The article may be ok, but le and opening line are terrible.
Spurs do one thing that many posters even miss. They prioritize character, drive and hard work over skill. There is a balance, of course (as skill is necessary), but they would rather have 10 guys who are blue collar, off the court workers, than a hodge podge of high draft pick athletic guys that bring drama, emotional instability and weakness in the face of adversity.
For a small market, I think there is no other way to go. The hard working guys will always compete and give you a chance at the playoffs. Talent may be slower to arrive (since this strategy does not involve tanking or catering to pussies), but when it does, the team jumps to elite, much like Kawhi gave the Spurs in 2016 and 2017.
There is some truth to PAFTO needing to learn how to better interact with the new generation of players, basically babied millennials (stereotype but with truth there). But, it is only somewhat true.
Teaching good habits, having a mentor that pushes you hard, and tough love are timeless, and are for every generation. The Spurs are overall better off avoiding the typical spoiled but skilled player, and bringing up lesser skilled character guys. So when you get that rare combination of character and talent, the Spurs are ready for the next period of dominance.
And then we never have to put up with ten years of "rebuilding", as Timvp rightly points out.