Standing pat is just fine with Popovich

LAS VEGAS — To hear Spurs coach Gregg Popovich tell it, negotiating a new contract with franchise big man Tim Duncan this summer was a lot like negotiating with the mob.

“He was just as big a pain in the neck as he was when he almost went to Orlando,” Popovich joked, referring to Duncan’s free-agent flirtation with the Magic in 2000.

“He toyed with me. He lied to me. He intimidated me. He threatened me. In the end, it worked out. But I had to take much abuse to get it done.”

Having last week secured Duncan’s autograph on a three-year deal believed to be worth $39 million — one that could carry the 36-year-old future Hall of Famer to the conclusion of his career — the Spurs’ front office commenced on an offseason signing spree that went quickly, quietly and by design produced little in the way of roster turnover.

With guard Danny Green (three years, $12 million), center Boris Diaw (two years, $9.2 million) and backup point guard Patty Mills back in the fold, the team the Spurs trot out on opening day 2012 will look remarkably like the one last seen slumping off the court at Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals.

“We had a very good year, went a pretty long ways,” Popovich said earlier this week from NBA Summer League in Las Vegas. “We would have liked to have gone further, but we want to keep that group together.”

Since the start of free agency July 1, the Los Angeles Lakers added a two-time MVP in Steve Nash, Dallas almost completely revamped around Dirk Nowitzki, Phoenix remade itself for the post-Nash era, and Houston cashed out Luis Scola for a dose of Jeremy Lin-sanity.

In the face of such a shifting landscape in the Western Conference, the Spurs opted to make like the Grand Canyon and hardly change at all.

The only new addition so far is Nando de Colo, a 25-year-old French guard drafted 53rd overall in 2009, who Popovich likens to “a poor-man’s Danny Ainge.”

“He’s a good basketball player, fits in well with the group, makes good decisions, finishes on the break,” Popovich said. “He’s going to be fun to watch.”

For the 16th consecutive season, the Spurs will build around Duncan, who enjoyed a resurgent campaign (15.4 points, nine rebounds in 28.2 minutes per game) in 2011-12.

Once Duncan’s new deal sapped any shot the Spurs had at salary cap room, doubling down on a roster that won 50 of 66 games last season and came within two wins of the NBA Finals became the only sensible play for Popovich and general manager R.C. Buford.

In a turn of events that should please team chairman Peter Holt, the Spurs were able to do it without crossing the luxury-tax line of $70.307 million.

“Lots of times you don’t have a choice (but to stand pat), because of contracts or numbers or whatever,” Popovich said. “This year, we were able to do everything and stay under the tax at the same time. That was a goal, to stay under the tax. We weren’t sure we were going to be able to do it.”

Between now and the start of training camp in October, Popovich and Buford will keep an eye on the waiver wire for opportunities to upgrade the roster.

The bulk of the front office’s summertime work, however, is already done.

The Spurs already have 14 players under contract for next season, one less than the league maximum, though they could create an extra space if needed by waiving DeJuan Blair’s non-guaranteed $1.504 million deal.

Popovich acknowledges the challenge of running down the young and hungry Oklahoma City Thunder — much less the NBA champion Miami Heat — with a roster nearly identical to the one that could not get it done last season.

He also sees room for internal improvement, particularly in Green, second-year small forward Kawhi Leonard and Diaw, who did not join the team until March.

“I think we can get better,” Popovich said. “We’re going to stick with the group and see how it goes.”

No Leonard, no win: Leonard’s summer league is over.

Having apparently seen enough in two dominant games from their second-year small forward, the Spurs allowed Leonard to leave Las Vegas for good Wednesday.

Leonard will not play in either of the Spurs’ remaining two games, ending his summer stint sporting a healthy 25-point per game scoring average.

Without their leading scorer, the Spurs lost 86-80 to the Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday night. Cory Joseph continued a strong summer league with 22 points and six assists.

jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

Spurs’ summer schedule

The Spurs’ Summer League team has two games remaining in Las Vegas:

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

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

Scola excited about chance with Phoenix

Luis Scola played five years for the Houston Rockets. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Luis Scola wasn’t particularly surprised when the Houston Rockets designated him as their amnesty player. He already knew they were going to go in a different direction.

What did catch him off-guard was the team that had the winning bid for his services.

While numerous teams were interested in Scola, the Phoenix Suns came from seemingly nowhere and snatched up the rugged forward, adding to their increasingly crowded frontcourt.

“I kind of knew I was going to be playing somewhere else,” Scola said Tuesday. “And when I found out it was Phoenix, I was a little surprised because there was a lot of talking with a lot of other teams that were supposedly going to bid. I didn’t really expect anything from Phoenix, and when they called me, I was a little bit surprised.”

Scola originally was drafted by the Spurs, who later traded his rights to the Rockets. He was a steady player in five seasons in Houston, providing solid scoring, good rebounding and plenty of scrappiness. The 6-foot-9 forward averaged 15.5 points and 6.4 rebounds last season, but Houston used its amnesty clause to clear salary cap space.

Wizards waive Blatche: Washington waived Andray Blatche, designating him as the team’s amnesty player.

The move enables the Wizards to remove the $23 million remaining on Blatche’s contract from their salary cap after he failed to live up to expectations and dealt with a series of off-court incidents.

Nets re-sign Humphries: Brooklyn continued its offseason barrage of signings, agreeing to a new, two-year deal with power forward Kris Humphries.

Humphries, 27, averaged 13.8 points and 11.0 rebounds for the team in New Jersey last season.

For Spurs’ Joseph, Summer League is growing season

By Jeff McDonald

LAS VEGAS — In the span of four hours this past week, the Spurs announced the return of one backup point guard (Patrick Mills) and the signing of another (Nando de Colo).

