Duncan says, ‘I’m a Spur for life’

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Why we love Tim Duncan

How do we love thee, Tim Duncan? Let us count the ways.


Because his teammates love him. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he loves his teammates. Aww. (Jerry Lara / San Antonio Express-News)


Because he has lead the Spurs in four (hopefully soon to be five) NBA championship runs. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he takes care of business. (AP)


Because he shuns the limelight. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he’s a hugger. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he makes funny faces. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he’s kind of a dork. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)


Because he’s not afraid of Kobe. (AP)


Because he never commits fouls. Ever. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)


Because everyone else can “talk to the hand.” (AP)


Because he has mad moves. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he puts the big in “Big Three.” (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because of the Twin Towers. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because Popovich loves him. (Jerry Lara / San Antonio Express-News)


Because we love these commercials. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because “these pythons are sick!” (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he seems like a guy you can just hang out with. (Billy Calzada / San Antonio Express-News)


Because he’s so stylish. Obviously. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because sometimes he does this. (AP)


Because he’s got brains to go with the brawn. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he’s a joker. (Imagine what he must have said or done to get Sean Elliott to make that face.) (Jerry Lara / San Antonio Express-News)


Because he’s serious about basketball. (TOM REEL / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he’s always there with a shoulder for rookies to cry on. (EDWARD A. ORNELAS / SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS)


Because he’s “understated.” (AP)


Because he’s a nice guy. (AP)


Did we mention he’s kind of a dork? (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

  • His teammates love him
  • He loves his teammates
  • Four championships
  • He takes care of business
  • He shuns the limelight
  • He's a hugger
  • He makes funny faces
  • He's kind of a dork
  • He's not afraid of Kobe
  • He never commits fouls
  • Talk to the hand
  • He has mad moves
  • Big Three
  • twin towers
  • Popovich loves him
  • SPURS HEB EAO 4
  • SPURS TIM DUNCAN EAO 4
  • A guy you can just hang out with
  • He's so stylish
  • Sometimes he does this
  • He's got brains
  • He's a joker
  • He's serious about basketball
  • shoulder for rookies
  • Because he's understated
  • All Star Weekend Basketball
  • Did we mention he's kind of a dork?

Tim Duncan will retire a Spur, according to a report Monday night.

The future Hall of Famer, who is in the final year of his contract, told Yahoo! Sports he has little interest in testing the free-agent market.

“No … I’m not going anywhere,” said Duncan, 36. “You can print that wherever you want. I’m here, and I’m a Spur for life.”

Drafted No. 1 overall by the Spurs in 1997, Duncan said it’s realistic to expect him to play another year or two. Determined to win a fifth NBA title, Duncan is averaging 15.4 points and 9.0 rebounds over 28 minutes in the playoffs.

In the opening game of the Western Conference finals Sunday, Duncan contributed 16 points and 11 rebounds to help the Spurs rally in the fourth quarter to defeat Oklahoma City 101-98.

The professionalism of Duncan and fellow stars Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili is a big reason the club is poised to make its fifth trip to the NBA Finals, coach Gregg Popovich suggested Monday.

“I’m very fortunate in that I didn’t have to deal with a star ego,” Popovich said. “I dealt with grown-ups. They had character and prioritization already set in their lives. When Timmy came along, David (Robinson) understood his talent and made it very easy for him to understand Tim was the go-to guy. As Timmy got older, he understood the value of Tony and Manu and was able to share that spotlight with them. It’s because of their character we were able to do it.”

Streak doesn’t interest Spurs: The Spurs’ reaction to the news they can make NBA history tonight with a win in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals can best be summed up in one word: Whatever.

(Express-News graphic)

With their 101-98 victory over the Thunder on Sunday, the Spurs claimed their 19th straight win, matching the 2001 Lakers for the longest winning streak in NBA history that includes regular season and playoff triumphs.

That Lakers team went on to capture a title, which is all the Spurs care about.

“If it doesn’t turn out the way we want it to turn out, with us winning the championship, nobody is going to talk about the streak or even care about the streak,” guard Gary Neal said Monday. “Maybe after we complete our goals people will talk about the streak.”

