How Spurs became Team Tony

ORLANDO, Fla. — Spurs point guard Tony Parker was sitting in a hotel ballroom earlier this weekend, immersed in the drudgery of his fourth NBA All-Star media day, reflecting on the unlikely journey that got him here.

Specially, he recalled a disaster of a pre-draft camp in Chicago more than 10 years ago that had nearly derailed his career before it began.

Then 19, Parker arrived at the workout not so fresh after a 12-hour flight from Paris and walked directly into a booby trap. His practice partner that day, a Spurs staffer and nondescript former NBA player named Lance Blanks, had been dispatched with explicit instructions to give the skinny kid from France the business.

“I was terrible,” Parker remembers of that day in 2001. “Lance was beating me up. He was playing no defense, just fouling me like crazy. I didn’t play well. They almost didn’t draft me.”

It took a second workout in San Antonio a few weeks later — plus some cajoling from general manager R.C. Buford — to get coach Gregg Popovich on board with selecting Parker 28th overall.

Even then, Popovich didn’t have high expectations once Parker arrived at training camp.

“At the time, I just wondered if he’d be able to make our team,” Popovich said.

Ten-plus seasons later, Parker has long since cleared that low bar. On the cusp of turning 30, Parker landed in Orlando in the midst of his best professional season, having tugged the Spurs to a 24-10 record despite missing star guard Manu Ginobili for all but nine games.

Tonight at the Amway Center, Parker will make his fourth All-Star appearance. In Spurs history, only Tim Duncan (13), David Robinson (10) and George Gervin (12, including three in the ABA) have made more.

With Duncan at age 35 and slowing, and Ginobili these days spending more time in street clothes than in uniform, Parker has emerged as the lead horse of a team that still harbors credible NBA title aspirations.

“He’s been our everything,” said Duncan, who will miss the All-Star Game for the first time in his career. “He’s played MVP caliber, he really has.”

Ginobili put it even more starkly.

“This is Tony’s team now,” he said.

Parker has accepted the keys, in part because he has no choice. He hit the All-Star break averaging 19.4 points and a career-best 8.1 assists, and riding a streak of four consecutive points-assists double-doubles.

“With Manu out, I have to do a lot more,” Parker said. “I have to be in attack mode the whole time.”

Apart from the numbers, Popovich has been impressed by Parker’s decision-making and control of the game. Night in and night out, Parker seems to sense what the Spurs need, and gives it to them.

Some of Parker’s box scores this season have been mind boggling: 34 points and 14 assists at Toronto, 30 points and 10 assists against the Clippers, 20 points and a career-high 17 assists at New Orleans.

“It’s his most complete season as a point guard,” Popovich said. “When you consider all aspects of the game — offense, deciding when to score and when to involve people, what’s the time of game, what’s the score, what’s going on, who’s hot, who’s rolling, playing defense at the other end and then being a leader out on the court — he’s doing all of those things better than he ever has.”

That’s high praise for a player who already has an NBA Finals MVP (2007) and All-NBA mention (2009) on his résumé.

The telltale night of Parker’s season came Feb. 4 in a home victory against Oklahoma City, when he broke Avery Johnson’s franchise assist record — and for dessert, pumped in 42 points. Ginobili calls that the best game of Parker’s career, eclipsing even a 55-point night at Minnesota in November 2008.

“The game in Minnesota, he knew he had to score,” Ginobili said. “Against Oklahoma City, he was scoring, he was setting guys up. Every decision he made was the right one.”

Opposing coaches have begun to focus on Parker as the head of the Spurs’ snake. When a team faces the Spurs nowadays, limiting Parker’s penetration is typically the emphasis of the defensive game plan.

“Tony Parker is playing the best basketball he’s ever played,” Denver coach George Karl said. “There’s no question about that at all. Before, you always thought you could turn him over a little bit and force him into bad decisions. The games I’ve watched, I haven’t seen any of that.”

L.A. Clippers point guard Chris Paul, who will start ahead of Parker for the West All-Stars tonight, believes his Spurs counterpart has been annually underrated.

