No lockout workouts yet for Spurs, but they could be coming

The opening of NBA training camps has been officially postponed, another casualty of the league’s ongoing labor dispute, but that doesn’t mean Spurs players won’t be working out together in San Antonio sometime in the near future.

No formal get-together has been formally organized yet, but with the lockout poised to eat up the first half of October and maybe more, Spurs forward Matt Bonner says he expects at least a handful of players will convene for voluntary camp-style practices at some point.

“Up until now, we’ve been hopeful we’d get (the lockout) solved before they cancelled anything,” said Bonner, a vice president of the players union. “As things have become more real, we’ll probably talk about getting something organized.”

It’s difficult to predict how well-attended such sessions might be.

Few Spurs players live in San Antonio full-time during the offseason — Tim Duncan being the most prominent exception — making large-scale workouts difficult  to organize this point.

In addition, up until recently four players — Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili, Tiago Splitter and rookie Cory Joseph — have been indisposed playing with their respective national teams in Olympic qualifying tournaments.

Complicating matters going forward, some players’ overseas obligations could mute participation at any future player-run workouts. DeJuan Blair (Russia) and Danny Green (Slovenia) have already committed to spending the lockout abroad. Parker, Splitter and Ginobili are also mulling offers to play overseas should the lockout continue.

Player-run workouts became en vogue during the NFL lockout, with players from numerous teams arranging mini-camps at local colleges or high school. Many members of the Dallas Cowboys, for instance, worked out at Southlake Carroll High School.

Among NBA teams, players from the Orlando Magic, Oklahoma City Thunder, Indiana Pacers and Golden State Warriors have pieced together lockout mini-camps this summer. Players in Cleveland are talking about doing the same.

The Spurs have yet to formulate team-wide workouts, though earlier this offseason, second-year guard James Anderson did organize workouts for a collection of young players, including Green, Gary Neal and Da’Sean Butler.

“It was mostly conditioning, a lot of individual workouts, getting up a lot of shots — a little bit of everything we could do with us four or five,” Anderson said. “We didn’t really have enough to play pickup. We were a little short on that end. But just getting together and getting some team chemistry between us was good.”

With Green in Europe and Neal enjoying the early glow of new fatherhood, even that group would be hard-pressed to reunite now. The longer the lockout persists, however, the more vital such workouts become.

Who knows? It might be fun for Spurs players to practice without Gregg Popovich yelling at them.

Lindsey emerging as top choice for Toronto GM job

So much for inactivity during the NBA lockout — at least for Spurs assistant general manager Dennis Lindsey.

Toronto Raptors president Bryan Colangelo has interviewed four finalists for the Raptors’ vacant general manager position. 

Well-connected Yahoo.com NBA reporter Adrian Wojnarowski reports that sources have told him thatOther remaining candidates include former New Orleans Hornets general manager Jeff Bower, Indiana pro personnel director Kevin Pritchard and Philadelphia general manager Ed Stefanski.

Lindsey also is still in the mix for the vacant Portland general manager job.

His association with the Spurs, R.C. Buford and Gregg Popovich clearly help his candidacy. But he likely will be careful before taking a job just for the opportunity to be an NBA general manager.

Wojnarowski reports that Colangelo would have to delegate some decision-making responsibilities to get Lindsey to take the job. And that’s sometimes easier said than done for a leader like Colangelo who has been actively involved in nearly every front-office decision since taking the Raptors job.

Portland owner Paul Allen has shown a quick trigger with his most recent general managers. Pritchard and Rich Cho both were relieved of their duties as Portland’s general manager in the last 15 months.

It might turn out that Lindsey has a better job working with one of the NBA’s top front offices in San Antonio than running his own team under less than ideal upper management with either of his potential opportunities.

Trainer playing to the Spurs’ strengths

Twelve years before he would return to the San Antonio area to become the Spurs’ new strength and conditioning coach, Matt Herring was a middle school teacher in Schertz.

In terms of propensity for cutting up, some of the students in Herring’s world history class probably could give notorious prankster Tim Duncan a run for his money.

“It’s a little different now, although some of the athletes we’ve come across acted like eighth-graders,” Herring said with a smile. “It’s easier to handle them in eighth grade, because they’ve got little kid bodies.”

Hired earlier this month away from the University of Florida, where he was part of two national championship teams under coach Billy Donovan, Herring would like nothing more than to have some NBA bodies present.

With the league’s lockout still in full effect, players have been barred from the team’s training facilities and from contact with club personnel, so Herring is a strength and conditioning coach with nobody to strengthen and condition.

A 40-year-old Austin native who started his first NBA job just after Labor Day, Herring has spent most of September getting the lay of the land, brainstorming with Spurs coaches and other staffers and reacquainting himself with Texas barbecue.

So far, the bored strength coach in him has resisted the urge to force Gregg Popovich to run suicide sprints up the hill behind the team’s practice facility in triple-digit heat.

“It’s actually been very peaceful,” Herring said. “It’s sure nice to be able to come in and get organized now, before everything starts.”

Make no mistake. Once everything starts, the task of replacing the retired Mike Brungardt — the only strength coach in franchise history — is sure to be a daunting one.

Brungardt, who began working with the Spurs full-time in 1994, is largely credited with building the team’s strength program, which includes conditioning and injury rehabilitation protocols, from the ground up. Brungardt earned four championship rings with the Spurs and, according to general manager R.C. Buford, earned each one.

“Mike Brungardt set a standard that produced outstanding results,” Buford said. “Our guys worked and enjoyed their work and were diligent with it. They were well-instructed and well-monitored, and that’s not easily replaceable.”

In a way, Herring is to Brungardt as the Spurs’ next starting power forward is to Duncan. Intimidating? Sure.

“You’d almost rather the person before you got booted out,” Herring said, with a laugh.

Yet there is also an upside to following a legend. After watching Brungardt operate for 15 years, nobody in the organization is likely to question the value of a good strength coach. That includes the players, who can sometimes bristle at the dirty work they’re asked to do in the weight room.

“‘Brungy’ made this one of the premier jobs in the league because of the culture he developed,” Herring said.

In Herring, the Spurs believe they’ve found a suitable torch-carrier for that culture. He and Brungardt share a bond, and a fondness for Mexican food, dating to 2003.

Having given up his gig as a middle school teacher and coach four years earlier for graduate school at the University of Texas, Herring had just begun his new life as the strength and conditioning coach at Oklahoma State and was looking for guidance.

A mutual friend slipped him Brungardt’s number.

One day that summer, not long after the Spurs had finished celebrating their second championship, Herring spent a weekend with Brungardt in San Antonio.

“He opened up his whole facility, philosophy and home to me,” Herring said.

The two kept in touch throughout the years. When Herring was up for the Spurs job this summer, Brungardt was one of the first people he called.

“There are things that are time-tested, and a lot of those elements are things Brungy and I share,” Herring said. “That’s what’s going to make the transition moderately easy, because it’s not going to be that different.”

Herring has come a long way from his days teaching eighth-graders in Schertz. His students’ bodies are bigger, and so are the stakes.

Heady stuff for a former world history teacher, who believes he is up for the challenge of a lifetime.

“I’ve never tried to look forward, dreaming big,” Herring said. “It’s always been a journey for me, and whatever life brings me is what I’m excited about.”

Matt Herring, a 40-year-old Austin native taking his first NBA coaching job, was the strength coach for two national championship basketball teams at the University of Florida. (Edward A. Ornelas/eaornelas@express-news.net)