Fans fear they’ll be the losers

A quick glance around A.J. Hausman’s office tells you everything you need to know about his NBA allegiance.

At least a dozen Spurs team balls, dating to the 1980s, line the shelves. Upward of 30 autographed Spurs jerseys festoon the walls.

When it comes to the latest NBA work stoppage, Hausman — a Spurs season-ticket holder since George Gervin was wowing audiences at HemisFair Arena — has but one rooting interest.

“I just hope they get it fixed before they start missing games,” said Hausman, 63, who runs a wholesale meat distribution company south of downtown. “The people who suffer the most in something like this are always the fans.”

The first full day of the NBA lockout came and went Friday, a day after league owners and the players’ union agreed they couldn’t agree on a new collective bargaining agreement.

At first blush, Spurs fans in San Antonio probably didn’t notice the difference.

At lunchtime Friday, the fan shop at the ATT Center had for sale the usual collection of jerseys, T-shirts and other paraphernalia bearing names and likenesses of Spurs players. Business was slow, but typically so for a random weekday in July.

The lockout was most immediately felt in the Spurs’ front office, where July 1 normally would have signaled the opening of free agency. Instead, phones remained quiet across the league, with team personnel barred — by threat of a $1 million fine — from contact with players, agents or intermediaries until the labor issue is settled.

Perhaps the most noticeable sign of the lockout’s arrival in San Antonio could be found on the Spurs’ official website, where images of all current players had been removed by order of the NBA.

Late Friday afternoon, the Spurs.com home page featured a link to NBA.com’s coverage of the labor struggle, a story on player-development coach Chad Forcier and video features about the Silver Dancers and the team’s mascot, The Coyote.

Though the earliest effects of the lockout have been easy to miss, fans who stuck with the team through the league’s last labor stoppage in 1998-99 realize more meaningful consequences are on the horizon.

Carol Muir, a real-estate agent with Kuper-Sotheby’s, has owned Spurs season tickets since 1974-75, when the club played in the ABA. If she learned anything from the labor war of 13 years ago, it’s that things are likely to get worse before they get better.

It took 204 days to resolve the last lockout, and not before 32 of 82 games were erased from the NBA schedule.

“The longer it goes, the worse it will be,” Muir said.

Owners are seeking to revamp a player salary-structure they say is unsustainable, citing league accounting that claims 22 of 30 teams posted losses last season totaling in excess of $300 million.

Players have been willing to concede some salary relief but would prefer owners contribute to their own bailout through revenue sharing, rather than relying solely on payroll cuts.

The two sides plan to return to the bargaining table in a few weeks. If an agreement can’t be reached by October, the start of the regular season could be postponed. If the dispute persists into January, the entire season might be scuttled.

Fans, some of whom plunk down thousands of dollars per year on season tickets, don’t seem to care about the specifics of the tug-of-war. They just want basketball.

“I feel more sorry for the people who work the games, the ushers and the concessionaires, than I do the players,” said Muir, who says she will keep her season tickets even if games are missed. “And I feel sorry for all the fans.”

After the 1998-99 lockout, it took several years for some fans to fully embrace the sport again. At a news conference Thursday in New York, league commissioner David Stern said he understood why fans might not take kindly to another stoppage.

“I think our fans will tend to have a negative view of, ‘Why can’t you guys work this thing out?’” Stern said.

Spurs forward Matt Bonner, a vice president of the players’ union, echoed sympathy for the league’s fans.

“As players, we want to play,” Bonner said. “But at the same time, we need a fair deal.”

For fans such as Hausman, that day can’t come soon enough. Like Muir, Hausman says he has no plans to cancel the season tickets he first purchased in 1984.

He just hopes he has a chance to use them again sometime soon.

“I’ll still support the Spurs,” he said. “I just hope they figure this out. It’s sad that it had to come to this.”

Staff Writer Mike Monroe contributed to this report.

NBA Finals matchups

Express-News NBA writer Mike Monroe profiles the key players and matchups in the NBA Finals between the Western Conference champion Dallas Mavericks and the Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat:

POINT GUARD

Mavericks: (9) Jason Kidd 6-4, 17th yr — He negated Russell Westbrook’s athleticism with guile and experience, but Bibby has been around nearly as long as he has. … His assists have increased in each series, to a high of 8.6 in Western finals.

Heat: (0) Mike Bibby 6-2, 13th yr — Bibby hasn’t scored much in the playoffs (3.6 PPG), but his scoring has increased, series to series to series. … He remains the worst defender among the 10 Finals starters.

Edge: Mavericks

SHOOTING GUARD

Mavericks: (92) D. Stevenson 6-5, 11th yr — A starter in name only, and only because he’s a disciplined, physical defender. So he’s well-suited to get first crack at putting clamps on Wade. … Rarely on floor in crunch time.

Heat: (3) Dwyane Wade 6-4, 8th yr — After dominant Eastern semis vs. Celtics (30.2 ppg, 52.6 percent shooting), output dropped vs. Bulls in Eastern finals (18.8, 40.5) and there are concerns about a sore left shoulder.

Edge: Heat

SMALL FORWARD

Mavericks: (0) Shawn Marion 6-7, 12th yr — Defensive work on Kevin Durant in Western finals enhanced his value and made him defensive key in these Finals. … He’ll harass James but has to stay out of foul trouble. … Quick rebounder.

