The
Dallas Chaparrals were established in 1967,
one of 11 teams to take the floor for the
ABA that year. Former St.
Louis Hawks
star Cliff
Hagan was persuaded to end his
one-year retirement and
join the club as a player-coach. The
Chaps'
stars included forward Cincinnatus "Cincy"
Powell,
center John Beasley, and guard
Bob Verga.
Maurice McHartley was the first player off the
bench.
With each team in the new league an
unknown quantity, the
ABA was
wide open, and
Dallas found itself in a tight
race with the
New Orleans Buccaneers and the
Denver Rockets for the top
spot in the
Western Division. The 36-year-old
Hagan had a good year, scoring 18.2 points
per game.
Beasley, the 6-foot-9 rookie, probably had the
best season of his
seven-year
ABA career, averaging 19.7 points while collecting 12.8 rebounds
per game.
Powell scored 18.3 points per game, Verga averaged 23.7 points in 31 contests before being called to military service, and McHartley tallied another 15.3 points per
contest.
Dallas finished its inaugural season with a 46-32
record and in
second place, two
games behind
New Orleans and two
Games ahead of
Denver. The Chaparrals swept the
Houston Mavericks in the first round of the playoffs, then
lost in the second round to
New Orleans, which went on to lose to the
Pittsburgh Pipers in the first
ABA Finals.
The second-year
Dallas Chaparrals slipped a
bit in the 1968-69 season despite the addition of rookie guard
Ron Boone.
Boone averaged 18.9 points in his freshman campaign, and
Powell and
Beasley each had productive years. But
Hagan's contribution slipped, and he appeared in only 35
games.
The
Chaps fell to fourth
place in the
Western Division with a 41-37
record, resulting in a first-round playoff rematch with
New Orleans. After falling behind the Buccaneers, three
games to
one,
Dallas bounced back with convincing wins in
Games 5 and 6. However, the
Chaps fell short by losing Game 7, 101-95.
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After the 1968-69 season
Hagan gave up playing and moved to the
bench full-
time. The 1969-70 team added a new
center, Manny Leaks, who had played for the
Kentucky Colonels and the
New York Nets before joining the Chaparrals. Leaks, who was only 6-foot-8, turned in a
stellar performance, averaging 18.8 points and 12.5 rebounds, while
Powell chipped in
20.1 points
per game.
Hagan's
bid to
give up playing and concentrate solely on his coaching duties backfired. With the team sporting a 22-
21 record, he was fired. His replacement,
Max Williams, piloted the team to a 45-39
record and a second-
place finish in the
Western Division.
Dallas lost in the first round of the playoffs to the
Los Angeles stars; however, the final three
games of the series were down-to-the-wire barn burners. With the Chaparrals up, two
Games to
one,
the Stars claimed Game 4, 144-138, then came back two nights later to win Game 5, 146-139.
The Stars then closed out the series in Game 6, winning 124-123.
For the 1970-71 season the
Dallas Chaparrals became the
Texas Chaparrals, but they continued to
play in
Dallas. It was not a good year on the
court for the
Chaps.
Powell was gone, and
the club cycled through 18
players and two
coaches during the campaign.
Donnie Freeman, a 6-foot-3 guard who came over from the
Utah stars during the season, provided much of the scoring, averaging 23.6 points. The franchise tumbled to its first losing season, at 30-54, and was then swept out of the playoffs by
the Stars.
The
Chaps (whose official
name was
once again the
Dallas Chaparrals)
hired Tom Nissalke as their head coach for the 1971-72 season, and he somehow managed to bring a team that featured names like Simmie
Hill and Goo
Kennedy to near respectability. A 41-41 finish was good enough to win Nissalke the league's Coach of the Year Award. For the second straight year the Chaparrals were swept by the
Utah stars in the first round of the playoffs, but it was a much better series. In the previous season
Utah had won by an average of more than 18 points
per game. In 1972 the margin was only
six points
per contest.
Nissalke jumped to the
NBA's
Seattle SuperSonics for the 1972-73 season. The team he left behind was in shambles. Neither his successor, Babe McCarthy, nor McCarthy's late-season replacement,
Dave Brown, could do much with the hapless team, which finished out of the playoffs at 28-56. To make matters worse, the franchise was struggling to attract fans, and when it was announced late in the season that a group from
New Jersey would purchase
the club, the last few shreds of local interest disappeared. To add insult to injury, the
New Jersey deal fell through.
The
Dallas Chaparrals'
swan song came on
March 26, 1973. Playing
one last
time at the
Dallas Convention Center, the Chaparrals eked out a 112-110
victory over
the Carolina Cougars, the
ABA's
best team that year. The paid attendance was reported to be 134.
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The franchise was rescued from oblivion by a group of
San Antonio businessmen led by
John Schaefer, B. J. "
Red" McCombs, Art Burdick, and
Angelo Drossos. The group moved
the club to
San Antonio and rechristened it the
Spurs. They also brought back Nissalke, whose
NBA sojourn had been a disaster-he'd lasted barely half a season with
Seattle, posting a 13-32
record with the SuperSonics before losing his
job.
The franchise played its first game in
San Antonio on October 10, 1973, before 5,879 fans at the HemisFair
Arena. The
Spurs faced the
San Diego Conquistadors and came out on the losing end of a 126-101
contest. The team got off to a slow start, posting a 1-6
record. Fan interest was minimal; only 1,799
people showed up for the
Spurs' first win, on October 18.
The situation began to
Change in November. The struggling
Virginia Squires franchise was selling off
players, and the
Spurs purchased 6-foot-11
Swen Nater for $300,000. On November 28
San Antonio played before a sellout crowd of 10,146 and
beat the Kentucky Colonels, to improve to 13-12. Nater, who had been Bill
Walton's backup at
UCLA, played in the
ABA All-
star Game, in which he racked up
29 points and 22 rebounds.
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1973-76: "The Iceman" Arrives
San Antonio made a second
big move at
the end of January, buying the rights to
21-year-old
George Gervin from
Virginia. Gervin joined the team in mid-February and averaged 19.4 points in 26 contests with the
Spurs.
the club won 12 of its final 18
games to claim third
place in the
Western Division with a 45-39
record. Paired with the
Indiana Pacers in the first round of postseason
play, the
Spurs lost in
seven Games.
The 1974-75
Spurs boasted a solid starting five. In addition to Gervin and Nater, the
Spurs had third-year guard
James "Snake"
Silas and sixth-year forward Rich
Jones, both of whom averaged 19.3 points. The team also added
veteran Donnie Freeman, who had played for the
Dallas Chaparrals a few
seasons earlier. He contributed 15.5 points
per game.
Despite the team's 17-10 start, Nissalke was fired in December, and
Bob Bass took over as coach. On January 28
San Antonio hosted the
ABA All-
star Game before 10,449
spectators. Three
Spurs played for the
West-Gervin, Nater, and
Silas. Gervin scored 23 points and
Silas canned
21 to
lead the
West, but the East prevailed, 151-124.
