Duncan as an Olympic Bird

LONDON – Tim Duncan would have helped the 2012 U.S. basketball team. But that’s not why he should be in London these next few weeks with Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker.

Duncan deserved a do-over. He deserved better teammates, and a better Olympic memory.

Yes, he deserved a better result, too.

Duncan never considered signing up again. When he left Athens in 2004, it was for good.

He had never planned on 2004, either. Had his knee not required surgery in the summer of 2000, he would have gone to Sydney, won gold and been done with the Olympics forever.

Duncan came back for Athens, as well as for qualifying the summer before, and others didn’t. If Shaquille O’Neal, Kobe Bryant and Kevin Garnett had joined him in Greece, the U.S. team would have won.

Instead, Duncan drew a group that didn’t impress then, and impresses less in hindsight. Allen Iverson has since gone bankrupt, Stephon Marbury to China, Lamar Odom to the Kardashians.

As for the small forward who the USA staff leaned on then: If the Spurs couldn’t count on Richard Jefferson, how could a nation?

Duncan’s jersey number, 13, summed up his karma. And he acted as cursed, walking through the mixed zone after games with headphones on, ignoring the clamor around him.

What followed was the worst American showing in the Olympics in the NBA international era. And what teammates didn’t do to Duncan, officials did. He was called for 30 fouls in eight Olympic games, which gave way to his parting words in Athens.

Then, after saying his international career was “95 per cent” finished, he added, “FIBA sucks.”

Announcing “Federation Internationale de Basketball sucks” wouldn’t have had the same ring.

Duncan’s image took a beating then, though the 2005 title erased most of that. Jerry Colangelo continued to offer him a spot in the revamped program, because Duncan was still among the top three in the game then, but Duncan never wavered.

Duncan figured he was past this part of his life and, besides, he had done his duty. He played on seven various international teams, and four of his teams went undefeated.

As for the idea that his resume is incomplete without a gold medal: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Julius Erving, Moses Malone, Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Walton managed to survive without one, too.

As the years went on, his inclusion made less and less sense. Now, at his age and with his knee, the last thing the Spurs want to see Duncan do is bang against the Gasol brothers in the summer.

But Larry Bird was in far worse shape as part of the Dream Team in 1992, and he treasures that time. Furthermore, just as Duncan doesn’t have to carry the Spurs anymore, he wouldn’t have to carry his country.

He could have played spot minutes, and here’s the kicker: The U.S. could use a smart, effective big man.

So Duncan deserved something better than spending another summer at the Spurs’ practice facility, and who knows?

Maybe he would have liked London, too.

Spurs’ Duncan faces summer of decision

By Jeff McDonald

Gregg Popovich’s first order of business, in those heady days after the 1997 NBA draft, was to go to the beach.

He boarded a flight to St. Croix in the Virgin Islands to meet 21-year-old Tim Duncan, the life-altering big man the Spurs had just made the No. 1 pick.

Duncan was already a luminary in his own right, a consensus national player of the year at Wake Forest. Popovich was an anonymous grunt, already under fire as he prepared to open his first full season as an NBA head coach.

Instinctively, Popovich knew the best sales gimmick, when it came to dealing with his new star player, was no gimmick at all.

“Players have a b.s. antenna,” Popovich said. “They know real quick if you’re for real or not.”

Popovich’s no-nonsense personality immediately endeared him to Duncan, setting the foundation for a 15-season, long-term relationship between coach and franchise player.

It is that relationship, in large part, that kept Duncan from fleeing to Orlando via free agency in 2000. It will come into play again in the coming days or weeks, when Popovich and Duncan reconvene, their connection at a crossroads once more.

The question, hanging in the air thick as island humidity: Does Duncan, now 36, want to keep playing or not?

SPUR FOR LIFE

Duncan’s contract is set to expire July 1, making him an unrestricted free agent. He and the team both acknowledge his impending free agency to be but a technicality.

If Duncan, the centerpiece of four NBA championship teams, chooses to continue his Hall of Fame-bound career, it will be in San Antonio.

“I don’t see him not having a future with the franchise,” Popovich said.

In the wake of the Spurs’ Game 6 ouster by Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals, Duncan said he had not yet begun the process that will lead to a decision about his future.

“I haven’t even thought about it, and I really don’t care,” Duncan said. “I’ll figure it out when it happens.”

In considering his options, Duncan is sure to draw advice from across the league, some public and some private, some solicited and some not.

Hall of Famer Charles Barkley offered his two cents on national television, during TNT’s coverage of Game 6 from Oklahoma City.

“I hope Tim Duncan retires,” Barkley said. “He is the greatest power forward ever, but he is obviously slowing down. I want to remember him as a great player.”

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

Those close to him say Duncan is unlikely to take Barkley’s counsel seriously.

