Report: Raptors to target Lindsey for GM opening

For the third time in as many summers, Dennis Lindsey’s name has come up in connection with another team’s general manager search.

, the Toronto Raptors are preparing to target Lindsey, who just finished his fourth season as the Spurs’ assistant GM, as a candidats in their front-office hunt.

Bryan Colangelo currently holds dual titles of president and GM in Toronto but, according to the report, is willing to surrender GM duties to the right candidate.

Lindsey is believed to be on that list, along with former New Orleans general manager Jeff Bower and Philadelphia GM Ed Stefanski.

According to the Yahoo! report, Toronto has not scheduled interviews with any candidates, and might not commence with a formal search until next month.

Lindsey has been a hot commodity almost since joining the Spurs prior to the 2007-08 season. In the past two summers, he turned down GM positions in Minnesota and Phoenix.

Are all of those NBA teams really losing all that money?

One of the key tenets in David Stern’s woeful economic plight for NBA owners is the oft-repeated nugget that 22 of the 30 teams in the NBA are losing money with total losses totaling about $370 million per year.

Obviously, if 73.3 percent of  the league’s franchises are losing money the league’s economic model really is broken.

But several revisionist blog posts have disputeds how widespread those losses really are.

ESPN.com’s Larry Coon provides an interesting primer on those operating losses that should be required reading for any NBA fan as the lockout begins.

NBA Players Association president Billy Hunter told ESPN.com

The players association contends that a significant portion of the NBA’s team losses are merely an accounting artifact, and doesn’t reflect an actual operating loss. ”There might not be any losses at all. It depends on what accounting procedure is used,” Hunter said. “If you decide you don’t count interest and depreciation, you already lop off 250 [million] of the 370 million dollars.”

Proving that point, Tommy Craggs of Deadspin analyzed the New Jersey Nets’ financial figures from 2003-06. Obviously, these aren’t the most up-to-date financial figures available, but they are representative of an NBA franchise.

Here’s what Craggs had to say about , which include a $27.6 million loss in 2004.

“That’s not a real loss. That’s house money. The Nets didn’t have to write any checks for $25 million. What that $25 million represents is the amount by which Nets owners reduced their tax obligation under something called a roster depreciation allowance, or RDA.

“Bear with me now. The RDA dates back to 1959, and was maybe Bill Veeck’s biggest hustle in a long lifetime of hustles. Veeck argued to the IRS that professional athletes, once they’ve been paid for, “waste away” like livestock. Therefore a sports team’s roster, like a farmer’s cattle or an office copy machine or a new Volvo, is a depreciable asset….

“If we’re trying to arrive at some idea of how much money the Nets really made in 2004, we’ll need to do a little crude math. Knock out the $25.1 million RDA — a paper loss, remember — and add the $9.1 million in tax savings. Suddenly, that $27.6 million loss becomes a $6.6 million profit.”

There are obviously some franchises that are struggling to meet payrolls. But these stories are indicative that the NBA’s financial plight not me as dire as the league wants us to believe heading into the lockout.

Perhaps the most telling comment comes from Rodney Fort, a sports economist employed at the University of Michigan.

“The bottom line about the bottom line,” Fort tells Deadspin, “is that even if it looks like they’re losing money, it doesn’t mean they’re losing money.”

Buck Harvey: The way Leonard can beat a lockout

The founder and president of Impact Basketball began his business with low overhead.

“It used to be me and the ball,” Joe Abunassar said.

Now his one-stop training school has dozens of employees operating in four states. So he’s busier. But Abunassar still works the gym, and he did this spring. Then, he oversaw the pre-draft training of Kawhi Leonard “every day” for two months.

Abunassar thinks Leonard showed both improvement and promise. Then again, Abunassar should say that; Leonard is a client, after all.

But Abunassar says something else, and this fits into what the Spurs’ intel told them before the draft.

It’s a quality that means more this season than any other.

Leonard has been in San Antonio this week getting acquainted and getting in some work. But when the lockout begins Friday, as most expect it will, Leonard will have to find someplace else to go.

He won’t be able to talk to Spurs coaches. He won’t have access to the Spurs’ practice facility. He won’t play in a mini-camp or a summer league. He also might miss his first NBA training camp and even the first three or four months of his rookie season.

Congratulations on being a first-round draft pick — and see you when we see you.

Most NBA players will create a workout regimen in the vacuum, and many will have the best intentions. But some will do more, because that’s who they are, and Abunassar has seen this firsthand.

He was once a student manager for Bob Knight at Indiana, and he worked his way to an assistant’s position at the University of Wyoming in the mid-1990s. Then, about the time he failed to sign a Denver schoolboy named Chauncey Billups, he realized he liked recruiting less than player development.

Among his first clients, coincidentally, was Billups. Through that relationship he built others; Kevin Garnett has worked with him before, as have Matt Bonner and James Anderson.

Prepping players for the draft is a major part of his business. Last year, 17 of his clients were drafted, and this year 12. One of them, paying the $1,000 weekly fee like everyone else, was Leonard.

“I’ve had a lot of top-10 picks in my day,” Abunassar told a newspaper before the draft, “and I’d be really surprised if he’s not one.”

So when Leonard fell to No. 15?

“I still think he is a top-10 talent,” Abunassar said over the telephone this week.

Two hours before the draft, reflective of their partnership, Abunassar told Leonard not too worry too much about how high he was drafted. “It’s about what comes next,” he told him.

Abunassar sees a lot coming, and he thinks Leonard’s jumpshot is a simple fix. He says the ball rotation and footwork is fine. In drills, he tried to shorten his stroke and get the basketball on his fingertips and out of his huge hands.

It’s likely something the Spurs tweaked this week, too. Abunassar thinks it’s easily correctable when Leonard returns to work with him in a few weeks.

“It’s just a repetition thing,” Abunassar said.

But repetition isn’t always fun. Leonard turned 20 on Wednesday. How many guys that age, finally free of school and with some money, really want to spend summer sweating in a gym?

Leonard appears to be one. “If his workout was scheduled for 9 a.m.,” Abunassar said, “then he was in at 7:45 a.m.”

Sometimes he stayed until 11:30 p.m. Sometimes they had to tell him he had to leave.

“Kawhi is one of the most focused and serious,” Abunassar said, “I’ve ever had.”

It’s a profile the Spurs always target. But maybe it’s never been more important now.

As the lockout begins.

bharvey@express-news.net