Those tickets have all been sold by the Spurs. The link you refer to will take you to Stubhub, which is a secondary marketplace for ticket sales. Those tickets are being sold by season ticket holders (individual and corporate) and by ticket speculators. The fact that there are tickets available for less than face value tells you that the secondary market for tickets to tomorrow's game is soft.
Beyond that, I can make some general statements about attendance as someone who has attended at least 95% of all home games over the past nine years.
1. Up until the economic collapse in 2008, there was not much difference between paid attendance and actual attendance. Since then, you see empty seats even at games announced as sellouts. I attribute this to season ticket holders staying home for a certain percentage of the games because there are expenses associated with going to the games beyond the price of their tickets.
2. This leads to the glut of tickets on the secondary market that you observed.
3. Generally speaking, games before the Rodeo Road Trip are less well attended than games after the RRT. Exception being the games played during those two weeks that schools are closed for the holidays.
4. Generally speaking, weeknight games are less well attended than weekend games for the obvious reasons.
5. Certain opponents (Lakers, LeBrons, Mavs, Rockets) draw better than most of the rest.
6. If you want to get great seats at great price, use Stubhub to buy tickets to a weeknight game against a bad opponent in December or January. For example, Milwaukee on Wednesday, December 5th. If you can wait until the last 24 hours before gametime, you'll have no problem get good lower level seats for less than 50% of face value.
Hope that helps.

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