Stats or wins? Duncan’s All-Star spot is at stake
By Brian Mahoney
Tim Duncan’s championship credentials will someday mandate a spot in the Hall of Fame.
“He’s a pillar, one of the few pillars of this league,” Houston’s Shane Battier said.
One who is having a mediocre season statistically, the kind that would normally warrant a long weekend off next month.
Duncan barely cracks the top 20 in scoring among a stellar class of Western Conference forwards. So as coaches submit their ballots this week for All-Star reserves, they’ll have to look elsewhere if they choose to consider Duncan for a 13th straight appearance.
Perhaps away from Blake Griffin’s spectacular highlights. Away from Kevin Love’s point-rebound totals that belong in a video game.
They will have to go directly to San Antonio’s won-loss record.
Because at 40-7, it may be impossible to dismiss how much Duncan means to the Spurs—even in a year when he seems to mean less than ever.
“I haven’t looked at him specifically. … Those guys are 37-4 or something,” Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said last week. “You’ve got to take a strong look at that. That’s meaningful, that Duncan is on a team that’s winning every game. That’s a big deal, and it should be.”
Coaches routinely favor players from winning teams when making their selections, and the Spurs have been even more dominant than in any of their four championship seasons with Duncan. So the West coaches likely believe San Antonio should have multiple All-Stars, just as their East counterparts did in recent years with teams that won so much, sending four Detroit Pistons in 2006 and two Boston reserves to join starter Kevin Garnett in 2008.
Manu Ginobili is the Spurs’ best candidate, averaging 18.8 points. Tony Parker is next at 17.5 on 52 percent shooting, while Duncan’s average of 13.6 points is third on the team and only 20th best among West forwards who have played at least 30 games, according to STATS LLC.
That’s a career low, as are his 9.4 rebounds in only 29 minutes per game while the Spurs monitor the 14-year veteran’s minutes. Still good for most players, those statistics look even punier next to the nightly double-doubles of Griffin and Love, players Duncan has to compete with, along with perhaps players such as Dallas’ Dirk Nowitzki, LaMarcus Aldridge of Portland, the Lakers’ Pau Gasol, or Zach Randolph of Memphis.
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