Buck Harvey: Shaq missed his last stop: The Big Exit

The Spurs said they were open. If Tiago Splitter hadn’t signed last summer, they say they would have talked to another big man.

Who knows? Apply enough Icy Hot to Shaquille O’Neal, and maybe he survives the season.

As it turned out, nothing could save his Achilles tendon. His retirement is mostly about that.

But what if Splitter had stayed in Europe another year?

And what if Shaq had returned to where he started?

As it is, Shaq is leaving without going anywhere. He’s just no longer playing basketball.

He has a few businesses, and he says he’s working on a dissertation. He’ll likely come up with another television project, and then there’s the natural destination.

There’s still room next to Kenny and Charles.

He would fit. Shaq was as big a ?personality as he was a basketball player, and that’s saying something. He ranks among the five best centers in history.

The others were mostly introverts. Shaq, instead, understood the stage, and that was clear Wednesday. Then, he used both a Finals off-day and the social media to maximize attention.

That’s the Shaq who used to say NBA stood for “Nothing But Actors.” The same guy who donned a mask to dance before an All-Star game, who gave a nickname to everyone, including to Tim Duncan, could be playful and approachable and funny.

He was just a big kid, everyone said, and he sometimes had the maturity of a 12-year-old. Shaq could be petty, and along the way, he damaged relationships. The current Finals matchup outlines one of them.

After all, the Heat needed a big body last summer more than the Spurs did. Shaq was available, and at a cheap price, but Pat Riley never considered it. Riley thought Shaq ruined the memories of their title together by the way he acted after he left Miami.

The Miami Herald gave him yet another nickname then. “The Big Bridge Burner.”

It probably didn’t help Shaq, either, that he had once called Chris Bosh “The RuPaul of centers.”

Shaq’s sense of humor often wasn’t that funny. Once, when talking about Yao Ming, Shaq slurred, “Ching chong yang wah ah so.”

When Shaq began to hear criticism, Yao saved him. “Chinese is hard to learn,” Yao joked then. “I had trouble with it when I was little.”

Shaq was rarely as subtle or as thoughtful. He treated others as if his dunks gave him that right. The list of those he has gone after ranges from Penny Hardaway to the Sacramento Kings, from Kobe Bryant to Phil Jackson, from the Heat medical staff to Dwight Howard, and from Stan Van Gundy to anyone who ever tried to take a charge from him.

But those are people, not places. And there was something about San Antonio, even with friends still living here, that tapped into a base insecurity.

As for his primary target: As much as Shaq has wanted people to believe his rivalry with David Robinson was just an inside joke, there was something real going on.

It came out on the court. It came out in Shaq’s book, too, when he called him “Punk-ass David.”

But over the years, Shaq softened, and last year showed all of it. He posed on a bench at Harvard Square in an afternoon of performance art, and he became Shaq-a-Claus at Christmas. He threw a birthday party for himself at the Children’s Museum in Boston and, according to a story on ESPN.com, he stopped at a Boston nursing home “to watch a Celtics road game after a resident wrote him a letter inviting him to dinner.”

He couldn’t play well anymore, but he could live well. So what if he had come back, joining Duncan, completing the circle?

Here’s a guess.

San Antonio would have liked this Shaq.

bharvey@express-news.net

TD vs Joey Crawford ranked as one of NBA’s top 5 historical feuds

It wouldn’t seem likely for normally mild-mannered Tim Duncan to make a list chronicling the NBA’s top feuds.

But my blog brothers at Mancave.com have ranked Duncan’s disagreements over the years with NBA referee Joey Crawford rank among the .

That’s right. Up there with Kobe Bryant vs. Shaquille O’Neal. Reggie Miller vs. Spike Lee. And even Wilt Chamberlain vs. Bill Russell.

Here’s what Mancave had have to say about Duncan’s previous squabbles with Crawford, which culminated in their legendary disagreement in a game against Dallas on April 15, 2007.

Probably the least-expected feud of all time involves giant teddy bear Tim Duncan and controversial veteran referee Joey Crawford. Joey has been known for some pretty ridiculous calls—sometimes calling fouls on people that he committed. But at the top of the list has to be slapping two technicals on Tim Duncan within two minutes …  for laughing on the bench. Crawford was fined, but Duncan had to pony up $25,000 as well. Some choice words he had for Joey as he left the court were caught on camera.”

It still rankles Spurs fans to see Crawford on the sidelines.

And guess what. I’m sure it doesn’t make Duncan any happier to see Crawford demonstratively making his calls in Spurs games, either.

There are other great historic feuds involving the Spurs. From Rich Jones against all of his old teammates back in the day to Karl Malone vs. David Robinson. Manu Ginobili vs. Tony Allen has the makings for some future antipathy as well.

I’m curious Spurs Nation. What is your favorite feud involving the Spurs and an opposing player over the years? And give a reason or two why it’s your favorite.

Brown’s second chance likely to come on the NBA’s biggest stage

It’s not a shock that former Cleveland coach and former Spurs assistant Mike Brown is returning to the NBA after a season away.

But it’s a little surprising that he apparently is , according to the Los Angeles Times.

The Lakers are the biggest of the big-boy jobs in the league.

Brown led Cleveland to a league-best 61 victories last season before the Cavaliers were eliminating in the Eastern Conference semifinals by Boston. That collapse led to Brown’s eventual dismissal and LeBron James leaving that franchise for Miami.  

During the season before, Brown earned the NBA’s Coach of the Year honors after leading them to a league-best 66-16 record. He earlier took the Cavaliers to the 2007 Finals where they lost to the Spurs. His .663 career winning percentage ranks sixth in NBA history among coaches with at least 100 career victories.  

But in hiring him, it appears that Lakers management will be go against the wishes of key players like Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher, who both endorsed Lakers assistant Brian Shaw. Other finalists included former Houston coach Rick Adelman, Lakers assistant coach Chuck Person and former Lakers coach Mike Dunleavy.

A source close to the Lakers told SI.com’s Sam Amick  that , and that he was not a part of the decision-making process.

The choice of Brown appears to be falling in line with the type of coach that Bryant had described during the team’s exit interviews.

“If you’re building a championship team, your DNA always has to start with the defensive end of the floor,” Bryant said earlier this month. ”Always. I’m a firm believer in that. I don’t believe in building a championship team on offense. It has to be built on defense and rebounding. Period.” 

Brown has been the most successful of Gregg Popovich’s proteges.  And he should bring a defensive bent to a Lakers’ franchise that didn’t play with much fervor during the playoffs.

During his time away from basketball, Brown was an assistant coach on his 13-year-old son’s middle-school football team as he bonded with his family and collected on his settlement with the Cavaliers.

It’s given him perspective as he tackles his new job.

Lakers executive vice president of player personnel Jim Buss likes his defensive-minded style. His hiring would also likely mean that Andrew Bynum, another Buss favorite, likely will remain on the roster.

Hiring Brown would enable the Lakers to pinch a few pennies. Team management wants to bring their coaching costs down after playing Phil Jackson the league’s highest coaching salary last season. Brown would likely command about half of Jackson’s rumored $9 million per year salary.

Will Brown be what the Lakers need to return to the form that enabled them to claim the last two NBA titles and has boosted them to the NBA Finals in each of the last three seasons?

It likely will mean the end of Jackson’s preferred “Triangle” offense for a more defensive bent.

It will be interesting to see.