WITH HEELS SPLAYED
AND TOES pigeoned, and with his anime-wide eyes fixed on the floor 10 feet in
front of him, Tim Duncan makes his telltale walk toward another NBA
championship. It is the walk of someone with something on his mind that he
doesn't wish to share. Is he confident...or anxious? It's none of your
business. Every night that Duncan steps onto the court from the San Antonio
Spurs' bench, he carries himself like a baseball manager on his way to the
mound: head down, with his long arms seesawing to their own gangly rhythm, his
face an inscrutable mask. The fans may be cheering or booing, but Duncan, bless
his consistency, appears deaf to them.
There was a time
five or six years ago, when he couldn't get his team past the Los Angeles
Lakers, that Duncan's reticence was seen as weakness. He was a team-first
player then, too, yet he was criticized for lacking the fiery charisma to
inspire the Spurs. Those days are hard to recall now that Duncan's leadership
and passion have set a standard beyond reach of his rivals. The 2007 playoffs
completed the makeover of Duncan from Shaquille O'Neal's victim to his heir:
Now that Duncan has led San Antonio to a Finals conquest of the Cleveland
Cavaliers, his ring collection matches Shaq's—and he has won his fourth at 31,
three years younger than O'Neal was when the Miami Heat took the title in '06
(page 70).
The 6'11",
260-pound Duncan has emerged as the Jason Kidd of big men, a playmaker able to
elevate his teammates from the low post. "In my 20 years in the NBA, Duncan
is the best big to play the game," says former Houston Rockets coach Jeff
Van Gundy. " O'Neal always had the benefit of a dominant perimeter player,
from [Penny] Hardaway to [Kobe] Bryant to [Dwyane] Wade. Duncan has had very
good players, but he's never had that dominant player, so that's why I give him
the edge."
If Duncan has
avoided historical reckoning until now, it's because his versatility has made
comparisons difficult. "The first decision that has to be made is, Are we
going to talk about him as a post guy or as a forward? Because he's sort of
both," says Gregg Popovich, the only NBA coach Duncan has had. "You
think about guys like Kareem [Abdul-Jabbar] and Wilt [Chamberlain], and you
don't think of Tim. Then you look at forwards like Elvin Hayes or Kevin McHale
or Larry Bird, and you don't exactly think of Tim in the way that they played
either. He's really an anomaly and has done both [roles].
"So I just try
to think of him more as a power forward, for lack of a better definition. And I
don't know that there's ever going to be somebody better at that position,
considering everything he's done. It's not just the scoring and the defense—you
add the blocked shots, the passing, the leadership he's given, the
championships."
Says Orlando Magic
senior vice president Pat Williams, "Are Karl Malone, Kevin McHale and Bob
Pettit the greatest power forwards of all time? On that basis I'd take Duncan.
He's just rock solid as a competitor and performer every night. He wins. At the
end of the day that's all there is to do."
THROUGHOUT THE
2005-06 SEASON DUNCAN looked prematurely old while playing 80 games (and
averaging a career-low 18.6 points) with a painful seasonlong bout of plantar
fasciitis. "We talked a lot about, 'If you're at a certain point, Timmy,
I'll just need to sit you for two months,' " recalls Popovich. Duncan's
ailment, along with a leaguewide trend toward up-tempo play, combined to create
doubt that the Spurs could keep up with younger contenders like the Phoenix
Suns and the Dallas Mavericks, who KO'd San Antonio in the second round.
But Duncan began
working himself back into shape early in the summer of 2006, and after pacing
himself through the regular season (20.0 points, 10.6 rebounds, 3.4 assists and
2.38 blocks in just 34.1 minutes per game), he picked up his production in the
playoffs with a more familiar line: 22.2 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.3 assists and
3.10 blocks. "It's always interesting to see how he is to start the ball
game," says Jazz coach Jerry Sloan. "He is very polite and very nice to
the guys he plays against, and then he annihilates them when he gets out on the
floor. He is a no-nonsense guy."
After watching
Duncan seal himself deep in the post for one-step layups to help the Spurs
seize the first two games in San Antonio, Utah decided to forgo the nonsense as
well. In Game 3 in Salt Lake City, Mehmet Okur, Jarron Collins and anybody else
within slapping distance struck Duncan's hands, arms and head, forcing him to
commit an uncharacteristic eight turnovers. Duncan's subsequent retaliations
led to gamelong foul trouble, limiting him to 16 points and 26 minutes in a
109-83 loss. "People were asking me if I was surprised to see him so
emotional," says Jazz guard Derek Fisher. "I'm not surprised. Tim's a
champion. If things aren't going well for you, you're supposed to be frustrated
and not pleased with what's happening."
Two nights later
Duncan was still irascible, muttering when he misfired on an array of warmup
jumpers before Game 4. But he predictably translated his anger into a San
Antonio victory. Amid a Greco-Roman atmosphere Duncan provided order with 19
points, nine rebounds and five blocks, and in the final quarter he bulled his
way to the line for five points to complement the drives of Manu Gin�bili, who
scored 16 in the fourth. The Spurs looked as competitive as ever, and by game's
end Duncan was back to his placid self.