McDyess: No regrets about time with Spurs

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

Sitting at his locker an hour before what became the final game of his 16-year NBA career, Spurs power forward Antonio McDyess winced.

He was trying to maneuver his back into a position that eased the twinge he still felt on the left side of his neck and down his left shoulder and arm — the result of a Game 3 injury that had left his arm totally numb.

Seeing his quest for comfort, a teammate asked the team’s oldest player how he felt.

“Not great,” McDyess replied.

Later, Grizzlies star Zach Randolph would lay an elbow to McDyess’ head and make things even worse, and force him to the bench to receive attention from the team’s medical staff.

As he stashed the last items from the locker in a travel bag, McDyess reflected on his two seasons in San Antonio, adamant he had made up his mind to retire and without regret for having chosen the Spurs over other teams that vied for his services in the summer of 2009.

“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.”

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich is going to miss McDyess, as a player and person, but will respect his decision.

“We’re not going to fight him,” Popovich said. “If he does retire, as much as a player, we would miss him more as a person. He’s one of the finest human beings I’ve ever been associated with. He commands huge, huge buckets of respect from his teammates, just from the way he conducts himself. He’s just a wonderful man. So if he does retire, we’ll really miss him in that leadership role.”

The highlight of McDyess’ final season in silver and black was a buzzer-beating tip-in that gave the Spurs an 89-88 victory over the Lakers at the Staples Center on Feb. 3.

His final basket as a Spur, a perfect 20-foot jumper from the top of the key, gave his team its only lead of the second half of Friday’s elimination game in Memphis.

“This was one of the most enjoyable seasons I’ve ever had but disappointing we couldn’t go farther than the first round,” McDyess said.

When the Spurs were blown out in Game 4 at Memphis, he called out his teammates for being timid, including himself.

“I think that first game at home kind of set the tone for the whole series,” he said. “We weren’t aggressive, and the Grizzlies were ready to play us, and we should have taken that to heart when they said they wanted to play us. They came out exactly like a team that wanted to play us, and we were just taking their punches and weren’t coming back at them.”

INCREDIBLE, SHRINKING R.J.: After making 44 percent of his 3-point shots and averaging 11.0 points per game, starting small forward Richard Jefferson was benched for the entire second half of Friday’s Game 6 — scoreless for the second time in the series.

After making 5 of 9 3-pointers in Games 1 and 2, Jefferson made only one of his next eight. He averaged just 6.5 points in the series and by its end was strictly a spectator. He played only 10 minutes and 13 seconds of Game 6 — all in the first half.

Only seven times in his 10 seasons had Jefferson failed to score, and two of those came in the series against the Grizzlies.

Sobering SI story predicting gloom for Spurs after Memphis series loss

The Spurs’ loss against Memphis  got the full analysis as the major topic in Chris Mannix’s “Inside the NBA” column in this week’s Sports Illustrated.

Mannix was in Memphis for Game 6 of the series with the Grizzlies and paints a gloomy picture for the Spurs’ future.

“They are the model franchise, owners of four championships in the last 13 seasons and the highest winning percentage in pro sports since 1997 (69.9 percent). But as the Spurs walked off the FedExForum floor in Memphis last Friday after a 99-91 Game 6 loss, they faced, for the first time in a long time, uncertainty. The Grizzlies exposed several weaknesses in San Antonio’s roster, flaws that are not easily fixed.”

Mannix describes the struggling play the Spurs received inside against Memphis’ strong interior tandem of Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph in the series. And he also highlights Richard Jefferson’s baffling playoff slump, where he scored 10 points in 106 minutes in the final four games of the series.

“You hate to say it,” an unnamed Western Conference scout tells Mannix, “but it looks like it’s time to rebuild.”

Gregg Popovich was adamant after the series ended that he’s not yet ready to do that. And after winning a Western Division-best 61 games this season it’s probably understandable he believes his team can contend again with its current roster.

But Mannix isn’t necessarily buying that.

“The core of the team — (Tim) Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker — is  good enough to stay in the playoffs, but without frontcourt help, San Antonio’s days as a contender are over,” Mannix wrote.

