Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 46
  1. #1
    I Like Double D's DDS4's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Post Count
    2,061
    Lock if reposted:


    1. If the Spurs don't make the NBA Finals this season, what will have been the main reasons?



    Henry Abbott, TrueHoop: Manu Ginobili's inconsistent play, which is undoubtedly related to fatigue and injury, and some bad timing in which the Spurs' normally excellent role players -- Robert Horry, Michael Finley, Bruce Bowen, Brent Barry -- took turns being really, really cold when it mattered.



    Also, the Lakers are an excellent team.



    J.A. Adande, ESPN.com: Sometimes there's a fine line between "experienced" and "old," and the Spurs appeared to tiptoe past it in these playoffs, getting blown out by New Orleans three times on the road and getting out-hustled by the Lakers in their own building in Game 5.



    Another reason would be the lack of consistent production from their role players. Robert Horry hasn't made a shot so far this series. Two starters didn't score in Game 5. As Hubie Brown would say, you cannot have that.



    Chris Broussard, ESPN The Mag: Age has had a slight impact. Tim Duncan is still a super-elite player but he has lost a step, and Bruce Bowen and Michael Finley, while still effective, have lost a bit as well.



    Also, the Lakers improved drastically, as did New Orleans. Simply put, San Antonio is no longer the best team in the West. L.A. is.



    Ric Bucher, ESPN The Mag: The age and athleticism issues we've been talking about for the past few years finally came to bear.



    John Hollinger, ESPN.com: If the Spurs don't make the Finals, it won't be because of a non-call at the end of Game 4. No, the reason instead will be the 20-point lead they blew in Game 1 and, more generally, the fact they ran into a team with younger, fresher legs and didn't have enough left in the tank to respond.



    With Manu worse than 100 percent and the other role players showing their age, they weren't quite good enough this time around.



    Chris Sheridan, ESPN.com: It won't be because of Joey Crawford or any other peripheral issue. It'll be because they met their match -- just like two years ago against Dallas. The Lakers deserve credit here. They've played well ... except for those final 30 seconds in Game 4.





    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------





    2. How much longer do you expect the Spurs' big three to play at a high level?



    Abbott: At least three years.



    John Hollinger will tell you big men last longer, and Tim Duncan is in perfectly good shape as far as I can tell. He's 32 and he'll be elite for at least three more years, I'd assume.



    Ginobili is the biggest worry: He's injury prone and a wing who has to be athletic to be most effective. But he's turning only 31 this summer. Plus, he can shoot and he has plenty of size for his position, so he'll age better than most.



    And Parker is a baby.



    Adande: If these playoffs are any indication, the Spurs will be down to a Big 2½ in the next couple of years.



    Duncan is still capable of putting up big numbers and his game isn't based on athleticism, so age won't affect him the way it did, say, Shaquille O'Neal. Tony Parker just turned 26 and is as fast as ever.



    But the ac ulated wear and tear of all those extra playoff games, plus international compe ion, appears to be catching up to Ginobili -- especially on defense, where he no longer is the roving X factor he used to be.



    Broussard: Patrick Ewing, Hakeem Olajuwon and Moses Malone all had their last "20-10''-type seasons at (roughly) 34 years of age, so the 32-year-old Duncan's probably got two, maybe three, seasons left at this level.



    Having a great, young (26) point guard like Tony Parker will help keep him at a high level.



    Ginobili, who'll be 31 this summer, is probably on a similar timetable to Duncan, so I'll give them at least two more years at close to this level, but to win another le, they're going to have to have better pieces around them.



    Bucher: The only question mark is the ulative effect of Manu Ginobili's injuries.



    Tim Duncan never lived off his athleticism, so even if that is diminishing, it shouldn't have a significant impact on his effectiveness.



    Tony Parker is still improving.



    They should have at least two more seasons as a championship-caliber core.



    Hollinger: I'd expect each of them to have at least a couple more good years in them. Ginobili had the best season of his career this year and Parker is only 26, so it's not like imminent declines are coming from either of them.