Heat: (6) LeBron James 6-8, 8th yr — No question he has become crunch option No. 1. … His legacy at stake, he prepared for pressure of Finals with clutch performances in Eastern finals. … Expect him to help a lot on Nowitzki.

Edge: Heat

POWER FORWARD

Mavericks: (41) Dirk Nowitzki 7-0, 13th yr — Leading scorer in first three rounds of playoffs (28.2 PPG) and coming off 32.2 PPG in Western finals. … Hitting 51.6 from 3-point range. … Best foul shooter in the series and gets to line in crunch time.

Heat: (1) Chris Bosh 6-11, 8th yr — After breakout in Eastern finals, when he averaged 23.2 points, there should be no more references to Heat’s “Big 2 1/2.” … Will energy required to defend Nowitzki affect his offense?

Edge: Mavericks

CENTER

Mavericks: (6) Tyson Chandler 7-0, 10th yr — Offensive rebounding and defense at the rim make him a key player in series. … Goal No. 1: Stay out of foul trouble so he can stay on the floor. … Always looking to cut to rim for lobs that become dunks.

Heat: (50) Joel Anthony 6-9, 4th yr — Production and playing time dipped in Eastern finals because of Udonis Haslem’s return. … Must keep Chandler off the offensive glass. … Outstanding interior defender.

Edge: Mavericks

BENCH

Mavericks: Jason Terry is second option in crunch time, behind Nowitzki, keeping defenders from doubling on Dirk. … Peja Stojakovic is a long-range threat. … J.J. Barea is effective as a change-of-pace point guard.

Heat: Can’t overstate importance of Udonis Haslem’s return. He can body up on Nowitzki, as he did in 2006 Finals, when Nowitzki made only 39 percent. … Finally healthy, Mike Miller is their X-factor, capable of changing a game.

Edge: Mavericks

COACH

Mavericks: Rick Carlisle 3rd yr — Was Tom Thibodeau really the best defensive coach in the league this season, or was it Carlisle, who somehow turned a team that has Nowitzki, Stojakovic and Barea into one of the best?

Heat: Erik Spoelstra 3rd yr — Does anyone remember when his job was on the line back in November? … His message during Eastern finals was consistent and to the point: Defend, play hard and play smart.

Edge: Mavericks

PREDICTION

Mavericks in 6

Manu’s elbow passes first test

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Manu Ginobili says the right elbow he sprained in the Spurs’ regular-season finale, the one that put a scare in all of San Antonio, did not bother him in his 2011 postseason debut Wednesday.

The brace fastened to it during the Spurs’ 93-87 victory in Game 2 over Memphis was another story.

“I’m not a player who likes to play with a lot of wristbands or pads or stuff like that,” he said. “So it was a little uncomfortable.”

Ginobili admitted, however, he liked the contraption better than the sports coat he was forced to wear while sitting out the Spurs’ Game 1 loss.

Playing with his right arm nearly tied to his back, and in his first full game in 10 days, Ginobili supplied 17 points, seven rebounds and four assists Wednesday. He shot 5 of 13 from the field and missed an atypical six free throws.

But most importantly, Ginobili came out of a rough-and-tumble Game 2 convinced there is little he can do to aggravate the elbow.

“I took some risks, I went for some steals and rebounds,” Ginobili said. “I didn’t play like I was worried of getting hit.”

One important test passed, Ginobili is eager to remove that infernal apparatus from his non-shooting arm. Team doctors have suggested perhaps he could play without it at some point in this series.

In the meantime, Ginobili chose to look at the lucky side of his predicament.

If Grant Hill had accidentally rammed through his left arm instead of his right April 13 at Phoenix, Ginobili wouldn’t be able to play at all.

“It would have been difficult,” Ginobili said. “Maybe impossible.”

PICK A SHOOTER: With 14.4 seconds remaining in Game 2 and the Spurs up by two, Ginobili practiced his free-throw shooting motion, preparing himself for what might be the game’s crucial foul shots.

Typically in that situation, the Spurs try to get the ball to Ginobili, their top foul shooter during the regular season at 87.1 percent, knowing Memphis had to foul to stop the clock.

This time, the inbounds pass went to George Hill, but coach Gregg Popovich said Ginobili’s uncharacteristic 7-for-13 foul shooting to that point in the game played no factor in his design for the play.

Without giving away tactical secrets, Popovich said he had an abundance of options.

“You want the ball in your free-throw shooters’ hands, and (Hill) is one of our good free-throw shooters, along with Manu,” he said. “Everybody would want to get the ball to somebody who you think might make a free throw, and (Hill) is the guy that caught it.”

BEEN A WHILE: After fouling out of Game 2 with 1:14 remaining, Spurs forward Tim Duncan tried to recall the last time that had happened to him in a postseason contest.

“I think it was 1964,” a straight-faced Duncan said.

In fact, Duncan last fouled out of a playoff game on May 13, 2006, during Game 3 against the Mavericks in the Western Conference semifinals. He scored 35 points before hitting the showers early in a 104-103 Dallas victory.

Express-News staff writer Mike Monroe contributed to this report.