Parker: Lockout won’t hasten Duncan’s retirement

It’s long been considered the apocalypse scenario in San Antonio: The NBA lockout devours the entire 2011-12 season, and then Tim Duncan retires.

Duncan’s contact is set to expire after this season. If the NBA labor impasse winds up cancelling the entire schedule, would the Spurs’ franchise icon simply retire instead of re-upping for another season in 2012-13, when he will be 36?

In May, had played his final game in a Spurs uniform. Speaking at a basketball clinic Saturday afternoon in San Antonio, Tony Parker — Duncan’s point guard for the past 10 seasons — echoed those doubts.

Asked if a wiped-out 2011-12 season would also mean the end of Duncan’s career, Parker shook his head.

“I don’t know. I don’t think so,” Parker said. “I see myself playing at least two or three more seasons with Timmy.”

Obviously, Parker is not Duncan’s agent, and isn’t qualified to speak authoritatively on the two-time MVP’s career plans. Still, Parker has been in touch with the reclusive Duncan often throughout the lockout, and plans to work out with him Monday in San Antonio.

If doomsday occurs, and the entire season is scuttled, it would be quite a blow to a Spurs team that still relies heavily on aging stars like Duncan (35) and Manu Ginobili (34), whose remaining seasons of elite productivity are numbered.

That seemed to be the , when he said the Spurs could “no longer say that we’re playing for a championship.” Parker has since backed off those remarks, and did again Saturday.

“We still have a great team,” Parker said. “We just have to stay positive. Right now, you’re thinking too far ahead.”

For the record, Parker believes talk about a scuttled season to be a moot point. Despite the doom and gloom shrouding labor talks, Parker said Saturday he believes the NBA will return at some point.

“I think we’ll have a season,” he said.

NBA lockout forces some players to look abroad

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Danny Green didn’t grow up with a green and white replica Union Olimpija jersey on his back. He did not have posters of Slovenian basketball greats such as Jure Zdovc and Rasho Nesterovic adorning the walls of his childhood bedroom in Long Island.

His hoops dreams have always been, and still are, as American as apple pie and monster trucks.

“I always wanted to play in the NBA,” Green said.

Green accomplished that goal in 2009-10, appearing in 20 games with the Cleveland Cavaliers. He played in 12, including four playoff games, last season with the Spurs.

Yet earlier this month, Green found himself with bag in hand at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, about to board a flight ultimately bound for Slovenia, his new, foreign basketball home for the time being.

While the NBA lockout limps along, threatening to cancel all or part of the 2011-12 season, Green found a soft landing in Ljubljana, Slovenia, playing for the same team — Union Olimpija — as 2011 Spurs draft pick Davis Bertrans.

In doing so, Green, a 24-year-old swingman, has joined the slowly swelling rolls of out-of-work NBA players who have signed on to study abroad, for promise of a modest payday, until the league’s owners and players association settle their differences.

“I didn’t want to jeopardize what I had here,” said Green, who secured an opt-out clause in his Slovenian contract that would allow him to return to the Spurs at lockout’s end. “At the same time, I just needed to play somewhere.”

A EUROPEAN INVASION?

So far, 30 players who ended last season on an NBA roster have agreed to open next season abroad, with that number growing weekly. So have eight members of the league’s ? June draft class, who have been unable to sign rookie contracts in the NBA for lack of a collective bargaining agreement.

Like Green, most have negotiated opt-out clauses that would free them to honor existing NBA contracts, or to sign a new one, once the labor impasse is over.

“Pretty soon, the whole NBA might be in Europe,” said Sacramento Kings forward DeMarcus Cousins, who says he’s examining overseas options as well.

That was the vision National Basketball Players Union chief Billy Hunter was hoping to sell earlier this summer, when he gave his membership blessing to pursue opportunities outside the NBA. It is also the message being sent by a powerful cadre of player agents, who can’t draw a paycheck unless their clients do.

As in any labor tug-of-war, leverage is everything.

