NBA will try, but can Manu be caught?

Column by Buck Harvey

If NBA officials went to the archives, they would likely find Manu Ginobili with a flop or four worth a fine. He’s been guilty.

But that’s over a decade in the league, with thousands of falls and groans and whistles. Ginobili has stuck his sizeable nose into the breach as consistently as anyone in the game, and he’s been clever 99.9 percent of the time.

That’s why calls have often gone his way, and why a replay won’t reveal much more than what a ref sees live.

To Ginobili, this is art.

That wasn’t the reaction from most players Wednesday after the NBA officially announced its new anti-flopping policy. While Ginobili said, “I don’t think it’s going to change much,” others around the league saw this as a positive step.

“It’s good,” Oklahoma City’s James Harden said, for example. “Guys can’t be flopping and get away with it anymore.”

Those who watched last spring’s Western Conference finals might remember Harden. He’s the one whose head snapped backward on nearly every jump shot he took, as if violently fouled.

But Harden excels, in part, because he understands this game within the game. It’s subtle, and it’s not going away. It didn’t in 2008, either, the first time the league thought it could curb flopping with fines.

Ginobili’s name came up then, too.

“There goes half of Manu’s salary,” Brent Barry joked.

But Ginobili kept his money, and he kept doing what he does. He didn’t change, but maybe others have.

Now, amateurs try what players such as Ginobili and Shane Battier have perfected. Blake Griffin’s clumsy attempts have been laughable, and LeBron James has sometimes been a king of comedy, too. The strongest man on the court has occasionally collapsed as his confidence once did.

Then there was the worst acting performance of this era. Shaquille O’Neal once said “Cowards flop,” yet there he was at the end of his career, helpless against Dwight Howard, opting to fall to the floor as if he weighed 150 pounds instead of 350.

Howard dunked, and the announcer that night screamed, “Shaquille O’Neal flops!”

Last spring brought more of the same. Indiana coach Frank Vogel accused the Heat of flopping before their playoff series began.

“Nobody does it better than the Heat,” Vogel said, and Memphis’ Zach Randolph disagreed.

Randolph said his playoff opponents, the Clippers, were the NBA’s best floppers “by far.”

But even those who agree there is too much flopping aren’t sure how easy it is to define. Ginobili is Exhibit A. After all, shouldn’t they have figured him out years ago?

He’s been the face of the fake foul. The Mavericks dedicated a scoreboard video to him, and the Onion, the satirical news organization, said this in a headline:

“Overacting Manu Ginobili Takes Charge, Plays Dead.”

More telling, a newspaper recently presented Ginobili with “The Vlade Divac Lifetime Achievement Award.” The writer called Ginobili the “Olivier of the NBA.”

But that’s just it. Ginobili is better than the rest. Among his basketball gifts — along with toughness and skill and vision — is anticipating contact.

Sometimes there is considerable contact. Ginobili didn’t become El Contusión by pretending to be hit.

Sometimes, too, there isn’t much contact. But Ginobili is usually in position and ready to react to what is there. It’s smart, and it changes games, and it has driven opposing players and fans mad.

But this season, they say they are going to clean this up. They are going to use replays to see if fines are necessary.

So they will look closely when an elbow touches Ginobili’s chest, or maybe it’s a forearm. They will see Ginobili fall, and they will try to determine why, and they will come to the same conclusion referees came to long ago.

The guy’s good.

bharvey@express-news.net
Twitter: @Buck_SA

Duncan, KG join elite club

Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett, inexorably bound as generational rivals and two of the greatest big men to ever set foot on an NBA court, are now joined in one more way.

Both joined Lakers guard Kobe Bryant and Mavericks forward Dirk Nowitzki over the offseason as the only players in the Association with full no-trade clauses, according to NBA salary expert .

Not that it really matters, of course. Now 36, Duncan re-upped for three more seasons after playing all 15 years of his pro career in San Antonio. But it was still a well-deserved token of respect for a player who has meant so much to the franchise.

Mike Monroe: Mavs taking circuitous route to success

DALLAS — The Spurs this season will suit up four players from their 2003 NBA title team, and that’s one more than the Mavericks retained from the outfit that overachieved its way to the 2011 championship.

Even allowing that Stephen Jackson played for five teams before Gregg Popovich and R.C. Buford brought him back in March, the Spurs’ commitment to continuity stands in contrast to what the Mavericks have done in 16-plus months since winning their first title.

The only Mavericks who remain from the 2011 title run: Dirk Nowitzki, Shawn Marion and Roddy Beaubois.

This doesn’t mean the Mavericks are any less committed to winning another title, just maybe not this year.

“Winning the championship that year, it was kind of tough to bring the boys back,” Nowitzki said at Mavs media day Friday. “We had a bunch of guys who were free agents. We decided to keep our salary cap open for the first time in my career.

“Unfortunately, last year we had some big fish available, and we didn’t get them. So you can do one of two things: Blow the whole thing up and start over, or keep signing guys to short contracts to stay a player in the free-agent market the following year. That’s the route we took.”

It’s the smart course but doesn’t sit well with all those Mavs Fans For Life. As he greeted eight new players with guaranteed contracts, Mavs coach Rick Carlisle cited the high expectations they were about to discover.

“My feeling is people know what we’re about as an organization and what our city is about,” he said on media day. “You show up, and you’re playing for a title, regardless of what people may or may not think about your roster or how many new guys you have. We don’t care about that.”

As jarring as the dismantling of the Mavericks’ roster has been, it makes sense long-term. Clearly, Mark Cuban and GM Donnie Nelson knew their team had overachieved in 2011, catching fire at just the right moment. Didn’t Nowitzki and Jason Terry hit every clutch shot in the playoffs?

It’s tempting to say that J.J. Barea had a once-in-a-lifetime performance when he averaged 16 points in the last two games of the Finals. Then again, he was also dating Miss Universe at the time. Safe to say, he was at the very top of his game. But could the Mavericks depend on that type of performance with a multi-year contract?

Letting Tyson Chandler leave in free agency also made sense, especially with the expectation that Dwight Howard would be available in the summer of 2012.

The Mavericks looked at the rosters of the Heat, Bulls, Spurs, Lakers, Thunder and Celtics and realized they would again have to overachieve to keep up with those elites. Was that realistic long-term?

Freeing up enough salary-cap space for Howard and Deron Williams in the summer of 2012 was a gamble worth taking. It was a gamble that lost but for the right reasons. Now they have Chris Kaman, Elton Brand and Darren Collison and cap flexibility aplenty next summer.

With a team built on the fly, the Mavericks will likely compete for nothing more than first-round home-court advantage this season.

But it is understandable that they dare to dream. They overachieved once; why not again?

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Twitter: @Monroe_SA