“Tony’s been doing the same thing he’s doing now for the past eight, 10 years,” Paul said. “When you know basketball, you appreciate it.”

Still, Parker could have envisioned none of this the day he arrived at Spurs training camp in 2001, still bruised from his pre-draft workout with Blanks.

“I thought if I could play like 15, 20 minutes and be a good player in the NBA, I’d be happy,” Parker said.

Over time, the goals changed, as did the expectations. Now, Parker is only the Spurs’ everything.

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Tony Parker career timeline

Express-News Spurs beat writer Jeff McDonald takes a season-by-season look at the point guard’s development, from teenage starter to four-time All-Star:

2001-02: As a 19-year-old rookie, installed as starting point guard four games into inaugural campaign, replacing Antonio Daniels.

2002-03: Started every game for a team that wins NBA championship, but is benched most fourth quarters against New Jersey in the Finals in favor of Speedy Claxton.

2003-04: Before the season, Spurs flirt with Nets All-Star Jason Kidd in free agency. Had Kidd come, Parker likely would have been pushed out the door.

2004-05: Helped earn Spurs’ third title with seven-game victory over Detroit, but still struggles with consistency in playoffs.

2005-06: Enjoyed a regular-season breakout, averaging 18.9 points en route to first All-Star appearance.

2006-07: Enjoyed postseason breakout, becoming first Spurs player other than Tim Duncan to earn Finals MVP, in sweep of Cleveland. Also garners second straight All-Star invite.

2007-08: Builds on Finals performance, averaging 18.8 points and six assists.

2008-09: With Manu Ginobili limited to 56 games due to injury, Parker explodes for 22 points and 6.9 assists per game, both career highs, highlighted by a 55-point opus in double-overtime win at Minnesota in November. Named to third All-Star team, and draws All-NBA honors for first time.

2009-10: Injury-plagued, plays in only 50 games. Scoring average dips to 16 points, its lowest since 2003-04 season.

2010-11: A bounce-back campaign of sorts, he scores 17.5 points with 6.6 assists.

September 2011: At Eurobasket tournament in Lithuania, leads French national team to first Olympics berth since 2000.

2011-12 (so far): Carrying Spurs again with Ginobili out, he’s averaging 19.4 points and career-best 8.1 assists. Surpassed Avery Johnson as franchise’s all-time assist leader in win over Oklahoma City in February, scoring 42 points in process. Today will play in fourth All-Star Game.

What the Spurs and Hornets said after Thursday’s game

Here’s a collection of comments  from both locker rooms after the Spurs’ 93-81 victory over New Orleans Thursday night at the ATT Center.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich

(What helped you get started closing this game out?)

“Lots of things helped us.  Maybe we made a shot, maybe we missed a shot.  I don’t know.  A lot of things happen on the court, it’s not one thing.  Finally the game broke.  We made a few stops in a row and were fortunate enough to score at the other end at the same time and that’s what happened.”

(Discuss the defensive execution in the fourth quarter …)

“Again, the defense generated offense for us as the game went on into the fourth quarter.  I thought Tony was really good in the second half in forcing the issue and I thought Tiago had a great run in there defensively and offensively. The two of them really got us going and that was it.  New Orleans work hard.  You know they’re injured and they got guys out there going 100 percent constantly.  Monty and those guys do a great job with them and they just didn’t have all their pieces and that’s tough.”

 (On Tim Duncan…he seemed to have a lot of energy again tonight after last night…)

“We kept his minutes down.  He didn’t play that much.  As long as the minutes are low, he feels pretty good.”

 (On Tim Duncan…it seems like in the last two games he’s consciously trying to play in the post more …)

“He has.  He feels really good.  He feels like he’s got a good balance and that’s always a good sign when he wants the ball down on the block.”

 (On Tiago and Tony playing together…they seem to have a nice kinship going…)

“Yeah.  At one point, Tony came over and told me what he wanted to run because of Tiago and he thought he could get him the ball and he did it.  Tiago went right to the hole and scored.”

Spurs forward Tim Duncan

(On his aggressive performance tonight…)

“You know, I just took the initiative to be aggressive and attack them a little bit. We didn’t have shots falling from the outside as we didn’t shoot the three-ball real well. Opportunities were there, so I just took them when I could.”

