Standing pat is just fine with Popovich

LAS VEGAS — To hear Spurs coach Gregg Popovich tell it, negotiating a new contract with franchise big man Tim Duncan this summer was a lot like negotiating with the mob.

“He was just as big a pain in the neck as he was when he almost went to Orlando,” Popovich joked, referring to Duncan’s free-agent flirtation with the Magic in 2000.

“He toyed with me. He lied to me. He intimidated me. He threatened me. In the end, it worked out. But I had to take much abuse to get it done.”

Having last week secured Duncan’s autograph on a three-year deal believed to be worth $39 million — one that could carry the 36-year-old future Hall of Famer to the conclusion of his career — the Spurs’ front office commenced on an offseason signing spree that went quickly, quietly and by design produced little in the way of roster turnover.

With guard Danny Green (three years, $12 million), center Boris Diaw (two years, $9.2 million) and backup point guard Patty Mills back in the fold, the team the Spurs trot out on opening day 2012 will look remarkably like the one last seen slumping off the court at Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals.

“We had a very good year, went a pretty long ways,” Popovich said earlier this week from NBA Summer League in Las Vegas. “We would have liked to have gone further, but we want to keep that group together.”

Since the start of free agency July 1, the Los Angeles Lakers added a two-time MVP in Steve Nash, Dallas almost completely revamped around Dirk Nowitzki, Phoenix remade itself for the post-Nash era, and Houston cashed out Luis Scola for a dose of Jeremy Lin-sanity.

In the face of such a shifting landscape in the Western Conference, the Spurs opted to make like the Grand Canyon and hardly change at all.

The only new addition so far is Nando de Colo, a 25-year-old French guard drafted 53rd overall in 2009, who Popovich likens to “a poor-man’s Danny Ainge.”

“He’s a good basketball player, fits in well with the group, makes good decisions, finishes on the break,” Popovich said. “He’s going to be fun to watch.”

For the 16th consecutive season, the Spurs will build around Duncan, who enjoyed a resurgent campaign (15.4 points, nine rebounds in 28.2 minutes per game) in 2011-12.

Once Duncan’s new deal sapped any shot the Spurs had at salary cap room, doubling down on a roster that won 50 of 66 games last season and came within two wins of the NBA Finals became the only sensible play for Popovich and general manager R.C. Buford.

In a turn of events that should please team chairman Peter Holt, the Spurs were able to do it without crossing the luxury-tax line of $70.307 million.

“Lots of times you don’t have a choice (but to stand pat), because of contracts or numbers or whatever,” Popovich said. “This year, we were able to do everything and stay under the tax at the same time. That was a goal, to stay under the tax. We weren’t sure we were going to be able to do it.”

Between now and the start of training camp in October, Popovich and Buford will keep an eye on the waiver wire for opportunities to upgrade the roster.

The bulk of the front office’s summertime work, however, is already done.

The Spurs already have 14 players under contract for next season, one less than the league maximum, though they could create an extra space if needed by waiving DeJuan Blair’s non-guaranteed $1.504 million deal.

Popovich acknowledges the challenge of running down the young and hungry Oklahoma City Thunder — much less the NBA champion Miami Heat — with a roster nearly identical to the one that could not get it done last season.

He also sees room for internal improvement, particularly in Green, second-year small forward Kawhi Leonard and Diaw, who did not join the team until March.

“I think we can get better,” Popovich said. “We’re going to stick with the group and see how it goes.”

No Leonard, no win: Leonard’s summer league is over.

Having apparently seen enough in two dominant games from their second-year small forward, the Spurs allowed Leonard to leave Las Vegas for good Wednesday.

Leonard will not play in either of the Spurs’ remaining two games, ending his summer stint sporting a healthy 25-point per game scoring average.

Without their leading scorer, the Spurs lost 86-80 to the Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday night. Cory Joseph continued a strong summer league with 22 points and six assists.

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Spurs’ summer schedule

The Spurs’ Summer League team has two games remaining in Las Vegas:

Friday: vs. Heat, Cox Pavilion, 7 p.m.

Saturday: vs. Mavericks, Cox Pavilion, 5 p.m.

James’ incandescent efforts a bright contrast from 2011

MIAMI — LeBron James arrived for practice Monday wearing lime-green sneakers, a highly fluorescent shade.

It was the fashion statement du jour for the league’s three-time MVP, much like the eyeglass frames he’s been sporting after games throughout this postseason. But those sneakers probably would have remained tucked away in the drawer beneath his locker during last year’s NBA Finals, since very little about James’ game would be considered glowing or luminous during those two weeks.

Different year, different story.

For the second straight season, the Miami Heat hold a 2-1 lead in the NBA Finals. There’s a glaring difference this time around — that being James is playing at the top of his game. And he’ll try to help the Heat move within one win of a championship tonight when Miami plays host to the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 4 of this title series.

“We’re a totally different team than we was last year when we was up 2-1,” James said Monday. “… We understand what it takes to win, we’ve used that motivation, and we will continue to use that motivation. But last year is last year, and we’re not going into a Game 4 on someone else’s floor. We’re going into a Game 4 on our floor with a lot of experience in this type of situation. We’ll be ready. We love the challenge.”

Miami lost Game 4 in Dallas last year, the start of a three-game slide that ended with the Mavericks winning the title.