    Duncan, at 32, remains one of the league's most effective players, and players of his size and build tend to age well. So I doubt any of them will slip radically over the next two years.



    Sheridan: Duncan has slipped very little. And Parker still has 90 percent of his speed, and Manu merely has ankle issues holding him back. I see them staying at a high level through 2012.





    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------





    3. What will be the Spurs' biggest issues going forward?



    Abbott: There is no crisis, just really good compe ion and a need for some of the pieces in the pipeline to start contributing (like Rodney Stuckey and Amir Johnson will be doing for the Pistons -- a team in a similar spot).



    The Spurs let Luis Scola get away. And they might be losing Tiago Splitter to Tau. So that puts a lot of pressure on the likes of Ian Mahinmi, Ime Udoka and new youngsters who might join the roster to really be able to play. In the past, those guys weren't really needed.



    Adande: The Spurs are so businesslike, it makes sense that one of their issues could be found in the currency tables of the Wall Street Journal; the declining dollar makes it less appealing for foreign draft picks to come here when they could be getting paid in Euros.



    And as other teams catch up with them they won't have the built-in edge to attract NBA free agents they enjoyed when they were closer to a le than anyone else.



    Finally, if home court is going to continue to make such a difference in the playoffs, the Spurs won't be able to stick with their strategy of rationing out minutes to the veterans and cruising a little in the regular season to keep everyone fresh. They'll have to fight for top seeds like everyone else.



    Broussard: The Spurs are going to have to put better players around their big three. They're going to have to get younger and more athletic, and they'll need to get a better power forward to match up with David West in N.O., and Pau Gasol (who will move to the 4 when Andrew Bynum returns) or Odom in L.A.



    Duncan won't be able to carry that frontline by himself anymore. He needs a PF who can give him good rebounding and a little scoring.



    Bucher: The Spurs have structured their contracts so that only Parker and Duncan are under contract for the summer of '10, when a dozen or more superstars -- Kobe, who has great admiration for the San Antonio organization, included -- could be available.



    So the biggest question they face is, how much do they invest in potential free agents, and thereby impinge upon their cap flexibility, between then and now?



    Hollinger: Their three biggest problems are age, age and age. Every Spurs role player is on the wrong side of 30. All of them. And they're fading fast.



    Michael Finley is a s of what he was. Robert Horry is done, finito, over. Bruce Bowen (36), Brent Barry (36) and Fabricio Oberto (33) got next.



    Even Ime Udoka is 30, and he's the young whippersnapper on this bench.



    The Spurs need to rebuild the entire roster outside of the three-man core over the next two years; while they've given themselves plenty of cap flexibility to do it, it's a massive undertaking.



    Sheridan: They need a young big man and an athletic 3. I am not ready to say that Ian Mahinmi and Tiago Splitter are the answers.





    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------





    4. The Spurs have talked about keeping this core together through (at least) 2012. How many NBA les will they win from now to then?



    Abbott: Darn it, my crystal ball is still not working! I'll guess one, but anything from zero to three would not surprise me.



    Adande: The Spurs could get one more championship in that window. They will have to be opportunistic because the next three to four years should belong to the Lakers, with the Hornets, Jazz and possibly Blazers in the Western Conference elite mix as well.



    Maybe they'll catch a break (they're owed one after the Derek Fisher non-call) or benefit from a key injury on another team. They'll be a fixture in the second round, but will need things to go their way to advance.



    Broussard: Like I said, it depends on who they add to their core. As they are, they probably won't win another ring. But I'll give them one more le through 2012 just because "you can never count them out'' and, I'm assuming, they'll make smart personnel moves.



    Bucher: On their every-other-year schedule, two more, but even the Spurs don't believe they can keep that run going.



    That said, they are simply too smart as an organization for anyone to suggest they can't claim one more Larry O'Brien bauble before we see Duncan and Popovich ride off into the sunset together.



    Hollinger: The Duncan-era Spurs might very well have another le left in them. Remember, this is one of the league's shrewdest organizations, and I have little doubt R.C. Buford, Gregg Popovich and company can figure out how to get some new pieces to replenish the aging ones.