Said forward Stephen Jackson: “If we lose tomorrow, then all that goes down the drain. … What we’ve done up to this point doesn’t matter. We have to be ready to win Game 2.”

The Spurs’ streak includes 10 games to cap the regular season. It’s also the longest in team history and is tied with the 1999-2000 Lakers for the fourth-longest in NBA history. With a win tonight, the Spurs will become just the fourth team to win 20 or more in a row.

But winning the franchise’s fifth title, not etching their names in the record book, is what matters most to the Spurs.

“None,” guard Manu Ginobili said when asked if he and his teammates had any awareness of the historical aspects of their scintillating run.

“When we are asked, we remember we are on a great streak, but we really don’t care,” he added. “We are close — seven games away — from accomplishing something way bigger than a streak.

“So, if it is happening, it’s fine. But we always think about the next game and how tough it’s going to be. The things we’ve got to do are beat (the Thunder) and improve.”

Only two teams have a longer streak than the Spurs’ nine to start the postseason. The Lakers won their first 11 games during the 1989 and 2001 playoffs. Both those teams reached the Finals, but only the 2001 crew won the title.

Green-light Gary: Neal said he’s “living his dream” in the playoffs. A more accurate statement is he’s living his dream with a hot hand.

Over his last two playoff games, Neal is hitting 62.5 percent from the field, including 57.1 percent from 3-point territory, while averaging 13 points. He scored seven of his 12 points in Game 1 in the fourth quarter on 3-of-4 shooting from the field. His biggest bucket was a 3-pointer to cap an 18-3 run.

Neal said his comfort with playoff basketball has a lot to do with Gregg Popovich.

“Coach Pop has given me the green light to come into the game and be aggressive,” Neal said. “When you have that kind of green light, you don’t really have a choice but to play with confidence.”

torsborn@express-news.net

Spurs beat worst to move into first

By Jeff McDonald

In the Internet age of ESPN and Twitter and smart phones and tablet apps, it is almost impossible for an NBA player to avoid the NBA standings. They are accessible to anybody, anywhere, via the simple click of a mouse.

So are scores from around the league, updated in real time, play-by-play and basket-by-basket.

Still, with all this inescapable information zipping through cyberspace at the speed of light, Spurs guard Danny Green admits he was unaware what was at stake in the Spurs’ 128-103 victory over New Orleans on Friday night at the ATT Center.

First place in the Western Conference?

“We knew we were close,” Green said. “But I didn’t know tonight would be the night.”

Combined with Oklahoma City’s loss at Indiana nearly an hour earlier, the Spurs’ unmerciful beatdown of the woeful Hornets moved them to the top of the West standings for the first time this season.

True, the lead the 39-14 Spurs hold over the Thunder is microscopic — a mere 9/100ths of a percentage point — and there is far too much season left to be popping champagne corks now. But for now, the Spurs will enjoy the view from the top while it lasts.

“It’s always  good to hold your own destiny in your hands,” said guard Gary Neal, whose team owns the head-to-head  tiebreaker with Oklahoma City.

Against New Orleans, Tim Duncan scored 19 points to head a list of six players in double figures, and the Spurs raced to a 28-point lead in the first half before cruising to a 10th straight victory. The Spurs now own the two longest winning streaks in the NBA this season, having won 11 in a row from Jan. 30 to Feb. 20.

Win No. 10 came by way of the Spurs’ highest-scoring night of the season, surpassing a 125-90 victory in Cleveland four nights earlier.

If the Spurs appeared hyper-motivated to take advantage of Oklahoma City’s misfortune Friday, pin it on coincidence. Laser focused, many players were blissfully unaware of the various standings storylines heading into their game against New Orleans.

A game ahead of the Spurs to start the night, the Thunder fell into a 24-point hole early in Indiana before losing 103-98. By the time the Spurs took the floor against New Orleans, the West’s last-place team, first place was in play.

News of the Thunder’s struggles did not exactly spread like wildfire in the Spurs locker room before tipoff at the ATT Center.

