ESPN.com predicts challenging future for Spurs

The state of Texas has accounted for seven NBA titles since 1994, with the Spurs claiming four, Houston two and Dallas notching the most recent championship. 

The “Texas Triangle” has traditional been a source of power teams. It might not be quite as rosy in the future.

Chris Palmer of ESPN.com has an interesting breakdown of all three teams in a recent Insider post. Of them, San Antonio might be facing the biggest test to return to elite status.

Here’s what Palmer had to say about the Spurs’ current outlook:

The Spurs’ 61-win regular season had head coach Gregg Popovich’s name in the Coach of the Year conversation all season long. As surprising as their Western Conference-best win total was, the manner in which they were bounced from the playoffs was even more stunning and exposed serious flaws in the Spurs’ game plan. They simply matched up poorly with an upstart Memphis Grizzlies team that became just the second No. 8 seed to topple a No. 1 seed since the NBA expanded the first round to best-of-seven. While age and injuries are probably their biggest concerns, Tim Duncan (34 years old), Manu Ginobili (33) and Tony Parker (28) missed only a combined 12 games last season. But there are a handful of other players on the roster over 30 who simply can’t match the speed or intensity of young teams such as the Grizzlies and Thunder. The Spurs were still highly effective on defense last season, but there’s no getting around the fact that this bunch is nearing the end of its run and is about to enter a major rebuilding phase.”

Here’s what Palmer had to say about the Spurs’ leadership with R.C. Buford and Popovich running the franchise.

“You don’t win four championships without an unseen mastermind behind the scenes. R.C. Buford, arguably the best GM in the NBA, has been the architect of the past three Spurs title runs and one of the most successful executives in American pro sports. The master of the Euro draft-and-stash, he convinced Popovich to go for Parker (three All-Star appearances, 2007 Finals MVP), had a hand in snagging Ginobili 57th overall in 1999 and has seen his gamble on DeJuan Blair pay off. ”He’s proved he can build and maintain a dynasty. Now he’s got to prove he can rebuild one. Buford won’t likely have the good fortune of rebuilding around an all-time great at his position as the Spurs did in 1997, when Duncan became the cornerstone of their brilliant 15-year run. Those rebuilding efforts also might include finding a new coach, as it’s hard to imagine Popovich, owner of four championship rings, slogging through the basement of the Southwest Division while Buford mines distant lands for the next Ginobili.

 ”But even dicier for Buford is what to do with soon-to-be free agent Duncan. Buford must balance the needs of the team with showing the utmost respect for a Spurs legend who made the success of the past 15 years possible.”

And here’s are Palmer’s comments on the team’s key needs heading into the upcoming season.

“Of all the Texas teams, the Spurs have the most work to do at the bargaining table since their key needs likely won’t come through the draft lottery. San Antonio needs an injection of youth, and needs it fast. The Spurs are in desperate need of athletes who can keep up with the speedy teams and sustain an up-tempo brand of basketball over long stretches of minutes. This could be the year the Spurs really start acting their age. During the playoffs, the Spurs simply couldn’t keep up with the spry legs and speed of the Grizzlies. Teams saw that and will surely try to exploit it. What was an ugly exit from the postseason could turn into an ugly demise of San Antonio’s “Big Three.”

It’s a dire prognosis for a team that has made the playoffs every year during Duncan’s tenure with the team and claimed  four NBA titles.

What about it Spurs Nation? Do you think the upcoming future appears to be as bleak as Palmer predicts?

And if not, why do you have faith the Spurs still have another title challenge left  in them?

 

 

 

Spurs memory No. 30: Torrid San Diego shooting spoils Spurs’ first game

Late San Diego blitz ruins Spurs’ opening ABA game

Date: Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973
Place: The Arena, San Antonio
Score: San Diego Conquistadors 121, San Antonio Spurs 106.

The Spurs’ team history began with a whimper with the kind of debut that was anything but memorable.

San Diego erupted for 48 points in the final quarter, storming back from a deficit at the start of the fourth quarter to claim a 121-106 victory over the Spurs in the team’s first regular-season ABA game. San Antonio blew a 77-73 lead coming into the final quarter.