San Antonio finished in
second place in the
Western Division with a 51-33
mark. Gervin, who was following up a solid rookie season with a very productive sophomore campaign, gave
San Antonio fans a
taste of what they would see in the coming years. On February 5 he collected 51 points against the
Memphis Sounds. In the playoffs against Indiana, Coach Bass moved Gervin from forward to the shooting guard position, and he caught
fire. In the final three
games of the series he averaged 35.0 points. But it wasn't enough for the
Spurs, who
lost the series,
four Games to two.
The
Spurs made some major
changes in the offseason. In
June the team traded Nater to the
New York Nets for forward
Larry Kenon. Three months later
San Antonio sent four Spurs to
New York in
exchange for 6-foot-11
center Billy Paultz.
When the 1975-76
ABA season commenced, the league was down to
seven teams playing in a single division.
San Antonio's offseason
moves paid off. Nater was slowed by a knee injury and was not a
big contributor for the Nets. Paultz and Kenon, on the other hand, combined for 35.2 points and
21.5 rebounds
per game.
San Antonio placed
four players-Gervin,
Silas, Paultz, and Kenon-in the
ABA's midseason All-
star Game. After taking
seven of eight
games down the
stretch, the
Spurs wound up in third
place with a 50-34
record.
San Antonio faced
Julius Erving and the
New York Nets in the first round of the playoffs. The
Spurs'
chances were dealt a serious blow in Game 1 after
Silas, the team's leading scorer at 23.8 points
per game, broke his ankle.
the club still managed to push the Nets to the limit before bowing out in Game 7, 121-114. The Nets went on to claim the
ABA's ninth and final championship.
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On
June 17, 1976, the
San Antonio Spurs, the
New York Nets, the
Denver Nuggets, and the
Indiana Pacers all gained admittance to the
NBA as the
ABA finally gave up the
ghost.
San Antonio brought in
Doug Moe to assume the coaching duties but planned to take the floor with basically the same team.
Silas, who was coming off his ankle injury,
hurt his knee in the preseason and was sidelined for the
Spurs' first 60
games. His backup,
George Karl (who would
go on to coach the
fine Seattle teams of the
early 1990s), was also out of action after undergoing knee surgery. The
starting point guard duties
fell to
Mike Gale, who in the previous season had averaged only 6.8 points while coming off the
bench.
The
Spurs'
NBA premiere took
place on October 22, 1976, against the
Philadelphia 76ers, who had come away from the
NBA-
ABA merger with
Julius Erving. Playing before 17,196 Sixers fans, the
Spurs notched a 121-118 win. After a 2-6 start,
San Antonio reeled off
six straight
victories in November. In December the Spurs purloined a game from the
Kansas City Kings as forward
Larry Kenon registered 11 steals to
set an NBA
record. By February
the club was 10
games above .500.
San Antonio faltered as the year wound down, losing five of
six games to end the regular season. The
Boston Celtics then swept
San Antonio in the first round of the playoffs. Still, the
Spurs had put together a good showing in their first trip through the
NBA. At 44-38,
the club posted the sixth-
best record in the league. Gervin finished ninth in the league in scoring with 23.1 points
per game, and he shot a phenomenal .544 from
the field, the second-
best mark in
NBA history for a guard. The
Spurs were the NBA's top-scoring team, averaging 115.0 points. But
The club also had the league's most porous defense, allowing 114.4 points
per contest.
Gervin, Kenon, and Paultz led
the way in the 1977-78 season. Injuries sidelined guards
Gale,
Karl, and
Silas early in the year, and
the club posted back-to-back 8-7
records in November and December. By January the team was healthy. From
the beginning of the new year to
the end of
March,
San Antonio piled up wins, going 30-9 to clinch
the Central Division title.
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1977-79: "The Iceman" Duels With "Skywalker"
The final day of the season featured the incredible
climax to a season-long duel between Gervin and the
Denver Nuggets'
David Thompson for the league's scoring title. On Sunday,
April 9, the
Nuggets played an afternoon game against
Detroit. The 6-foot-4 Thompson blistered the
Pistons for 73 points in the
Nuggets' 139-137 win. Thompson's
point total was the third highest in league history. Only
Wilt Chamberlain, with
games of 100 in 1962 and 78 in 1961, had
ever scored more points in a single
contest.
Gervin and the
Spurs played that same night in
New Orleans against the Jazz. The Iceman needed 58 points to claim the title. He accumulated
20 of the
Spurs' 33 points in the first period. In the second Gervin added 33 to
set an
NBA single-period
record. With more than 10 minutes remaining in the third period, Gervin sank a 10-foot
jump shot to reach 59 points and take the title. Coach
Moe took Gervin out of
the game to a standing
ovation. The Iceman returned later to add 4 more points and finish with 63, on 23-of-49 shooting from
the field.
Gervin edged Thompson by the thinnest of margins for the scoring title. For the season, Gervin averaged 27.22 points to Thompson's 27.15.
The
Spurs entered the 1978 postseason with a 52-30
record and were favored to
beat the Washington Bullets in the first round of the playoffs. But the surprising Bullets, who had finished eight
games behind the
Spurs in
the Central Division, ousted
San Antonio in a hard-fought
six-game series. Gervin continued his scoring onslaught in the postseason, averaging 33.2 points. In Game 2 he
set a franchise playoff
record with 46 points.
The
Spurs set the
tone for the 1978-79 season on opening day, when
the club scored 153 points and
beat the Milwaukee Bucks by 42.
San Antonio would
go on to
lead the league in scoring with an average of 119.3 points.
The next closest team was the Bullets, who trailed the
Spurs by 4.4 points
per contest. The Spurs also paced the league in
point differential, beating opposing clubs by an average of 5.2 points.
The high-scoring
Spurs were led
once again by Gervin (
29.6 ppg), who became the first guard in
NBA history to win back-to-back scoring titles. The team also received a
big boost from
James Silas, who returned to the starting lineup after a two-year absence
due to knee surgery. The
Spurs were 14-14 when
Silas joined Gervin in the Spurs' starting backcourt. From that
point on the team went 34-
20. A 117-101 win over the
Cleveland Cavaliers on the final day of the season gave the Spurs a second straight
Central Division
crown with a 48-34
record,
one game ahead of the
Houston Rockets.
The
Spurs squared off against the
Philadelphia 76ers in the
Eastern Conference Semifinals and jumped out to a two-
games-to-
none lead in the
best-of-
seven series. The 76ers came back to knot the series at three
Games apiece. However, on
May 2
San Antonio returned
home and clipped the Sixers by a three-
point margin.
The
Spurs moved on to
face the
Washington Bullets in the
Eastern Conference Finals. After posting
victories in
games 1, 3, and 4,
San Antonio was in the driver's seat with a three-
Games-to-
one series
lead. But the Bullets squeezed out close
victories in each of the final three
games, winning by
scores of 107-103, 108-100, and 107-105, respectively, to take the series and
advance to the championship round against the
Seattle SuperSonics. Gervin averaged 28.6 points in the postseason to
lead all playoff participants.
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1979-80: Gervin Stays
HotAfter two years at the top of
the Central Division, the 1979-80 season was a disappointment for
San Antonio, although Kenon and
Silas had good years. In January the
Spurs sent Billy Paultz to
Houston for
John Shumate, who chipped in 14.7 points and 7.9 rebounds
per game in his 27 contests for the
Spurs. Gervin, meanwhile, was outstanding. He won his third straight scoring title by averaging 33.1 points
per game, leading the league in field goals
made and attempted. His shooting percentage was a blazing .528, and he also earned the MVP Award at the 1980
NBA All-
star Game after a 34-
point, 10-rebound
performance.
Despite Gervin's scoring outbursts,
San Antonio hovered around the .500
mark all season. The team was hampered by a weak defense, which yielded a whopping 119.7 points
per game. (
Denver, the second-poorest defensive
club, surrendered 112.7 points
per game.) Head Coach
Doug Moe paid for the team's mediocre
performance with his
job.
Moe was fired on
March 1 and replaced by
Bob Bass.
San Antonio finished the season with a 41-41
record and was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the
Houston Rockets.
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As a result of that lackluster showing, the
Spurs made a couple of key
moves before the 1980-81 season.
Larry Kenon was shipped to the
Chicago Bulls,
Dave Corzine came over from the
Washington Bullets,
George Johnson was picked up as a
free agent, and Reggie Johnson, a 6-foot-9 forward from the
University of
Tennessee, was selected in the first round of the
NBA Draft. In addition, the franchise brought in Stan Albeck as its new head coach. Meanwhile, the
Spurs jumped over to the
Midwest Division of the
Western Conference, joining
Houston,
Kansas City,
Denver,
Utah, and the expansion
Dallas Mavericks.
All the
pieces quickly fell into
place.
San Antonio jumped out to a 10-2 start. In late December a
San Antonio tradition was
born when
the club handed out 10,000
free posters that featured the
Spurs'
front line as the "Bruise
Brothers." The crew of
George Johnson,
Dave Corzine,
Kevin Restani,
Paul Griffin,
mark Olberding, and Reggie Johnson deserved the moniker. The 1980-81 team led the
NBA in rebounds and blocked
shots, and was third in
personal fouls.
George Johnson led the league in blocked
shots with 3.39
per game.
San Antonio breezed to its third division title in
four years, with a 52-30
record.
Kansas City and
Houston tied for second, a distant 12
games back. But the
Spurs were unable to get by the
Rockets in the
Western Conference Semifinals.
Houston took three
Games from
San Antonio at the HemisFair
Arena, including the deciding Game 7, which Houston won by a 105-100 tally.
An
era of sorts came to an end the following offseason when the
Spurs traded
James Silas to
Cleveland.
Silas was the last of the remaining
Spurs to have played with the old
Dallas Chaparrals. The emergence of Johnny
Moore made the trade possible.
Moore, a second-year
point guard, took over the starting
spot and went on to
lead the league in assists with 9.6
per game. He wasn't the only Spurs league leader during the 1981-82 campaign. After finishing third in scoring the season before, Gervin regained the top
spot by averaging 32.3 points
per game.
Halfway through the season the
Spurs made an important acquisition-they traded
Ron Brewer and
George Johnson to
Cleveland for the high-scoring, 6-foot-7
Mike Mitchell. In his first season with the
Spurs,
Mitchell averaged
21.0 points.
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San Antonio's
success was
built on its prolific offense. The 1981-82 season featured
one game with the second-highest
point total in
NBA history. In a triple-
overtime contest against
Milwaukee at the HemisFair
Arena, the
Spurs pulled away with a 171-166 win, thanks to a 50-
Point performance from Gervin.
San Antonio finished the year
ranked second in the
NBA in scoring at 113.1 points
per game, but that wasn't even close to league-leading
Denver, which averaged an astonishing 126.5 points.
The
Spurs claimed a second straight
Midwest Division title in 1981-82, finishing two
games ahead of
Denver. Matched up against
Seattle in the
Western Conference Semifinals, the
Spurs split the first two
Games with the SuperSonics, then won three straight close
games to take the series. That earned the team a shot at the
Lakers in the
Western Conference Finals, but
Los Angeles swept the Spurs on its way to an
NBA Championship.
In the offseason the
Spurs engineered a swap with the
Bulls that
sent mark Olberding and
Dave Corzine to
Chicago in return for 11-year
veteran Artis Gilmore. The 7-foot-2, 33-year-old
Gilmore fit right in, powering
San Antonio to a franchise-
record 53 wins. The team did it with solid, all-around
play. The
Spurs were second in the league in scoring, rebounding, blocked
shots, and assists.
Gilmore led the league in field-goal percentage at .626; Johnny
Moore was second in assists with 9.8
per game; and Gervin finished fourth in scoring at 26.5 points
per game.
The
Spurs concluded the regular season with an eight-game
lead over the
Denver Nuggets. The two teams squared off in the playoffs and proceeded to
light up the
scoreboard in
one of the most explosive playoff series
ever.
San Antonio took the first game, 152-133, as the two teams
set a single-game postseason
record for
total points. The
Spurs won Game 2 by 17 points, then took a commanding three-
games-to-
none lead in the series with a 127-126
overtime win. After losing Game 4,
San Antonio sent Denver packing with a 145-105 rout in Game 5. For the five-game series the Spurs averaged 132.8 points to
Denver's 119.4.
The next round saw a rematch of the previous
season's Lakers-
Spurs series. Swept in 1982, the
Spurs put on a much better showing in 1983, taking the
Lakers to
six games before bowing out in a
one-
point loss in Game 6.
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1983-84:
success No More In 1983-84
A division leader in five of the previous
six seasons,
San Antonio saw
the bottom drop out during the 1983-84 campaign. The problems started in the offseason when Stan Albeck left to take a head coaching
job with the
New Jersey Nets.
Morris McHone was
hired as his replacement. By
the end of November the team was 6-12. On December 17 the
Spurs lost to the
Atlanta Hawks, and Gervin was held to only 8 points, breaking a string of 407 straight
games in which he had scored in double
figures.
McHone was gone before the new year, and General Manager
Bob Bass stepped in and tried to
restore order. He didn't have much
luck.
Moore and
Gilmore spent large parts of the second half of the season on the injured
list, and the
Spurs lost 14 of 18
games following the All-
star break. Despite a flurry of five wins in
seven Games to end the season,
San Antonio finished out of the playoffs with a 37-45
record.
There were a couple of
bright spots in an otherwise lackluster season.
John Lucas, who joined the
Spurs from the
Continental Basketball Association in December, finished fourth in the
NBA with 10.7 assists
per game. During the final
contest of the season he
set an
NBA record with 14 assists in a
quarter and a team
record with 24 assists in a game. (Nonetheless, the
Spurs lost to the
Nuggets, 157-154.)
Gilmore led the league in field-goal percentage (.631) for the second consecutive year.
Moore finished
fifth in the NBA in assists, right behind
Lucas with 9.6
per game. And in February the Spurs retired the
Jersey of
James Silas.
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1984-85: Losses Shrink With Cotton
Cotton Fitzsimmons was
hired away from
Kansas City in the offseason and was given the task of rebuilding the
Spurs.
six games into the 1984-85 season he looked like a Coach of the Year candidate, having piloted the
Spurs to a 5-1
record. But the team stumbled through a
seven-game losing streak and struggled to
play .500 basketball the rest of
the way.
San Antonio didn't put together a winning month until January, when the team went 8-5. That month was highlighted by a 139-94 win in which
Moore missed a quadruple-double by a single steal; for the night his
line read 26 points, 13 assists, 11 rebounds, and 9 steals.
San Antonio finished the season with a 41-41
record, tied for fourth in the
Midwest Division with
Utah. The
Spurs almost surprised the first-
place Nuggets in the opening round of the playoffs, taking the series to the limit before losing in Game 5 by 27 points.
1985-87: A
four-Year Drought Begins
The next season was the first of
four very lean years for the
Spurs. Shortly before the start of the 1985-86 campaign the team
made a surprising trade by sending Gervin to
Chicago for
David Greenwood. Despite the loss of "the Iceman," the team played well through December and stood at 19-13 two months into the season. But on December 26
Moore was hospitalized with desert fever. The
rare disease not only kept him out for the year, it also ended his career.
San Antonio bumbled through the rest of the season, losing 10 of 16
games in January, 12 of 13 from
early February to
early March, and 13 of 16 overall in
March. A 35-47
record was the team's worst showing since relocating to
San Antonio from
Dallas.
Not to be overlooked in the midst of the
Spurs' mediocre
performance was the excellent season of second-year player
Alvin Robertson. He earned a handful of awards, including
NBA Defensive Player of the Year and
NBA Most Improved Player, and he represented the
Spurs at the NBA All-
star Game.
Robertson recorded 301 steals to
set a new league
record, and on February 18 he became only the second player in NBA history to chalk up a quadruple-double with
20 points, 11 rebounds, 10 assists, and 10 steals.
Coach Fitzsimmons was fired after the 1985-86 season, and
Bob Weiss was handed the reins. Weiss had even less
luck with the 1986-87
Spurs as the team shuffled through 17
players looking for a winning combination.
Nothing worked. The
Spurs finished in last
place in the
Midwest Division with a 28-54
record, 27
games behind the
Utah Jazz.
Robertson repeated as the
NBA's steals leader and Defensive Player of the Year.
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On
May 17, 1987, the
Spurs won the
NBA Draft Lottery. Exercising the No. 1
pick six weeks later at the
NBA Draft, the team
made a major commitment to its
Future by selecting 7-foot
center David Robinson. But that
future was two years away. After signing a contract with the
Spurs on November 6, 1987, the
Naval Academy graduate headed off to fulfill his two-year commitment to the Navy.
The 1987-88 campaign was a struggle for the
Spurs, though the team played well in December, posting an 8-4
record to end a string of 12 straight losing months. On December 5 the franchise retired
George Gervin's
Jersey. There weren't too many other highlights for the undermanned
San Antonio franchise this season. The team finished the year with a 31-51
record and was swept in the first round of the playoffs by the
Lakers.
There was even less to cheer about during the 1988-89 season. The
Spurs had a new owner,
Red McCombs, as well as a new head coach,
Larry Brown. However, the results were even worse than the previous year. A 1-12 showing in February and an 8-game losing streak to end the season resulted in a
21-61
record. Injuries decimated
the club, with
Alvin Robertson just one of many
Spurs who spent
time on the
sidelines, but the team was weak by any standards. Only rookie
Willie Anderson provided a
ray of hope. The 6-foot-8 swingman led the team in scoring (18.7 ppg) and finished runner-up to
Mitch Richmond for the
NBA Rookie of the Year Award.
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1989-90: From Worst To First
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1990-92: First Round Not Kind To
SpursThe
Spurs proved that the 1989-90 season was not a
fluke by outdueling the
Utah Jazz during the following campaign to take the
Midwest Division
crown for a second straight year. The team finished with a 55-27
record, and the
success came despite the loss of Strickland for 24
games and Cummings for 15, both
due to injury. Playing in his second straight
NBA All-
star Game,
Robinson scored 16 points in 18 minutes.
The
Spurs entered the postseason as a contender for the
NBA title. But the team stumbled in the first round of the playoffs against
Golden State. Three
Spurs scored more than 30 points in
San Antonio's 130-121 Game 1
victory, but the Warriors claimed
The next three
games to steal the series.
San Antonio made one significant trade during the offseason, picking up 6-foot-9 muscleman
Antoine Carr from
Sacramento for
Dwayne Schintzius. Strickland, the team's
starting point guard, began the season on the
sidelines because of a contract dispute and didn't
suit up until late December. Despite the absence of their
point guard, the
Spurs opened the 1991-92 campaign by going 10-3 in November.
the club struggled through
The next two months, and Head Coach
Larry Brown stepped down on January
21.
Bob Bass, who was serving as
vice president of basketball operations, took over the reins for the fourth
time in 17 years.
Under Bass, the team closed out the season by winning 26
games and losing 18 to
post a final
record of 47-35, good enough for
second place in the
Midwest Division behind the Jazz. The
Spurs'
chances of advancing in the playoffs were severely hampered by the absence of
Robinson and
Willie Anderson. "The Admiral" was placed on the injured
list on
April 1 after undergoing surgery to repair a torn ligament in his left hand.
Anderson missed the final 24
Games of the season with a
stress fracture in his left
tibia. Neither player was ready for action when the postseason began, and the
Spurs were swept in the first round by the
Phoenix Suns.
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1992-93: Tarkanian's Tenure Brief;
Lucas Takes Helm
In the offseason the
Spurs hired Jerry Tarkanian as their new head coach. That
summer San Antonio also acquired
Dale Ellis from
Milwaukee, but
the club lost Terry Cummings for much of the upcoming 1992-93 season when he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee.
The
Spurs never jelled under Tarkanian. The team opened by losing
four of five
games and was 5-6 at
the end of November. In mid-December the franchise
made two key
moves. The first was on the
court. On December 9 the
Spurs sent Sidney Green and a pair of draft choices to the
Charlotte Hornets and received J. R. Reid
in return.
Ten days later the Tarkanian reign came to a close after only
six weeks. He had posted a 9-11
record.
The head coaching duties were handed to
John Lucas. The
Spurs played
inspired basketball under the former
NBA guard, winning 16 of 18
games after
Lucas took over. A key
move was the insertion into the starting lineup of
Avery Johnson, a 5-foot-10
journeyman point guard. A former teammate of
Lucas's in
Seattle, "A. J." averaged 11.4 points and 9.9 assists while leading the
Spurs to an 11-1
record in his first dozen starts.
The
Spurs went 9-4 in February to climb to 35-18 overall, and they took the
lead in the
Midwest Division. An 8-8
record in
March dropped the team back into
second place behind the
Houston Rockets. On
March 26 the franchise changed hands when
Red McCombs sold his interest to a consortium of 12 investors. The
sale price was $75 million.
San Antonio continued to struggle in
April, winning
just 6 of 13
games. The
Spurs managed to
dispatch the
Trail Blazers in the first round of the playoffs, winning by
one point in Game 1 and by
three points in an
overtime contest in Game 4 to take the series.
San Antonio gave
Phoenix a scare in
The next round. The teams
split the first
four Games, with each team winning on its
home court. The Suns
beat the Spurs in Game 5 in
Phoenix, 109-96. Game 6 was played at the HemisFair
Arena. An 18-foot
jump shot by
Charles Barkley broke a 100-100 deadlock with 1.8 seconds left, and when
David Robinson missed a
20-footer at the buzzer, the Spurs were eliminated. It was the last game at the HemisFair
Arena. The Spurs moved to the brand-new Alamodome for the 1993-94 season.
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In the offseason the
Spurs traded
Sean Elliott to the
Detroit Pistons in a
deal that brought
Dennis Rodman to
San Antonio.
Rodman, sporting a variety of hair
colors throughout the year, changed the entire look of the
Spurs in 1993-94. A team that had finished last in the
NBA in offensive rebounding percentage the previous season vaulted to first with
Rodman aboard. The iconoclastic rebounder helped
San Antonio craft the league's second-
best defense, allowing only 94.8 points
per game.
However,
Rodman's most noticeable
impact was on
David Robinson, who had less pressure to rebound and more opportunities to
Score. Doing more of his work on the perimeter,
Robinson led the
NBA in scoring with
29.8 points
per game. On the
last day of the season he wrested the scoring
crown from Shaquille O'Neal by pouring in 71 points against the
Los Angeles Clippers, becoming only the fourth player in
NBA history to
score 70 points in a game. He had also registered the fourth quadruple-double in NBA annals with 34 points, 10 rebounds, 10 assists, and 10 blocks against
Detroit on February 17. At
season's end, he was runner-up to
Hakeem Olajuwon for the NBA MVP Award.
Rodman (17.3 rpg) and
Robinson became the first teammates to
lead the
NBA in both scoring and rebounding in the same season. The
Spurs finished 55-17, second to the
Houston Rockets in the
Midwest Division. But after going 3-7 in their final 10
games, they entered a first-round playoff series against the
Utah Jazz with little
momentum.
Utah won in
four Games, as the
Spurs managed only 88.0 points
per contest. A few weeks later
Lucas left
San Antonio to become head coach and general manager of the
Philadelphia 76ers.
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1994-95:
Robinson & Co. Surge To 62-Win Season
The 1994-95 campaign proved to be the
best ever for the
Spurs, although it ended a
bit prematurely for
San Antonio fans. The team posted a 62-
20 record,
tops in the
NBA and the
best in franchise history. The
Spurs' previous best
record was 56-26 in 1989-90,
David Robinson's rookie season.
The year didn't begin with much
promise. With
Dennis Rodman suspended,
San Antonio stumbled out to a 7-9
record. But the
Spurs went 55-11 the rest of
the way, logging a 15-game winning streak during
one stretch. They ended the regular season with a
21-2
record in their final 23
games. The team went 11-2 in February, 14-2 in
March, and 11-2 in
April to win the
Midwest Division.
Several
players had career
seasons.
Robinson won the
NBA Most Valuable Player Award for a season in which he was third in the league in scoring (27.6 ppg), seventh in rebounding (10.8 rpg), and fourth in blocked
shots (3.23
per game). He was also named to the
NBA All-Defensive First Team. Dynamic
point guard
Avery Johnson rejoined the team after a year with the
Golden State Warriors and averaged 13.4 points and 8.2 assists. He increased his scoring average for the seventh consecutive season, and his .519 field-goal percentage
ranked third among NBA guards.
Sean Elliott, reacquired from the
Detroit Pistons in a trade for draft
pick Bill
Curley,
lit up the scoring charts with an average of 18.1 points
per game and drilled 136 of 333 three-pointers for a .408 percentage (18th in the
NBA).
Rodman's look remained
unique and his rebounding unmatched. Despite missing 33
games, he led the league in rebounding for the fourth consecutive season (16.8 rpg) and was named to the All-
NBA Third Team and the NBA All-Defensive First Team.
Vinny Del Negro assumed the starting off guard
job and averaged 12.5 points on .486 shooting from
the field. Chuck Person joined the team and knocked down 172 three-pointers as a
hired gun off the
bench.
In the playoffs, the
Spurs swept the
Denver Nuggets in the first round, got past the
Los Angeles Lakers in
six games in the conference semifinals, and then
fell in
Six Games to the
Houston Rockets in the conference finals.
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1995-96:
Spurs Can't Shake Playoff Blues
Prior to the 1995-96 season, the
Spurs traded
Dennis Rodman to the
Chicago Bulls in
exchange for
center Will Perdue. While
Rodman's talents ultimately led the
Bulls back to the
NBA championship, the hope was that the trade would be addition by
subtraction.
Rodman, though an unparalleled rebounder, proved distracting to the
Spurs in their quest for a title.
The
move paid off in the regular season, where the
Spurs didn't miss a
beat. They completed the season 59-23 to capture their second straight
Midwest Division title, only three
games off their
record-setting
pace of the previous year. Team
chemistry was remarkable, and according to coach
Bob Hill "the
best I've
ever been around."
The
talent was equally extraordinary.
Sean Elliott and
David Robinson represented the
West at the All-
star Game, and the backcourt of
Vinny Del Negro and
Avery Johnson posted the league's
best assist to turnover ratio. They shored up their
front line with the acquisition of
Charles Smith and
Monty Williams from
New York in February. In
March, they posted a
perfect 16-0
record, tying them with the 1971-72
Los Angeles Lakers for the
best month in
NBA history.
But come playoff
time, the
Spurs faced the same question. Could they win in the postseason? They proved to
Phoenix that the
answer was yes, winning three
games to
one in the first round
best-of-five series. In the second round, the
Spurs battled the
Utah Jazz to
six Games, but as in 1994, the Jazz toppled the Spurs, handing
San Antonio's hope of that still elusive trip to the Finals.
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The 1996-97 season was
one of the most frustrating in franchise history for the
San Antonio Spurs, but ultimately
May turn out to be for the
best.. Although the
Spurs lost David Robinson to injury, managed only
20 wins and missed the playoffs for the first
time since the 1988-89 season, they struck gold in the 1997 Draft Lottery,
landing the first overall
pick and draft rights to
super prospect Tim Duncan.
Injuries decimated the
Spurs,
none more so than that of
Robinson, who returned from back problems only to suffer a broken foot. The former MVP appeared in only nine
games. Chuck Person was even less fortunate, missing the entire season following back surgery.
Charles Smith missed 65
Games with an arthritic right knee and
Sean Elliott missed 43
games with tendinitis in the right knee. The loss of those
four players, each among the top
six scorers from the 1995-96 team, prompted the steepest
one-year decline in
NBA history, from 59 wins to only
20.
Another
Spurs casualty was head coach
Bob Hill, relieved of his duties after a 3-15 start, and replaced by General Manager Gregg Popovich, who posted a 17-47
record in his first stint as an
NBA head coach.
In the absence of many of his regulars, Popovich relied on a
veteran crew that included
free agent signees
Dominique Wilkins and
Vernon Maxwell and the familiar backcourt duo of Vinnie
Del Negro and
Avery Johnson. Wilkins,
one of the top scorers in
NBA history, led the offensive
charge with 18.2 points
per game. During the season he became only the 38th player to appear in 1,000
NBA games and surpassed 26,000 points, moving into seventh
place on the NBA's all-
time scoring
list.
All the pain of the 1996-97 season went away on
May 18, when the
Spurs won the Lottery and
drew the top
pick in the 1997
NBA Draft. That assured them the rights to
Duncan, a dominant collegiate
star at
Wake Forest. With a dynamic duo of
Robinson and
Duncan up
front,
San Antonio was expected to return to a
place among the league's
elite in 1997-98.
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The
San Antonio Spurs knew they were going to be an improved team in 1997-98. After all, they were coming off of a
20-62 season, the worst in their 25-year
NBA history.
just how good they came, and how
quickly, surprised a lot of
NBA teams.
With the return of
David Robinson (who missed all but
six games The previous season because of injury) and the arrival of
Tim Duncan, the first overall
pick in the 1997
NBA Draft, the
Spurs engineered the biggest single-season
turnaround in
NBA history, winning 56
games and advancing to the second round of the NBA Playoffs.
For the season,
Duncan averaged
21.1 points (12th in the
NBA), 11.9 rebounds (3rd), 2.51 blocks (6th) and led all
NBA players with 57 double-doubles. He was named to the NBA All-
star Team and needless to
say, he ran away with the NBA Rookie of the Year award.
Unlike many prized
rookies,
Duncan didn't have the
burden of carrying the offensive load. Standing right beside him all season was
Robinson, the former MVP who returned from his injury-plagued season to
his place among the league's
elite centers.
It only took the
Spurs revamped lineup about a month to learn to
play together. After a Dec. 9 loss dropped
San Antonio to 10-10, it all clicked and the
Spurs soared, going 46-16 in their final 62
games. Like
Duncan,
Robinson earned a berth on the
Western Conference All-
star team and was among the league
leaders in scoring (
21.6 ppg, 10th in the
NBA), rebounding (10.6 rpg, 5th), blocks (2.63 bpg, 5th) and double-doubles (40, 9th).
In the playoffs, the
Spurs faced the
Phoenix Suns in the first round. But for all of Suns coach
Danny Ainge's worries about
Duncan and
Robinson, it was diminutive
Avery Johnson who closed the door on
Phoenix. The 5-10
point guard, still hearing
the whispers that the
Spurs needed a stronger
Point guard to contend, had his way with
Phoenix throughout the series, averaging a team-high
20.5 ppg and 6.0 apg in the 3-to-1 series win.
Against the
Utah Jazz in the Conference Semfinals, the
Spurs continued to
give every indication that they were a title contender. They
just couldn't put away the defending conference
champs.
Utah won Game 1, 83-82, despite 33 points from
Duncan. In Game 2,
Utah prevailed 109-106 in
overtime, and the
Spurs'
chances took a huge
hit when
Duncan sprained his ankle.
San Antonio rebounded to win Game 3, but
lost the series in five
games.
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1998-99: The Championship Season
San Antonio struggled in the first month of the lockout-shortened season. But once the
Spurs hit their
stride, nobody could block their
path to the franchise's first
NBA title.
The
Spurs clinched the championship on
Avery Johnson's jumper with 47 seconds left in Game 5 of the Finals, giving
San Antonio a 78-77
victory over the
New York Knicks.
Tim Duncan averaged 27.4 points, 14 rebounds and 2.2 blocks in the series and was named Finals MVP.
Duncan's fellow
Twin Tower,
David Robinson, also
made his presence known. The perennial All-
star, in his 10th season with the
Spurs, averaged 16.6 points, 11.8 rebounds and 3.0 blocks in the Finals as
San Antonio became the first former
ABA team to win the
NBA title.
one of the most compelling
story lines came to
light after the season ended. Starting forward
Sean Elliott revealed that he had played despite needing a kidney transplant.
Elliott, who was battling a
rare kidney disease, received the transplant Aug. 16. His brother
Noel donated the kidney.
Elliott averaged 33.8 minutes in 17 playoff
games and was responsible for the "Memorial Day Miracle." On that
play, he tiptoed the sideline to
stay inbounds before hitting a three-pointer with nine seconds left, lifting the
Spurs to an 86-85 win over
Portland in Game 2 of the
Western Conference finals.
San Antonio's championship season had an inauspicious beginning as the
Spurs went 6-8 in February. But
the players eventually settled into a groove, and the team got a spark when
veteran swingman
Mario Elie joined the starting lineup. The
Spurs went 31-5 after their slow start and they raced through the postseason with a 15-2
record.
Duncan was named to the All-
NBA First Team for the second year in a row. He was the only
NBA player to finish in the
top 10 in scoring (
21.7 ppg, sixth), rebounds (11.4 rpg,
fifth), blocks (2.52, seventh) and field goal percentage (.495, 10th).
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The
Spurs started the season with a franchise
best 14-3
mark. The team then struggled through an 11-12
stretch before finishing the season 28-14, but, on 4/11 at
Sacramento,
Tim Duncan suffered a torn left lateral meniscus. The injury eventually required surgery and forced him to miss the remainder of the regular season and the playoffs. Without
Duncan, the
Spurs fell to the Suns in
four games in the First Round of the 2000 Playoffs in a series that saw
Malik Rose and
Jerome Kersey also
go down with injuries.
The biggest
story of the season was
Sean Elliott.
Elliott underwent a kidney transplant on 8/16/99. He spent the first half of the season as the
Spurs television analyst, then on 2/1 he was cleared to return to practice and
The next day joined his team on the
court After almost
six weeks of practice, he was removed from the injured
list on 3/14. That night he
made NBA history, becoming the first player to return to action after an
organ transplant.
Elliott was a
surprise starter and finished with 2 points in 12 minutes vs. the Hawks in
front of a crowd of 26,708.
Avery Johnson became the
Spurs all-
time leader in assists on 12/7 at Indiana, passing Johnny
Moore who handed out 3,865 assists in his nine
seasons with
San Antonio. Johnson finished the season with 4,237 assists with the
Spurs.
David Robinson also
hit several milestones during the 1999-2000 season. On 12/18 at
Denver, he played in his 710th game with the
Spurs to pass
George Gervin to become the team’s all-
time NBA leader in
games played, then on 2/18 vs.
Houston, he recorded
seven steals to become the
Spurs all-
time leader in steals, passing
Alvin Robertson. Also during the season
Robinson scored his 17,000th career
point (vs.
Washington on 12/11) and his 18,000th career
Point (vs.
Sacramento on 4/5).
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For the fourth
time in franchise history
San Antonio complied the
NBA’s
best overall
record during the regular season sporting a 58-24
mark during the 2000-01 campaign. The
Spurs posted the fourth
best winning percentage (.707) in franchise history while
on the way to capturing their 11th division title.
Tim Duncan led the league with 66 double-doubles for the third time in his four seasons. Duncan was also named to both the All-NBA First Team and the All-NBA Defensive Team for the third straight season, while finishing runner-up to Allen Iverson for MVP.
With an 86-79 victory over Houston on 12/19, Gregg Popoovich moved to the top of San Antonio’s all-time victory list, passing Doug Moe’s total of 177 wins as coach of the Spurs. Popovich also passed Moe for the most games as head coach of the Spurs with 360.
The 2000-01 Spurs featured a balanced inside-outside offensive attack and a stingy defense to rank at or near the top of the NBA in several statistical categories. The Spurs led the league in three categories and were among the top 12 in the NBA in several others. The Spurs finished first in the league in blocked shots (7.02), 3-point FG% (.407) and tied for first in defensive 3-Point FG% (.329).
The 2000-01 season also marked the first time in franchise history San Antonio led the NBA in home attendance. The Spurs drew 913,175 fans to 41 regular season home games for an average of 22,273 fans per game. The Spurs did not disappoint their fans either, posting a 33-8 home record which was tied for tops in the league with Sacramento.
The Spurs made the playoffs for the 11th time in 12 years. The Spurs used their homecourt advantage to better the Minnesota Timberwolves 3-1 in the first round and the Dallas Mavericks 4-1 in the Western Conference Semi-Finals. San Antonio’s season was cut short by the L.A. Lakers 4-0 in the Western Conference Finals.
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2001-02:
Duncan Enjoys MVP Season
San Antonio mustered another
strong regular season, finishing with a 58-24
record, identical to the 2000-01 season.
Tim Duncan elevated his game even higher during the 2001-02 campaign, as the fifth year pro captured the league’s MVP award. Duncan finished fifth in the league in points, second in rebounding, tied for third in blocks and sixth in minutes. He led the Spurs in scoring 70 times and in rebounding 69 times while accounting for 26.3% of the team’s total points and 30.0% of the team’s total rebounds. Duncan also set a new career-high for points with 53 against the Dallas Mavericks on 12/26.
David Robinson made Spurs history when he slammed down his 19,384th point at 6:20 mark of the first quarter vs. Cleveland on 11/16. With that dunk Robinson became the Spurs all-time NBA scoring leader surpassing George Gervin. Robinson was not finished with his milestones yet. The Admiral scored his 20,000th Point on 3/5 vs. Golden State. Robinson was the 27th player all-time and 10th center to reach that plateau.
Youth was served for San Antonio on 10/30 vs. the L.A. Clippers when 19-year old Tony Parker entered the game at the 8:26 mark to become the youngest player to appear in a game in franchise history. Parker’s tender age did not slow him down as the rookie earned starting duties on 11/6 vs. Orlando. His play earned him a trip to the ‘got milk?’ Rookie Challenge at All-star weekend and a spot on the All-Rookie First Team.
The Spurs led the NBA in attendance for the second straight season as 906,390 fans passed through the doors of the Alamodome. Over 41 home dates San Antonio averaged 22,107 fans per game including a season-high 35,052 vs. Washington on 12/5. The 2001-02 campaign also marked the Spurs final season in the Alamodome, where they posted a 258-95 record.
San Antonio met an eager Seattle SuperSonics team in the 2002 Western Conference Quarterfinals. Tony Parker continued his strong play in the playoffs as he almost doubled his season scoring average posting 17.2 points as the Spurs edged the Sonics 3-2. For the second year in a row, the Spurs had the Los Angeles Lakers end their season this time by a 4-1 margin.
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San Antonio takes
NBA title.
Tim Duncan became the first player since Michael Jordan to win back-to-back regular season MVP honors … ranked in the top 10 in points (seventh with 23.3), rebounds (third with 12.9), blocks (third with 2.93) and FG percentage (seventh with a .513 mark) … of course the regular season was just a warm-up for Duncan … in the postseason he averaged 24.7 points, 15.4 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 3.29 blocks in 42.5 minutes … Duncan led the Spurs to their second NBA Championship in a five-year span and was named the 2003 Finals MVP (after averaging 24.2 points, 17.0 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 5.33 blocks in the Finals).
The Spurs Championship served as a perfect ending to a perfect career … prior to the 2002-03 season David Robinson announced it would be his last … his 14th and final season with the Spurs was a memorable one … he finished his NBA career with 20,790 points and 10,497 rebounds making him one of just 12 players in league history in the 20,000 point, 10,000 rebound club … a 10-time All-star, Robinson was the 1995 NBA MVP, the 1992 NBA Defensive Player of the Year and the 1990 NBA Rookie of the Year … he led the league in scoring in 1994, in rebounding in 1991 and in blocked shots in 1992 to join Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as One of two Players in NBA history to accomplish the feat.
Rookie guard Manu Ginobili made an immediate impact and quickly became a fan favorite … the Argentina native – who the Spurs selected with the 57th pick in the 1999 NBA Draft – joined the team after spending the previous three seasons playing in the Italian League … he was named to the 2003 All-Rookie Second Team after averaging 7.6 points, 2.3 rebounds and 2.0 assists during the 2002-03 campaign.
