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Sports Focus

Big three look good for Spurs

Some say the San Antonio Spurs will go as far as their so-called Big three – Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili – will carry them this year.

That may be so, but the notion that they are an old team getting older may not be the case as some believe.

Without much fanfare, the Spurs have brought in some young blood and it was evident that some of those new and young players have improved enough to help the team. That was clear Monday night as the Spurs raced past the Memphis Grizzlies, 95-82 in the season’s opener.

As usual, the top two scorers were Ginobili with 24 and Parker with 15. A pleasant surprise was Richard Jefferson who chipped in 14, most of them coming in the second period. If Jefferson continues to contribute, then the trade that didn’t happen will be a good move for the Spurs.

The good news Monday night was that the Spurs used defense to hold back a team that manhandled them last year and eliminated them from the playoffs. Defense was the Spurs forte when they were winning NBA titles a few years ago but last year, the Spurs were slow on defense and that’s why many thought they were getting old and out of contention.

A lot of the Spurs defensive pressure Monday night came from Parker who had four steals and from Kawhi Leonard, a rookie who came to San Antonio after they traded away popular guard George Hill, a great defender in his own right.

Leonard showed good defense and his all-around hustle and speed seemed to feed off on the other Spurs who made the Grizzlies look like an ordinary team – especially in the third period when the Spurs outscored them 29-14.

Former Texas Longhorn guard TJ. Ford showed flashes of his Longhorn self with his ability to handle the ball and find the open man. He made some nifty passes that led to points and it looks like he’ll help the team.

Another pleasant surprise, as far as I’m concerned, was the play and improvement of Tiago Splitter, the 7-foot center from Brazil, who was a disappointment last year. Injuries had a lot to do with his slow start but I’m hopeful that he’ll turn into one of the league’s top big men and take pressure off Duncan who is the Spurs only dominant big man in the middle.

As long as the big three of Duncan, Ginobili and Parker stay healthy, the Spurs should be in the thick of the race for another title as we start the new year fresh.

Here’s wishing the Spurs much success in 2011 and to all of you a prosperous New Year.

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Spurs, Duncan head into season of uncertainty

 

Published Saturday, December 24, 2011 8:22 PM


By PAUL J. WEBER
Associated Press

SAN ANTONIO — If this really is Tim Duncan’s final season, a perfect ending won’t come easy.

The four-time NBA champion has won just one playoff series in the last three years. Tony Parker himself called the San Antonio Spurs finished as contenders in May, before later walking back that blunt assessment of his own team.

The Spurs didn’t find an upgrade from Richard Jefferson after the lockout, and in a sign of how badly they need big men, couldn’t talk 37-year-old Antonio McDyess into playing another season.

That leaves Duncan, entering his 15th season and the end of his contract, making perhaps his last try for a fifth title with largely the same group that hasn’t come close lately.

“This is basically the same team,” Duncan said. “We have as good an opportunity as anyone else. We have that experience a lot of people are going to work for.”

Duncan arrived at training camp insisting he’s not yet thinking about retirement. He’ll be 36 when the playoffs roll around and will make $21 million this season, behind only Kobe Bryant ($25 million) and Rashard Lewis ($22 million).

The big payday is Duncan’s reward for making the Spurs the winningest franchise in major professional sports the past 14 years, surpassing even the New England Patriots or New York Yankees in winning percentage. Even last year, against all expectations, the Spurs won 61 games and reclaimed the Western Conference’s top seed.

It still wasn’t good enough.

It was easy to read into San Antonio’s first-round loss as more than an upset. The Memphis Grizzlies, quick and big, made the Spurs look slow and small.

Weeks after losing to Memphis in six games, Parker was in Paris telling French journalists that was the last chance for the aging Spurs, whose last title was in 2007. “We will always have a good team but can no longer say we’re playing for a championship,” he said.

Parker later backed away from those remarks, and returned to San Antonio this month with a cheerier outlook.

