Marcus Denmon reportedly headed overseas

Marcus Denmon, how we hardly knew ye.

The Spurs’ second-round pick out of Missouri will play the upcoming season in France for ES Chalon-Sur-Saone, according to a report at Sports.fr that was dug up by earlier in the day.

The move doesn’t appear to be much more than a blip on the radar after Denmon, already a long shot to make the Spurs after lasting until the next-to-last pick of the recent draft, averaged just 5.4 points on 37-percent shooting in the Las Vegas Summer League.

Granted, it was only five games — but obviously not what the Spurs were looking for from an undersized guard billed as a shooter/scorer.

No word on how closely the Spurs will follow his progress. But, barring a Gary Neal-type ascent, it’s a pretty safe bet we won’t see him in black and silver any time soon — if ever.

Mavericks work OT to finish off Spurs

The Dallas Mavericks outscored the Spurs 6-0 in a two-minute overtime period to secure an 82-76 win Saturday in the final game for each club at the 2012 Summer League in Las Vegas.

Jae Crowder led the way with 21 points for Dallas (4-1), which squandered a 13-point second-half lead. Justin Dentmon added 16.

Cory Joseph had 18 points for the Spurs (2-3), who rested Kawhi Leonard, and James Anderson tacked on 13.

The teams traded buckets and the lead in the fourth quarter. Joseph found Dwight Buycks on a fast break with 34 seconds to play to tie it at 74. Micah Downs then connected with 12.3 left to give Dallas a 76-74 lead, but L.D. Williams nailed a pair of free throws with six seconds left to play make it 76-all. Crowder missed a jumper from the top of the key at the other end.

The Spurs outscored Dallas 23-8 in the third period, taking their first lead of the game at 49-48 on a Buycks jumper with 3:55 on the clock. The Spurs owned a 54-50 lead to start the fourth quarter.

Joseph scored eight of the Spurs’ 10 second-quarter points, but with little support from his teammates, Dallas extended its lead to as many as 13 and owned a 42-31 advantage heading into halftime.

Rockets reportedly land Lin as Knicks don’t match offer sheet

Jeremy Lin is headed to the Houston Rockets. ASSOCIATED PRESS

HOUSTON — Jeremy Lin is leaving New York and taking Linsanity to Houston.

The New York Knicks announced Tuesday night that they will not match the Houston Rockets’ three-year, $25 million offer for Lin, a restricted free agent.

New York officially had until 11:59 p.m. EDT to decide whether to re-sign Lin, who became an international phenomenon in the media glare of the Big Apple.

The Rockets made it tough for the Knicks to sign off on keeping him by backloading their offer sheet with a $15 million salary in the third season. If the Knicks agreed to that deal, they would have faced a hefty luxury tax in 2014-15 because of other big contracts on their books — between $30-40 million.

Lin now returns to Houston, where he spent about two weeks in December during training camp. The Rockets liked what they saw in the undrafted point guard but had to waive him because they had Kyle Lowry and Goran Dragic on the roster.

The New York Times initially reported the Knicks’ decision, citing an unidentified person briefed on the situation.

One sports consultant said the adjustment to the offer sheet was a stroke of genius by Rockets general manager Daryl Morey.

“The Rockets deserve a lot of credit for the way they’ve gone about this,” said Marc Ganis, president of Chicago-based SportsCorp. “It was extremely intelligent — with an assassin’s touch.”

The Knicks, though, gave Lin his first shot, picking him up after the Rockets waived him. He was briefly demoted to the development league, recalled, and finally got his chance when coach Mike D’Antoni put him in with the Knicks floundering at 8-15. Lin scored a career-high 25 points in a 99-92 win over New Jersey, and “Linsanity” was born.

Lin had slept on teammate Landry Fields’ couch the night before, refusing to get his own place as he headed into that week, knowing the Knicks would have to decide whether to cut him or guarantee his contract for the rest of the season.

But Lin proved more than just an overnight sensation — he had 28 and 23 points in his first two NBA starts.