Spurs set for a grueling slate?

By Mike Monroe
mikemonroe@express-news.net

After playing his fourth game in as many nights at the FIBA Americas Olympic qualifying tournament in Argentina in September, Manu Ginobili, the Spurs guard from Bahia Blanca, Argentina, acknowledged utter exhaustion.

“Can you imagine,” he said, “what Pop would say about having to play back-to-back-to-back-to-back?”

Ginobili and his Spurs teammates probably won’t have to speculate about coach Gregg Popovich’s opinion of back-to-back-to-back games, which will be part of the new schedule for a 2011-12 NBA season scheduled to begin Dec. 25.

Final details of a new, lockout-ending collective bargaining agreement still must be settled by negotiators and approved by both sides, but a new schedule is expected this week. Some details have been released, including the fact each team will play at least one set of three straight games.

Some may play as many as three sets of three in a row. There will be many more sets of back-to-backs.

For a team like the Spurs, with aging veterans among its key players, the grind will be especially difficult. Perennial All-Star and two-time Most Valuable Player Tim Duncan is 35, Ginobili 34. Richard Jefferson and Matt Bonner are 31. Point guard Tony Parker is just 29, but has been playing professionally since he was 15.

Popovich has been limiting Duncan’s and Ginobili’s playing time for several seasons. One expert on Popovich’s approach expects even more vigilance.

Mike Brungardt announced his retirement in July, after 17 seasons as the only strength and conditioning coach in franchise history. He was with Popovich in the 50-game lockout season of 1998-99, when the Spurs played three straight on one occasion and back-to-backs 10 more times.

“It’s going to be a situation where he has to monitor their minutes closely and probably be even more conscious of it,” Brungardt said. “Pop’s really good about sticking to a game plan with minutes for each player, adjusting as he goes. He’s got a great feel for players, always questioning, always staying on top of it. I know he’ll go into the season with a plan for exactly how he wants to approach every scenario.

“You always have to adjust on the fly. Things change. People get hurt. Some games become more important than others. But he will stay with his plan for the most part. He’s as experienced as anyone at dealing with a situation like this. He’s always done well in these types of scenarios.”

The schedule also will mean Matt Herring, who replaced Brungardt, will have to adapt his approach to keeping players at peak strength.

“When you compress that many games into that short a period of time, it’s going to be important not to overtrain guys,” Brungardt said. “I would assume that most teams will probably practice much less than in the past, simply because of the schedule. And even when they do practice, most practices won’t be as intense or as long.”

Brungardt is convinced most Spurs will be in good condition when camp opens. So is former Spur Bruce Bowen, who warns that players who neglected conditioning during the lockout will pay when camps open.

“Once they start playing, there’s going to be a lot of injuries,” said Bowen, 40, now an NBA analyst for ESPN. “I saw it last time. Some guys, especially young guys, just don’t stay in shape. They don’t know what’s about to hit them.”

Most of the Spurs have been diligent about staying in shape, according to Brungardt.

“I know Timmy is in great shape, and Manu and quite a few of the others,” he said.

Duncan has organized local workouts for many of his teammates during the lockout. Participants have included Ginobili, Parker, Tiago Splitter, James Anderson, Gary Neal, Danny Green, Da’Sean Butler and Kawhi Leonard.

“With a guy like him (Duncan) leading the way, those guys will be ahead of the curve,” said Bowen. “When the greatest power forward of all time is out there in the heat working, it’s hard for other guys to slack off.”

No sympathy from scorned fans over NBA impasse

Jeff Marker lives in Dallas, but he is no Mavericks Maniac.

A Spurs season ticket-holder for 20 years, he bleeds silver and black all across the Metroplex.

Before he ever takes his seats for a Spurs game at the ATT Center, Marker has boarded a plane, rented a car and checked into a .

When he expresses his regret about a 2011-12 Spurs season now seriously threatened with cancellation as the lockout heads to litigation, his first thoughts are for the parking-lot attendants, ushers and concessionaires he and his family have gotten to know over many seasons.

The disclaimer of interest announced Monday by the has put the league on a path to what commissioner called nuclear winter. The chill has resonated for Spurs fans across the globe. Email responses to a feedback request posted on Twitter came from Texas, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, California and Spain.

Marker’s concern for those affected by the cancellation of games was a theme repeated often.

“My heart really goes out to the arena workers that have taken such great care of me and my family,” he wrote. “They are the only ones that are really getting (abused) in this process.”

While empathy for those affected dominates Marker’s emotions about the loss of games and the threat the entire season could be canceled, other Spurs fans are mad as hell.

Some will express their fury with their wallets, including Tyler Remmert, a 24-year-old season ticket-holder who says he has spent literally half his life going to Spurs games at the SBC/ATT Center and Alamodome.

“I bleed silver and black (and in the early years, teal, pink and orange). I’ve personally witnessed both championships won at home, unashamedly crying in 2003 watching The Admiral exit the floor for the last time as a champion.

“It is with this background that I make this promise to you now: So long as retains control of the Spurs, so long as David Stern heads the NBA, and so long as heads association, you will not see me in the ATT Center.

“So long as the avarice-infected money-mongers of this league continue to have no regard for the quality of life for the employees (NOT THE PLAYERS) of this organization, I will not give money to them. It will mean nothing, and if perchance they ever read this they would probably laugh. Who cares, right? I’m just another fan, a pauper compared to the owners and players of this league who have made it their business to insult us by making the difference between 53 and 50 percent BRI seem like life and death.”

Another San Antonian, , made it clear he puts most of the blame on the owners for the ongoing impasse:

“While I am sure there is some blame on both sides, the players were willing to give back (seven percent) of BRI and also appeared willing to compromise on many, if not most, system issues. I have not seen any similar demonstration of good faith or fair negotiation from the owners, who made the decision to lock the players out and jeopardize the season in the first place.

“Additionally, as a San Antonio taxpayer, it is incredibly frustrating that the , which was funded in part by approximately $150 million in local tax dollars, will apparently sit unused this season.”

John Lugo, a 19-year-old student and lifetime Spurs fan, expressed frustration at the focus on arcana in the issues that separate the two sides, especially during a time of economic stress.

“Try explaining system issues to people who are now scrambling for minimum wage jobs,” he wrote.

The common thread among Spurs fans appears to be deep disappointment, even from a continent away.

“I’m a Spanish Spurs fan, have been sleepless thousands of nights through the last decade just to watch NBA games — particularly Spurs games,” wrote , from Madrid. “I’m deeply disappointed with both owners and players, and I really wonder how will be the NBA when this nightmare ends.”

Kirilenko’s injury should scare on-the-fence players

As Manu Ginobili, Matt Bonner and Gary Neal mull playing overseas during the NBA lockout, I suggest they watch .

I’m not trying to come off like a driver’s education instructor here. But Andrei Kirilenko’s scary head injury while playing for CSKA Moscow last week should be a reminder that those extra paychecks overseas still come with a potential price.

Kirilenko received a broken nose, head laceration and concussion as he scrambled for a loose ball. Obviously, that injury could have happened anywhere, but sitting home on his couch seems to be the better option to me.

Of particular note are the primitive conditions that go with Kirilenko’s treatment. I guess they don’t have sterile gloves for trainers in the Russian league, either.

Here’s a You Tube video of the play of Kirilenko’s injury.