No Duncan, No Parker: Yup, it’s preseason

For Spurs players who spent the better part of six months locked out by the NBA, not to mention fans suffering through basketball withdrawal, tonight’s preseason opener in Houston is sure to feel like more than a run-of-the-mill exhibition.

For coach Gregg Popovich, however, it’s just another preseason game. So much so that Tim Duncan and Tony Parker aren’t even on the trip.

The Spurs’ charter plane left San Antonio on Friday afternoon leaving the All-Star twosome behind because, hey, it’s preseason and Popovich has other plans.

“It will be a practice, where we work on things we want to get across and try to get some guys minutes,” Popovich said. “There are a couple of evaluation things to do, but hopefully another step in getting them ready to play a game.”

Duncan and Parker, the two longest-tenured members of the Spurs’ roster, apparently don’t require much evaluation. We can also assume that Manu Ginobili will play Saturday, but only while encased in bubble wrap.

One player who could see some action with Parker back home is rookie Cory Joseph.

The former Texas standout, selected 29th in the June draft, has missed every training camp practice so far while clearing up immigration red tape in his native Canada.

Work visa in hand, Joseph joined the team in Houston on Friday afternoon and is expected to be uniform Saturday night at the Toyota Center.

Leonard’s late shot caps Spurs preseason

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard had missed all four of his field-goal attempts Wednesday, struggling through the kind of night all rookies are bound to endure — especially those not known for shooting the ball in the first place.

It was the kind of night that could rob a 20-year-old of his confidence, that could result in two steps back in a development curve that needs to take giant leaps forward.

The ball swung to Leonard on the wing in the waning moments against Houston, and he was tasked with the most important job any rookie could ever face in a preseason game.

The avoidance of overtime.

Leonard’s fifth field-goal try of the game — a 20-footer over Rockets guard Jeremy Lin — found the bottom of the net with 5.3 seconds left, lifting the Spurs to a 97-95 victory at the ATT Center.

“I loved seeing that last shot go down, so that nobody would have overtime,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “It made two teams really happy the game was over.”

On a night the Spurs’ Big Three was reunited for the first time in a regulation game since the first round of April’s playoffs, with at least two of them approaching All-Star levels, the game eventually came down to an untested rookie known more for his defense than offense.

For Leonard, it was just another day on the job.

“I took the shot, and I made it,” he said.

In a game that served as the Spurs’ preseason home opener and exhibition finale, Popovich dispatched his usual starting five in hopes of ? reawakening some chemistry before the regular season tips off on Monday night.

Making their preseason debuts, Tim Duncan scored 19 points on 7-of-10 shooting and Tony Parker added 15 points and five assists. Richard Jefferson hit all three of his 3-pointers en route to nine points, while DeJuan Blair made all three of his field goals and scored eight.

Only Manu Ginobili, who admits he is not quite in basketball shape, struggled, going 1 of 8 from the field.

One sequence, early in the first quarter, offered a glimpse of a team ready for games that count. Ginobili passed to Duncan at the top of the key, who fired a quick no-look pass low to Blair, who immediately shuttled the ball to Jefferson in the corner for an open 3.

“The first five, six minutes were great,” Ginobili said.

Eventually, the game came down — as most preseason games do — to a collection of rookies and role players trying too hard to impress their respective coaches.

The Spurs led by 10 after Danny Green’s four-point play with 3:34 to go, but saw that lead vanish using a lineup devoid of a single established NBA player.

Lin’s acrobatic drive with 28.8 seconds left knotted the game at 95, setting the stage for Leonard to try and break his night-long oh-fer.

Fellow rookie Cory Joseph skipped a pass to Leonard near the left arc. With the shot clock winding down and Lin in his face, Leonard had no choice but to shoot.

By finishing 1 for 5, Leonard kept the Spurs out of OT.

For Leonard, it was just the second successful field goal of the preseason. In the daily evolution of the Spurs’ highest-drafted rookie since Duncan, however, it could mean so much more.

Almost a year ago to the date, as a freshman at Texas, Joseph had a similar moment against North Carolina, hitting a jumper to beat the Tar Heels. He knows better than most the power of a game-winner.

“That can build anybody’s confidence,” Joseph said.

To Ginobili, it recalled a night in Mexico City two Octobers ago, when another rookie named Gary Neal buried a jumper to win a preseason game against the Clippers.

“He waited for his moment,” Ginobili said of Leonard.

“For a rookie, a game-winner is important, even if it’s the preseason.”

Neal earned the trust of his teammates that night. Perhaps Leonard is now free to do the same.

Stern speaks out on CP3 trade

David Stern was careful to avoid the national radio sports talk shows this morning.

But Stern finally has spoken on his controversial decision that nullified the three-way trade that would have moved Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Lakers.

Here’s what Stern had to say, courtesy of a statement released by the NBA.

“Since the NBA purchased the New Orleans Hornets, final responsibility for significant management decisions lies with the Commissioner’s Office in consultation with team chairman Jac Sperling. All decisions are made on the basis of what is in the best interests of the Hornets. In the case of the trade proposal that was made to the Hornets for Chris Paul, we decided, free from the influence of other NBA owners, that the team was better served with Chris in a Hornets uniform than by the outcome of the terms of that trade.”

But Dallas owner Mark Cuban said he was against the trade  for “basketball reasons.”

“The message is we went through this lockout for a reason,” Cuban said Friday on ESPN Dallas 103.3. “Again, I’m not speaking for Stern. He’s not telling me his thought process. I’m just telling you my perspective, having gone through all this. There’s a reason that we went through this lockout, and one of the reasons is to give small-market teams the ability to keep their stars and the ability to compete.”

Cuban said he was against the trade because it was with the lockout.

“We just had a lockout, and one of the goals of the lockout was to say that small-market teams now have a chance to keep their players, and the rules were designed to give them that opportunity,” Cuban said. “So to all of a sudden have a league-owned team trade their best player, particularly after having gone out and sold a ton of tickets in that market, that’s not the kind of signal you want to send.

“Then, part two of that is all the rules of what you can and can’t do under the new CBA weren’t finalized until yesterday, so how do you really make a strategic decision until you know all the rules?”