“This is the way players make a living,” said agent Mark Bartelstein, who has funneled a handful of his clients overseas already. “The NBA has locked the players out. If a good opportunity comes along (overseas), at some point maybe they go that way, instead of waiting around on something they can’t control.”

Two months into the lockout, the U.S.-to-Europe pipeline isn’t gushing yet.

Though numerous All-Stars have publicly pondered earning their next paycheck overseas — among them the Lakers’ Kobe Bryant, Orlando’s Dwight Howard, Oklahoma City’s Kevin Durant, Miami’s Dwyane Wade and the Spurs’ Tony Parker — only one has actually signed his name on an international dotted line.

The foreign floodgates that were supposed to open after Nets guard Deron Williams signed with Turkish team Besiktas in July remain only slightly ajar. The recent decision by the Chinese Basketball Association to ban contracted NBA players from joining that league only served to shrink the foreign labor market.

So the basic profile of the Euro-bound NBA player — young, relatively low-paid, preferably a free agent — isn’t likely to cause league owners to blink at the bargaining table.

Aside from Williams, the most notable NBA players already to have signed overseas are Portland’s Nicolas Batum (France), Toronto’s Leandro Barbosa (Brazil) and Boston’s Nenad Krstic (Russia). Chris Quinn, the Spurs’ third-string point guard last season, accepted a contract in Russia with no opt-out clause.

“There are a lot of variables, a lot of question marks you have to weigh when that situation comes into play,” said Spurs guard Gary Neal, who split three seasons between Italy and Spain before joining the NBA last year. “It depends on the person, their financial status, their family situation. All those variables come into play when you’re talking about moving thousands and thousands of miles away to work.”

NOT FOR EVERYONE

With European training camps set to start at the end of September, and rosters filling up fast, time is running out for a mass exodus.

Money is one issue. According to research at InsideHoops.com, the highest-paid player in Europe last season was Theo Papaloukas, who earned $5.1 million playing for Olympiacos in Greece. That figure is slightly less than the NBA’s mid-level exception.

For the more highly paid NBA players, the cost of securing insurance to protect their American contracts against injury while abroad could prove prohibitive.

“Each situation is different,” Bartelstein said. “A player under a lucrative, long-term (NBA) contract — for that player it doesn’t make a lot of sense to go overseas.

“For players that are free agents, young players who want playing time or veterans who can come close to the amount of money they’re making now, it makes more sense.”

The differences between the NBA and overseas leagues are more than monetary. Americans playing abroad can often experience acute culture shock, especially if they’ve become accustomed to the creature comforts of the NBA.

Most every NBA player who has ever ventured overseas returns with a cautionary tale involving unruly crowds and security trouble, a concern underscored recently when the Georgetown University men’s team had an exhibition in China ended by full-scale brawl.

Milwaukee Bucks guard Brandon Jennings, who played a year in Italy straight out of high school in 2008, says he has no plans to go back, even in the midst of a work stoppage.

“It’s nothing like the NBA, of course,” Jennings said. “That’s not to say it’s bad. It’s still basketball. It’s just a different way of living and a different way of doing things.”

DREAMS ON HOLD

Even if the NBA-infused European leagues turn out to be more like Euro Disney — a low-rent facsimile of the original — players are hopeful the specter of an expanded job market might ramp up pressure on the owners during labor negotiations.

Packing up and heading overseas wasn’t a viable option for players during the league’s last lockout in 1999.

“The world’s a lot smaller than it was in 1999,” Bartelstein said. “There’s a lot less fear of the unknown. The level of basketball over there has skyrocketed. The whole dynamics of the world have changed.”

That’s what Green was counting on earlier this month, when he loaded what would fit into a pair of oversized suitcases, printed his boarding pass to Slovenia’s consonant-heavy capital city by way of Munich, and prepared to journey into unfamiliar territory.

It isn’t the career path Green would have chosen for himself. With his NBA dreams on hiatus, it’s the best one available to him.

