the Spurs’ price range doesn’t exactly have the front office fumbling for its checkbook. As luxury tax payers, the most the Spurs can offer is a deal starting at $3 million.

That list, highlighted by the likes of Utah’s Kyrylo Fesenko and Toronto’s Alexis Ajinca, “won’t keep you up reading at night, like a good book,” Popovich said.

“I want that person to at least be able to help us when we put him in the game, instead of just take up minutes.”

Instead of rushing to fill a void with a player they don’t really want, the Spurs appear content to see what shakes out during the season, up until the March 15 trade deadline.

McDyess’ contract — worth $5.22 million but guaranteed for only $2.64 million until the end of the day today — appears to be the team’s most worthwhile trade chip.

Even at full price, McDyess’ expiring deal would likely interest a team looking to shed salary to chase a bumper crop of free agents this summer.

“We’re going to be patient and just take our time and see what develops,” Popovich said.

In the meantime, the Spurs’ search for a center will cycle through a familiar list of in-house candidates, each of them incomplete in some way.

Matt Bonner was the NBA’s leading 3-point shooter last season at 45.7 percent, but will never be confused with Bill Russell on defense. DeJuan Blair is undersized at 6-foot-7, has battled weight issues and, at 22, is still developing.

Tiago Splitter is a Brazilian mystery, limited to 60 games of mostly mop-up duty during an injury-speckled rookie year. In a sense, Popovich views Splitter as this season’s de facto free-agent signee.

“We haven’t really seen Tiago much, so he’s kind of a new player this year,” Popovich said. “He’s going to give us a lot of minutes we have to have, because of the quick schedule.”

With Duncan held out of Saturday’s preseason-opening loss at Houston, Splitter started at center next to Blair and scored 13 points on 6-of-9 shooting.

“I want to grow my game,” Splitter said. “I know how to play. I just want to help the team win games.”

Once upon a time, with Duncan in his two-time MVP prime, the Spurs were able to win championships with the likes of Rasho Nesterovic and Fabricio Oberto flanking him.

With Duncan’s 36th birthday approaching, the Spurs now require more from their starting center than to just be tall and ambulatory.

Popovich believes the Spurs can afford to remain patient in finding that person. For now, at least.