San Antonio coach Tom Nissalke’s team struggled defensively as Stew Johnson torched them for five 3-pointers and Bo Lamar added two more in the Conquistadors’ victory.

San Diego coach Wilt Chamberlain had hoped to be playing for the Conquistadors after jumping from the Los Angeles Lakers. Instead, he watched from the bench in his first regular-season game. San Diego assistant Stan Albeck was involved in directing the game for the Conquistadors, foreshadowing his association with the Spurs later in the team’s history.   .

Johnson finished with 38 points and Lamar added 30 to pace San Diego. Rich Jones led the Spurs with 25 points and Joe Hamilton tallied 20 points and a game-high 10 assists.

The game nearly never came off as a strike between ABA owners and players was averted only a few hours before the opening tip-off. ABA players won the right to fly first class on all trips of longer than an hour. NBA players already had that perk at that time for all flights.

The Spurs led for most of the game before San Diego’s late charge. The game was actually much closer than the final margin as San Diego scored 10 points in the final 90 seconds, including a 3-pointer by Billy Shepherd at the final buzzer.

San Diego blistered the Spurs from outside throughout the game, hitting 8 for 11 from 3-point territory in the game.

The game attracted a crowd of 5,879 — seventh largest for a basketball game in San Antonio at that time.

They said it, part I: “They’re more willing to shoot the 3-pointers than most teams are, and when they hit them like they did tonight … ” Nissalke breaking off in mid-sentence his comments about the Conquistadors’ torrid outside shooting.

They said it, part II: “They have spirit and togetherness and are good 3-point shooters,” Chamberlain to the San Antonio Light about his team’s shooting performance. He had been with the team for only the previous 10 days.

They said it, part III: “It’s a long season. In a business like this you can’t let yourself get too far down when you lose, nor can you get too sky far up when you win. It’s a game in which too many things can happen,” Nissalke to the Light about the Spurs’ late collapse.

They said it, part IV: “The new San Antonio Spurs have promising young backcourt men in James Silas and lefthanded rookie Bird Averitt, last year’s top college scorer from Pepperdine. They also have a quality forward in Rich Jones, but for the Spurs to improve significantly center Bob Netolicky must stop playing defense like Santa Anna.” Sports Illustrated’s preview of the Spurs  in their Oct. 15, 1973 issue.

The upshot: The Spurs and Nissalke didn’t forget San Diego’s late run at the buzzer in the opening game.  San Antonio won the next four games against the Q’s and seven of the next eight. The Spurs claimed the season series over San Diego, 8-3. The Spurs lost their first four games in franchise history before notching a 116-106 victory over Virginia on Oct. 16, 1973, for the first victory in team history. Their fortunes changed after George Gervin was acquired from Virginia later in the season, paving the way for a playoff march that saw them win 11 of their last 15 games. They lost in seven games to ABA defending champion Indiana in the first round of the playoffs. Chamberlain and the Q’s won a one-game tiebreaker over Denver to qualify for the playoffs and then lost in six games to Utah in the first round of the playoffs.

Eva speaks of frosty relationship with TP since divorce

Actress Eva Longoria told Ellen DeGeneres that her relationship with her former husband Tony Parker has come to an abrupt conclusion over the past several months.

Longoria told DeGeneres that , with whom she was married from 2007-10.

She told GeGeneres that she learned a hard lesson during her marriage.

“Being a woman, I realized you cannot identify yourself through a man or through your marriage,” Longoria said, prompting DeGeneres to high-five her. 

“I think it’s our nature to be socially constructed that way,” Longoria added. “To just be inferior or subservient and you don’t have to be. You can be yourself and really hold your own by yourself no matter what partnership you’re in.”

Longoria, 36, is in a new relationship with Eduardo Cruz, the 26-year-old younger brother of actress Penelope Cruz.

“I’m in a happy place,” she told DeGeneres. “Everyone says I look younger… Everyone keeps saying, ‘You’ve never looked better. I think divorce agrees with me!”

Parker once appeared on the show with his former wife, as she and DeGeneres threw softballs that tried to knock him from a perch.

This time, his mention wasn’t nearly as positive or supportive as before.

Videos: You Tube.