“A lot of young teams are coming up, so we just have to make sure we can keep up and be competitive,” Parker said. “You have to be positive and you have to believe in your team. I definitely believe in my team. Hopefully we can stay healthy and not have those little bumps like last year.”

If San Antonio does have another run left in them, it’ll be up to mostly the same cast. That includes Jefferson, who survived last week’s amnesty deadline after the Spurs had a chance to part ways with the underachieving swingman who is due $9.2 million this season.

The Spurs courted free agents Caron Butler and Josh Howard. Though after it became apparent Jefferson would make it to opening day, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich defended his starting small forward as an improving defender and reliable 3-point shooter.

“It’s kind of interesting. Everybody always asked about amnesty, and I always wondered why Richard, Richard, Richard,” Popovich said. “As if we didn’t advance in the playoffs because of Richard. I don’t think anybody played great.”

Be that as it may, the Spurs may have landed Jefferson’s eventual replacement in rookie Kawhi Leonard. Selected 15th overall by Indiana, the 6-foot-7 forward was dealt in a draft-day trade for guard George Hill, who was Parker’s backup and a budding star in the Popovich’s eyes.

Yet it was a price Popovich says he was willing to pay. The 20-year-old Leonard brings not only youth and size but a knack for defense, which Popovich is reprioritizing after the Spurs were — rather atypically — better known for outscoring teams than stopping them last season.

Parker (17.5 points per game) and 34-year-old Ginobili (17.4 points) will again drive San Antonio’s offense from the backcourt, and veteran T.J. Ford replaces Hill off the bench. The frontcourt is a larger concern: with McDyess gone, the big men left are 3-point marksman Matt Bonner, undersized 6-foot-7 center DeJuan Blair and 7-footer Tiago Splitter.

Then there’s Duncan. The two-time MVP, whose scoring and rebounding (13.4 and 8.9) were career lows last year, is the only Spurs player left from the 1999 team that won the franchise’s first championship in that lockout-shortened season.

Duncan draws no comparisons to then and now. He just knows the toll awaiting him in the compressed schedule ahead.

“It wasn’t a grind to me then,” Duncan recalled of 1999. “I was running like a deer up and down every day. I wanted to play. But this is going to feel different, I know it.”





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Spurs, Duncan heads into season of uncertainty

SAN ANTONIO (AP)—If this really is Tim Duncan’s final season, a perfect
ending won’t come easy.

The four-time NBA champion has won just one playoff series in the last three
years. Tony Parker himself called the San Antonio Spurs finished as contenders
in May, before later walking back that blunt assessment of his own team.

The Spurs didn’t find an upgrade from Richard Jefferson after the lockout,
and in a sign of how badly they need big men, couldn’t talk 37-year-old Antonio
McDyess
into playing another season.

That leaves Duncan, entering his 15th season and the end of his contract,
making perhaps his last try for a fifth title with largely the same group that
hasn’t come close lately.

“This is basically the same team,” Duncan said. “We have as good an
opportunity as anyone else. We have that experience a lot of people are going to
work for.”

Duncan arrived at training camp insisting he’s not yet thinking about
retirement. He’ll be 36 when the playoffs roll around and will make $21 million
this season, behind only Kobe Bryant ($25 million) and Rashard Lewis ($22
million).

The big payday is Duncan’s reward for making the Spurs the winningest
franchise in major professional sports the past 14 years, surpassing even the
New England Patriots or New York Yankees in winning percentage. Even last year,
against all expectations, the Spurs won 61 games and reclaimed the Western
Conference’s top seed.

It still wasn’t good enough.

It was easy to read into San Antonio’s first-round loss as more than an
upset. The Memphis Grizzlies, quick and big, made the Spurs look slow and small.

Weeks after losing to Memphis in six games, Parker was in Paris telling
French journalists that was the last chance for the aging Spurs, whose last
title was in 2007. “We will always have a good team but can no longer say we’re
playing for a championship,” he said.