“I think one of the ballboys came in and told us,” Manu Ginobili said.

At about the time the Pacers were finishing off the Thunder, the Spurs were putting the final polish on a season-best 72-point first half, making 30 of 45 shots and taking a 25-point lead into intermission.

With no starter logging more than Kawhi Leonard’s 21 minutes, five reserves scored in double figures for the Spurs, who recorded a season-best 31 assists.

Ginobili and Patrick Mills each produced 14 points off the bench, while all 13 members of the Spurs’ active roster scored. The Spurs’ reserves combined for 82 points, the most prolific night for an NBA bench since Jan. 3, 2000, when the Orlando subs also accounted for 82 against Detroit.

Already ahead by 10 heading into the second quarter, the Spurs reeled off a 23-5 run in the second quarter to transform the entire night into an exercise in scoreboard-watching.

New Orleans coach Monty Williams bemoaned his team’s defense after the Spurs shot a season-best 60.7 percent — “We couldn’t guard a bike if we were riding it” — but even he knew his hamstrung roster was no match for the one belonging to Spurs coach Gregg Popovich.

“They look like they’re primed for a championship run,” said Williams, whose team fell to 14-41.

Friday, the Spurs took over first place in the West, then reacted as if they’d just found some spare change in a couch cushion.

“We don’t want to get crazy about it,” Ginobili said.

Indeed, the Spurs have been here before, winning 61 games for the West’s top-seed last season, then tumbling in the first round against Memphis. With 13 games still to play this season, the Spurs are guaranteed nothing.

The best course of action, they’ve decided, is to do what they’ve been doing: Keep playing, oblivious to vagaries of the standings, looking up only at the end of the regular season.

First place?

“It’s great, but there’s too many games left,” Duncan said. “We’re going to go through some ups and downs. We’re going to lose some games. They’re (the Thunder) going to lose some games. We’ll see how we come out the other end.”

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Spurs 128, Hornets 103: April 6, 2012


DeJuan Blair reaches in trying to foil Carl Landry on the blocks as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tony Parker slides between Greiis Vasquez and Chris Kaman as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


DeJuan Blair scores from the backdoor on Chris Kaman as the San Antonio Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


DeJuan Blair jams one as the San Antonio Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Kawhi Leonard jams it in the face of Chris Kaman as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Manu Ginobili scores easily on Gustavo Ayon as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


SPORTS James Anderson moves inside of Al-Farouq Aminu as the San Antonio Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


The Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Chris Kaman pivots on Tiago Splitter as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


SPORTS Manu Ginobili coordinates the team in the first half as the San Antonio Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Manu Ginobili goes through the net trying to score and draws the foul against Trevor Ariza as the San Antonio Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan takes it to the hoop against Chris Kaman as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Stephen Jackson puts up a shot in the first half as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tiago Splitter puts up a hook shot against Chris Kaman as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Chris Kaman pivots on Tiago Splitter as the Spurs play the New Orleans Hornets at the ATT Center on April 6, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)

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jmcdonald@express-news.net

Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

New-look Spurs sink champs

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Spurs 104, Mavericks 87: March 23, 2012


Kawhi Leonard slips inside for a shot in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Manu Ginobili fouls Brandon Wright as he combines with Stephen Jackson on defense as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Boris Diaw is accepted on the bench by coach Brett Brown and Tony Parker as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Stephen Jackson reaches in and tips the ball away from Dirk Nowitzki resulting in a fast break score by Manu Ginobili as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan powers a shot over Brandan Wright in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan clears his way into the basket by Ian Mahinmi in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green loses the ball after being fouled in the lane as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green gets inside of Jason Terry for a layup as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Stephen Jackson winds his way through the middle in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Gary Neal gets off a runner in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Kawhi Leonard rolls in to score on a fast break against Jason Kidd as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green gets by Dominique Jones in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Boris Diaw gets the assignment to guard Dirk Nowitzki in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan and Danny Green stop Jason Terry in the lane in the second half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Tim Duncan runs into a block by Ian Mahinmi in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Boris Diaw defends against Dirk Nowitzki as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Danny Green gets a pass backward over Jason Kidd as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


Shawn Marion loses control of the ball under pressure from Kawhi Leonard as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)


DeJuan Blair pressures Dirk Nowitzki in the first half as the Spurs play the Dallas Mavericks at the ATT Center in San Antonio on March 23, 2012. Tom Reel/ San Antonio Express-News (TOM REEL / San Antonio Express-News)

  • SPURS  V  MAVERICKS
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By Jeff McDonald

The Spurs could have been content to sit tight.

With a roster good enough for second in the Western Conference, with an 11-game winning streak still fresh in their minds and a position about 25 general managers in the NBA would sell their first-born to acquire, the Spurs could have stood pat on a solid hand at the trade deadline.

Instead, the Spurs rolled the dice on a makeover that has changed the face of the team — and perhaps the Western Conference race.

When general manager R.C. Buford traded his starting small forward to bring back a prodigal son, signed a promising backup point guard and claimed a slick-passing big man from the free-agent pile — all in an eight-day whirlwind — it sent an unmistakable signal to his locker room.

“We’re trying to win this thing,” Tim Duncan said.

Friday night, the new-look Spurs were on display at the ATT Center, and the results were undeniable: Without Tony Parker — the only All-Star on the roster — the Spurs devastated the NBA’s reigning champions, choking out Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks 104-87.

Duncan had 15 points and 12 rebounds, while Manu Ginobili had 11 points, seven assists and seven rebounds, recovering from an uneven first half in his first start at point guard.

Danny Green led the Spurs with 18 points, and Kawhi Leonard added 12 and eight rebounds.

It added up to a significant victory, one that kicked off a back-to-back-to-back set that continues tonight in New Orleans and gave the Spurs (31-14) a six-game cushion in the Southwest Division.

It was also, as that noted purveyor of temperance and caution Stephen Jackson said afterward, just one game.

“You can’t be jumping the gun after one game,” Jackson said.

How thorough was the beating the Spurs administered Friday? They outrebounded Dallas 54-34, including a 12-4 edge on the offensive glass, and outscored the Mavs 50-16 in the paint and 21-7 in second-chance points.

Jackson had 10 points and eight rebounds. But his biggest contribution might have been his defensive work on Nowitzki during a short stretch in the first half. He appeared to so frustrate the big German that he sent the Dallas star into a game-long funk.

Nowitzki finished 5 of 21 and scored 16 points as Dallas (27-22) ended a four-game winning streak.

“He has an edge to him,” coach Gregg Popovich said of Jackson, who returned to the Spurs after nine seasons. “He’s a competitor.”

Boris Diaw, the newest Spurs player barely 24 hours off the plane from Charlotte, played nearly 16 minutes and made his lone field goal.

Signed on Friday after securing a buyout from the Bobcats, Diaw also helped defend Nowiztki, who missed 14 of 16 shots after the first quarter.

It was a surreal day for Diaw, who went from the NBA’s worst team to the thick of a title run overnight.

“I knew it was going to be pretty fast after the buyout,” Diaw said.

The Spurs put the game away with a 22-2 run in the second half, using a lineup that once would have been a hallucination: Gary Neal, Ginobili, Jackson, Diaw and Matt Bonner.

The only hole the Spurs showed Friday was at backup point guard, which could be filled once Patrick Mills clears up a visa issue.

“They obviously did not want to lose the season series,” Nowitzki said. “They came out with a little more fire.”

Nowitzki walked off the ATT Center floor worn and beaten, and this should concern Dallas when looking ahead to a potential playoff matchup. When Nowitzki shoved Leonard after a rebound with 2:04 left, drawing a technical foul, it was clear he’d had enough.

For the Spurs, it was off to New Orleans, in pursuit of the same goal they’d always had — winning this thing.

But thanks to their trade-deadline gamble, perhaps with a better chance of accomplishing it.

“We’re trying to be a contender,” Duncan said. “It’s good to see us making moves like that. Hopefully these moves pay off for us.”

jmcdonald@express-news.net