With two international roadblocks suddenly in his path to playing time, it would have been easy for Cory Joseph to read the writing on the wall as a bus ticket back to Austin and the Development League.

Instead, Joseph looks at his plummeting place on the Spurs’ depth chart as an opportunity.

“As a player, you love competition,” said Joseph, a first-round pick in 2011 after one college season at Texas. “It’s going to be a battle every day in practice. We’re going to raise each other’s play.”

For the next seven days in Las Vegas, Joseph is presented with a rare solo chance he dare not squander.

When the Spurs open a five-game slate at NBA Summer League, de Colo will be overseas, preparing for Olympic duty as Tony Parker’s backup on the French national team. Mills will be gearing up for London as well, as a member of the Australian team.

Meanwhile in Las Vegas, the Spurs will put the ball in the hands of a 20-year-old Canadian and offer him a shot to show he can pass for an NBA point guard.

The clock is ticking. The Spurs have until Oct. 31 to decide whether to pick up Joseph’s $1.12 million contract for 2013-14 or cut him loose as an unrestricted free agent next summer.

“I’m just going to do what got me here,” said Joseph, who spent most of his rookie year with the D-League champion Austin Toros. “Just play and compete, and let the rest handle itself.”

Summers are vital for the development of young players, and especially point guards, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich says.

He recalls the strides made by former Spur George Hill — now a member of the Indiana Pacers — between his first and second pro seasons.

“When he first came in, he couldn’t even spell pick-and-roll,” Popovich said. “He didn’t know what was going on, and the summer program was huge for bringing him along. I think it will be the same for Cory.”

That growth was stolen from Joseph last season by the NBA lockout, cancelling the summer league as well as other team-run minicamps young players traditionally use as springboards to improvement.

Once the shortened season began in December, Joseph and fellow rookie Kawhi Leonard were essentially tossed into the NBA ocean and told to swim.

Deemed a long-term project from the day two Junes ago that he was drafted 29th overall, Joseph appeared in 29 games for the Spurs as a rookie, much of it mop-up duty, and started one.

He averaged two points and shot a woeful 31.4 percent from the field but showed promise as a defender. The Spurs are hopeful that under the tutelage of Summer League coach Jacque Vaughn, a former NBA point guard himself, Joseph might begin to absorb the intricacies of the pick-and-roll.

Overcoming a lack of summer development, Leonard turned in an All-Rookie campaign, emerging as the Spurs’ starting small forward.

Meanwhile, Joseph was primarily in Austin and would have spent more time in the state capital had backup point T.J. Ford not been lost for the season in early January.

The Austin experience, Joseph admits, was good for him.

“I just tried to control the team and learn as a point guard to just be a leader,” he said. “There’s no experience like game experience.”

This week in Las Vegas, Joseph is sure to get that.

The Spurs have high hopes for him in Summer League, as well as for the other, more high-profile member of last year’s rookie class.

“I’d like to see Cory play like Steve Nash; I’d like to see Kawhi play like Michael Jordan,” general manager R.C. Buford said. “But we’ll take some intermittent progress. Just them playing to their strengths and seeing where they are.”

It is a bar Joseph believes he can clear, mostly because he has no other choice.

His Spurs career is on the clock. There are other point guards on the way, decisions for management to make — and no time to lose.

“I’ve always been a workhorse,” Joseph said. “Things might not always go your way, I know that. But you’ve just got to stick with it, and that’s what I’m going to always do.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

SPURS SUMMER LEAGUE SCHEDULE

The Spurs’ Summer League team will play five games in ?Las Vegas in seven days.

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

Tuesday: vs. Lakers, Thomas Mack, 5:30 p.m.

Wednesday: vs. Clippers, Cox Pavilion, 9 p.m.

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

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

SPURS SUMMER LEAGUE ROSTER
No. Player Pos. Ht. Wt. DOB From Yrs.
42 Alexis Ajinca C 7-2 248 5/6/88 France 4th
25 James Anderson G 6-6 215 3/25/89 Oklahoma State 3rd
10 Dwight Buycks G 6-3 190 6/6/89 Marquette 1st
34 Derrick Byars G/F 6-7 220 4/25/84 Vanderbilt 2nd
23 Eric Dawson F 6-9 250 7/7/84 Midwestern State 2nd
1 Marcus Denmon G 6-3 185 3/20/90 Missouri 1st
17 Moses Ehambe G/F 6-6 215 5/22/86 Oral Roberts 1st
43 Darius Foster G 6-3 210 1/12/88 Wilberforce 1st
11 JaMychal Green F 6-8 228 6/21/90 Alabama 1st
7 Cedric Jackson G 6-3 190 3/5/86 Cleveland State 2nd
5 Cory Joseph G 6-3 190 8/20/91 Texas 2nd
2 Kawhi Leonard F 6-7 225 6/29/91 San Diego State 2nd
14 Kalin Lucas G 6-1 195 5/24/89 Michigan State 1st
19 Ryan Richards F 6-11 230 4/21/91 England 1st
30 Alexis Wangmene F/C 6-7 241 3/1/89 Texas 1st
27 Tyler Wilkerson F 6-8 240 7/25/88 Marshall 1st
24 L.D. Williams G 6-4 210 5/8/88 Wake Forest 1st
40 Luke Zeller F/C 6-11 245 4/7/87 Notre Dame 1st
Head coach: Jacque Vaughn
Assistant coaches: Bret Brielmaier, Will Hardy, Taylor Jenkins, Alex Lloyd, Christos Marmarinos, Lele Molin, Darko Rajakovic
Athletic trainer: Dice Yamaguchi