Spurs Way apparently rubbed off on Tolliver

Anthony Tolliver’s career with the Spurs lasted 19 games at the start of the 2008-09 season. Since then, he’s logged 111 games with three other teams, the most recent 65 of them coming with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Reading between the lines on this story in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, however, it seems apparent Tolliver learned something during his short stint in silver and black.

“Sometimes it’s good to have a coach (who) likes to be a jerk,” Tolliver said.

Speaking to the newspaper in the wake of Kurt Rambis’ firing earlier this week, Tolliver describes the characteristics he thinks would be ideal in a new coach in the Great White North. Though Tolliver explicitly cites Chicago’s Tom Thibodeau as a model, it’s not hard to listen to his comments and think Gregg Popovich.

Again from the Star-Tribune piece:

Asked what kind of coach the team needs to hire next, Tolliver said, “Someone who’s going to be a disciplinarian. Kurt’s a really nice guy. Sometimes that got in the way. I’m not saying he’s too nice, but sometimes it’s good to have a coach no likes to be a jerk.

“I know several players on the Bulls and nobody really liked Tom Thibodeau, but that’s O.K. You don’t have to like the coach. You just have to be able to play for him.”

Sound familiar?

Speaking more specifically about the Xs and Os of the Timberwolves’ yet-to-be-tabbed new coach, Tolliver says the new guy should be more focused on defense. Or, though Tolliver didn’t phrase it this way, more like Popovich.

“I never really thought the offense was a problem, the defensive side was,” Tolliver said. “We scored enough points to win games. We struggled with the ability to get easy buckets in crunch time, but our main problem was the defensive end. Whoever they bring in next, it’s really important that they be a defensive coach.”

Who that guy is remains to be seen. Although, if Minnesota really wants a defensive-minded coach, it probably won’t be Don Nelson.

Brown adds Person, Snyder to his Lakers’ coaching staff

Former Spurs assistant and Cleveland head coach Mike Brown dug into his connection with the Spurs with two hirings to his new staff with the Los Angeles Lakers.

Former Spurs player Chuck Person and former Austin Toros coach Quin Snyder will join former Detroit coach John Kuester on Brown’s staff with the Lakers.

Person was a member of Phil Jackson’s staff last season with the Lakers where he received rave reviews coaching the team’s defense. He was a member of the Spurs from 1994-96 and still holds the franchise’s record for most 3-pointers in a season with 190 in 1995-96.

Snyder was most recently was on Doug Collins’ staff at Philadelphia this season as an assistant. He coached the Spurs’ developmental league team in Austin from 2007-10, taking the team to the playoffs in each season and was coach at Missouri from 1999-2006. Earlier this week, Snyder interviewed for the vacant head coaching job with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

“I’m very pleased to add Chuck to my coaching staff,” Brown said in a statement. “I’ve seen firsthand his dedication and his desire to making the players he coaches better. … With the addition of Quin to my coaching staff, we’ve added someone with an extremely intelligent basketball mind.”  

It’s interesting that one of the Spurs’ fiercest traditional rivals now has such a strong connection with Gregg Popovich and his staff with the Spurs.

Will Spurs Nation still have an intense dislike for everything Purple and Gold of the Lakers with such familiar faces running the team?

Missing Las Vegas

Were it not for the ongoing NBA lockout, this blog post would come with a Las Vegas dateline. The thought has no doubt crossed the mind of NBA players, prospects, rookies, executives, and all manner of followers and scribes as we stand in place this first week of July.

“Dude,” (and I’m giving NBA players, prospects, rookies, etc. the voice of  Jeff Spicoli here) ” we should be in Vegas right now.”

For the past six years, NBA Summer League has set up camp at UNLV’s Thomas Mack Center and the adjoining Cox Pavilion, giving NBA big wigs — and the accompanying mob of beat writers — an excuse to set up shop for a working vacation in Sin City.

This year, we’ve all crapped out.

Summer League was the first official casualty of the lockout, scuttled before the lockout even became official. For sportswriters who had come to count on the annual Vegas trip as an easy way to fill both newshole and expense reports, it’s a bummer.

For NBA prospects who might have parlayed a nice run in Vegas into a full-time job, it could be devastating. Just ask Gary Neal, whose five-game run in Las Vegas last season was the final straw in securing him a contract with the Spurs.

“Summer League definitely sealed the deal for me,” Neal told the Express-News back in April, when it became apparent the 2011 version might be in jeopardy. “With no summer league, who knows what would have happened?”

Certainly, the cancellation of  Summer League reduces the chances that the Spurs — or some other team — can ferret out this year’s version of Neal, a diamond-in-the-rough who went on to earn a solid spot in Gregg Popovich’s rotation and first-team All-Rookie honors.

“It’s an opportunity taken away from a guy trying to get into the league,” Neal said in April. “It can close a couple doors for some guys.”

Truth be told, the Spurs weren’t counting on mining another Neal out of the Las Vegas desert. That kind of jackpot doesn’t comes around all that often.

Still, Summer League had become an integral part of the Spurs’ player development program, for rookies and young returning veterans alike. There will be a void this offseason.

“It’s been huge for us, actually,” Popovich said in April, before the event was shuttered. “There have been a large number of people who have started their knowledge of what the NBA is all about in summer league. We really get a good feeling about players there.”

With that in mind, here are some Spurs players for whom the loss of summer league might be particularly harmful:

* Kawhi Leonard and Cory Joseph. Summer League is generally a rookie’s first real exposure to anything approaching an NBA game. The Spurs’ two first-round picks in the June draft won’t have that luxury. They’ll basically have to hit the ground running in training camp.

* James Anderson. In terms of NBA service time, Anderson isn’t a rookie, but might as well be. He missed his first crack at Summer League in 2010 with a strained hamstring, and that absence set him back once the real season began. After appearing in just 26 games as a rookie, Anderson could have used a nice run in Vegas this summer.

* Danny Green and Da’Sean Butler. Green made fans in the front office last season with his willingness to shoot the basketball. He could have used a solid Summer League to bolster those good feelings about him. Butler, meanwhile, is the wildest of wild cards, having not played in an organized game since blowing out his knee in the 2010 Final Four. In short, he’s the kind of guy for whom the Vegas stage was built.

* Gary Neal. On the surface, Neal 2.0 isn’t the type of player normally dispatched to Summer League. As a rookie, he established himself as a rotation staple. He’s not a kid looking for exposure. However, with George Hill now playing for Indiana, the Spurs are in need of someone to eat up minutes behind Tony Parker at point guard. Las Vegas would have been the perfect place for Neal to put his work-in-progress point guard skills into practice.