Spurs notebook: Popovich says rest, energy trump victories

With the regular season down to its final 14 games — to be played over the next 20 days — coach Gregg Popovich insists the Spurs’ depth is more important than it has been all season.

“Going down the stretch here we’re a lot more concerned with health and energy than we are wins and losses, as long as we’re theoretically getting better,” he said.

“I’d like to see us get better defensively in certain ways. As long as we’re trying, as long as we’re on that path, our health and our energy are more important than anything, because in the West, anybody can beat anybody, one through eight.”

The Spurs are one of two teams in the league with 10 players averaging more than 20 minutes per game. Stephen Jackson, who joined the team on March 17 after a trade deadline deal with the Golden State Warriors, isn’t playing quite as much as the player he replaced, Richard Jefferson, but he is averaging 22.1 minutes per game for the nine games he has played in silver and black this season.

Popovich understands the depth will make for some difficult decisions when he shortens his player rotations for the playoffs, as he always does.

“Rotations always get a little shorter at that time,” Popovich said, “but that’s just the way it is.”

Popovich didn’t rest any of his key players in the back-to-back set that produced Tuesday-Wednesday victories in Cleveland and Boston, but newcomers Boris Diaw and Patrick Mills didn’t see any court time in the second game, against the Celtics.

While the Australian Mills came to the team with an advantage of having played the Spurs offense as a member of the Australian national team, which is coached by Spurs assistant coach Brett Brown, Diaw acknowledged it will take some time to learn the team’s plays.

“I don’t have a timeline for learning everything, but it’s getting better every game, game to game,” he said. “There are times I’m in the wrong spot on the floor. There’s still some of that, so it’s going to take a little bit.

“What’s important is that I get to know my teammates, them getting to know me and just learning to play together so we can be the most efficient as possible. That’s what I’m trying to do right now, just getting things right and getting to know everyone on the court.”

What’s in a name? Though he’s grown accustomed to being called “Patty” by nearly everyone around the NBA, Mills said he much prefers to called by his given name, rather than the truncated nickname.

“It’s not a big deal,” he said. “Either one is all right, but if you really want to know which I prefer, well, it’s Patrick.”

Mills was the Spurs’ top scorer in Tuesday’s blowout victory over the Cavaliers, scoring 20 points to become the 11th different player to lead the team in scoring this season.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA

Leonard recalls short time with Pacers

By Jeff McDonald

It doesn’t take Kawhi Leonard long to recount the entirety of his career as an Indiana Pacer.

NBA commissioner David Stern announced him as the 15th pick in the June draft. Someone handed Leonard a Pacers ball cap as he walked up on stage at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. He shook the commissioner’s hand. He walked off stage.

“And then a media person in the back told me I had been traded,” Leonard said.

Leonard was the property of the Pacers for all of five minutes before being informed he’d been swapped to the Spurs in a pre-arranged deal for guard George Hill.

The Spurs rookie small forward faces his, ahem, former team for the first time tonight when the Pacers visit the ATT Center.

It’s not as if Leonard will be out for revenge against the team that traded him. He’s enjoying life as a starting member of a Spurs team boasting the Western Conference’s second-best record.

He recalls being neither stunned nor daunted by the trade.

“It still felt good,” Leonard said. “I got drafted that day. I was happy with whatever team wanted me.”

Acquired for his skills as a defender and rebounder, Leonard is averaging 8.3 points, an offensive output that has surprised coach Gregg Popovich. In March, the 6-foot-7 Leonard is contributing 11.6 points, 6.8 rebounds and 1.6 steals per game.

“He’s been great all year long,” Tim Duncan said. “Even with Pop getting on him at times, he responds the right way. That’s big for a rook.

“The steals, the one-man fast breaks, all those things — they’re great for us. He adds a new dimension to our team.”

Nash missing Diaw: After obtaining a buyout from Charlotte a little more than a week ago, recently acquired forward Boris Diaw admits he talked to his old friend, Steve Nash, about the possibility of reuniting in Phoenix.

But Diaw wouldn’t go so far as to call it a recruiting pitch.

“He’s a friend, so I talk to him every now and then,” said Diaw, who played for Phoenix from 2005 to 2008. “We were talking about it, when people knew I was on the verge of being bought out by Charlotte. I got some interest from a few teams.”

According to a report in the New York Post, citing an unidentified source, Nash is upset Suns management didn’t do more to lure Diaw back to Phoenix.

Diaw, 29, instead signed with the Spurs, where has averaged 2.4 points, 3.6 rebounds, two assists and 1.4 steals in five games.

False Aussie advertising: Patrick Mills, the Australian point guard who joined the Spurs over the weekend, is sheepish to admit it.

He has indeed been to Outback Steakhouse. What’s more, he kind of liked it.

“I go there for the cheesy fries,” Mills said.

Yes, it’s a little like Yao Ming frequenting Panda Express. Or Eduardo Najera noshing at Taco Bell.

Mills is quick to point out to American diners that Outback probably isn’t the best representative of his home country’s cuisine.

“I might be the most Australian thing in there,” Mills said

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN