Pop unsure if McDyess will be back

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich is unsure if veteran power forward Antonio McDyess will return for a 16th season in the NBA.

Popovich offered few hints of what players his team could be interested in picking up in free agency, or even if McDyess would return.

“I don’t know,” Popovich said when asked about McDyess during a press conference Friday afternoon at the team’s training facility. ”I don’t know the status of a lot of guys.”

McDyess, who turned 37 in September, hinted at retirement after the Spurs’ first-round playoff loss to Memphis last season. He averaged a career-low 5.3 points per game and 5.4 rebounds  in 73 games for the Spurs last season and 5.7 points and 5.0 rebounds in the playoffs against Memphis.

Mike Monroe: Amnesty for RJ not a simple choice

Mike Monroe/Express-News staff

The last time the NBA and the players union struck a new collective bargaining agreement, in 2005, the deal included an amnesty clause that allowed teams to waive one player and remove his salary from its official payroll.

Mavericks owner Mark Cuban used the provision to waive Michael Finley, and the final three years of his contract ($51.8 million) disappeared from Dallas’ official payroll but not from its contractual obligations. Finley is still getting paid by Cuban, $5.18 million a year, give or take, through 2015.

The Spurs, fresh off a championship run, swooped in and convinced Finley to sign a three-year deal at $2.5 million per season. Ultimately, he earned a championship ring and made another $10 million.

Another amnesty clause is part of the tentative NBA deal awaiting finalization and approval.

Isn’t this a chance for the Spurs to get Richard Jefferson’s contract, average salary $10.17 million, off their payroll through the next three seasons?

Seems like a no-brainer, unless you think $10.1 million is fair value for a guy who averages 11.0 points, 3.8 rebounds and 1.3 assists. Or unless you’re the guy who still has to sign his paychecks.

Turns out there is a new wrinkle to the proposed amnesty rules that makes dumping Jefferson anything but a slam dunk: The new amnesty can be implemented in any offseason of the new CBA.

As underwhelming as Jefferson has been in his two seasons in silver and black, he was a pretty solid contributor last season on a team that won 61 games. So doesn’t it make more sense for the Spurs to see how the returning core group fares this season? After all, Jefferson made a career-high 44 percent of his 3-point shots, fifth-best in the league at a skill the Spurs value highly.

If Jefferson can help the Spurs remain in the hunt for another championship, his contract will have been well worth keeping.

But if the Spurs should suffer another first-round playoff disaster or fail to make the postseason at all? Then the conclusion will be evident: Getting Jefferson’s money off the cap will make basketball sense, no matter how painful the fiscal hit.

In all likelihood, the Spurs will keep Jefferson, but it’s not a simple decision. That’s because the pending agreement contains other wrinkles that argue for big-spending teams to use amnesty.

For one thing, the proposed deal requires teams over the luxury tax threshold to operate under more punitive restrictions on their free-agency options, including a mid-level cap exception of $3 million. Teams that are not over the luxury tax threshold will be able to offer free agents a $5 million mid-level exception.

The Spurs continue to hover around the threshold, which was $70.3 million last season. With Jefferson on this season’s roster, they’ve got 12 players whose contracts go well above $70.3 million, plus two first-round draftees who will add about $2.2 million. Getting Jefferson’s salary off the rolls would guarantee the Spurs would be under the threshold.

A third change in the pending agreement might mitigate the sting of writing all those post-waiver checks. Players waived under amnesty will be subject to a secondary waiver process that will give teams with cap room a chance to bid on them. Winning bids will apply to the player’s prior contract, effectively reducing the cost to the team that waived him.

Jefferson is still worth $4 million-$5 million a season to a team well under the cap, isn’t he?

The Spurs must decide if that is a question worth asking.

Former Spur Charles Smith in nasty spat with retired players’ union

Spurs Nation will remember Charles Smith as one of the most maddening talents to ever play for the team.

Back in the days before Tim Duncan filled the paint for the Spurs, Smith was counted to provide an inside threat with David Robinson. He had averaged at least 20 points in two different seasons earlier in his career. More of the same when he arrived in San Antonio from New York in a trade involving J.R. Reid.

Instead, Smith became one of the biggest bust in franchise history, averaging 7.7 points and 3.4 rebounds in 51 career games (and 37 starts) over two seasons with the Spurs. He was let go on Jan. 6, 1998 after not playing since the end of the 1996-97 season. He never played in the NBA again.

Smith surfaced several years ago as the president of the National Basketball Retired Players Association.  But  just as suddenly as he left the Spurs, Smith was sacked last year in a palace coup orchestrated by a group of other retired players.

Peter Vescey of  the New York Post reports that NBRPA CEO Arnie D. Fielkow and president George Tinsley the estranged Smith has been contacting members regarding the possible start-up of a rival retired association. On Nov. 18, 2010, after two years on the job, Smith was furtively fired by Tinsley and a five-man board.

Board member Dan Schayes replaced Smith, though briefly. Numerous players, led by Earl Monroe, fiercely objected to how the coup was handled. Several believed that Smith’s firing was disputable and that the membership wasn’t given a vote.

Schayes was removed several months later and Fielkow assumed  the operations of the organization. But in the meantime, Smith has threatened to sue the NBRPA for his wrongful discharge.

Spurs fans from back in the day probably are wondering where that fire and determination was during Smith’s short career with the Silver and Black.