Author: Stephen Hale (Page 9 of 22)

They Only Scored 10 Points


Photo: Sports Illustrated

Eight.                     Zero.                     Two.

That’s how many points three future Hall of Famers scored in a professional basketball game.

They only scored 10 points!

You would think a team with three future Hall of Famers scoring 10 total points would mean a loss for sure. Usually when that happens, a team doesn’t end up winning by 18.

But these Spurs, man.

It only took 1,360 games for a team to figure out how to keep Timothy Theodore Duncan from scoring. Considering that the Big Three were held to a pathetic 10 points in total, I’d say the Rockets broke the code.

Unfortunately for them, Houston gave up 64 points combined to the likes of a “super bust” in Kawhi Leonard, a guy who can’t fit in the Spurs system in LaMarcus Aldridge, and table scraps wingman Danny Green.

Yep. Just stop the Big Three and you’ll beat the Spurs.

There are a ton of cliches in Spurs Nation, most of which I hate…

“Well-Oiled Machine”

“Father Time”

“Small Market”

“Pounding the Rock”

“The Spurs Way”

“Top-Shelf” (by Sean Elliott in particular)

“In Pop We Trust”

But most of all, I despise the phrase, “Big Three.”

It’s ludicrous and it represents everything the Spurs oppose. Nothing about this team suggests that its centered around a big three. Yet, because three guys have been the face of the organization, we somehow believe otherwise.

As Spurs fans, we often forget that. We think that because ESPN tells us that we have a Big Three, that we actually do. We think because we see stats about the winningest trio, that the success of the Spurs are centered around TimParkU. And we think because these guys refuse to retire, that the only reason the Spurs are still good is because of them.

I’m going to go out on a limb here: I don’t know if any of the so-called Big Three are even one of the best three players on the current Spurs roster.

Relax. Let me, explain.

The reason the Spurs are a well-oiled machine is because of what the Big Three don’t do. In their primes, the TimParkU were merely really good players individually, save Duncan who is without question the greatest power forward of all time. But Manu and Tony were never great individually. They were just really good players who did a few things great and played great in a system together.

Personally, I don’t think Parker is a top 50 player all time. Not even close. Nor is Manu, and frankly, I don’t know if either of them would have had the career they have had if they had been drafted to play for the Wizards or the Jazz.

The term Big Three is almost insulting when you think of it. The Spurs success has always been centered on these guys, but it was the supporting cast who helped win championships…

  • Steve Kerr going bonkers against Dallas.
  • Robert Horry running circles around the Wallace brothers.
  • Stephen Jackson looking like Craig Hodges.
  • Boris Diaw
  • Mario Elie
  • Danny Green

The fact is, having a big three is not the reason why five banners hang from the AT&T Center’s rafters. It’s because of the other guys.

As Spurs fans, we severely underestimate our player development program. I would argue that no one uses the D-League better than the Spurs. Sending Ray McCallum to Austin for a few games is typically ignored by the average Spurs fan. But it might be one of the smartest moves made in a single game. Cory Joseph became CoJo because of the D-League.

And don’t even get me started on the scout team. Johnny Simmons is a huge find. Boban is a huge find. Tiago Splitter was a huge find. Fabricio Oberto was a huge find. Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili were huge finds.

We also take for granted the value of Chip Engelland. Go back and look at Tim Duncan’s shot 13 years ago. (I can’t believe I just wrote that sentence). Look at it now and notice the hand placement of the ball and the arc of the ball when it leaves his fingers.

Look at Patty Mills’ jumper in Portland and look at it now. And if you need a better example, just read Kawhi Leonard’s draft scouting report, watch his first few NBA games and then look at him now.

All Chip, bro.

And finally, if you don’t know who Will Sevening is, then you better get familiar. He has squeezed more juice out of 35 year old players than Dr. Oz. Trust me, it’s not Tim Duncan’s knee brace that keeps him trucking this long.

To suggest that the Spurs have a Big Three means that there must be a Little Three. It means that you are dividing the Spurs into special treatment plans for individual players.

Look, Tim Duncan won Saturday night’s game against the Rockets. Not with his point totals, but with his salary. With his belief that there is no such thing as a Big Three. Lamarcus Aldridge would have never scored 24 points and had nine boards if Duncan thought as a member of the Big Three he deserved to make $5.2 million a year.

The Spurs are a “well-oiled machine” because there is no Big Three. There is a Big 12 and everyone is an equal. That’s why Pop rides these guys like he’s a high school coach, angry he has to grade papers after the game.

Because there is no Big Three, the Spurs can find a way to hold Father Time at bay in a small market. And it doesn’t matter if the Spurs are “pounding the rock,” or Kawhi is “going top shelf” (someone please tell Sean to stop) – the Spurs can win.

“The Spurs Way” is not the Big Three way. If we truly believe it when we say, “In Pop we Trust,” then we can’t accept that there is ever a Big Three, because that’s not how Pop coaches.

I don’t know if the Spurs are going to win a sixth championship this year. But I do know that this Spurs team is going to be good for a long time because there is no Big Three. Aldridge, Green and Kawhi are not the Next Three, regardless of what Fran Blineburry writes on NBA.com.

I mean, good Lord: what happened to Miami after LeBron left, or the Bulls when Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen and Dennis “the Worm” Rodman left?

Good grief, the Mavs beat the pants off the Warriors without Steph Curry.

Yikes, I don’t ever want a Big Three.

