whottt
06-17-2007, 02:15 AM
I am only posting the first page of a 5 page article...but it's a nice and very informative article. Lots of good stuff in here.
If you click on the link you can read the other 4 pages.
http://www.boston.com/sports/articles/2007/06/17/spurs_have_it_all_together/?page=1
Spurs have it all together
Pieces are in place for even more titles
By Peter May | June 17, 2007
Gregg Popovich recently bought 47 acres of land in Vermont, where he plans to build a home. He's not happy the news got out; credit the Bennington Banner for that. But it's not as if he's going to turn into Bob Newhart overnight. Suffice it to say that the first shovel will hit the ground when Tim Duncan walks out that door, never to return.
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Sign up for: Globe Headlines e-mail | Breaking News Alerts And that won't be for a while, which is good news for Popovich and the folks in San Antonio, and bad news for everyone else.
The Spurs not only have won three of the last five NBA titles, they could easily have won the other two, losing to the Lakers in 2004 (the series-turning play being Derek Fisher's Game 5 heroics at the end) and to the Mavericks last year (the series-turning play being Manu Ginobili's foul on Dirk Nowitzki near the end of regulation in Game 7). They haven't even repeated yet, but you have to figure they will be in the mix for several years.
The reason? Duncan, of course. Tony Parker was the Finals MVP but that was like giving the 1981 MVP to Cedric Maxwell or the 1988 award to James Worthy. Yes, the award winners played great. But everyone knows who the real MVP was (including, by the way, Parker, Worthy, and Maxwell).
"Guys want to come play here," said Spurs general manager R.C. Buford during the Finals. "People are willing to sacrifice to do that. We've had a long list of guys do that: [Steve] Kerr, [Danny] Ferry, [Terry] Porter, Mario [Elie], and now [Michael] Finley and [Fabricio] Oberto.
"A lot of those guys had better offers. Tim allows this to happen. I think they have an appreciation playing for Pop and knowing that it's going to be fair and reasonable. But it starts with Tim. You got the honey, the bees will come."
Indeed. And Duncan isn't going anywhere or, presumably, losing any of his "honey." So the "bees" should continue to come. Duncan is signed for three more years (at roughly the same amount the Celtics decided to pay Paul Pierce) and is still only 31. The other key guys, Parker (25) and Ginobili (30 next month), aren't going anywhere, either. Ginobili is signed through 2010 and Parker through 2011.
The Spurs will basically return the same group next year with minor tweaks. (We're not sure of Matt Bonner's fate, sadly. The pride of Concord will be a free agent.) Veterans Finley, Robert Horry, Bruce Bowen, and Brent Barry are all signed through 2008. Oberto has a player option; can't see him deciding to pass on a possible repeat. If San Antonio does not bring back Jacque Vaughn, it'll have at least one space available. (Bonner would be another.) The Spurs have the rights to several bodies playing in Europe, including menacing Argentine Luis Scola.Continued...
If you click on the link you can read the other 4 pages.
http://www.boston.com/sports/articles/2007/06/17/spurs_have_it_all_together/?page=1
Spurs have it all together
Pieces are in place for even more titles
By Peter May | June 17, 2007
Gregg Popovich recently bought 47 acres of land in Vermont, where he plans to build a home. He's not happy the news got out; credit the Bennington Banner for that. But it's not as if he's going to turn into Bob Newhart overnight. Suffice it to say that the first shovel will hit the ground when Tim Duncan walks out that door, never to return.
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E-mail to a friend
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powered by Del.icio.us
More:
Sports section |
Latest sports news |
Globe front page |
Boston.com
Sign up for: Globe Headlines e-mail | Breaking News Alerts And that won't be for a while, which is good news for Popovich and the folks in San Antonio, and bad news for everyone else.
The Spurs not only have won three of the last five NBA titles, they could easily have won the other two, losing to the Lakers in 2004 (the series-turning play being Derek Fisher's Game 5 heroics at the end) and to the Mavericks last year (the series-turning play being Manu Ginobili's foul on Dirk Nowitzki near the end of regulation in Game 7). They haven't even repeated yet, but you have to figure they will be in the mix for several years.
The reason? Duncan, of course. Tony Parker was the Finals MVP but that was like giving the 1981 MVP to Cedric Maxwell or the 1988 award to James Worthy. Yes, the award winners played great. But everyone knows who the real MVP was (including, by the way, Parker, Worthy, and Maxwell).
"Guys want to come play here," said Spurs general manager R.C. Buford during the Finals. "People are willing to sacrifice to do that. We've had a long list of guys do that: [Steve] Kerr, [Danny] Ferry, [Terry] Porter, Mario [Elie], and now [Michael] Finley and [Fabricio] Oberto.
"A lot of those guys had better offers. Tim allows this to happen. I think they have an appreciation playing for Pop and knowing that it's going to be fair and reasonable. But it starts with Tim. You got the honey, the bees will come."
Indeed. And Duncan isn't going anywhere or, presumably, losing any of his "honey." So the "bees" should continue to come. Duncan is signed for three more years (at roughly the same amount the Celtics decided to pay Paul Pierce) and is still only 31. The other key guys, Parker (25) and Ginobili (30 next month), aren't going anywhere, either. Ginobili is signed through 2010 and Parker through 2011.
The Spurs will basically return the same group next year with minor tweaks. (We're not sure of Matt Bonner's fate, sadly. The pride of Concord will be a free agent.) Veterans Finley, Robert Horry, Bruce Bowen, and Brent Barry are all signed through 2008. Oberto has a player option; can't see him deciding to pass on a possible repeat. If San Antonio does not bring back Jacque Vaughn, it'll have at least one space available. (Bonner would be another.) The Spurs have the rights to several bodies playing in Europe, including menacing Argentine Luis Scola.Continued...