NBA draft: Potent picks past No. 50

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Late draft picks who made good


Bucks’ Anthony Mason, left (AP Photo/LM Otero)


Drazen Petrovic of the Nets. (Tim DeFrisco/Getty Images) (Getty Images)


Knicks’ general manager Isaiah Thomas, right. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)


Bulls’ Kyle Korver. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)


Rockets’ Luis Scola. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)


Suns’ Marcin Gortat, left. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)


Spurs’ Mario Elie. (EXPRESS-NEWS/JERRY LARA)


Spurs’ Patty Mills, right. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS/SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Timberwolves’ Sam Mitchell, left. (AP Photo/Ann Heisenfelt)


Sarunas Marciulionis of the Warriors. (Mike Powell/Getty Images)


Anthony (Spud) Webb of the Hawks (Stephen Dunn/Getty Images)


Spurs’ Steve Kerr. (JERRY LARA/Express-News)

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Owning only the No. 59 pick in Thursday’s NBA draft, the Spurs aren’t expecting to add an immediate impact rookie. In reality, odds are good whoever’s name deputy commissioner Adam Silver calls second-to-last in Newark, N.J., will struggle simply to make the Spurs’ roster.

Yet the late second round is not always fallow ground, and the Spurs need only to look at their own draft history for proof. In 1999, they drafted an unknown Argentine guard named Emanuel Ginobili at No. 57. Express-News staff writer Jeff McDonald combs the archives for other “50-and-over” players who might offer the Spurs a bit of draft-night hope:

Anthony Mason

Selected: 53rd overall (third round) by Portland in 1988

The payoff: Bruising forward eventually developed into a key component of playoff teams in New York, Charlotte and Miami, winning NBA Sixth Man of the Year in 1993-94, making the All-Star team in 2001 and being named third-team All-NBA in 1996-97.

Michael Adams

Selected: 66th overall (third round) by Sacramento in 1985

The payoff: Diminutive guard went on to become one of NBA’s most lethal scorers in Denver, averaging a career high of 26.5 points in 1990-91. Twice led the NBA in 3-pointers and made one All-Star team in 1992.

Mark Eaton

Selected: 72nd overall (fourth round) by Utah in 1982

The payoff: The 7-foot-4 center led the league in blocked shots in four of his 10 seasons, won two NBA Defensive Player of the Year awards and made one All-Star appearance.

Drazen Petrovic

Selected: 60th overall (third round) by Portland in 1986

The payoff: In a prelude to the overseas invasion to come, Petrovic enjoyed his best years in New Jersey, where he averaged 20-plus points in back-to-back seasons and earned All-NBA recognition in 1992-93 before his death in a car accident.

Steve Kerr

Selected: 50th overall by Phoenix in 1988

The payoff: The NBA’s most accurate 3-point shooter in history had a hand in five championships, including two with the Spurs.

Mario Elie

Selected: 160th overall (seventh round) by Milwaukee in 1985

The payoff: Pugnacious swingman lasted 11 NBA seasons and won three NBA titles, two with Houston and one with the Spurs.

Luis Scola

Selected: 55th overall by Spurs in 2002

The payoff: Long considered the one who got away for Spurs fans, Ginobili’s teammate on the Argentine national team developed into a steady starter in Houston. In 2010-11, averaged 20.2 points and nine rebounds.

Marcin Gortat

Selected: 57th by Phoenix in 2005

The payoff: Traded on draft day to Orlando, where he spent three seasons backing up Dwight Howard. Broke out after return to Suns in 2010, averaging a double-double (15.4 points, 10 rebounds) this past season.

Isaiah Thomas

Selected: 60th by Sacramento in 2011

The payoff: Last year’s Mr. Irrelevant was anything but, averaging 14.2 points and 5.2 assists for the Kings after the All-Star break to garner a second-team All-Rookie mention.

Sarunas Marciulionis

Selected: 127th overall (sixth round) by Golden State in 1987

The payoff: Became sixth man for high-scoring Warriors teams of the early 1990s, averaging a career high of 18.9 points in 1991-92.

Sam Mitchell

Selected: 54th overall (third round) by Houston in 1985

The payoff: Forward spent 10 of 13 NBA seasons with the Timberwolves, averaging 14.5 points and 6.3 rebounds in 1990-91.

Spud Webb

Selected: 87th overall (fourth round) by Detroit in 1985

The payoff: The 5-6 Lilliputian lasted 13 seasons, averaging a high of 16 points with Sacramento in 1991-92. Memorably won 1986 slam dunk contest while with the Hawks.

Kyle Korver

Selected: 51st overall by New Jersey in 2003

The payoff: Has long been one of league’s deadliest 3-point shooters, leading NBA in long balls made in 2004-05 and percentage in 2009-10.

Patty Mills

Selected: 55th overall by Portland in 2009

The payoff: Still to come, perhaps. Hooked on with Spurs as backup point guard late in 2011-12 and finished with 61 points in final two regular-season games.

Manu erupts for historically strong playoff game

Manu Ginobili single-handedly did all he could Monday to try pushing the Spurs to a victory in Game 5 against Oklahoma City.

It wasn’t enough.

Ginobili erupted for 34 points to mark his second-highest career scoring game in the Spurs’ 108-103 loss to the Thunder. It was topped only by his 39-point effort against Seattle on May 17, 2005.

“I just wanted to get on the court, do what I can do to help the team win and that’s it,” Ginobili said. “I knew with me starting, I had the possibility to play more minutes. So I knew I had to be ready for that.”

He did all that and much more as he added six rebounds, a team-high seven assists and two steals.

Here’s a look at Ginobili’s top playoff scoring games.

Date                Opponent                   Pts.                Result

5-17-05         Seattle                          39                W  103-90                     *

6-4-12           Oklahoma City            34                 L   103-108                   *

4-27-11         Memphis                      33                 W  110-103 (OT)         *

5-18-07        Phoenix                         33                W   114-106 

4-25-06       Sacramento                  32                 W   128-119 (OT)         *

4-30-05       @ Denver                      32                 W     86-78

5-8-08          New Orleans                31                  W   110-99                   *

5-25-08        L.A. Lakers                  30                  W  103-84       

5-19-06        @ Dallas                       30                  W     91-86                   *

* – Indicates games where Ginobili started

The Spurs push winning streak to 19 games

It’s been a long time since the Spurs lost.

Spurs Nation still remembers that 98-84 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on April 11.

In those 46 days since that last loss the Spurs have won 19 straight games, extending the streak with a 101-98 victory Sunday night over Oklahoma City. It’s included the last 10 regular season games and all nine playoff games.

Here’s the streak, broken down game by game.

1.     Apr. 12      Memphis              107-97

2.     Apr. 14      Phoenix                105-91

3.     Apr. 16      @ Golden State   120-99

4.     Apr.  17     @ L.A. Lakers     112-91

5.     Apr.  18      @ Sacramento    127-102

6.     Apr. 20        L.A. Lakers       121-97 

7.      Apr. 22       Cleveland           114-98

8.      Apr. 23       Portland             124-89

9.      Apr. 25       @ Phoenix         110-106

10.    Apr. 26       @ Golden State 107-101

11.    Apr. 29         Utah                  106-91     *

12.    May 2           Utah                  114-83      *

13.    May 5           @ Utah             102-90     *

14.    May 7            @ Utah               87-81     *

15.    May 15          L.A. Clippers    108-92    *

16.    May 17          L.A. Clippers     105-88    *

17.    May 19          @ L.A. Clippers   96-86    *

18.    May 20          @ L.A. Clippers 102-99   *

19.    May 27          Oklahoma City   101-98   *

* – Playoff game