“I’ve heard horror stories about playing overseas, and I’ve heard good stories,” said Green, who is under contract with the Spurs for next season if there is one.

“I don’t know what to expect.”

No matter how things go in Slovenia, Green’s goal remains the same: Get back on American soil, and an NBA court, as soon as possible.

CHIEF EXPORTS

A glance at some notable names among the 30 NBA players who have signed with teams overseas while the league tries to figure out its labor dispute:

*: denotes no opt-out clause
Source: Hoopshype.com

Missing Las Vegas

Were it not for the ongoing NBA lockout, this blog post would come with a Las Vegas dateline. The thought has no doubt crossed the mind of NBA players, prospects, rookies, executives, and all manner of followers and scribes as we stand in place this first week of July.

“Dude,” (and I’m giving NBA players, prospects, rookies, etc. the voice of  Jeff Spicoli here) ” we should be in Vegas right now.”

For the past six years, NBA Summer League has set up camp at UNLV’s Thomas Mack Center and the adjoining Cox Pavilion, giving NBA big wigs — and the accompanying mob of beat writers — an excuse to set up shop for a working vacation in Sin City.

This year, we’ve all crapped out.

Summer League was the first official casualty of the lockout, scuttled before the lockout even became official. For sportswriters who had come to count on the annual Vegas trip as an easy way to fill both newshole and expense reports, it’s a bummer.

For NBA prospects who might have parlayed a nice run in Vegas into a full-time job, it could be devastating. Just ask Gary Neal, whose five-game run in Las Vegas last season was the final straw in securing him a contract with the Spurs.

“Summer League definitely sealed the deal for me,” Neal told the Express-News back in April, when it became apparent the 2011 version might be in jeopardy. “With no summer league, who knows what would have happened?”

Certainly, the cancellation of  Summer League reduces the chances that the Spurs — or some other team — can ferret out this year’s version of Neal, a diamond-in-the-rough who went on to earn a solid spot in Gregg Popovich’s rotation and first-team All-Rookie honors.

“It’s an opportunity taken away from a guy trying to get into the league,” Neal said in April. “It can close a couple doors for some guys.”

Truth be told, the Spurs weren’t counting on mining another Neal out of the Las Vegas desert. That kind of jackpot doesn’t comes around all that often.

Still, Summer League had become an integral part of the Spurs’ player development program, for rookies and young returning veterans alike. There will be a void this offseason.

“It’s been huge for us, actually,” Popovich said in April, before the event was shuttered. “There have been a large number of people who have started their knowledge of what the NBA is all about in summer league. We really get a good feeling about players there.”

With that in mind, here are some Spurs players for whom the loss of summer league might be particularly harmful:

* Kawhi Leonard and Cory Joseph. Summer League is generally a rookie’s first real exposure to anything approaching an NBA game. The Spurs’ two first-round picks in the June draft won’t have that luxury. They’ll basically have to hit the ground running in training camp.

* James Anderson. In terms of NBA service time, Anderson isn’t a rookie, but might as well be. He missed his first crack at Summer League in 2010 with a strained hamstring, and that absence set him back once the real season began. After appearing in just 26 games as a rookie, Anderson could have used a nice run in Vegas this summer.

* Danny Green and Da’Sean Butler. Green made fans in the front office last season with his willingness to shoot the basketball. He could have used a solid Summer League to bolster those good feelings about him. Butler, meanwhile, is the wildest of wild cards, having not played in an organized game since blowing out his knee in the 2010 Final Four. In short, he’s the kind of guy for whom the Vegas stage was built.

* Gary Neal. On the surface, Neal 2.0 isn’t the type of player normally dispatched to Summer League. As a rookie, he established himself as a rotation staple. He’s not a kid looking for exposure. However, with George Hill now playing for Indiana, the Spurs are in need of someone to eat up minutes behind Tony Parker at point guard. Las Vegas would have been the perfect place for Neal to put his work-in-progress point guard skills into practice.