Spurs’ Neal not built for indoor streetball

By Jeff McDonald
jmcdonald@express-news.net

WASHINGTON — Even before he walked into that humid, jam-packed locker room in the nation’s capital Saturday, Gary Neal knew he was out of his element.

With no Gregg Popovich around to call his number and no Manu Ginobili to set him up, Neal figured his chances of standing out in the exhibition between two legendary summer pro-am leagues — Los Angeles’ Drew League and the D.C.-based Goodman League — were slim.

His spot-up game and role-player mentality aren’t built for streetball, even streetball played indoors.

“No, not at all,” said Neal, a Spurs guard and Baltimore native who played for the Goodman team. “My point guards are (Denver’s) Ty Lawson and (Washington’s) John Wall. Just have to hope they’re in a distributing mood.”

They weren’t. Neal finished with six points, 38 shy of the 44 pumped in by NBA scoring champ Kevin Durant, who earned MVP honors in Goodman’s 135-134 victory.

As the NBA’s Lockout Summer swelters into its second month, this is what passes for basketball at its apex. It is a standing-room crowd of about 2,000 wedged into a Division-III bandbox at some place called Trinity University, 4 miles north of Capitol Hill and two levels above the campus swimming pool.

It is a trash-talking emcee, Goodman League commissioner Miles Rawls, chattering through free throws when he wasn’t hawking highlight DVDs — entitled, appropriately enough, “No Lockout” — like a P.T. Barnum of the pick-and-roll.

It is the mild-mannered Durant, the only NBA All-Star on either roster, flexing for the crowd after a coast-to-coast drive.

It is streetball legends named “Money Mike” (no last name) and Baby Shaq Jones filling out the end of the bench.

It is showmanship above all else, and in that, Saturday night delivered.

“We put on a show,” said Wall, who added 28 points to the Goodman win. “That’s what it’s all about. It’s not about money. It’s about loving the game and wanting to play the game.”

Of course, not everybody wanted to.

Wizards swingman Nick Young, reportedly miffed because he wasn’t named the Drew League’s regular-season MVP, didn’t show. Neither did Kobe Bryant, whose presence was rumored after he dropped 43 points and the game-winning jumper in a Drew League game last week.

“We tried to get him,” said Drew Leaguer DeMar DeRozan, a Toronto Raptors forward. “You pretty much have to catch Kobe at the right time and the right place.”

Like a good Spur, Neal wasn’t built for this circus.

Neal, who made the leap from the undrafted scrap heap to first-team All-Rookie last season by staying within himself, couldn’t have felt further from San Antonio had he gone back to Europe.

Minutes into his first appearance, Neal buried the kind of off-balance, guarded 3-pointer he hit about 129 times last season. In the fourth quarter, he added a transition three to a Goodman rally.

In between, Neal might as well have been a paying customer. Certainly, nobody was going to call a play for him, because neither team was running any.

Neal was there at Trinity mostly because he had nowhere else to go.

“I’m pretty much just trying to stay in shape,” Neal said. “If I had to pick, I’d rather be back in San Antonio, getting instruction from the coaches and things like that. Games like this are everywhere now, so you just try to stay active.”

In a way, Neal has been with the understated Spurs too long to shine in a game like this. All-star games, as a rule, are built for dunkers and speedsters, and Neal is neither.

The game opened with a Drew League alley-oop, from Milwaukee’s Brandon Jennings to Washington’s JaVale McGee. Moments later, Wall hooked up with Durant for an answer. And so on and so forth, until the final horn.

In the end, Saturday’s exhibition wasn’t an apples-to-apples replacement for NBA basketball. But for Neal, a Spur out of water, at least it was something.

Neal set for Goodman-Drew All-Star Game on Aug. 20

Spurs guard Gary Neal will be among the NBA standouts who will participate in an all-star game involving top players from the Los Angeles and Washington area.

Pro Basketball Talk reports that the a venerable pro-am summer league from the area that has seen a lot of NBA players come through it over the years.

They will be meeting NBA players who will represent the Drew League from Los Angeles in a game that will be played Aug. 20 and will be available through live streaming on the web.

Among Neal’s teammates for the Goodman League will include Oklahoma City’s Kevin Durant, Washington’s John Wall, Sacramento’s Tyreke Evans, DeMarcus Cousins and Donte Green, Minnesota’s Michael Beasley, Memphis’ Josh Shelby and Sam Young, Hugh ”Baby Shaq” Jones of the AND1 Tour and Emanuel “Duce” Jones and Warren “D-Nice” Jefferson.

Among the Los Angeles-area players for the Drew League will include Oklahoma City’s James Harden, Toronto’s DeMar DeRozan, Washington’s Nick Young and JaVale McGee, Sacramento’s Dorrell Wright and Pooh Jeter, the Los Angeles Clippers’ Craig Smith, Milwaukee’s Brandon Jennings, Memphis’ Marcus Williams, Bobby Brown of Aris BC and a couple of other players to be named.

For NBA junkies in need of a hoop fix, it should be an entertaining game. But Neal’s perimeter-heavy game might be a tad out of place, considering this contest’s potential for rim-rattling slam dunks and transition excitement.

The first team to 200 will win this game, trust me.

Rockets center Yao calls it a career

By JONATHAN FEIGEN
Houston Chronicle

A sports career unlike any other is over.

Yao Ming, who became the face of China’s outreach to the West and the NBA’s growing popularity around the globe, has informed the Rockets and NBA he would retire, several individuals told of the decision confirmed on Friday.

Yao has played in just five games the past two season and has had five consecutive seasons ended or interrupted by bone injuries, most recently a stress fracture in his left leg suffered Nov. 10 in Washington. Yahoo.com reported that Yao officially informed the NBA of his decision in the past 48 hours.

An eight-time All Star, he averaged 19.0 points and 9.3 rebounds in his career. He had said in March and again in May that he had chosen to continue his rehabilitation to attempt a comeback. A free agent, he said he wanted to play for the Rockets. Rockets general manager Daryl Morey and owner Leslie Alexander said they wanted Yao back.

“I’ll try continuing. I’ll try continuing,” Yao said. “A lot will depend on this foot.”

Asked if he believes he will play again, Yao said, “That’s the direction.”

Yao could not, however, play again with any confidence that he would avoid injuries.

“When you look at the course of Yao’s career, stress fractures have been a part of his foot,” Rockets team physician Walter Lowe said in December. “To say he’s not at a risk to continue to have stress fractures would be crazy. He is at a continued risk.”

Yao had said last off season in China that if he could not stay healthy that he would have to retire.

Limited to no more than 24 minutes per game, he played in just five games before the injury in Washington. Initially thought to be a relatively sprained ankle, a stress fracture was later found, ending Yao’s season and career.

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