Duncan is coming off a season of rejuvenation, in which he averaged 15.4 points, nine rebounds and 1.5 blocks in a carefully monitored, career-low 28.2 minutes per game.

In terms of efficiency, Duncan’s numbers were nearly identical to those from his 2005-06 campaign, when he was 29.

One longtime league executive who saw Duncan play in February said he thought the Spurs’ big man had two or three more productive seasons left in him.

“He’s moving like he did seven years ago,” said Spurs forward Stephen Jackson, who won a title with Duncan in 2003, perhaps with some hyperbole.

Not all aging big men are created equal.

Shaquille O’Neal (17.8 and 8.4) and Hakeem Olajuwon (18.9 and 9.6) made significant point and rebound contributions for Phoenix and Houston, respectively, at 36.

However, David Robinson (12.2 and 8.3) had clearly slowed down in 2001-02 because of back trouble and he retired the following year.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, a player whose game — like Duncan’s — was not predicated on dizzying athleticism, averaged 21.5 points as a 36-year-old in 1983-84, and would see his scoring increase for two seasons after that.

“The good thing about Tim, his love for the game doesn’t go anywhere,” Jackson said. “The older he gets, the more he dedicates himself to the game.”

ALL THINGS CONSIDERED

In the weeks to come, Duncan — who was on the salary books for $21.1 million last season — must decide whether an inevitable pay cut will make the wear-and-tear of another 82-game NBA campaign worth his while.

Robinson, for example, made $20 million total in his final two seasons in San Antonio, albeit in a different era.

After playing at least the past three seasons with chronic knee soreness, Duncan must also decide if the rigorous workout program and stringent dietary regimen necessary to keep his body in fighting shape is worth the effort.

As Duncan’s 15th NBA season was winding down, Popovich was often asked to reminisce about their time together.

He often answered by flashing back to a day on the beach in St. Croix, 15 years earlier.

“I wanted to know who he was,” Popovich said. “I wanted to know who I was going to be coaching, what the positive and negatives are going to be. I wanted him to know what I was thinking, and how I wanted to run things, and if we were going to have any discussions about it, let’s start now.

“I didn’t want to waste any time.”

As an unheralded coach of a 20-win team, Popovich knew the future of a franchise — and perhaps his own career — was riding on that meeting.

“You just have to be yourself,” Popovich said he told himself then. “If he doesn’t like you, screw it, he doesn’t like you. But you can’t fake it and do something to make somebody like you.”

Even now, Popovich remains grateful for the outcome of that first introduction with Duncan, and the professional lifetime the two have shared because of it.

“Every time I walk around the house, once a month, I tell my wife, ‘Say thank you, Tim,’?” Popovich said.

In the weeks to come, after proper pause for reflection, the Spurs’ coach and franchise player will meet for another no-nonsense conversation.

Once again, the future of a franchise will be riding on it.

No matter what Duncan decides, Popovich’s reaction is likely to be the same:

Thank you, Tim.

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Thunder 102, Spurs 82: Game 3

By Tim Griffin

OKLAHOMA CITY – Kevin Durant erupted for 22 points to lead Oklahoma City to a 102-82 victory over the Spurs in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals.

The loss snapped the Spurs’ 20-game winning streak which ended up as the fourth longest in NBA history. The Spurs’ last loss before Thursday came April 11 when the Los Angeles Lakers beat them in San Antonio.

A determined defensive effort and Durant’s fast start helped the Thunder pull within 2-1 in the best-of-seven series. Game 4 will be played Saturday night in Oklahoma City.

Thabo Sefolosha made the most of extending playing time to produce 19 points and six steals. Sefolosha played only 15 minutes in the Thunder’s Game 2 loss in San Antonio.

James Harden scored 15, Serge Ibaka added 14 and Russell Westbrook filled the scoresheet with 10 points, seven rebounds and nine assists.

Duncan notched five blocked shots to pass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the most playoff rejections since the NBA started recording the statistic in 1973-74. Duncan has 478 plus. Abdul-Jabbar has 476.

With a 78-60 deficit heading into the fourth quarter, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich opted to rest Duncan and Tony Parker for the rest of the game. Parker finished with 16 points and five turnovers and Duncan had 11 points but produced only two rebounds to match his career playoff low, set Apr. 23, 2009 against Dallas.

Stephen Jackson also added 16 for the Spurs, who finished with a playoff-low 40 percent from the field with 21 turnovers. DeJuan Blair scored 10 points in garbage time in the fourth quarter.

Durant scored 16 points in the first half to lead the Thunder to a 54-41 halftime lead as they dominated the game from the start of the second quarter.

The Thunder showed it was going to be different from the start as a feisty defensive effort forced 13 Spurs turnovers in the first half and limited them to 40 percent shooting before the break

Harden added 11 points and Westbrook chipped in with eight as the Thunder extended their lead up to 15 points before the break.

