Playing along without a draft pick
Publication Date : June 23, 1996
- S.A.'s success in the regular season hindered chances for prize rookies By Tim Griffin Express-News Staff Writer
Choosing players in the NBA draft isn't the easiest chore for general managers, coaches and player-personnel directors.
Take away the top players and the task becomes even more difficult.
The Spurs historically have been saddled with low draft picks because of their success on the court. Wins during the regular season usually meant the team selected at the end of the first round.
"If you end up drafting 18th or 20th and pick up a player once every two years or so who can help you, you've done pretty well," said Don Leventhal, whose draft analysis is considered to be the industry's standard. "When you are picking that late, you need some extraordinary luck to get good players."
The only sustained period of good drafting position for San Antonio came in the late 1980s, when the team struggled through its worst stretch on the court.
Losing seasons prompted lottery picks from 1987 to '89. Those choices served as the nucleus for San Antonio's playoff units over the last seven seasons.
David Robinson's selection was an easy one with the first pick in the 1987 draft. The most difficult task for San Antonio was actually signing the center, who could have re-entered the draft the following season if he didn't agree on contract terms.
After he was signed, the Spurs waited out his two-year military obligation. The Spurs claimed 31 and 21 victories in those two seasons, qualifying for the lottery both times.
Some of the initial shock from not having Robinson was lessened in the first year by the quick development of forward Greg "Cadillac" Anderson. The former University of Houston product averaged 11.7 points and 6.3 rebounds a game, becoming the first player in team history to be selected on the league's all-rookie team.
In 1988, the Spurs snared guard Willie Anderson from Georgia with the No. 10 pick.
Anderson became an immediate starter, earning all-rookie honors and placing second in rookie of the year balloting behind Mitch Richmond. The 6-foot-8 swingman became the first Spurs rookie to lead the team in scoring, averaging 18.6 points per game.
Sean Elliott came in the 1990 draft with the third pick - San Antonio's second-highest choice ever.
The Spurs were anticipating Danny Ferry would be their pick after Pervis Ellison was nabbed by Sacramento with the No. 1 choice in the draft.
Several weeks after Ferry was chosen by the Los Angeles Clippers with the draft's second pick, the former Duke product opted to sign with an Italian team.
Ironically, the Clippers were leaning toward Elliott before the draft, but backed off because of concerns about his knee. Elliott had worn a brace since high school, and Clippers general manager Elgin Baylor said discussions with doctors indicated that "there might have been a risk factor."
"Everyone knows we would have preferred Ferry," then-Spurs owner Red McCombs said at the time. "But we got a great player."
The arrival of Robinson and Elliott coincided with the team's return to the playoffs in a 56-win season. Robinson earned rookie of the year honors, leading the team in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and steals. Elliott averaged 10 points a game and earned a starting position in his first season.
One of the more intriguing misses came in 1991, when the Spurs selected 7-foot-1 center Dwayne Schintzius with the 24th pick.
The 260-pound center was thought to have been a lottery player before his senior season. But repeated rules violations at Florida and a bad showing at a predraft camp cost him dearly.
"I am going to make people sorry they didn't draft me sooner," Schintzius said.
But that feeling probably extended to the Spurs after Schintzius managed just 3.8 points and 2.9 rebounds in 42 games in his rookie season. He was packaged with a second-round pick the following season to Sacramento for Antoine Carr, who was a solid contributor during 2 seasons in San Antonio.
That draft also must have soured San Antonio's ins utional mindset on using the draft. They traded two No. 1 draft picks in deals for Sidney Green and J.R. Reid and also swapped UCLA forward Tracy Murray (to Portland for Dale Ellis) and Bill Curley (to reacquire Elliott from Detroit) before training camp.
No first-round draft pick selected by the team joined San Antonio between Schintzius and 1995 first-round selection Cory Alexander.
Perhaps San Antonio's biggest draft-day disappointment came in 1985, when the Spurs almost selected Karl Malone.
San Antonio and Utah were tied during the regular season, but Utah won the coin flip to pick ahead of the Spurs.
Former assistant coach Gary Fitzsimmons remembers that the Spurs were convinced Malone would be available before the draft.
"We thought that Utah wanted to take Blair Rasmussen and that might have left Karl for us," Fitzsimmons said.
FILE PHOTO
The Spurs wanted Karl Malone in 1985. Instead, they got Alfrederick Hughes, who lasted just two seasons in S.A.
FILE PHOTO
Dwayne Schintzius came to S.A. in '91 with the 24th pick. He left a year later after playing just 42 games as a rookie.
The five best and five worst player personnel moves made by the Spurs during the David Robinson era (1989-present), as selected by Express-News staffers who have covered the team; moves are listed chronologically:
THE BEST
- Acquired power forward Terry mings and future
considerations in a trade that sent guard Alvin Robertson, forward/center Greg Anderson and future considerations to Milwaukee on May 28, 1989.
(General Manager Bob Bass' corraling of mings gave the Spurs a proven, consistent scorer to take some of the heat off rookie center David Robinson, muscle on the boards and veteran leadership).
- Acquired guard Rod Strickland in a trade that sent guard Maurice Cheeks to New York on Feb. 21, 1990.
(The Spurs gave up an unhappy veteran running out of time and gained a talented young point guard from the streets of the Bronx).
- Acquired forward Dennis Rodman, guard/forward Isaiah Morris and future considerations in a trade that sent forward Sean Elliott and forward David Wood to Detroit on Oct. 1, 1993.
(Prodded by Coach John Lucas, Bass gambled by dealing one of the Spurs' most popular players -who also happened to be seeking a contract extension at the time - for the brilliant but flaky rebounding workhorse).
- Reacquired Elliott in a trade that sent the rights to rookie forward/center Bill Curley and a second-round pick in the 1997 draft to Detroit on July 18, 1994.
(New GM Gregg Popovich got Elliott back in a trade that made Taco Cabana and Spurs president Robert McDermott very happy).
- Signed free-agent point guard Avery Johnson on July 22, 1994.
(Popovich winds up solving the club's point guard woes with a player whose resume included two prior stints with the Spurs).
THE WORST
- Traded guard Vernon Maxwell to Houston in exchange for $50,000 on Feb. 21, 1990.
(Maxwell's temper and off-the-court unpredictability forced the Spurs' hand. The problem was they didn't get much in return from their I-10 rivals, who got five fine seasons out of Mad Max before they, too, became fed up with his immature ways).
- Traded forward Frank Brickowski to Milwaukee in exchange for veteran guard/forward Paul Pressey on Aug. 1, 1990.
(Pressey played in only 126 games before becoming a Spurs assistant coach. Brickowski's still banging away in Seattle).
- Allowed guard Rod Strickland to become an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 1992.
(Strickland's salary demands and off-court antics soured the Spurs, who struggled to fill the point-guard spot for the next two seasons).
- Traded forward/center Sidney Green, a first-round pick in 1993 and a second-round pick in 1996 to Charlotte in exchange for forward J.R. Reid on Dec. 9, 1992.
(Charlotte used the first-round pick to nab guard-forward Scott Burrell, a solid performer who continues to improve for the Hornets. Players drafted after Burrell included Sam Cassell, Earvin Johnson and Gheorgehe Muresan).
- Traded Rodman and other considerations to Chicago for forward/center Will Perdue on Oct. 2, 1995.
(Nothing against Perdue, but was he enough compensation for one of the greatest rebounders of all time?)