(On whether his high number of free throws was due to being in the post more…)

“I’m just trying to attack when I get the ball. I’ve had some good situations the last couple of games to attack and I’ve gotten to the free throw line luckily. That’s just a big part of it. It helps me get started and it helps me in feeling good, so I just need to get to the free throw line more often.”

(On whether their skipping of practice will be good for them against Oklahoma City…)

“You know, I think we had some tired legs tonight as you could tell with our shooters. Guys were worn out a little bit and it’ll be good for us. It’s a crazy season as it’s taking a lot out of a lot of people. Any rest is good rest. I don’t think we’re going to lose much in just today, as it’s good to get some rest under our belts. I know there are a lot of games coming up as well as the season we have ahead of us.”

(On the defense in the fourth quarter with New Orleans trying to catch up…)

“I don’t understand it either. I thought we were playing pretty decent defense all the way through. They made some shots especially in the first half as they made shots from some guys were weren’t expecting. We stuck with it, stuck with the game plan we had, as it finally started to turn for us.”

Spurs forward Tiago Splitter

(On his performance in the fourth quarter…)

“Well, I think we had a great run as our defense stepped up a little bit. Offensively, I think TP runs the team very well as he finds the right guy open every time.”

(On the comfort he had with the offense tonight…)

“These are the kind of games where if you’re comfortable you have to ask for the ball. Overall, I think I‘ve been doing this for years even though this is my second year in the NBA. I’m feeling good and comfortable on the court, so I’m just trying to play my game.”

(On his drive on the top of the key…)

“That was a weird handoff from Tony but I saw my man sleeping, so I just went to the basket and tried to score.”

(On his thoughts about the upcoming matchup against Oklahoma City…)

“They’re a tough team. They’re very athletic, they play very fast and they have great players. You can see why they’re one of the best teams in the NBA right now. We got to have a great game and start very well to matchup against them.”

(On whether the talks about Oklahoma City being the best is creating motivation…)

“Of course. Also by playing at home in front of our crowd, we want to play good. We want to show our basketball as we know what we can do and it starts with our defense.”

New Orleans Hornets coach Monty Williams

(When asked about what he noticed in the game at the start of the fourth quarter…)

“We tied it up and then Gary Neal hit that three at the end of the quarter.  That was a bit of a let down because we know that’s what he does.  You have got to close out on him as the hot guy and make sure he puts the ball down.  They (the Spurs) just executed.  Their main guys stepped up.  They guys we were counting on to step up tonight just didn’t have it.  If you can hold San Antonio to that amount points you take it.  Our shooting and ability to score the ball wasn’t there in the fourth quarter.”

Follow up to previous question (When asked you called that quick timeout in the fourth what did you tell your players?)

“I told them to slow it down.  You don’t have to get it all in one possession.  They (the Spurs) made a run and we expected that on their home floor.  So we tried to go out there and run a set where we could get a good possession and we weren’t able to do it.”

(When asked about the play of Trevor Ariza and Jason Smith, did the Spurs do anything to try to make it tougher on them tonight…)

“I don’t think so.  With Jason (Smith) because he shoots the ball so well, teams are rotating to him.  Outside of that, I don’t think so.  We have to be forceful at the basket and try to dunk the ball.  For the most part, the ball was moving in the first half.  In the second half, I thought it came to a stand still at times.  It’s easy to play against iso-basketball.”

(When asked about the play of his guards tonight…)

“I thought they did O.K. With the circumstances I thought that Greivis (Vasquez) was really good in the first half.  Squeaky (Carldell Johnson) gave us great minutes.”

Hornets guard Marco Belinelli

(On what happened tonight…)

“In the fourth quarter, we only had 13 points and they had 22. That’s good on our defensive part but we just didn’t stick to our principle on offense. We stood with them the entire game. It’s just closing out games like coach said over and over but like I said last night, we just have to flush the toilet on this one and look forward to the next game and continue to work harder.”

