A lot to keep eye on as camp nears

There are plenty of questions as the Spurs open training camp at their practice facility next week, but one big decision must be made before camp begins: Will the team insist that point guard Tony Parker continue wearing the protective goggles he sported during the Olympics in London?

Parker didn’t like the protective eyewear, but it was necessary after a freak injury that required surgery to remove a shard of glass from his left cornea. He pitched the goggles into the stands after Spain eliminated France from the medal round, declaring he was done with them for good.

When he arrives for his physical exam ahead of Tuesday’s start of camp, he may discover the club’s well-established history of erring on the side of caution with injuries demands he be fitted for new goggles.

“I’m not sure that’s a decision ‘Dr. Parker’ gets to make on his own,” Spurs general manager R.C. Buford said. “We haven’t seen him yet. We’re now several months, post-injury. We’ll have a better picture of it when we see him. Somebody very qualified will examine that eye.”

The All-NBA second-team selection, and the Spurs’ top scorer and assist man last season, suffered the injury June 15. He was a bystander during a bottle-throwing incident involving musicians Chris Brown and Drake at a New York nightclub.

Parker was one of six Spurs who competed in the Olympics during part of the summer Buford declared “very productive” for the team’s core, in large part because everyone made it through competition healthy.

Parker played on the French national team with big man Boris Diaw and rookie combo guard Nando De Colo.

Veteran guard Manu Ginobili led Argentina to the bronze-medal game. Center Tiago Splitter helped Brazil qualify for the medal round. Guard Patrick Mills was one of the tournament’s top scorers in guiding Australia into the medal round.

“I think it was a good summer in a lot of different areas” Buford said. “Starting off with Kawhi (Leonard) and DeJuan (Blair) playing on the (USA Basketball) select team. Both of them had a very good showing and represented themselves well. Kawhi’s turn in the summer league, while short, was really impressive. Cory Joseph also had a good run through that.

“Obviously, we had a big crew of guys at the Olympics and they all played relatively well. After the Olympics concluded we had a really good month of open gym with a lot of our young guys.

“Of course, Tim (Duncan) was in there long before the open gym started. I just think the professionalism with which our group approaches the season is fun to see.”

Well aware that Blair believed the Spurs would trade him after he fell out of the playing rotation during the playoffs, Buford empathized with the fourth-year forward’s situation.

“We understand the way he feels,” he said. “If we were in his shoes we may feel similar. Having said that, DeJuan helped us win a lot of games and we have not had anything presented to us that puts our team in a better position than moving forward with DeJuan.”

mikemonroe

@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA

NBA will try, but can Manu be caught?

Column by Buck Harvey

If NBA officials went to the archives, they would likely find Manu Ginobili with a flop or four worth a fine. He’s been guilty.

But that’s over a decade in the league, with thousands of falls and groans and whistles. Ginobili has stuck his sizeable nose into the breach as consistently as anyone in the game, and he’s been clever 99.9 percent of the time.

That’s why calls have often gone his way, and why a replay won’t reveal much more than what a ref sees live.

To Ginobili, this is art.

That wasn’t the reaction from most players Wednesday after the NBA officially announced its new anti-flopping policy. While Ginobili said, “I don’t think it’s going to change much,” others around the league saw this as a positive step.

“It’s good,” Oklahoma City’s James Harden said, for example. “Guys can’t be flopping and get away with it anymore.”

Those who watched last spring’s Western Conference finals might remember Harden. He’s the one whose head snapped backward on nearly every jump shot he took, as if violently fouled.

But Harden excels, in part, because he understands this game within the game. It’s subtle, and it’s not going away. It didn’t in 2008, either, the first time the league thought it could curb flopping with fines.

Ginobili’s name came up then, too.

“There goes half of Manu’s salary,” Brent Barry joked.

But Ginobili kept his money, and he kept doing what he does. He didn’t change, but maybe others have.

Now, amateurs try what players such as Ginobili and Shane Battier have perfected. Blake Griffin’s clumsy attempts have been laughable, and LeBron James has sometimes been a king of comedy, too. The strongest man on the court has occasionally collapsed as his confidence once did.

Then there was the worst acting performance of this era. Shaquille O’Neal once said “Cowards flop,” yet there he was at the end of his career, helpless against Dwight Howard, opting to fall to the floor as if he weighed 150 pounds instead of 350.

Howard dunked, and the announcer that night screamed, “Shaquille O’Neal flops!”

Last spring brought more of the same. Indiana coach Frank Vogel accused the Heat of flopping before their playoff series began.

“Nobody does it better than the Heat,” Vogel said, and Memphis’ Zach Randolph disagreed.

Randolph said his playoff opponents, the Clippers, were the NBA’s best floppers “by far.”

But even those who agree there is too much flopping aren’t sure how easy it is to define. Ginobili is Exhibit A. After all, shouldn’t they have figured him out years ago?

He’s been the face of the fake foul. The Mavericks dedicated a scoreboard video to him, and the Onion, the satirical news organization, said this in a headline:

“Overacting Manu Ginobili Takes Charge, Plays Dead.”

More telling, a newspaper recently presented Ginobili with “The Vlade Divac Lifetime Achievement Award.” The writer called Ginobili the “Olivier of the NBA.”

But that’s just it. Ginobili is better than the rest. Among his basketball gifts — along with toughness and skill and vision — is anticipating contact.

Sometimes there is considerable contact. Ginobili didn’t become El Contusión by pretending to be hit.

Sometimes, too, there isn’t much contact. But Ginobili is usually in position and ready to react to what is there. It’s smart, and it changes games, and it has driven opposing players and fans mad.

But this season, they say they are going to clean this up. They are going to use replays to see if fines are necessary.

So they will look closely when an elbow touches Ginobili’s chest, or maybe it’s a forearm. They will see Ginobili fall, and they will try to determine why, and they will come to the same conclusion referees came to long ago.

The guy’s good.

bharvey@express-news.net
Twitter: @Buck_SA

Duncan, KG join elite club

Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett, inexorably bound as generational rivals and two of the greatest big men to ever set foot on an NBA court, are now joined in one more way.

Both joined Lakers guard Kobe Bryant and Mavericks forward Dirk Nowitzki over the offseason as the only players in the Association with full no-trade clauses, according to NBA salary expert .

Not that it really matters, of course. Now 36, Duncan re-upped for three more seasons after playing all 15 years of his pro career in San Antonio. But it was still a well-deserved token of respect for a player who has meant so much to the franchise.