Spurs’ ‘wonderful season’ leads to summer uncertainty

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

The old champion sat in the corner locker at the FedEx Forum late Friday night, vanquished and spent. He performed his perfunctory media obligations, answering in a low tone a few questions about one of the most disappointing playoff ousters of his Hall of Fame career.

And then, Tim Duncan stood up, walked toward the door and into the most uncertain offseason of his life.

On his way to the bus, the Spurs forward recognized a familiar face and paused with one more thought.

“Looks like we got an offensive tackle,” Duncan said, referring to the NFL draft and his beloved Chicago Bears. “We needed two.”

With the season finished more quickly than anyone could have surmised, and the possibility of a lockout postponing the start of his 14th season, Duncan will have plenty of time to ponder both the future and football.

By becoming the second No. 8 seed in the best-of-7 era to topple a No. 1, the Memphis Grizzlies spoiled what was supposed to be Duncan’s last, best run to a fifth NBA championship.

“With the seeding and the situation, I think we’re a better team than we showed,” said Duncan, who turned 35 this month. “I thought we could have put together a much better series.”

In a brutally effective six-game march, capped with a 99-91 victory in Game 6, Memphis brought an unceremonious end to a season in which the Spurs defied expectations, for better and worse.

Nobody imagined a 61-win regular season, the second-best of the Duncan era, during which the Spurs led the NBA for 70 games. Nobody imagined they would flame out as a top seed in the first round, because it had so rarely happened before.

“It was a disappointing end to a wonderful season,” coach Gregg Popovich said Saturday, after the team conducted its year-end meetings.

For the second time in three postseasons, the Spurs failed to advance to the second round. At four years now without an NBA title, it marks the longest drought of Duncan’s career.

Give the Grizzlies credit. Their hard-nosed defense, led by Tony Allen and Shane Battier and a group of castoffs, flummoxed what had been the most offensively potent team of the Popovich era.

By the end of the series, it didn’t even seem like an upset.

“We lost to a team that played better than us for more of the minutes,” said guard Manu Ginobili, who turns 34 in June. “We went through a great season and got in a position to win 61 games, but we couldn’t maintain that high level.”

In autopsying the season Saturday, Popovich blamed April injuries to Duncan and Ginobili for throwing off the Spurs’ groove heading into the playoffs. The Spurs were 57-13 before Duncan went down, 4-8 after.

“We didn’t really go into the playoffs with that rhythm and that mojo you want,” Popovich said. “We think things could have had a different look if we’d had that rhythm going in, but it never did get there.

“Confidence is a big deal in the playoffs. We thought we could overcome it, but Memphis had to cooperate — and they did not.”

It is difficult to imagine the Spurs having an easier time next season.

With a landlocked payroll, there isn’t much general manager R.C. Buford can do to remake the roster. The NBA draft, in which the Spurs possess the 29th pick for what is considered to be a historically shallow prospect pool, is unlikely to be of much help.

Antonio McDyess, the 36-year-old center who spent much of the series battered by Memphis’ bruising Zach Randolph, plans to retire.

“We’re not going to fight him,” Popovich said.

Duncan is entering the final year of his contract but has the option of forgoing the roughly $21.2 million he is owed to sign a longer-term deal at a lower starting price, as Richard Jefferson did last summer. That could give the Spurs a bit of financial wiggle room to chase free agents.

“There will be some changes, but we never get drastic in that sense,” Popovich said. “Somebody asked me yesterday, ‘We lost, do we blow it up’?? That’s the most preposterous attitude you can have.”

Whatever the offseason holds, winning 60 games again next season will be a tall order, and — in a Western Conference in which the eighth seed can beat the first — simply making the playoffs will be a chore.

The apocalypse scenario for Spurs fans remains a lockout that erases the entire final year of Duncan’s deal, after which he could walk away for good.

Duncan was in no mood to consider that possibility after Game 6.

“I just lost a game,” Duncan said. “I’m not even worried about any of that stuff.”

Between now and the tenuous start of the 2011-12 campaign, there will be time to think about roster overhauls, and time to debate the future and, maybe, to ponder the end of an era.

Too much time, if you ask the Spurs.

Gasol avoids brotherly bragging

Grizzlies center Marc Gasol talks and texts nearly every day with older brother Pau, the four-time All-Star center for the Lakers.

But he knew better than to dial big brother’s cell phone on Sunday night, no matter how much he wanted to share the joy of his role in helping the Grizzlies get the first playoff victory in franchise history.

“I knew he did not have a good game, and I knew they lost,” Gasol said, “so I knew he wouldn’t be talking a lot.”

Marc Gasol made 9 of 10 shots and scored 24 points Sunday in the No. 8-seed Grizzlies’ 101-98 victory over the top-seeded Spurs in Game 1 of their first-round series that will resume Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Pau Gasol missed 7 of 9 shots and scored only eight points in a 109-100 loss to the No. 7-seed New Orleans Hornets in Los Angeles.

For one night, brotherly love won out over sibling rivalry. But Marc Gasol can take personal pride in knowing he accomplished something with the Grizzlies that Pau Gasol could not in six-plus seasons as Memphis’ starting center — a playoff victory.

The younger Gasol was a pudgy, 23-year-old 7-footer when he arrived in Memphis in 2008, part of the trade that sent his brother to the Lakers.

He has become one of the better centers in the NBA after dropping more than 20 pounds last summer and gaining confidence that he could play in the post. He averaged 11.7 points and 8.0 rebounds in 81 games this season, teaming with Zach Randolph to give the Grizzlies a beefy, 1-2 punch in the middle.

His progress and potential have been so impressive that Randolph made certain the Grizzlies intended to keep Gasol around before he agreed to sign a $71 million contract extension that will keep him in Memphis for an additional four years.

Randolph agreed to the new deal during the weekend.

“Marc is great, man,” Randolph said. “He has such a high IQ for the game. That’s what I love about him. He’s been playing so long and playing against older guys, because he was playing overseas. He’s a great player. I love playing with him. He plays the right way.”

The Spurs have a healthy respect for Gasol’s skills, though Spurs captain Tim Duncan admitted he occasionally wandered a bit from his defensive assignment on Gasol to keep an eye on Randolph, Memphis’ top scorer against the Spurs in four regular-season games.

“I gave him a bit of an easy time in there trying to have half an eye on Zach, instead of just focusing on Marc,” Duncan said, promising to have “a little better focus in that respect” in Game 2.

Spurs guard Tony Parker didn’t fault Duncan. Gasol, he said, simply had one of those “can’t miss” games.

“He got a lot of points,” Parker said. “He’s not going to play like that the whole series.”

Gasol understands his 90 percent shooting isn’t apt to continue through the series.

“That won’t happen,” he said. “I guarantee that.”

Spurs sign swing man Danny Green

Spurs general manager R.C. Buford has confirmed that the Spurs have signed Danny Green, a 6-foot-6 guard-forward who was with the club for six days in November.

Green had been playing with the Reno Bighorns of the NBA D-League. He averaged 20.1 points, a team high, along with 7.5 rebounds and 2.8 points in 16 games with the Bighorns.

Green played two games with the Spurs in November, scoring six points. He was waived on Nov. 23.

Sam Amick, of NBA Confidential, first reported Green’s signing on Tuesday.