So the Thunder know a 2-1 deficit in a series is hardly insurmountable, even though the home-court roles are reversed this time around. And if Oklahoma City needed more proof, all the Thunder need to do is remember the Western Conference finals when they lost the first two games to San Antonio, becoming the 19th and 20th entries on the Spurs’ incredible winning streak. The Spurs didn’t win another game the rest of the way.

“We were down 2-0 against San Antonio, and everybody thought the series was over,” Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. “But I know our guys, they’re very competitive, they’re very resilient. They’ve always showed that type of effort every game, and we’ve always been a great bounce-back team. I thought last night was a great bounce-back. It’s unfortunate we didn’t make a couple plays, and uncharacteristic, also.”

Uncharacteristic. That would also be a fine word to describe how James played in the Finals last season.

He freely acknowledges that he “didn’t make enough plays” against the Mavericks a year ago, and the numbers — 17.8 points, 7.2 rebounds and 6.8 assists per game — back that up, as do his well-chronicled fourth quarter struggles in that series. So far in this year’s Finals, James is averaging 30.3 points, 10.3 rebounds and 4.0 assists, and in the final minutes of Miami’s two wins in the series, he’s done his part to slam the door on the Thunder.

“He’s been aggressive. He’s an aggressive player,” Thunder guard James Harden said. “He’s been aggressive all year, all postseason. He’s tall, strong, and physical. He’s a tough matchup. It takes five guys to really lock down on their offense because they’re a very offensive team especially with LeBron and (Dwyane) Wade.”

James is shooting 46 percent in the series, not even close to the 57 percent clip Kevin Durant is putting up for Oklahoma City. But here’s maybe one piece of proof to support that aggression notion Harden was speaking of — James is 25 for 29 from the foul line in the three games, while Durant is just 14 for 19.

James has done much of his work near the rim in these Finals. But while it wasn’t his most memorable shot, perhaps the biggest one he hit all night in Miami’s Game 3 victory was a 3-pointer late in the third quarter, one of just five shots the Heat made from outside the paint in that game. That shot put Miami up entering the fourth and seemed to extend the Thunder defense just enough to allow James, Wade and Chris Bosh to create more in the lane late.

“The biggest evolution of great players is they always stay in constant state of being uncomfortable,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “They don’t stay satisfied. And LeBron every summer has added something to his game. … I think that’s a sign of greatness.”

Spurs in a haircut? Too cool.

By René A. Guzman

A lot of passion goes into showing Spurs love on your scalp. Just ask Joe Barajas, better known as Joe Barber.

The Razor Sharp Cutz master barber at Ingram Park Mall has turned plenty of heads with his sporting hair designs. He recently made, ahem, headlines after shaving the likeness of Spurs forward Matt Bonner into the head of 12-year-old Patrick Gonzalez.

For Barajas, such a work of art is just another in a long line of buzz-worthy buzz cuts.

“I’ve been doing this for a long time,” Barajas said, noting he started cutting famous faces into not-so-famous heads in 2005 with a depiction of Spurs point guard Tony Parker, though he found viral video fame with a Michael Jordan clip he did in January.

Barajas has also made hair designs of Spurs stars Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili, as well as the Miami Heat’s LeBron James, the Los Angeles Lakers’ Kobe Bryant and the Oklahoma City Thunder’s Kevin Durant. He’s even done depictions of Ray Charles and Marvin Gaye.

“It’s whatever that fan wants,” Barajas said. “I try to meet their needs.”

For a Spurs fan like George Renteria, that means maintaining the Silver and Black on his head every week. Barajas just gave the telemarketer his regular Friday touch-up of a shaved, black-dyed Spurs logo outlined with silver dye.

“If the Spurs are playing, I’m here to get this haircut,” Renteria said, wearing a Duncan jersey and Spurs earring.

Barajas usually takes two hours to complete such cuts. He starts with an image hunt on his iPad, then uses grayscale shading with hair dye and pattern clipping with various clippers, plus a handheld razor blade broken in half to etch in those extra-fine details.

Since Patrick and Bonner are both redheads, Barajas used Patrick’s own hair color to depict Bonner and black hair dye for the image’s outlines.

That hairdo ultimately cost the Woodlake Hills Middle School student a one-day suspension. Patrick reluctantly shaved the $75 haircut to go back to class, but netted tickets to Game 2 against the not-so-coincidentally named Los Angeles Clippers, along with a meet-and-greet with Bonner and a signed jersey and shoes.

Mike Rios at Knockout Cuts says cutting such designs into kids’ hair be tough due to the smaller canvas. That may explain why the barber is especially proud of a full lion he cut into a boy’s head for a zoo trip.

“It’s just really good for one event,” said Rios, who cuts his share of boxers like Manny Pacquiao into fans’ heads as well as more kid-friendly art like Angry Birds and Transformers logos.

Rios says such cuts grow out in about a week-and-half, so there isn’t too much time for buyer’s remorse. And one can always go back to edit or eliminate the hair art, as Rios notes many New England Patriots fans did after the team lost the last Super Bowl.

As Barajas says, a haircut isn’t just a haircut, it’s a representation of one’s self. And that goes well beyond wearing passion on one’s sleeve.

“I’m nothing but Spurs,” Renteria said. “Spurs is in my blood.”

And always on his mind.

rguzman@express-news.net
Twitter: @reneguz