Parker later backed away from those remarks, and returned to San Antonio
this month with a cheerier outlook.

“A lot of young teams are coming up, so we just have to make sure we can
keep up and be competitive,” Parker said. “You have to be positive and you
have to believe in your team. I definitely believe in my team. Hopefully we can
stay healthy and not have those little bumps like last year.”

If San Antonio does have another run left in them, it’ll be up to mostly the
same cast. That includes Jefferson, who survived last week’s amnesty deadline
after the Spurs had a chance to part ways with the underachieving swingman who
is due $9.2 million this season.

The Spurs courted free agents Caron Butler and Josh Howard. Though after it
became apparent Jefferson would make it to opening day, Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich defended his starting small forward as an improving defender and
reliable 3-point shooter.

“It’s kind of interesting. Everybody always asked about amnesty, and I
always wondered why Richard, Richard, Richard,” Popovich said. “As if we
didn’t advance in the playoffs because of Richard. I don’t think anybody played
great.”

Be that as it may, the Spurs may have landed Jefferson’s eventual
replacement in rookie Kawhi Leonard. Selected 15th overall by Indiana, the
6-foot-7 forward was dealt in a draft-day trade for guard George Hill, who was
Parker’s backup and a budding star in the Popovich’s eyes.

Yet it was a price Popovich says he was willing to pay. The 20-year-old
Leonard brings not only youth and size but a knack for defense, which Popovich
is reprioritizing after the Spurs were—rather atypically—better known for
outscoring teams than stopping them last season.

Parker (17.5 points per game) and 34-year-old Ginobili (17.4 points) will
again drive San Antonio’s offense from the backcourt, and veteran T.J. Ford
replaces Hill off the bench. The frontcourt is a larger concern: with McDyess
gone, the big men left are 3-point marksman Matt Bonner, undersized 6-foot-7
center DeJuan Blair and 7-footer Tiago Splitter.

Then there’s Duncan. The two-time MVP, whose scoring and rebounding (13.4
and 8.9) were career lows last year, is the only Spurs player left from the 1999
team that won the franchise’s first championship in that lockout-shortened
season.

Duncan draws no comparisons to then and now. He just knows the toll awaiting
him in the compressed schedule ahead.

“It wasn’t a grind to me then,” Duncan recalled of 1999. “I was running
like a deer up and down every day. I wanted to play. But this is going to feel
different, I know it.”

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NBA Star Tony Parker Gives A Walk-Through Of The…

San Antonio Spurs guard, Tony Parker, has been pushing a new watch from Swiss watchmaker Tissot, fulfilling his position as one of nine brand ambassadors.

The NBA star loves the brand’s Touch collection, specifically the T-Touch II timepiece, which boasts a touch screen and offers a variety of features.

In this clip, Parker gives viewers an intimate walk-through of the new watch, which the company says is “perfect for adventurous spirits.”

It has 13 features — including an altimeter, backlight, perpetual calendar, two time zones, two alarms and more — and is available in solid stainless steel or titanium bracelet, or black rubber or orange silicone strap.

For more info on the T-Touch II and Tissot, visit Tissot.ch.

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Tony Parker to play basketball in France

Published: Oct. 7, 2011 at 12:24 PM

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VILLEURBANNE, France, Oct. 7 (UPI) — San Antonio Spurs point guard Tony Parker said he’s back in his native France to play for the Villeurbanne pro team during the NBA lockout.

The 29-year-old Parker announced Thursday he will spend three months playing for the French team and make just $2,013 per month, The Local in France reported Friday.

Parker is also connected to the French team as a shareholder, the report said.

“The reason I’m back is because I want to give something back for everything I’ve received from the club,” he said. “I will be at training, I’ll play in the European Cup and all the matches in France. And I’ll be taking the bus like everyone else.”

The NBA is in the midst of a lockout brought about by disputes over player salaries.

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