The acquisition of Steve Smith was a case of the Spurs getting what scraps they could in the S&T deal once Derek Anderson announced he was going to Portland. I don't remember having any delusions about how limited he was going to be. That the Spurs went 58-24 with the garbage lineup they trotted out in 2001-02 was a testament to the greatness of Tim Duncan at the peak of his powers.
Obviously, the Spurs did not agree that it was such a good price since they were so eager to dump him. Rasho was what they settled for when they couldn't get any first-tier players with their free agent money. Rasho had a good scoring game once against the Spurs, and Pop liked him. That summer was turning into a huge bust until Sam Presti, who in actuality was the real brains of the operation, figured out a way to get Hedo Turkoglu for nothing. That was slick.
If the Spurs had acquired Kidd, they never would have had enough money to keep Ginobili. Parker would have demanded a trade. They lucked out when Kidd decided to stay in New Jersey. Had R.C. gotten his way, the Spurs contending days would have been long over. They win in spite of R.C.
It's the Los Angeles Lakers. If they want to pay the luxury tax, it doesn't kill them. If they don't, players like Radmanovic and Walton are easily expendable.
That is absolute and utter nonsense. The Spurs acquired Finley two years after the 2003 draft flub. They threw away that pick to conserve cap space for the Jason Kidd run. They lucked out in not getting him, but had they drafted Howard in 2003, he never joins the Mavericks, never creates the infamous mismatch in combination with Nowitzki, the Mavs never get far enough against the Spurs for Manu's foul to make a difference, and right now we're bummed because the Lakers just returned the favor in preventing a four-peat.
They got Finley in 2005 because of a one-time luxury tax amnesty event where Mark Cuban could waive a player and not pay the tax on his salary (though he still had to pay the salary). Finley chose the Spurs over the Miami Heat.
Neither are they the transcendant geniuses people make them out to be. When Presti was there, they could make magic things happen with the salary-cap rules. Look at what he did in Seattle: he got draft picks from Phoenix in order to take Kurt Thomas off their hands, then got another pick for passing Thomas off to the Spurs. He turned thin air and a four-month rental of Kurt Thomas into three first-round picks. That's a genius. R.C. Buford struck it rich on draft picks nearly a decade ago, and got credit for Presti's brainstorms, and people make him out to be a model GM, which is nonsense. The league has long since caught up on international scouting, he's repeatedly flubbed basic details like dates of birth and buyout clauses that have cost the Spurs chances at players who can contribute, and frankly it's hard to see where he's brought enough to the table to have any confidence that he knows what he's doing enough to restock this roster.
The Spurs have never had much of a problem getting aging veteran free agents to fill out the roster. Following 1999, that team aged out of contention rapidly, culminating in a 2001 Western final where the Lakers posted the worst beating on the Spurs in NBA playoff history. That team featured 108-year old Terry Porter at the point, who was passed up by elderly ladies in motorized carts as he brought the ball up the court.
The team was rebuilt because the Spurs struck draft gold in Parker and Ginobili, and made a sage move in acquiring Bruce Bowen as a free agent. Everything else was gravy.
Now they're back in the same boat they were in back in 2001. They lost to the Lakers in the WCF. I'm glad they at least were compe ive instead of going down 111-72 and 111-82 to close out a sweep, but clearly there are a lot of old pieces to replace. I don't even detect any sense of urgency on Pop's part that they need to get that much younger. He and R.C. seem quite content to bring in Mahinmi to replace Horry, sign a swingman with the MLE, and grab a scrub point guard to replace Jacque Vaughn. That will still leave senior citizens Kurt Thomas, Michael Finley, Bruce Bowen, and Brent Barry on the team, expected to play significant roles. That just isn't going to cut it anymore. The 2008 Spurs already were the oldest team ever to make a conference final. I don't support the apparent effort to break that record next season. It won't succeed.