Kirilenko’s injury should scare on-the-fence players

As Manu Ginobili, Matt Bonner and Gary Neal mull playing overseas during the NBA lockout, I suggest they watch .

I’m not trying to come off like a driver’s education instructor here. But Andrei Kirilenko’s scary head injury while playing for CSKA Moscow last week should be a reminder that those extra paychecks overseas still come with a potential price.

Kirilenko received a broken nose, head laceration and concussion as he scrambled for a loose ball. Obviously, that injury could have happened anywhere, but sitting home on his couch seems to be the better option to me.

Of particular note are the primitive conditions that go with Kirilenko’s treatment. I guess they don’t have sterile gloves for trainers in the Russian league, either.

Here’s a You Tube video of the play of Kirilenko’s injury.

Unlocked: Now what for Spurs?

The NBA lockout is almost over. The “nuclear winter” commissioner David Stern promised turned out to be a mild snowstorm. What can the Spurs expect from a shortened training camp, condensed free-agent period and truncated 66-game regular season slated to start after Christmas? Express-News Spurs beat writer Jeff McDonald takes a guess:

Will the shortened season really help an old team like the Spurs?

In 1999, when the Spurs parlayed a lockout-shrunken, 50-game season into the first championship in franchise history, their starting lineup averaged 30.8 years.

This season’s projected starting lineup averages 31. For an older team, it seems logical that fewer regular-season games should result in fresher legs once the playoffs roll around.

Last season, the Spurs were 54-12 and peaking at the 66-game mark. Had the postseason started then, perhaps they would have lasted past the first round.

How many back-to-backs (and back-to-back-to-backs) can older stars such as Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili be expected to handle?

The downside for an old team facing a compressed schedule: a greater percentage of those dreaded back-to-backs, and the possibility of back-to-back-to-backs as schedule makers attempt to shoehorn 66 games into a four-month window.

In a normal season, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich is vigilant about resting his older stars during the rigorous portions of the schedule. With Duncan 35 and Ginobili 34, expect that caution to approach paranoia this season.

When Ginobili had to play eight games in 11 nights in an Olympic qualifier in Argentina this past summer, he complained of exhaustion by the end of it. Chances are, he won’t be given a chance to repeat that experience for Popovich.

What kind of shape will most players be in once training camp commences?

Don’t expect many fat, out-of-shape guys among the Spurs’ key players.

Throughout the lockout, Duncan has been leading regular workouts for San Antonio-based players and is reported to be in fine fighting shape. Ginobili has kept himself in shape after playing for Argentina. Tony Parker played for France and is now playing professional ball in that country.

The Spurs’ veterans have been there and done that and know how to prepare their bodies for the nightly grind of the NBA. Younger players, given too much downtime away from the watchful eyes of the Spurs’ new strength and conditioning staff, might not fare so well. It will be interesting to see who is gassed and who is not come the first day of camp.

Will Richard Jefferson still be here opening night?

The new collective bargaining agreement is expected to contain an amnesty provision that would allow teams to waive one player without incurring the accompanying salary-cap hit.

Richard Jefferson, the 31-year-old small forward who has mostly underwhelmed in two seasons in San Antonio, appears to be a prime candidate for the axe. But not so fast.

Jettisoning Jefferson and his $9.2 million salary wouldn’t put the Spurs below the cap, limiting their ability to replace him via free agency. It is possible, perhaps even likely, the Spurs hold on to Jefferson for the time being, using him as a de facto expiring contract at the trade deadline.

Or, they could wait and waive him until next summer, when the Spurs also have Duncan’s $21.3 million coming off the books, to create enough cap room to attract a higher class of free agents in 2012.

How active should we expect the Spurs to be in the December free agent frenzy?

Not very. Even if the Spurs do use amnesty provision on Jefferson and lose Antonio McDyess and his $5.2 million contract to retirement, they still won’t fall far enough below the cap line to make much of a splash in free agency.

For the Spurs, the free-agent period expected to start Dec. 9 — the same day teams can open camp — will probably look much like the one that usually starts July 1. The team will use its mid-level exception and minimum contracts to fill out the roster with role players (Shane Battier, anyone?) and hope the core of a team that won 61 games last season will be enough to keep it competitive this season.

Ex-Spurs guard returns to S.A. for game

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Five months after being traded to the Indiana Pacers, George Hill was back on a San Antonio basketball court on Sunday afternoon, back in a black No. 3 jersey.

Except it wasn’t a Spurs jersey. And it wasn’t the ATT Center.

With the NBA lockout still in full bloom, Hill was in town to play point guard for the Texas Fuel.

“I know San Antonio misses some basketball,” said Hill, one of the Spurs’ most popular players in his three seasons with the team. “I wanted to give the fans something to do during the lockout.”

Haven’t heard of the Texas Fuel? You’re likely not alone. The Fuel is the name given to the American Basketball Association team that plays at the Alamo Convocation Center.

They are a professional team, to be sure, but about as far a leap from the NBA as the Alamo Convocation Center is from the currently unoccupied basketball gym the Spurs call home.

The ball — like the iconic sphere used in the ABA of the 1970s — is red, white and blue. A DJ blasts music while the ball is in play (sample playlist selection: Joan Jett’s “I Love Rock and Roll.”) About 500 people were on hand Sunday to watch the Hill-led Fuel beat the Hill Country Stampede — a team, incidentally, based out of Big Spring — 113-93 in the team’s opener.

“It’s not the Spurs,” Hill said. “But it’s still basketball.”

Or, as Fuel officials are fond of saying: “It’s the only game in town.”

The Fuel’s roster is filled mostly with small-college castoffs holding on to a dream. Hill was the only player in uniform Sunday to have appeared in the NBA, and likely the only one who ever will.

The team’s leading scorer was De’Andre Hall, a 6-foot-7 combo forward who played collegiately at Texas Southern. He had 34 points and 11 rebounds.

More content to facilitate than score, Hill recorded his first pro triple-double with 11 points, 11 rebounds and 17 assists.

“I was just trying to get my feet wet again and get up and down the floor,” he said. “At the same time, it’s all for fun. I’m not out here to embarrass anybody.”

Hill hooked on with the Fuel as a favor to a friend, Marlon Minifee, one of the team’s co-owners. It gave him something to do during the lockout, which next week will enter its fifth month.

To pass the time, Hill has been working out in S.A. and Indianapolis. He shared the South Texas portion of his workouts with a slew of former Spurs teammates, including All-Stars Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili.

Though it cast the 2011-12 season in dire jeopardy, Hill said he supported the union leadership’s decision to push the lockout into litigation last week. He didn’t care that the NBA’s most recent collective bargaining proposal was not put to a full vote of the membership before the union decided to take its fight to court.

“At the end of the day, you have to do what’s best for your family,” Hill said, specifically praising union president Derek Fisher. “If that’s sacrificing what you make for a year to get the best deal possible — not just for us, but for the guys coming in after us — it’s worth it.”

The prospect of missing an entire season hasn’t caught Hill off guard.

“You knew this was coming,” said Hill, who has earned more than $3.2 million in his short career. “I paid attention during rookie orientation when they said, ‘Save your money.’?”

Still, Hill would rather be earning a paycheck in the NBA right now.

Instead of spending Sunday facing the Pistons in Detroit, Hill found himself running point guard in a half-empty gym that houses SAISD’s high school teams. He might be back soon. He wouldn’t rule out a return engagement with the Fuel.

“It depends on how much Icy Hot I have to use after this game,” he said.