It will make for an interesting off-season for the Spurs as they wrestle with trying to solve those problems.  

I’m curious. Does Spurs Nation believe the rest of the country has been too quick in writing the obituary for the Spurs’ dynasty?

Spurs’ Hill, Memphis’ Conley rekindle old times

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Shortly before the start of the playoffs, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich pulled guard George Hill aside and issued marching orders only he could understand.

Once the postseason began, Popovich said, he wanted the mild-mannered Hill to transform into an alter ego named Indiana George.

“Pop means Indiana George from back in Indianapolis,” Hill said. “Just being a freak of nature on offense.”

In the other huddle in this first-round series, running point guard for Memphis, is a player who knows Indiana George well.

“That guy,” Mike Conley said, “was lethal.”

Growing up within a few miles of each other in Indianapolis, as friends and adversaries, Hill and Conley never dreamed they would one day leave a mark on the same NBA playoff series.

Memphis won Game 1 in part because Conley, a 23-year-old playoff tenderfoot, went toe-to-toe with Tony Parker, the Spurs’ three-time All-Star. The Spurs evened the series in Game 2 in part because Indiana George finally showed up in the second half, scoring 14 of his 16 points.

The two hoopsters from the Hoosier state go way back, central figures in an Indianapolis basketball tradition that now fills half an NBA roster.

Now 24, Hill was once a ?scoring star at Broad Ripple High, a city school without much of a basketball reputation, where he averaged a state-leading 36.2 points as a senior in 2005 before playing college ball at hometown IUPUI.

Indiana George was fearless, with a you-can’t-stop-me-or-even-hope-to-contain-me swagger. Indiana George didn’t care who was on the floor with him, or who was assigned to guard him.

Indiana George once scored 49 points in a high school game, without stepping foot on the court in the fourth quarter.

“He could score in so many different ways,” said Conley, who watched Hill tie his NBA career-high of 30 points in his last trip to Memphis on March 27. “Nobody could stop him.”

Conley played at Lawrence North, a prestigious suburban hoops factory where he wasn’t even the most famous player in the Class of 2006. Before he became a limping cautionary tale, Greg Oden would go on to be Indiana’s Mr. Basketball, a consensus collegiate player of the year alongside Conley at Ohio State and the No. 1 pick in the 2007 NBA Draft.

Though a year older, Hill knew Conley from their schoolboy battles, elite AAU tournaments and summer pick-up games.

“Mike is a true point guard,” Hill said. “He sees the floor well and gets everyone involved.”

Even after Memphis made Conley the fourth pick in the 2007 draft, three selections after Oden went to Portland, he couldn’t shake his second-fiddle label. He split time his first two seasons with Kyle Lowry at the point, a situation Conley now calls “the lowest point I’ve had my entire basketball career.”

When Lionel Hollins took over as head coach in January 2009, one of his first moves was to install Conley at point guard and leave him there.

“If I didn’t have to go through what I’ve gone through, I wouldn’t be where I’m at,” Conley said.

In the first two games of his first postseason, Conley averaged 14 points, seven assists and 5.5 rebounds.

Hill has averaged 15.5 points, six rebounds and three steals. After a two-point first half in Game 2, Indiana George exploded in the second half to get the Spurs over the hump.

Though he has made just 5 of 16 field goals, Hill has gone to the foul line a team-high 22 times, converting 19 — testament to the forcefulness Popovich has asked of him. Hill remains key for the Spurs even after Manu Ginobili’s return from an injury moved him back to the bench in Game 2.

“Manu’s injury has nothing to do with George,” Popovich said. “Even with Manu, he’s got to play well for us.”

In a way, Hill and Conley have been preparing for this moment since they were teenagers. Playing high school ball in Indianapolis in the mid-2000s was like attending NBA prep school.

In addition to Hill, Conley and Oden, Indy was also home to future NBAers Eric Gordon, Courtney Lee and Jeff Teague. Another, Jared Jeffries, played in nearby Bloomington.

“Any given night, you were going against someone who is in the NBA now,” Hill said.

On Saturday, in a Game 3 in Memphis that could again swing momentum in the series, it will just be the two of them.

Indiana George and Indiana Mike. Just like old times.