Red tape cleared, Joseph practices

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

HOUSTON — Cory Joseph was the last Spurs player to come off the floor at shootaround Saturday morning at the Toyota Center, bounding toward the bus with the same grin that had been perma-pressed to his face for much of the hourlong workout.

“This is what every kid waits for,” the rookie point guard said.

Some just wait longer than others.

Having missed the first eight days of his inaugural NBA training camp while dealing with immigration issues from his native Canada, Joseph was the happiest player at shoot-?around before the preseason opener against the Rockets.

At long last, Joseph was able to slip on some workout gear and experience his first professional practice.

Later that night, with all of 60 minutes of practice under his belt, Joseph logged 19:17 of playing time in the Spurs’ 101-87 loss, scoring four points on 2-for-7 shooting to go with two assists and no turnovers.

The 29th overall pick from Texas, Joseph had been in San Antonio since the start of camp while waiting to obtain a work visa. He was able to watch practices but unable to participate.

“You get anxious to get out there on the court and start playing,” said Joseph, 20.

Joseph filed his request for a work visa when the NBA lockout ended Dec. 9. It took more than a week to process.

He flew to Toronto on Thursday to pick up his visa, then met the Spurs in Houston on Friday afternoon, where he signed his rookie-scale contract.

“It was a long wait,” Joseph said. “I’m happy it’s over with and I’m back on the court again.”

REST ALREADY: For Tim Duncan and Tony Parker, the preseason debut will have to wait.

Spurs coach Gregg Popovich opted to leave two-thirds of the team’s “Big Three” in San Antonio for Saturday’s game.

Parker has been playing more or less nonstop since August, first with the French national team then with ASVEL Villeurbanne, and is already in game shape. He is also dealing with some back soreness.

Duncan, meanwhile, is 35 and more useful to the Spurs in the regular season than preseason, Popovich said.

“The way the schedule is going to be, I don’t see any reason to be running Timmy too much in the preseason,” Popovich said.

MOVING ON: Rockets forward Luis Scola claims to be over the trade-that-wasn’t that would have sent him and guard Kevin Martin to New Orleans.

The pair remained in Houston after the NBA scuttled the original deal that would have sent Hornets point guard Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Lakers.

“There’s nothing you can do about it,” Scola said after Saturday morning’s shootaround. “I might as well forget about it and start to play.”

Spurs guard Manu Ginobili said he had little doubt his friend and teammate on the Argentine national team will have no trouble putting hard feelings behind him.

Report: Adelman hired as new coach of T’wolves

Former Houston coach Rick Adelman has been hired as the new coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves.

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported Monday that two league sources have reported that , who was fired after last  season.

Adelman, 65, directed the Rockets to winning records each of his four seasons. His last two teams failed to make the playoffs, leading to his contract not be renewed after the 2010-11 season.

During a 20-season coaching history for four NBA teams, Adelman directed his teams to a 945-616 record. He earlier coached Portland, Golden State and Sacramento, leading the Trail Blazers to the NBA Finals in 1990 and 1992.

Adelman is a veteran coaching with a deep history around the league. He inherits a growing young team led by forwards Kevin Love and Michael Beasley. But working with rookie point guard Ricky Rubio could test his patience.

Takes from blog brothers: Manu looks strong in Super 4 Tournament

Manu Ginobili looked in mid-season form over the weekend in his early work for his Argentina national team.

Ginobili erupted for 22 points in 20 minutes of action to help Argentina to a 106-53 victory over Venezuela to win the Super 4 Tournament as the teams prepared for the FIBA Tournament of the Americas later this month.

Jeff Garcia of Project Spurs.com has a few snippets of the .  It’s a typical Ginobili performance as he dives and hustles around the court looking to make plays. In the process he shows little lingering rust from his injury-marred end of the 2011 season.

Chilai of Pounding the Rock.com was at Orfeo Stadium to watch the Argentina team and about the effort by Ginobili, Fabricio Oberto and their teammates. Watch for his “Manu alerts.”

Garcia also has an update from the performance of first-round draft pick Cory Joseph with the Canadian national team. The rookie point guard in  Canada’s 74-67 triumph over Belgium in the Jack Donohoe International Classic.  

Here are some other Spurs-related stories from across the blogosphere.

  • Andrew McNeill of 48 Minutes of Hell.com wonders if the Spurs might have arranged for Danny Green to play for the Slovenian team Union Olimpija to .
  • ESPN.com’s Andy Katz reflects on Kawhi Leonard’s on the West  Coast for San Diego State.
  • Robby Lim of Spurs World.com provide a on Nov. 5, 2008.   
  • Howard Herman of the Berkshire (Mass.) Eagle reflects on .
  • Jerry DiPaola of the Pittsburgh Review has a profile of Pitt wide receiver Cameron Saddler, a 5-foot-7 junior .
  • The Sacramento Bee’s Ailene Voisin believes Vlade Divac belongs in the Naismith Hall of Fame because of the way he like Ginobili.
  • The Boston Globe’s Gary Washburn describes into the Hall of Fame.
  • The San Diego Union-Tribune’s Tim Sullivan describes how Leonard’s early departure from San Diego State for the school’s Academic Progress Rate score.
  • Gilmore calls Hubie Brown the during his pro career, the Jacksonville Times-Union’s Gene Frenette reports.   
  • In case you missed it, here’s a story that Express-News colleague Heath Hamilton wrote about how athletes of today like Parkerthan those of previous generations.
  • Eric Johnson of the Bleacher Report.com predicts the Spurs – once next season finally begins.