    The problem is that it might take a couple of years to get it all sorted out, and in the meantime the Lakers, Jazz, Hornets and Blazers all will be ascendant in the West.



    Sheridan: At least one. And I am not counting them out of this series yet. But they'll be a high-level team at least until then, and they have a knack for winning tight games.





    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------





    5. How do the Spurs rate among the greatest franchises of the past three decades?



    Abbott: Part of being a "great franchise" is capturing the imagination of a national audience, and on that score they are among the worst champions ever and rank so far behind the Bulls, Lakers, and Celtics that you'd need binoculars to see them. But they don't care. This franchise under Gregg Popovich and Tim Duncan has always been about playing the best basketball, and on that score you simply have to put them up there with the very best.



    Adande: They go sixth, behind the '80s Lakers, the '80s Celtics, the '90s Bulls, the three-peat Lakers and the underrated Pistons Bad Boys teams.



    Duncan deserves credit for being the mainstay of so many good teams, but the full Spurs lineup couldn't match the talent on those other squads. Their most admirable trait has been their stability, a testament to the mind-set of the players and coaches and the front office's ability to manage the payroll. But that isn't an awe-inspiring trait.



    Broussard: On the court, the Lakers are easily the NBA's finest franchise over the past three decades. Chicago's great just based on the Jordan Era, but San Antonio is right there after that.



    They were solid in the late '70s/early '80s with The Iceman, very good in the late '80s/early '90s with The Admiral and great in the late '90s/2000s with Duncan. They haven't had the long droughts of weak play that have plagued Chicago and Boston and Detroit.



    Off the court, the Spurs are great in terms of professionalism, character, etc.



    Bucher: A top-five franchise, along with Lakers, Celtics, Pistons and Bulls.



    Sure, they haven't won back-to-back les, but maybe that's a reflection of overall increased league parity more than the Spurs' being unworthy of entrance to Valhalla. In the five years since the Lakers' three-peat, seven different teams have been in the Finals. If the Lakers and Celtics advance, it will be nine different teams over a six-year span. From a cursory glance at the NBA Guide, I didn't see a five-year stretch that ever saw that much Finals turnover.



    Hollinger: The fact San Antonio never repeated will be held against it, but four championships in nine years is impressive no matter how you slice it. While these Spurs can't hang with the Shaq-and-Kobe three-peat or the Lakers and Celtics teams from the '80s, I'd put them up against any other team from the past three decades.



    So let's call them the fourth-best dynasty of the post-merger era. That's not too shabby for a little outpost in south Texas.




    http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/playof...e-Spurs-080529

  2. #2
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Post Count
    154,447
    Quite a good round table.

  3. #3
    Believe. Lake_show's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Post Count
    232
    They only have 3 good players on their team. Bowen, Finley and the role players need to be dealt.

  4. #4
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Post Count
    154,447
    They only have 3 good players on their team. Bowen, Finley and the role players need to be dealt.
    Bowen stays. The rest can go.

  5. #5
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Post Count
    342
    Very good analysis of the spurs past, present and future.

  6. #6
    Veteran Indazone's Avatar
    My Team
    Houston Rockets
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Post Count
    9,838
    In 2010 I do not expect the Spurs to go out and get Kobe. If anything the Spurs will sign a bunch of young hotshots and basically start over.

  7. #7
    9mm nkdlunch's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Post Count
    11,497
    the future is a slow, sometimes painful descent into oblivion. Kinda like the future of US of A

  8. #8
    Still Hates Small Ball Spurminator's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Post Count
    37,751
    Pretty good until #5...

    Abbott: Part of being a "great franchise" is capturing the imagination of a national audience
    Why is that? Says who?

    Adande: They go sixth, behind the '80s Lakers, the '80s Celtics, the '90s Bulls, the three-peat Lakers and the underrated Pistons Bad Boys teams.
    Behind a two-time champion?

