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View Full Version : Slam online Top 50- Duncan #5



duncan228
11-09-2006, 03:15 PM
http://slamonline.com/online/2006/11/5-tim-duncan/
It's an interesting list. Be sure to listen to the q&a if you haven't heard it.

BruceBowenFan
11-09-2006, 04:43 PM
man that shit is funny

Spurminator
11-09-2006, 05:19 PM
Where's the rest of the audio? Mine cut off at 3 min.

AOMrep
11-09-2006, 06:38 PM
Best. Forward. Ever.

Shaolin-Style
11-09-2006, 07:50 PM
td would be awesome to hang out with. he'd no doubt crush me on the court, but at least i'd have a shot in socom.

~~Ice Man 2000~~
11-10-2006, 04:17 PM
Good list.... lol kg is like 10....

flipcritic
11-11-2006, 06:38 AM
This interview might have been held last year. Lang Whitaker's article here is pretty much a rewrite of his interview with TD here (he writes for SI.com too) -> http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/writers/lang_whitaker/06/13/tim.duncan/index.html.

Prime time gamer
San Antonio star has skills beyond the court

A few months ago, I was in San Antonio trying to figure out a way to get Tim Duncan to talk to me. I wanted to talk to him because I was writing a story about the Spurs, and, of course, without Duncan there are no Spurs. Problem is, Duncan doesn't talk to the media before games. He's polite about it, but that's his thing. So I stood around and talked 1980's SEC football with Bob Horry instead.

Then, Duncan looked up and mentioned something about SOCOM 2 to Brent Barry. And I knew I had my in.

Two nights later, 90 minutes before tip-off, Duncan sat in his locker processing a scouting report. I'd brought a copy of the video game magazine EGM with me, and instead of throwing it away when I finished reading it, I walked up to Duncan, slipped him the mag and said, "Tim, don't want to bother you, but thought you might want to check this out."

I walked back over to the loquacious Horry, who started talking about Roger Clemens' salary, when Duncan called me back over. He pulled a chair up next to him and said, softly, "Are you a gamer?"

And I was in.

I love video games, as do many in my generation. One of those people happens to be the best basketball player on the planet, Duncan. He plays online as often as he can. He doesn't play basketball video games. He says he's a PlayStation 2 guy, because he can't bring the Xbox on the road. He loved Metal Gear Solid 1, kind of liked MGS 2 and didn't really like MGS 3. After playing an early version of the PlayStation Portable, Duncan put in a bulk order so the entire team could use the wi-fi feature and play against each other on team flights.

The easy thing to do is call Duncan boring. The truth is he lets his game speak for itself. And really, what else is there to say? So many times, people in sports spout quotes because they're expected to say something. Last night, after losing to the Spurs, Pistons point guard Chauncey Billups said, "They won on their home court, we're going to try and do the same." Thanks for that nugget, Chauncey. Duncan doesn't bother playing the media game.

Last summer, during the Olympics, we nicknamed Duncan "T, Robot" in my column over at SLAM's Web site, not only for his vague resemblance to Will Smith (who, yes, looks more like Horry, but had just released I, Robot), but also for his robotic style of play and tone of voice. Watching the Spurs, there are times I'm positive Duncan is an android, programmed with every conceivable basketball maneuver. When he catches the ball in the post, his "eyes" survey the situation and relay the information to a tiny microprocessor in his head, which is why he always seems to make the proper read. (Incidentally, if Duncan is indeed a robot, his inability to hit free throws is probably a purposeful glitch in his mainframe designed to make him appear more human.)

Mostly, Duncan's is a huge kid. (Remember, he's just 29 years old.) He never wears suits because, according to former teammate Kevin Willis, he wore a suit to a game years ago and had a horrible game. So he wears jeans and T-shirts and even rocked a pair of Vans to a game at Madison Square Garden earlier this season.

During the first round of the playoffs, I bumped into Duncan in a hallway at Denver's Pepsi Center. The Spurs had whacked the Nuggets, and Duncan was on his way to the team bus, escorted by Spurs media relations ace Tom James. As Duncan hustled past, head down, I said, "So you liking your PSP?"

Duncan stopped cold. "Yeah, man, it's awesome. Did you get one?" I told him I did, but that mine had a dark spot on the screen I was going to have to get fixed. "That sucks, dude" said the two-time MVP, sounding for all the world like a 15-year-old making minimum wage. "You should be able to return that, right?"

Unless the Pistons are able to jam his frequency, T, Robot will continue to put up 20 and 10, causing enough havoc to open the outside for Manu Ginobili to zig-zag around and Bruce Bowen to stand wide-open in the corner. One of those guys will explode each night and get all the shine. Duncan, meanwhile, is the key to the whole thing.

Can the Pistons stop Duncan in time to win the chip? Not at the rate they're going. If Ben Wallace whispers something about Medal of Honor: European Assault the next time Duncan faces up to the ball, maybe T, Robot will freeze up.

At this point anything's worth a try.