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  1. #1
    1ST BALLOT HOF Buddy Mignon's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Post Count
    7,098
    Here I am... in my boxers sipping my coffee... fed up to the brim... forced to feed you all the same sandwich you served us at the end of last season. In this video you'll see hundreds of Spursfans guaranteeing a sixth le, and a back to back. Listen to how y they sound as they rally around their King Nerd, Skip Bayless. You see... this is why I don't take you nerds serious. Click on the link and watch the video.



    Five-time NBA champion Tim Duncan eventually will retire, of course, but San Antonio Spurs teammate Tony Parker doesn't expect it to happen just yet.

    "It will come to an end, but I don't think next year," Parker told reporters after the Spurs beat the Miami Heat Sunday in the NBA Finals for their fifth championship in 15 seasons. "I think everybody's gonna come back."
    Parker believes his longtime teammate will return and join Manu Ginobili, Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard and himself as they try to defend their le.
    Spurs owner Peter Holt agrees with Parker's assessment.
    "Tim and Manu are going to play until they die, so I think we are in pretty good shape," Holt told reporters. "Tim and Manu want to play until they die, somewhat sincerely, actually."
    The 38-year-old Duncan, who holds a player option to return next season for $10.3 million, said during the Finals that he would continue to play if he is still effective.
    He averaged 15.1 points and 9.7 rebounds during the regular season, and was slightly better during the team's run to the championship (15.4 PPG, 10.0 RPG).

    Tony Parker says he thinks that "everybody's gonna come back" as the Spurs will try to defend their NBA championship and seek a sixth le in 16 seasons. Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty ImagesAdd to that coach Gregg Popovich's ability to rest his big man -- Duncan averaged 29.2 minutes per game this past season.
    "I don't see any reason, watching him play, why he can't continue to be a great player," Spurs general manager R.C. Buford said during Sunday's celebration. "He'll make that decision."
    And if Duncan returns -- and even if he doesn't -- Ginobili expects the Spurs to continue what they've become accustomed to doing.
    "I think I said it many times. There was not one season since I'm in the NBA that I really didn't truly believe that we could have won it," said Ginobili, who will turn 37 in July. "Every year we were up there. Sometimes we were No. 1, and we lost in the first round. Some other times we were seventh, and we had a shot at winning it.
    "But playing with the teammates I've always played [with], coached by the guy that is coaching us, I always felt that we had a shot, and I truly never believed it was the last shot."

    http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/11...rn-18th-season




  2. #2
    Veteran
    My Team
    Houston Rockets
    Post Count
    1,981
    Why wouldn't he? He looks about as good as he was 10 years ago. Wouldn't be surprised to see him play into his mid-40's...okay, that would be surprising but he may be able to at this rate.

    Just imagine if he had gone to Boston had the Lottery ping pong ball bounced that way in 1997. I think his career would be different in a high profile market like that as opposed low key SA-Town.

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