Buck Harvey: Ginobili’s back as a contrast to business

LONDON — Tony Parker shook hands with the Spaniards, then made one, final Olympic gesture. He smashed his goggles onto the floor.

A few hours later, near the same spot where pieces of plastic had skidded, Manu Ginobili made a gesture, too. He and his Argentine teammates sang with the crowd, pointing to those in the stands, hugging, almost dancing.

“Doing our thing,” Ginobili said afterward, smiling.

The two were a contrast, but their emotions were also a contrast to what they do in San Antonio. Parker never smashes anything as a Spur when he loses, and Ginobili never sings when he wins, yet they were here, all while playing for free.

And David Stern, who witnessed all of it in the London arena Wednesday, wants to take this away?

We think we know about rivalries in the United States, but Spurs-Mavs is preseason stuff compared to Wednesday’s quarterfinals. Then, there were three games with geographic pride.

Lithuania and Russia went at it 20 years to the day after they first met in a non-Soviet world. Next came France and Spain, with everything but World Metta Peace with an accent.

The highlight came after what has become the traditional groin punch. A Spanish reporter asked the French coach about the low blow, and the French coach wouldn’t answer because the question came from a Spanish reporter.

Parker chose to beat up himself. Knowing he’s missed his one Olympic chance to medal, he looked in shock afterward and said, “It’s on me.”

It’s on his coach, mostly. There was little direction from the bench when Spain went into a zone, and, besides, Parker was exhausted by then. The French coach played Parker all of the second half and 38 minutes in the game.

As Spain is to France, Argentina has been to Brazil. The play that changed the game: With just over three minutes left, Argentina’s lead cut to two points, Ginobili threw his body in front of a Brazilian driver and took a fast-break charge.

Afterward members of the press wanted to talk about the next game, because it will be against the Americans. Ginobili stopped them.

“First of all,” he said, “let me enjoy this.”

He deserved that much. He’s the only Spur left in the Olympics, and it’s a pattern. With Ginobili, Argentina has made it this far all three times.

The U.S. has been there waiting, in the same slot, all three times. Ginobili won once, was hurt in the other, and now comes the tiebreaker.

But, as he said, talking about the U.S. was for another day. On this one, the Argentines weren’t celebrating what comes next. They were celebrating success and sacrifice and friendship.

Ginobili said he feels similar when he’s won an NBA title. Still, there’s something about playing for your country, as well as with friends he’s known for a dozen years.

Huge is the word he uses, and it comes out “Huuuugge!”

So he hears Stern’s proposal — that Olympic basketball should go to an under-23 format — and he cringes.

Stern isn’t alone on this. Everyone from the Spurs to Mark Cuban question why they are lending out their stars and taking all the risk.

Basic business is to protect your assets, especially when your assets are prone to twist their ankles. Besides, instead of essentially working as yet another Olympic volunteer, imagine the revenue if the NBA took over and created its own World Cup?

Ginobili understands all of that, but this hasn’t been a business deal for him, either. He’s been staying in a dorm, and he’s seen his twins for one day out of the last 45. Yet he couldn’t have imagined his life without this.

“If I was 24 right now,” Ginobili told a reporter last week, “I’d be crying in that corner over there.”

Crying, smashing, dancing.

Who wants to see this end?

bharvey@express-news.net

Twitter: @Buck_SA

Spurs kinda, maybe interested in Oden

Citing an anonymous general manager offering an educated guess, Fox Sports reporter Sam Amico yesterday that the Spurs are one of three teams who could — could – be interested in signing draft bust Greg Oden. This was followed with a full-fledged chronicling how little interest Oden, the former No. 1 draft choice whose career has been totally derailed by injuries, is receiving on the free agent market.

And with good reason. Following in the unfortunate footsteps of Bill Walton and Sam Bowie, Oden’s career quickly unraveled after he was selected No. 1 overall — in front of three-time scoring champion Kevin Durant — by Portland in 2007. More accurately, it never really got started. Hampered by a variety of chronic knee and leg injuries, Oden played in just 82 games over five seasons for the Blazers — developing an in the process — before they waived him in March.

The truly sad part for basketball fans is that Oden, 24, showed flashes of greatness when he did play, registering a 23.1 Player Efficiency Rating in 21 games in 2009-10. (Anything in the 20s is considered All-Star caliber.)

Oden has expressed desire to return to the court. But when that will happen, if ever, remains to be seen. He recently pumped the brakes on a report that he was interested in signing with the Heat, telling the he needed at least another year off.

“I would love to play [in 2012-13], but I’m not going to rush anything,” he said. “I need to take a year off. What I told (player agent Mike Conley Sr., the father of former Ohio State teammate Mike Conley Jr.) was ‘Look, I want to get back with a team. I want to play. If there’s a chance that later on in the [NBA] year, if I feel good or if I’m healthy enough to play, I would love to play this year.’ That’s the conversation we had. I think some people kinda blew that up and took his words and kinda changed them around. I know I need to get healthy first before I do anything…It’s not like teams are out there telling people they want me, because they’re not right now.”

Oden went on to say he’d like to eventually be a middle school or high school gym teacher, calling it “the best job ever” because they get weekends off and get to to wear sweatpants to work. (You’d think multi-millionaire basketball star would have more perks, but apparently not. Nobody boos gym teachers when they pick mismatched teams in dodge ball.)

If Oden needs any inspiration, he need look no further than Walton, who played in just 167 games from 1979 to 1985 before enjoying one last hurrah with Boston in 1986, winning the Sixth Man of the Year award while helping the Celtics win the championship. And Bowie was at least solid after recovering from his injuries.

But even though there’s hope Oden can rekindle his career, it doesn’t look like there’s much chance he’ll be doing it this season — in San Antonio, or anywhere else.

Vegas likes Lakers, Heat for NBA title

Las Vegas has spoken.

The Los Angeles Lakers, augmented by the additions of Dwight Howard and Steve Nash, and the defending champion Miami Heat are the consensus favorites to lift the 2012-13 championship. The odds vary from book to book, but the — home to Sin City’s largest gambling operation — puts L.A.’s odds at 5-2 and Miami’s at 9-4, followed by Oklahoma City at 9-2.

The Spurs? Either a huge insult or a great value at a paltry 10-1. likes their chances even less, giving them 18-1 behind seven other teams. Take solace, Spurs fans. At least one had Dallas as a 15-1 underdog when it won the championship in 2010-11.