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.

Joseph hits summer’s first rough patch

LAS VEGAS — His summer school teacher was absent Friday, but for Spurs point guard Cory Joseph, the education continued.

With Summer League coach Jacque Vaughn indisposed by a second interview with the Orlando Magic, Joseph was left to handle the first pressure situation of the week without his mentor’s guidance.

The results were what might be expected from a 20-year-old with all of 266 minutes of NBA experience.

Joseph committed three of his 10 turnovers in the final 1:24, and also missed two long 3-point tries, as Miami rallied for an 83-78 win at Cox Pavilion.

“I felt like I did a bad job down the stretch, keeping the guys calm and controlling the basketball,” Joseph said. “It’s part of the growing process.”

Joseph finished with nine points and six assists and missed 7 of 11 shots, turning in by far his worst outing in a Summer League that had otherwise been going well for him.

This is considered an important time for Joseph, the 29th pick in the 2011 draft after one season at Texas. The Spurs have until Oct. 31 to decide whether to pick up his contract option for the 2013-14 season.

Entering the game, Joseph was averaging 19.3 points and five assists while shooting 48.8 percent. Two nights earlier, he had opened eyes with a steady game against the L.A. Clippers’ Eric Bledsoe, an established NBA rotation player.

Spurs coaches have been impressed with Joseph’s poise and command of the team throughout the week, which had been solid until late in Friday’s game.

“It’s all about learning experience, game situations, clock management,” Vaughn, himself a former NBA point guard, said earlier in the week.

Friday’s lesson: How to bounce back from late-game missteps.

With the game in the balance, Joseph for the first time all week looked overwhelmed.

He admitted he lost command of the floor during the frantic final 2:37 that saw the Spurs go from four points ahead to five behind.

“They were double-teaming, and it forced me to give up the ball,” Joseph said. “They had us out of control, and we weren’t really running sets.”

It is an experience Joseph vows to learn from. After all, that is the point of Summer League.

Vaughn interviews again: With Vaughn meeting with Orlando’s ownership group elsewhere in Las Vegas, the reins to the Spurs’ Summer League team were handed to Taylor Jenkins, assistant coach of the Austin Toros.

It was a second interview for Vaughn, considered in some corners to be the front-runner to replace Stan Van Gundy with the Magic, and the first to include Magic CEO Alex Martins.

Vaughn’s availability for today’s finale against Dallas will largely be determined by the direction of Orlando’s coaching search.

Ajinca aims to be seen: When Slovenian prospect Erazem Lorbek chose to re-sign with his Spanish League club, it opened a window of opportunity — albeit ever so slight — for another big man to make the Spurs’ roster.

At 7-foot-2, and with 77 games of NBA work on his résumé, Alexis Ajinca is both the biggest and most experienced candidate to fill that void.

But his chance to make an impression might be running out. The 24-year-old Frenchman, a former first-round pick for Charlotte, had six points and six rebounds in 16 minutes Friday. It was by far his most active game of the week.

“So far, it’s been hard,” said Ajinca, who hasn’t played in the NBA since 2010-11 with Toronto. “I didn’t have any chance to prove what I’ve been working on. Tonight I had a lot of minutes to show what I’ve been working on overseas.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Don’t tell rookie Denmon the odds

LAS VEGAS — Even before he arrived at Summer League, Spurs guard Marcus Denmon knew what he was up against.

The team already has 14 players under contract for the 2012-13 season. The league maximum is 15.

A general studies major at Missouri, Denmon is a good enough mathematician to realize the odds of making the Spurs’ final roster are not in his favor.

“Every time you go out and compete, you’re playing for a job,” said Denmon, the lone member of the Spurs’ 2012 draft class, selected 59th overall.

A scoring star at Missouri, where his 17.7 points per game as a senior ranked second in the Big 12, Denmon hasn’t had much of a chance to make an impression so far in Las Vegas.

In three games, he has averaged 5.7 points and 2.3 assists while shooting 37.5 percent, including 1 of 6 from 3-point range.

Seeing time at his college position (shooting guard) and the position most 6-foot-3 players occupy in the NBA (point guard), Denmon’s focus has been on absorbing the reams of new information coming at him in waves.

It’s a learning process he hopes to continue when the Spurs resume Summer League play tonight against Miami.

“I’m a pretty quick learner,” Denmon said. “I think as you continue to play and learn under a system, your play will continue to elevate.”

Backing up Cory Joseph and James Anderson, two players the Spurs want to force-feed minutes while in Vegas, has limited both Denmon’s time and touches.

Spurs assistant Jacque Vaughn, coach of the summer league squad, has been impressed by Denmon’s willingness to fit into a smaller role than he had in college.

“He hasn’t tried to do too much, but has done enough,” Vaughn said. “Which is a lot harder for guys to understand, especially when you’re fighting for a job.

“The best part is he competes,” Vaughn added. “That’s what I want to see in an individual.”

Based on sheer numbers, the most likely destination for Denmon is overseas, or the Development League.

Holding fast to his NBA dream, however, Denmon refuses to be deterred by math.

“The Spurs drafted me because of the talent they feel I have,” Denmon said. “My job is to hold up my end and just come out and play hard.”

Switch for Green: For the first time in his career, Danny Green came to Summer League as a spectator, and not a player.

Still, even after signing a three-year, $12 million contract to return to the Spurs last week, Green could recall his days as a fledgling Cleveland Cavaliers summer-leaguer hoping to play well enough to impress the right people.

“I know what it’s like to be in these guys’ positions, trying to get a job and make a team,” Green said while watching the Spurs’ loss to the Los Angeles Clippers late Wednesday night. “It’s a lot more comfortable, a lot less stressful, being a spectator.”

Green called his contract, the first guaranteed deal of his NBA career, “a stress-reliever.”

Green is one of three starters the Spurs re-signed in hopes of keeping together a roster that advanced to the Western Conference finals before losing to Oklahoma City.

Power forward Tim Duncan and center Boris Diaw are the others. The Spurs also re-upped with backup point guard Patrick Mills.

“It shows the organization had a great deal of confidence in us,” Green said. “We had a really good team.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Spurs’ summer schedule

The Spurs’ summer league team has two games remaining in Las Vegas:

Today: vs. Heat, Cox Pavilion, 7 p.m.

Saturday: vs. Mavericks, Cox Pavilion, 5 p.m.