Spurs to face Lakers this Tuesday

The San Antonio Spurs will are facing a tough week with the surging, well sprouting LA Lakers Tuesday followed up by the seriously surging NY Knicks.

The Lakers are rolling into town with Bernie Bickerstaff as the interim head coach but the world already knows that Mike D’ Antoni has been hired on to replace him once D’ Antoni has fully recovered from  reconstructive knee surgery.

The Spurs (6-1) are coming off a Saturday night 112-109 victory over the Portland Trailblazers where Gary Neal came off the bench to score 27 points (20 in the second half) and the Spurs climbed out from under a 14-point deficit.  Duncan was his usual effective 22 points, nine rebounds self.

”He carried us on his back,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said about Neal. ”Sometimes a player will do that, and he picked a good time for it.”

The Lakers (3-4) are also coming off a victory over the Sacramento Kings 103-90 where Dwight Howard had 23 points and 18 rebounds and Kobe kicked in 20 points all before they knew that Mike D’Antoni was their new leader.

”My job is to coach the team until they ring the bell,” Bickerstaff said. ”But listen. What’s the reality here? I mean, we all know what’s going on and I understand that. But I consented to do this for the organization, and I’m not worried about the big picture.”

Spurs at the Lakers Tuesday night 10:30 pm Eastern Standard time.

Be sure to get your tickets to see the Spurs take on the Knicks at the AT&T Center Thursday night.

No surprise: Pop indifferent to new flopping initiative

It came as no surprise that all-business, no-nonsense Gregg Popovich refrained from entering the fray when asked to comment on the NBA’s new anti-flopping initiative.

“I don’t think about it too much,” he said Thursday, and that’s very likely true. This is, after all, a man whose life philosophy can be summed up by one of his favorite phrases: Get over yourself.

He is very much in the minority, however, as evidenced by this massive list of comments compiled by .

Some of the standouts:

Tyson Chandler — ‘There are a lot of guys in the league that are in trouble.”

Kobe Bryant — “Shameless flopping, that’s a chump move.”

Anderson Verejao — “I’m not flopping anymore. I used to flop a little bit.”

Metta World Peace — “It’s the NBA Finals, a new lady is watching and never saw basketball, she sees (flopping) and wonders, ‘What is that?’ She won’t watch the game anymore.”

Whether you like it, hate it or, in Popovich’s case, don’t really care, it is here to stay — at least until January, when most of the NBA’s previous disciplinary crusades seem to have petered out.

Interestingly, it’s Tony Parker, and not Manu Ginobili, who was selected by the NBA to the type of offensive over-embellishment that will (supposedly) no longer be tolerated.

Other examples were provided by Reggie Evans, Dwyane Wade, Josh Smith, and of course, Chris “The Human Tornado” Paul.

In case you missed it, check out on just how difficult it is to catch flop master in the act, even after the fact.

Manu Ginobili at 35

One of the central tenets of Buddhism is impermanence, the notion that nothing – not personality traits, not physical conditions, not material items, nothing – can resist the inexorable force of change.

Tony Parker is obviously not an adherent of this concept.

“Still the same,” is how Parker describes long-time backcourt partner at 35, on the verge of his 11th season.

This, of course, is impossible. But while Ginobili’s athleticism and hairline aren’t what they used to be, just about everything else has aged nicely.

Indeed, from the standpoint of pure skill, Ginobili has never been better. It’s just a matter of whether his body, at an age where many of his historic peers had already called it quits, will cooperate.

Before we fiddle around with those details, it’s worthwhile examining just how much Ginobili has already changed over the years, most of which has been for the good.

While not quite in the same class as Vince Carter or Kobe Bryant as an athlete, Ginobili wasn’t far behind when he entered the NBA in 2002. But even then, when he could regularly dunk like , what stood out most were his instincts and basketball IQ, qualities that have only improved with experience.

An average shooter as a rookie in 2002-03, Ginobili shot a career-best 41.3 percent from 3-point range last season while finishing third in the league in true shooting percentage at 66.8. (To put the latter figure into perspective, it would have been the third-best TS% for a guard in NBA history if he’d played enough games.)

Perhaps more impressive is his development as a ball-handler and playmaker.

Ginobili registered a minus 5.59 pure point rating in his second-to-last season with Virtus Bologna, which basically means he was a turnover waiting to happen. Ten years later he finished at 4.50, placing him first among NBA shooting guards and second among all non-point guards in 2011-12.

That brings us to today, where the Spurs will be keeping their fingers crossed that Ginobili can bring all those skills to bear following a season in which he missed 32 games and under performed in the postseason.

ESPN’s John Hollinger projects another quality campaign (21.8 PER, with 21 points, 5.8 assists and 7.0 rebounds per 40 minutes).

Although no clear trend is discernable, it’s also interesting to look at how other elite shooting guards fared at 35:

George Gervin, Allen Iverson, Paul Westphal, Sidney Moncrief, Bill Sharman and Dave Bing were all retired, while Michael Redd is on the verge.

Vince Carter (10.1 ppg, 51.9 TS%, 13.6 PER) had the worst season of his career. Mitch Richmond had the second-worst (16.2 ppg, 52.1 TS%, 14.9 PER).

Jerry West produced at an All-Star level (20.3 ppg, 22.4 PER) but appeared in just 31 games.

Ray Allen did make the All-Star team, averaging 16.5 points with a total shooting percentage of 61.5.

Reggie Miller, Jeff Hornacek, Fred Brown and Sam Jones had quality campaigns, recording PERs between 17.1 and 17.8 while playing varying roles. Miller was particularly good, averaging 18.9 points on 57.4 TS% while playing more than 39 minutes per game.

Then there was Clyde Drexler, who performed almost identically at 35 (18.7 ppg, 53.1 TS%, 19.8 PER) as he did at 23 (19.4 ppg, 53.0 TS%, 19.4 PER).

(Michael Jordan likely would have been an MVP candidate at 35 – he won the award at 34 in his final season with the Bulls – but retired before returning for those two Twilight Zone seasons with the Washington Wizards.)

Where Ginobili will fall on that continuum is impossible to tell at this point, especially given a history of injuries that has forced him to miss roughly one out of every five games in the NBA.

He’s at least been handled delicately, never averaging more than 32.3 minutes during that span and another two seasons in Italy. As a result he’s played considerably fewer minutes than many of the aforementioned players at similar stages in their career, including roughly 17,000 less than Jordan.

That extra time on the bench could be a blessing in disguise now that Ginobili is in the twilight of his career, trying to squeeze out a few more seasons in which to utilize the skill set he’s polished to such a fine sheen.