Supporting cast provided Spurs with huge value

With a shallow-pocketed owner and limited revenue steams, the Spurs have few peers when it comes to stretching dollars.

Combine that with their savvy front office, and it comes as no surprise that the team got massive value last season from their supporting cast — defined as everyone not named Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker. Indeed, not only were those players generally productive, in most cases they vastly outperformed their contracts.

Just look at the numbers dug up in this , using a formula involving win shares and individual salaries. (Follow the link for more details, and the complete table.)

Tiago Splitter and Matt Bonner outperformed their contracts by nearly double. Guys like Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green and DeJuan Blair were even better, playing as much as EIGHT TIMES better than their deals would suggest.

On the flip side, Duncan is suggested to have been overpaid by almost $12 million, but that’s what happens with aging superstars. And he still didn’t even , as compiled by CNBC.

Spurs rank third in ESPN Ultimate Team Rankings

In what has become an annual tradition, the Spurs are once again ranked among the in America by ESPN.

With the distilled down to eight categories, the Spurs took third out of 122 franchises, trailing only Oklahoma City  and the NFL’s Green Bay Packers. They ranked first in four categories: Fan relations, ownership, players and coaching.

It marked San Antonio’s seventh top three finish since ESPN first began the rankings in 2003. The Spurs were named No. 1 in 2004 and 2006, and have never finished lower than ninth. Indeed, according to team spokesman Tom James, they are the only franchise to finish in the Top 10 all 10 years.

An arena deal done, Seattle looks to lure a new team

Seattle billionaire Chris Hansen — no relation to the other — did the near-impossible, coming to an agreement with the city to build a new arena that could portend the NBA’s return. Now comes the hard part: Finding a team to occupy the slated for construction next to Safeco Park, the home of MLB’s Mariners.

With NBA commissioner David Stern having ruled out expansion — at least in North America — that would put the Emerald City in the awkward position of needing to steal a team just like Oklahoma City did its SuperSonics a few years back.

Exactly how the process will play out remains unclear. After enduring some of the worst press of his career for the Sonics debacle — more than a few believe owner Clay Bennett had no intention of ever keeping them in Seattle, including the makers of this — Stern said at last year’s All-Star Game that he’ll do everything in his power to avoid the relocation of any more franchises.

But that the only way cities like Sacramento and New Orleans can avoid being poached is to build the type of building that will soon be under construction in Seattle:

“Right now what I’m working hard to do, in a perverse kind of a way, from Seattle’s perspective, is to sell New Orleans to stay in New Orleans, and get a building for Sacramento that will enable the Kings to stay in Sacramento.  I can’t say for sure [that a new arena in Seattle is] a pathway [to a replacement for the Sonics], but I will say that the only way to have a team these days is to have a world?class building.”

Things have changed since then. San Antonio businessman Tom Benson bought the Hornets to seemingly bring them back from the brink of league-owned purgatory and secure their future in New Orleans. But an apparent agreement for a new arena in Sacramento also collapsed, putting the Kings’ future in Northern California in major jeopardy.

Unfortunately for the fans who have supported the Kings despite their largely horrendous performances over the years, that makes the Kings the No. 1 candidate. The Maloofs have already turned down a $400 million offer — $100 million more than the franchise is worth, — so prying the team from their cold, greedy hands could be an expensive proposition. But with their fortunes rapidly dwindling, they might not have another choice.

Others include:

* Charlotte. The same Forbes article puts the Bobcats’ losses at $20 million per year, and they just absorbed a crippling loss by missing out on the lottery to draft Anthony Davis. The main question is whether or not Michael Jordan, whose uninspired stewardship has already marred his reputation, would ever admit defeat by selling.

* Memphis. The Grizzlies have finally tasted success with consecutive playoff appearances. There’s also an iron-clad lease agreement with their current home, the FedEx Forum. And last but not least, prospective new owner Robert Pera probably wouldn’t sell out his new toy so quickly.

* Milwaukee. Forbes notes that owner Herb Kohl paid a paltry $18 million for the franchise in the mid-1980s, meaning he’d get a massive return on his investment for selling what has been at best a mediocre franchise. Then there’s the outdated Bradley Center, with which the Bucks have only a year-to-year lease.