Parker led San Antonio with 11 points and Duncan added nine, but the Spurs were out of synch throughout the game.

Durant’s technical with 9:22 left in the second quarter seemed to ignite the Thunder.

After Manu Ginobili’s free throw on the technical pulled the Spurs within 31-28, Oklahoma City took control on a 15-4 run punctuated by a pull-up jumper by Westbrook that gave them a 46-32 with 4:15 left.

Earlier, the Spurs weathered an early charge by the Thunder who jumped to an 8-0 lead in the first 3 minutes.

Parker had trouble with Thabo Sefolosha’s length in the early going as Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks opted to put him on the Spurs point guard after his 34-point game in Game 2 Tuesday night.

Sefolosha responded with four steals in the Spurs’ first seven possessions as the Spurs contributed seven turnovers in the first quarter.

Duncan was active in the first quarter after struggling most of the first two games. He hit for seven points in the first quarter as he tried six shots in the first six minutes.

Duncan and Parker combined to score all but one of the Spurs’ first 15 points. But Stephen Jackson came out with a productive ending to the first quarter with some strong defense on Durant and five straight points to boost the Spurs into the lead. Ginobili hit two foul shots to give the Spurs a 24-22 lead at the quarter break.

The Spurs shot only 35.3 percent in the second quarter as the Thunder took control and never trailed after the first minute in the second quarter. and have to get their offense going if they have any hope of extending their strength.

And considering the way the raucous crowd at Chesapeake Energy Arena has responded, it will be the most difficult challenge the Spurs have faced since tax day

wgriffin@express-news.net

Updates by Joe Alexander

The Spurs lost for the first time since April 11 and for the first time in this postseason.

Their 20-game win streak ended with a thud in a 102-82 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder in Oklahoma City in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals.

The Spurs still lead the best-of-seven series 2-1. The Thunder’s victory guarantees there will be a Game 5 on Monday at the ATT Center.

The Spurs were plagued from the outset by turnovers and mediocre shooting. The Thunder were aggressive on defense and consistently turned Spurs turnovers into points. The Spurs finished with 21 turnovers.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich had all of his starters on the bench with more than eight minutes left in the game. The Thunder pulled their starters midway through the fourth quarter.

Tony Parker and Stephen Jackson led the Spurs with 16 points each. Tim Duncan had 11 points and blocked 5 shots – he became the NBA career leader in postseason blocked shots.

Kevin Durant led Oklahoma City with 22 points and Thabo Sefolosha had 19.

Fourth quarter: The Thunder lead the Spurs 100-75 with 2:57 left.

The Thunder lead 86-63. There’s 9:47 left in the fourth quarter, but this one is basically over.

Third quarter – Thunder 78, Spurs 60: Barring a huge comeback, the Spurs are going to lose for the first time since April 11. The Thunder lead by 18 at the end of the third quarter.

The Thunder lead the Spurs 73-53 with 2:06 left in the third quarter. Kevin Durant has 22 points. The Spurs have 17 turnovers and are shooting 38.8 percent.

The Thunder continue to build on their lead early in the second half. It’s Thunder 63, Spurs 46 with 7:59 left in the third quarter.

Halftime – Thunder 54, Spurs 41: The Spurs have 13 turnovers. Kevin Durant leads the Thunder with 16 points, James Harden has 11. Tony Parker leads the Spurs with 11 points, Tim Duncan has 9 and Manu Ginobili has 8.

The Thunder’s biggest lead of the half was 14 points at 46-32. The Thunder lead 49-37 with 3:01 left in the half.

The Thunder have their biggest lead so far at 44-32. The Spurs are up to 11 turnovers and are shooting 39.3 percent.

The Thunder went on a 9-0 run to retake the lead – again taking advantage of Spurs turnovers. The Thunder are in front 31-28 with 8:59 left in the half.

First quarter – Spurs 24, Thunder 22: The Spurs missed their first four shots of the game and turned the ball over 7 times. Despite that the Spurs lead by two at the end of the first quarter.

Tim Duncan and Tony Parker scored 7 points each in the first 9 minutes of the game. The Thunder lead the spurs 16-15 with 2:43 left in the first quarter.

After the Thunder led 8-0 in the opening minutes, the Spurs lead 13-12. That’s the Spurs’ first lead of the game.

The Spurs missed their first four shots. Tim Duncan made the Spurs’ first two baskets and Tony Parker hit a 3-pointer and a long jumper. The Thunder lead the Spurs 12-10 after leading by eight points.

The Spurs open with four quick turnovers and the Thunder jump out to an 8-0 lead.

Spurs starters: Tony Parker, Danny Green, Kawhi Leonard, Boris Diaw and Tim Duncan.

The Spurs play on the road tonight against the Oklahoma City Thunder at 8 p.m. in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals.

Join Jeff McDonald and Tim Griffin for a live game chat (below) beginning at 7:30 p.m.