The Spurs moved into a new home for the 2002-03 campaign … although the Spurs and their fans loved both the HemisFair Arena and the Alamodome, the SBC center was their first home conceived, designed and built with the Spurs in mind (unlike the HemisFair Arena – which was built for the 1968 World’s Fair – and the Dome – which was built by the city of San Antonio as a multi-use sports and entertainment venue) … in their first season in the SBC Center the Spurs sold out 21 games, averaging 17,950 fans per game in the 18,797-seat facility.
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2003-04: Defending The Title
Tim Duncan has accomplished in
seven seasons what most
players Don’t accomplish in an entire career.
During the Tim Duncan era the Spurs have made winning a habit, posting a regular season record of 379-163 in his seven NBA seasons … the Spurs winning percentage of .699 during his career is the best in the NBA over this seven-year span … not only have the Spurs enjoyed the best winning percentage in the NBA over this period – during the last seven seasons they actually have the highest winning percentage of any team in the four major sports (MLB, NBA, NFL and NHL) … in the Duncan era the Spurs have won two NBA Championships (1999 and 2003), have finished with the NBA’s best regular season record three times (‘98-99, ‘00-01 and ‘02-03) and have captured four Midwest Division titles (‘98-99, ‘00-01, ‘01-02 and ‘02-03)
When you combine a defensive force like Tim Duncan, who has received All-Defensive honors in each of his seven seasons, and Gregg Popovich, a coach who emphasizes defense, you get one of the most dominant defensive teams in the NBA … it makes sense that the Spurs have been ranked in the top five in the NBA in both opponent FG% and opponent PPG in each of the last seven seasons … during the 2003-04 campaign the Spurs led the league in opponent FG% (with a .409 mark) and were tied with the Pistons for the lowest opponent PPG (both teams giving up just 84.3 ppg) … both marks set NBA record lows for an 82 game season (the all-time lows of 83.4 ppg allowed by Atlanta and a .402 opponent FG percentage by the Spurs both occurred during the 50 game 1998-99 campaign) … in fact during the seven year span the Spurs have recorded three of the lowest opponent field goal percentage marks in NBA history: .402 in ‘98-99, .409 in ‘03-04 and .411 in ‘97-98 …
The 2004 postseason marked the seventh consecutive playoff appearance for the Spurs … the Spurs have made the playoffs in 14 of the last 15 years, missing only the 1996-97 season in which David Robinson played only six games … in their NBA history, the Spurs have earned a playoff berth in 24 out of their 28 NBA seasons … only the Lakers, with 26 postseason appearances, have made more trips to the playoffs during the 28-year span … the Spurs have an all-time NBA postseason record of 105-101 (.510) which is sixth best among current NBA franchises.
The Spurs got off to a slow start in the 2003-04 season … with a 9-10 record on December 4 the Spurs found themselves at the bottom of the Midwest Division and in 25th place in the NBA … but thanks to their recent history the Spurs didn’t panic … instead the team won 13 straight games from December 5 to December 28 … San Antonio then won their final 11 Games of the regular season to finish with a 57-25 mark (which was the third best record in the league behind only Indiana and Minnesota) … this marked only the second time in Spurs history that they have posted two win streaks of Ten games or more in the same season … the only other time the Spurs accomplished the feat was during the 2001-02 campaign when they won 10 straight in both December and March … although the Spurs start slow out of the gate, they have a habit of finishing strong … in their worst start of the Tim Duncan era the Spurs started the ‘98-99 season with a 6-8 Mark … the team then went 31-5 to end the season en route to the Spurs first NBA Championship … the Spurs also started slow in the 2002-03 season when they claimed their second NBA title … after a 12-9 start the Spurs finished the season with a 48-13 run … the Spurs slow start in 2003-04 did not produce a third championship as San Antonio was knocked out by Los Angeles in the Western Conference Semifinals.
Tim Duncan has accomplished in seven seasons what most players Don’t accomplish in an entire career … he accomplished another NBA feat in 2003-04 when he was named to the All-NBA First Team for the seventh straight year … he joins a short list of Hall of Famers who have been named to the All-NBA First Team in each of their first seven seasons: Elgin Baylor (each of his first 10 seasons), Bob Pettit (first 10), Larry Bird (first 9) and Oscar Robertson (first 9) … by earning a spot on the 2004 All-Defensive Second Team, Duncan became just the second player in NBA history to be named to both an All-NBA team and an All-Defensive team in each of his first seven seasons (joining former teammate David Robinson who earned the honors each of his first seven seasons as well) … of course Duncan Just adds this hardware to the awards he has captured in the past including two regular season MVP awards (2002 and 2003), a pair of Finals MVP awards (1999 and 2003), the 1998 Rookie of the Year award and his trophy for being named the co-MVP of the 2000 NBA All-star Game.
Bruce Bowen earned a spot on the 2004 All-Defensive First Team … it was Bowen’s first selection to the All-Defensive First Team after earning All-Defensive Second Team honors in each of the previous three seasons … he becomes just the fourth Spur to earn All-Defensive honors three-or-more times joining David Robinson (nine selections), Tim Duncan (seven) and Alvin Robertson (four) … within NBA circles, Bowen—who guards everyone from point guards to power forwards—joins an elite group of nine swingmen who have earned All-Defensive Team honors in four-or-more straight seasons … they are: Kobe Bryant (‘00-04), Don Chaney (‘72-75), Doug Christie (‘01-04), Walt Frazier (‘69-75), John Havlicek (‘69-76), Michael Jordan (‘88-93), Scottie Pippen (‘90-00) and Alvin Robertson (‘86-91).
During the 2003-04 season the Spurs had the best record within the conference of any team in the Western Conference posting a 35-17 record versus Western foes … the Spurs also had the best inter-divisional record in the Midwest Division with a 15-9 record within the division that sent six teams to the 2004 Playoffs.
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2004-05: Recapturing the Ring
Since
Tim Duncan joined the
Spurs for the 1997-98 season, the team has enjoyed remarkable
success ... the
Spurs not only own the
best record in
NBA, going 438-186 over that span, but also have the
best winning percentage of any team in the
four major
sports during the eight year span ... during this period the Spurs have won three
NBA titles (1999, 2003, 2005), held the NBA's best
record three times ('98-'99, '00-'01, '02-'03), and earned five division titles (1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005).
THE DEFENSE NEVER RESTS: A great deal of the success that the Spurs have enjoyed during the Tim Duncan era can be attributed to the team's commitment to defense ... the Spurs continued their stingy defensive trends during the 2004-05 season allowing only 88.4 points per contest, best in the league, while holding opponents to a .426 mark from the field, which was third best in the NBA ... during the Duncan era, which spans the last eight seasons, the Spurs have ranked in the top five in both opponent's field goal percentage and opponent's points per game ... the Spurs set NBA record lows for an 82 game season for opponent's points per game (84.3) and field goal percentage (40.9%) during the 2003-04 season.
ALL-NBA ALL-THE-time: Tim Duncan earned his eighth consecutive selec