Toronto Star

Asterisk talk offers a history lesson

The 1999 Spurs were derided, like Toronto, but they ignored it and won more NBA titles

- MARC STEIN THE NEW YORK TIMES

The basketball back then certainly wasn’t the most beautiful, but the mere mention of the NBA’s lockout-shortened 1999 season invokes some distinct imagery.

It was the last time, of course, that the New York Knicks reached the NBA Finals. It was likewise the first time that Tim Duncan, Gregg Popovich and the San Antonio Spurs were crowned champions, establishi­ng the platform for four more titles before Duncan retired.

It also became known, regrettabl­y, as the league’s Asterisk Season, christened so not by a know-it-all scribe but by a rather successful coach named Phil Jackson. In possession of merely six of his eventual11­championsh­ip rings at the time, Jackson insisted that the Spurs’ achievemen­t needed one of these affixed — (*) — because the regular season spanned only 50 games.

Twenty years later, whether Jackson was indeed serious or merely trying to tweak the team (and coach) that would emerge as his foremost rivals once he joined Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant with the Los Angeles Lakers, what those Spurs endured serves as a handy history lesson.

It is useful most of all for the Toronto Raptors. The new champions have already faced some asterisk talk of their own because of the crushing injuries suffered by the Golden State Warriors in their championsh­ip series.

The 2019 Finals, like it or not, will forever be synonymous — for some — with the catastroph­ic manner in which the mighty Warriors lost Kevin Durant (Achilles) and then Klay Thompson (knee). The good news for Toronto: According to a couple prominent members of that Spurs team, time really does make the asterisk stuff fade.

“Today is actually the anniversar­y of our first championsh­ip,” Avery Johnson, San Antonio’s point guard and lead spokespers­on in 1999, said during a phone interview Tuesday.

“We were just taken back a little bit by Phil’s comments because, even though it was a 50-game season (instead of 82), it wasn’t a shortened playoffs.

“Some of the backhanded comments we heard after that, even from some hall of fame players, it was comical. Had they won the championsh­ip, I’m pretty sure they would have accepted the full playoff share, they would have had a parade and they would be bragging about winning a championsh­ip.”

Johnson added: “The Raptors’ championsh­ip is going to be well-respected by people who understand the journey. The joy of the moment, they’re going to remember it for the rest of their lives. Take it from a guy who’s 20 years removed from his first championsh­ip; I’ll be having a bottle of Champagne tonight celebratin­g our championsh­ip. It’s such a monumental achievemen­t, you can’t take anything away from it — however you got there.”

Will Perdue, who played under Jackson in Chicago until he was traded to San Antonio in 1995 for Dennis Rodman, believes “people have quite honestly forgotten” about the disclaimer Jackson tried to pin on that Spurs team.

“I actually have some fun with it,” Perdue said. “I always bring it up before people can address it. I’ll use the air quotes and everything and say, ‘Yeah, but according to Phil Jackson, that was the asterisk.’

“I don’t think people remember it that way. People don’t remember that it was an abbreviate­d season. I think more people remember that it was Tim Duncan’s and David Robinson’s first championsh­ip.”

Now a member of the Bulls’ pre- and post-game broadcast team with NBC Sports Chicago, Perdue marvels at the Raptors’ depth and feels “sorry for Toronto if people aren’t looking at the bigger picture.”

“Injuries — that’s part of the equation,” Perdue said. “It’s still a team game. Look at the guys who stepped up for Toronto in that series — Fred VanVleet came off the bench, Serge Ibaka came off the bench. You can have the greatest starting five of all time, but those guys can’t play 48 minutes. It’s physically impossible.

“I played with the best player that’s ever played the game,” Perdue said of his time alongside Michael Jordan, “but until (longtime Bulls general manager) Jerry Krause put a better team around him, he didn’t win a championsh­ip, as good as he was.”

What complicate­s matters in the Raptors’ case is the looming free agency of their superstar Kawhi Leonard, which exposes the new champions to a potentiall­y worse fate than an asterisk: Toronto is at risk of being dismissed as a one-hit wonder if Leonard elects to leave.

Nothing can diminish the seminal post-season Leonard assembled individual­ly. He averaged 30.5 points, 9.1 rebounds, 3.9 assists and1.7 steals. He hauled the Raptors out of a deficit in each of the first three rounds of the playoffs just to get them to the Finals.

He sank the unforgetta­ble walk-off jumper against Philadelph­ia in Game 7 of the second round that smooched the rim four times before dropping through, then outplayed the league’s freshly minted MVP — Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo — in the conference final.

Most of all, Leonard cemented his status as a dynasty disrupter, halting Golden State’s bid for a three-peat just as he did as a young Spur in 2014 when San Antonio prevented the LeBron James-led Miami Heat from winning a third successive title.

The Raptors’ fragility, though, is suddenly so tangible — even after all of their gambles of the past year (swapping coach Dwane Casey for Nick Nurse, trading for Leonard and then swinging an all-in deal to acquire Marc Gasol) were rewarded.

Toronto’s Danny Green, who, like Leonard, is a free agent, explained that his teammates aren’t lobbying him to stay because they know it isn’t necessary. “I think they know how I feel — I’ve expressed my interest in coming back,” he said.

Yet, the reality for Green and every other Raptor is that their broader outlook rides on the whims of a superstar.

As the veteran swingman and aspiring broadcaste­r neatly summarized it, Leonard “can change it drasticall­y or really bring us into life to keep this going.”

Green acknowledg­ed that it’s difficult to be definitive about anything else until Leonard decides whether to stay or go.

“I don’t know,” Green said, insisting that he has no insider intel on Leonard’s plans even though they played together in San Antonio and became Raptors together when the Spurs dispatched them to Canada via trade on July 18, 2018.

“He may not know, but I don’t know, either. I’m probably more confused or more up in the air than he is.”

Speaking of the championsh­ip run, Green said, “We know we were playing for more than ourselves — we were playing for a whole country.”

He described the experience as “very different” compared to the title he and Leonard won with the Spurs in 2014. “In a city and a country that has never experience­d something like this, it’s a blessing to be a part of it.”

The basketball romantic in me can’t help but hope that Leonard, though he so rarely shows an ounce of emotion, comes to see it the same way. One more season with Team Canada, before the move back home to Southern California with the Los Angeles Clippers that has been expected from the day he became a Raptor, makes too much sense.

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