Maybe it’s not about a Big Three.

Maybe it’s not about a Big One.

Maybe it’s not about a coach, or a market, or a tradition of winning.

Maybe it’s just about…

the Spurs.

Silly, Annoying and Scary

Here’s the deal, guys. The Spurs are really good.

I know that sounds basic, but I am not sure it needs to be any more in depth. If you are anything like me, you watch the Spurs and complain about Danny Green, you curse LaMarcus Aldridge for not making EVERYTHING, and you roll your eyes when Boris actually does miss a reverse layup. In short, we demand perfection.

The Silly Thing: The Spurs are pretty close to perfection.

The first half of the season has been all about the Warriors, who sit at a league best 24-1. The Spurs are 3.5 games back at 21-5. It’s been almost comical to watch the rest of the league play – not even close to that caliber of play of the Warriors and Spurs. The Clippers are sitting at 16-8 and third place in the standings. The Cavs over in the East are at 15-7. Everyone has been in a frenzy, talking about how good the Warriors are. And let’s be very clear: they are good. They have a legit chance to repeat. They are doing this with a Klay Thompson bum ankle and an assistant coach who joined the team in the playoffs last year at the helm while Steve Kerr recovers from back surgery.

But the Spurs are also going bonkers in their own right. These Spurs are defensive juggernauts right now. They have nine victories which they won by more than 20 points and have a point differential of 37, larger than the Warriors. They are holding teams to 87.9 points per game. The Spurs have the best home record in the NBA at 13-0 and are about to play six of their next eight in December at the AT&T Center.

Good Lord.

Jeff McDonald summarized it best in a tweet.

The Annoying Thing: No one cares.

I watch most of games on delay, late at night, with NBA League Pass on my Apple TV, after my kids are in bed.

The game will be fine and then suddenly: “the content can’t be loaded.” So I was really excited to hear that NBATV was going to air the Spurs vs Hawks on Saturday, only to see the game get bumped for Warriors vs Bucks. That’s what the buzz is all about.

No one wants to see the ho-hum Spurs win another 55-plus games this season. No one wants to see a defensive clinic, where the game is closed out in the 3rd quarter. No one wants to see Tim Duncan’s unbending knee lumber up the court for 26 minutes a game. I mean, come on. The best part about a Spurs game is the Gregg Popovich interviews, right? It’s just boring.

Yes. Winning is boring.

If you think this is boring, then you’re stupid.

What Steph Curry does is incredible. It’s fun to watch and I am glad to witness it. But think of everyone that has ever picked up a basketball:

Every high school player that wants a scholarship…

Every fat guy at the Y who is still living the dream…

Every two-handed set shooter with a handle at the park…

No one has the kind of green light that Curry has right now. No one has that kind of freedom. What Steph does is almost, ALMOST, bad for the game. I worry that too many young kids will want to shoot as much as him, without putting in the work like he does.

Instead, maybe learn how to get in the right defensive spot, like Kawhi does. Maybe learn how that dribble penetration only matters if you get to the free throw line extended, like Tony has been doing. Maybe learn how to move without the ball, stop on a dime and shoot a jump shot straight up and down without drifting – a real jumper. Not a set shot – like Patty Mills does. Or maybe learn when NOT to shoot and stick to your strengths, like a Johnny Simmons.

Maybe, but that’s just me. Get off my lawn.

The Scary Thing: The Spurs haven’t peaked yet.

• Kawhi Leonard is currently 14th in the league in scoring, but 13th in Per 48. He is 40th in the league in rebounds and only one of three Small Forwards in the top 40. He is sixth in the league in steals, 4th in real plus/minus and leads the league from the 3-point line.

All those stats are garbage though. Best Kawhi stat?

Kawhi leads the Spurs in minutes per game at 33. That’s 41st in the league. It’s too bad the Spurs are struggling to find some competition. It would be nice to get Kawhi some clock and bump those stats up.

He’s probably going to be the best player to not get named MVP. It’s scary how good he can be.

• It’s scary that LaMarcus Aldridge isn’t comfortable and is still averaging a 15 and 8.

• It’s scary that Manu plays only 19 minutes a game and is 35th in the league in PER.

• It’s scary that Tim Duncan is 107 and could very well make First Team All Defense.

• It’s scary that Danny Green stinks right now.

• It’s scary that David West would be the starting Power Forward on most teams and probably an All-Star in the Eastern Conference.

• It’s scary that Patty Mills looks like Patty Mills.

• It’s scary that Johnny Simmons looks like he can play.

• It’s scary that Boban can play.

• It’s scary that all the Spurs bench players can play.

• It’s scary that Gregg Popovich is now 8th all-time in wins.

It’s scary that we all sit at home and watch these games with angry eyebrows at every botched in-bounds play and every time the Spurs bump into each other. It’s scary that the starters are this good and don’t fully understand the integration of Aldridge and the new Kawhi. It’s scary that this team looks like it has a long way to go and still, is only 3.5 games behind the best team in the league.

As Spurs fans…

It’s silly that we expect more.

It’s annoying that we don’t get more.

And it’s scary we will get more.

As we all yell at Danny Green and our TVs… when we quietly suggest that maybe we start Diaw over Aldridge when he misses a shot from the top of the key… when we roll our eyes at Kyle Anderson… and when we all just wish Boban would get in the game and score 10 points in 4 minutes of garbage time… let’s just remember that this season is silly, annoying and scary.

All rolled into one.

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