Sunday News

Still slam Duncan

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TIM Duncan walked out of the visitor’s locker room at Staples Center and stopped to chat with Chris Paul after the San Antonio Spurs completed their four-game annihilati­on of the Los Angeles Clippers two weeks ago. But the conversati­on kept getting interrupte­d so that Duncan could joke around with Paul’s 2-year-old son, Chris.

Duncan asked the younger Paul to show him his muscles and the kid flexed proudly. Hethen laughed as Chris Jr answered questions from his father about what number Duncan wears (‘‘21’’) and what college he plans to attend (‘‘Wake Forest’’).

The playful ease with which Duncan interacted with the toddler may come as a surprise to those who consider him to be the dullest superstar to lace them up. But in many ways, Duncan is having the same effectiven­ess playing basketball this season against a new generation of bigmenwho were barely in elementary school when he first came into the league.

Duncan, 36, came back with something to prove after a season in which the Spurs were eliminated from the first round by Memphis and he recorded the worst statistica­l season of his career. It has helped San Antonio get back to the Western Conference Finals for the first time in four years. The Spurs lead the Oklahoma City Thunder 2-1 in the series after Duncan’s team lost Friday’s game 3 in Oklahoma.

‘‘A lot of people messed up saying he was old last year,’’ Spurs reserve Stephen Jackson said about Duncan. ‘‘He worked his butt off this summer to play the way he’s playing now.’’

Duncan changed his off-season programme to get in better shape and take some pressure off his achy knees. The result has been a player with much more lift and explosion, which he displayed when he rejected a dunk attempt by the Clippers’ 23-year-old high-flying all-star forward Blake Griffin in the conference semifinals – though Duncan was modest in his descriptio­n of the play.

‘‘I think I got him on the way up. That’s the only chance I have,’’ Duncan said with a laugh.

Duncan certainly looks as if he can effectivel­y play a fewmore years at a high level. Howmuch longer is anyone’s guess. ‘‘I don’t have that kind of crystal ball,’’ Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich said.

Popovich can’t be expected to know how much longer Duncan can lead profession­al sports’ most consistent­ly successful franchise of the past 15 years when he surely had no idea that their union would yield so many accolades for both of them. Since the Spurs lucked into landing Duncan with theNo 1 pick in 1997, no player-coach tandem has had more playoff victories (184), more regular season wins (792) or a better winning per centage (.713). And, they are now eight wins from claiming their fifth NBAchampio­nship together.

‘‘I’m incredibly fortunate,’’ said Duncan, who won the first of back-toback most valuable player awards 10 years ago. ‘‘I understand the situation I’m in. It doesn’t happen for a lot of people. The organisati­on, the players, the coach. In every respect, I’ve been blessed. I understand it every day and I appreciate it every day.’’

Popovich won coach of the year honours for the second time but he has always deflected praise in the direction of Duncan, whomhe credits for the incredible run.

‘‘I’ve got one hand hanging on his coat tail,’’ Popovich said. ‘‘He just keeps draggingme­around wherever he goes. Every time I walk around the house, about once a month, I tell my wife, ‘Say, thank you, Tim.’ AndI’m serious.’’

Former Spur andTNTNBA analyst Steve Kerr described the union of the white-haired, Midwestern-rooted Air Force grad who once desired to work for the CIA

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Photo o Despite being in what most athletes woul d above and left, is still climbing high.

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