(On coming out of the timeout in the fourth quarter, what did coach tell you guys…)

“Just to stay out there and run our stuff. Sometimes when we get into a pinch, we start doing stuff uncharacteristically not us, not running our offense and trying to go one on one basketball. We need to stay with what has kept us in the game and what has kept the game close. I felt like we were starting to get away from that so I tried to get the guys together and get us realigned.”

 Hornets guard Greivis Vasquez

(On the inability of closing out in the fourth quarter…)

“I take responsibility for that because I was the point guard out there today. In the last five minutes, I should have taken control of the game better. It is just a learning process, but I’m tired of learning. I don’t want to learn no more. I really take responsibility because as a young guy here, you have to learn quick. There are no excuses. It’s not coach, we are playing good defense and we are holding teams to a low score. At times we turn the ball over, then we try to come back and it is too late. We waste too much energy and when we are playing all stars we cannot be doing that.”

(Does it get frustrating by each loss?)

“We lost the last two games in the fourth quarter. We play hard in the third quarter and then we do not execute in the fourth (quarter). As a point guard, it is hard to fill Chris Paul’s shoes, but I expect myself to be better and that takes a little work. I’m going to get back and work, watch film and see how I can get better. ”

Howard’s 25-24 leads Magic victory over Miami, tops S&Ds

Dwight Howard might not be a member of the Orlando Magic for much longer.

But if the All-Star center is leaving his team, he’s leaving “Magic City” with a boatload of memories about his strong inside play.

Howard muscled for 25 points and 24 rebounds to lead the Magic’s 102-89 victory over Miami Wednesday night.

It was his 43rd career 20-20 game, including his sixth this season.  His 24 rebounds were within one of his season high — 25 against the Spurs on Jan. 18 — as the toyed with the Heat inside.

His inside game open up the perimeter for the Magic to hit 17 3-pointers

“They shot the 3 extremely well and the big fella in the middle took care of his 20 and 20 once again,” Miami forward LeBron James said. “Sometimes you have to pick your poison, but we gave up both tonight. They are an extremely tough team to beat when they are making the 3s and the big fella is doing what he wants.”

Whether “the big fella” is there much longer will be determined by Howard, his agents and Orlando’s management.

But in the meantime, Howard produced another effort worthy of leading Wednesday’s Studs and Duds.

STUDS

Orlando C Dwight Howard: Went for 25 points, 24 rebounds, four assists, three steals, two blocks and was plus-8 in the Magic’s victory over Miami.

San Antonio G Tony Parker: Erupted for 37 points, eight assists, three rebounds and was plus-5 in the Spurs’ victory at Philadephia.

Atlanta F Josh Smith: Filled the stat sheet for 28 points, 12 rebounds, five steals, three assists, three steals and was plus-12 in the Hawks’ triumph over Indiana. 

New York G Jeremy Lin: Notched 23 points and 10 assists — his third straight 20-plus scoring game — four rebounds and was plus-18 in the Knicks’ triumph at Washington.

Milwaukee G Carlos Delfino: Produced 25 points, nine rebounds, four steals and two assists in the Bucks’ victory at Toronto.  

New Jersey G Deron Williams: Went for 34 points, including six 3-pointers, and added seven assists in the Nets’ loss to Detroit.

DUDS

Philadelphia C Nikola Vucevic: Missed all four shots with four turnovers and was minus-9 in the Sixers’ loss to the Spurs.

Chicago G C.J. Watson: Went 1 for 10 from the field with four turnovers and was minus-3 in the Bulls’ victory at New Orleans.

Portland G Raymond Felton: Struggled through a 4-for-11 shooting night with five turnovers and was minus-2 in the Trail Blazers’ loss to Houston.

Houston G Goran Dragic: The Spurs killer went 3 for 9 from the field with five turnovers in the Rockets’ victory over Portland.

Dallas G Jason Terry: The lippy guard that Spurs Nation loves to hate went 1 of 9 from the field with a turnover and was minus-2 in the Mavericks’ victory at Denver.

Indiana G Paul George: Went 1 for 8 from the field with three turnovers and was minus-13 in the Pacers’ loss at Atlanta.