    In the five years since the Lakers' three-peat, seven different teams have been in the Finals. If the Lakers and Celtics advance, it will be nine different teams over a six-year span.
    Eight. The Lakers were there in 2004.

    While these Spurs can't hang with the Shaq-and-Kobe three-peat or the Lakers and Celtics teams from the '80s, I'd put them up against any other team from the past three decades.

    So let's call them the fourth-best dynasty of the post-merger era. That's not too shabby for a little outpost in south Texas.
    I think Hollinger forgot someone.

  9. #9
    Believe. Lake_show's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Post Count
    232
    Bowen stays. The rest can go.
    He is 36, no offensive threat and his defense is declining. He should be a bench player NOT a starter.

  10. #10
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Post Count
    41,642
    Bowen stays. The rest can go.
    yep! indeed.

  11. #11
    9mm nkdlunch's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Post Count
    11,497
    He is 36, no offensive threat and his defense is declining. He should be a bench player NOT a starter.
    he is still best perimeter defender in the league.

  12. #12
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Post Count
    154,447
    He is 36, no offensive threat and his defense is declining. He should be a bench player NOT a starter.
    You said he needs to be dealt.

    Make up your mind.

  13. #13
    #FreeGiuseppe BlackSwordsMan's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Post Count
    14,648
    So much for Ime taking over Bowen's spot.

  14. #14
    Spur Forever urunobili's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Post Count
    14,291
    so we already lost this season?

  15. #15
    Laker Lover 2Cleva's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Post Count
    1,842
    That was an awfully nice obituary.

  16. #16
    Believe. Lake_show's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Post Count
    232
    he is still best perimeter defender in the league.
    I'd take Artest first over him. I'd still take a good defender and not a offensive liability. Point blank, Bowen should come off the bench.

  17. #17
    Believe? rAm's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Post Count
    1,474
    I enjoyed the article even though it reeked of impending doom. The writer's seemed fairly on point.

  18. #18
    Believe. Lake_show's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Post Count
    232
    You said he needs to be dealt.

    Make up your mind.
    Either or.

  19. #19
    Spurs Homer. D'oh! MadDog73's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Post Count
    3,610
    "Adande: The Spurs are so businesslike, it makes sense that one of their issues could be found in the currency tables of the Wall Street Journal; the declining dollar makes it less appealing for foreign draft picks to come here when they could be getting paid in Euros."

    Interesting point.

    How long until top American draft picks are being recruited BY Europe?

  20. #20
    Veteran
    My Team
    Denver Nuggets
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Post Count
    332
    "Adande: The Spurs are so businesslike, it makes sense that one of their issues could be found in the currency tables of the Wall Street Journal; the declining dollar makes it less appealing for foreign draft picks to come here when they could be getting paid in Euros."

    Interesting point.

    How long until top American draft picks are being recruited BY Europe?
    Could this be why the NBA is trying to get a team or teams in Europe? From my understanding that the teams that are in Canada pay pay their players with the Canadian dollar. (I am not positive on that) So if a team is based in Europe they would be paid in Euro's. But would that make them more attractive to play for? I guess it also depends on the taxes that have to be paid.

  21. #21
    Drive for Five! ambchang's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Post Count
    18,142
    I would be laughing when the Spurs come back and win the series in 7.

  22. #22
    PhillyGirl 1Parker1's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Post Count
    16,374


    People are acting as if it's like the end of an Era or something.

  23. #23
    Big Mo MoSpur's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Post Count
    7,185
    As long as Orberto, Vaughn, Finley, & Horry don't come back, its all good.

  24. #24
    Believe. Lake_show's Avatar
    My Team
    Los Angeles Lakers
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Post Count
    232


    People are acting as if it's like the end of an Era or something.
    Hmm, 4 of your starters have about 3 years left in them.

  25. #25
    Believe. OldSilentHill's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Post Count
    388
    ESPN writer roundtable: What does the future hold for Spurs?

    Game 5. Nothing else. They have to focus on game 5.

    Hope they dont read this article before this playoff ends. After the PO, i hope they really do.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •