Mavs assistant Dwane Casey in line for Toronto head job

It’s been a whirlwind the last several days for Dallas Mavericks’ lead assistant Dwane Casey.

Last week, the Mavericks claimed their first title. Casey helped celebrate with all of his team once they got back to Dallas later in the week.

And Casey also had what appears to be a successful job interview with Toronto general manager Bryan Colangelo.

Enough that the Dallas Morning News is reporting that Casey  perhaps as soon as later this afternoon.

Casey interviewed with the Raptors twice over the last several days. He apparently has beaten out Boston lead assistant and former New Jersey head coach Lawrence Frank.  

Casey, a former Kentucky standout in college, has most recently served as the top assistant coach under Rick Carlisle for the Mavericks. Earlier, he was the head coach for the Minnesota Timberwolves over 1-1/2 seasons — a span during which the Timberwolves were 53-69. The Timberwolves were 20-20 in the 2006-07 when Casey was fired by then-GM Kevin McHale, who said he believed the team was a playoff contender. Randy Wittman took over, and the team finished 12-30 in its remaining 42 games.

Casey will take over the vacant job created when Jay Triano was demoted after more than two seasons as Toronto’s head coach.

Frank apparently has now emerged as the created when John Kuester’s contract wasn’t renewed, the Toronto Star reports.

Spurs well positioned to endure the lockout

San Antonio’s unique position as the strongest NBA market in terms of fan interest should make the Spurs less susceptible to fallout from the lockout than other league franchises.

Bill Nielsen, vice president of sales for the Scarborough Sports Marketing Group, said the Spurs have traditionally dominated his company’s measurements of fan awareness and support in the NBA.

And because of that support, Nielsen doesn’t believe that a lengthy lockout will erode local support and interest for the team.

Scarborough’s most recent list indicates that 61 percent of thousands of fans interviewed in the San Antonio area have either watched a Spurs game at the ATT Center, listened to a Spurs game on radio or watched a Spurs game on television in the last year.

That figure is the best of the 29 NBA American markets the company surveys. Toronto isn’t included in the Scarborough list.

“That’s a very healthy number when three out of five persons in San Antonio have that kind of contact with the team,” Nielsen said. “In layman’s terms, it indicates that if you live in San Antonio, you are going to be a Spurs fan.”

Because of that broad-based community awareness and support, Nielsen said the Spurs shouldn’t feel a lockout-related pinch that might be inflicted on other NBA teams once the league’s labor differences are settled.

“It bodes well for them,” Nielsen said. “I wouldn’t expect there to be a hangover (after the lockout) because of that traditional support they have.”

The Spurs ranked at the top of Scarborough’s most recent list of NBA franchises, which was generated for the first half of 2011.

Cleveland is second at 58 percent, followed by Boston (50 percent), Utah (47 percent) and Phoenix (45 percent) among the top five franchises. New Jersey (11 percent) is the lowest.

Scarborough has analyzed sports teams, leagues and markets among other consumer research for more than a decade. The Spurs have traditionally ranked at the top of the NBA’s “watched on television/attended/listened on radio” rankings during that time.

The NBA’s top numbers in that category don’t match those of other teams in other major sports in Scarborough’s “WAL” rankings. The NFL’s New Orleans Saints lead all professional sports franchises at 87 percent. The St. Louis Cardinals in Major League Baseball have a “WAL” ranking of 73 percent to lead franchises in that sport.

But the Spurs’ traditional number at 60 percent is a solid one for any sports franchise, Nielsen said.

“I’m impressed with that number considering they haven’t won a title in several years,” Nielsen said. “When you win a title, it traditionally pushes your numbers to the top. Look at New Orleans. But the Spurs have held solid.”

Undrafted and undaunted, Spurs’ Neal named to All-Rookie first team

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

Gary Neal’s remarkable NBA journey has passed another significant signpost.

From undrafted to first-team All-Rookie.

Neal, the 26-year-old Spurs guard, earned that designation Wednesday by vote of all 30 NBA coaches. Joining him on the first team were L.A. Clippers forward Blake Griffin — the newly crowned Rookie of the Year — Sacramento center DeMarcus Cousins, Washington guard John Wall and New York guard Landry Fields.

Passed over by every NBA team after finishing his collegiate career at Towson University in 2007, and having spent the previous three seasons hopscotching around European Leagues, Neal became only the second undrafted player in league history to make All-Rookie first team.

The first was Jorge Garbajosa, who earned the honor in 2006-07 with Toronto.

Neal joined the Spurs as a free agent in July after starring in the Las Vegas Summer League.

“We’ve had a lot of guys over the years we’ve wanted to fit into roles that we thought wanted to prove something,” coach Gregg Popovich said. “He’s one of those guys. He’s taken advantage of that opportunity.”

A key member of the Spurs’ backcourt rotation, Neal averaged 9.8 points and hit 41.9-percent from 3-point range in his inaugural NBA season. In the process, he snapped franchise rookie records for 3-point percentage and 3-pointers made (129), and finished third on the club’s all-time rookie list for free-throw percentage (80.8 percent).

Neal’s most enduring moment came in Game 5 of the Spurs’ first-round playoff series against Memphis, when he buried a game-tying 3-pointer as time expired to force overtime. The Spurs won 110-103 in the extra frame and kept their season alive for one more game.

Neal is the ninth Spurs player to make an All-Rookie team and the sixth first-teamer. He is the first Spurs player to earn first-team accolades since Tony Parker in 2001-02.

ELITE COMPANY

Spurs guard Gary Neal went from undrafted free agent to the NBA’s All-Rookie first team, something only one other free agent (FA) has ever done. Here are the top rookies with their draft position:

First team
Blake Griffin Clippers 1st
John Wall Wizards 1st
Landry Fields Knicks 39th
D. Cousins Kings 5th
Gary Neal Spurs FA

Second team
Greg Monroe Pistons 7th
Wes. Johnson T-wolves 4th
Eric Bledsoe Clippers 18th
Derrick Favors Jazz 3rd
Paul George Pacers 10th