USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Cosmos lines up perfectly for NBA and Spurs

- Dan Wolken

No event in sports sits at the nexus of karma, luck and conspiracy quite like the NBA draft lottery.

Every year, we watch the relevant few minutes where NBA deputy commission­er Mark Tatum reads off the results of a totally random pingpong ball drawing and come away convinced that some greater force was at play with a guiding hand on history.

The San Antonio Spurs won the Victor Wembanyama sweepstake­s. Of course they did.

Who else was going to get a generation­al big man other than the team that got the lottery to fall perfectly in 1987 and 1997 when it just so happened that two other generation­al big men were available?

Somehow, these things happen all the time in the NBA. How does LeBron James end up in Cleveland, a mere 40 miles from where he grew up? How does Cleveland get the No. 1 pick again the year James is a free agent, clearing the way for him to return and win a championsh­ip? How does Chicago, with a mere 1.8% chance of getting the No. 1 pick, end up with the chance to draft hometown kid Derrick Rose? How does New Orleans, stung by Anthony Davis’ trade demand in 2019, immediatel­y win the lottery again when Zion Williamson was by far the hottest prospect on the planet?

We’ll never know how the cosmos keeps lining up perfectly for the NBA to tell and sell these too-good-to-be-true stories. But as of last week, we can add another one to the list.

The Spurs? The perfect organizati­on once again getting the perfect player? Ridiculous, and yet entirely predictabl­e.

Brazen tanking has been a pox on the NBA over the last decade, to the point where the league changed the playoff format and the draft lottery rules to disincenti­vize it. For the Spurs, it didn’t matter. Knowing there was little chance of rebuilding a contender, they went aggressive­ly all-in on the tank because a 7-foot-2 teenager from France was available.

What can you say? It paid off – again. Of course, there’s a very, very long way between where the Spurs are now and where David Robinson and Tim

Duncan led them, winning titles in 1999, 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014.

Besides Wembanyama, the Spurs will start next season with a good 24-yearold wing in Keldon Johnson, an intriguing second-year forward in Jeremy Sochan and … not much else that will help them win games anytime soon. The Spurs didn’t finish 22-60 by accident; to the contrary, it was quite deliberate.

On the other hand, if Wembanyama is really as good as the hype – ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowsk­i relayed that some NBA executives think he could be the best offensive and defensive player in the league by his third season – it shouldn’t be that difficult for the Spurs to get back to the playoffs in a reasonable amount of time.

It would also seem likely that Gregg Popovich, who will turn 75 in the middle of next season, sticks around for a while when a lot of people wondered whether he’d have interest in going through a rebuild.

In other words, if the two decades after

Duncan’s arrival in the league wore you out on watching Popovich and the Spurs win a lot of games, the night of May 16 was tough. They’re probably going to be back pretty quickly – because that’s just how things tend to shake out in the NBA. The symmetry is seemingly always perfect.

The real intrigue in the draft, though, came at No. 2, where the Charlotte Hornets jumped over the Detroit Pistons and Houston Rockets.

All year long, G-League point guard Scoot Henderson has been hyped as the No. 2 pick with a combinatio­n of NBAready explosiven­ess and physicalit­y that you rarely see at the position. If not for Wembanyama, Henderson is considered the type of prospect who would be No. 1 in a lot of other draft years.

The Hornets, though, already have three years invested in LaMelo Ball as their point guard. Could Ball and Henderson play together? Do the Hornets trade the pick? Could they possibly try to get assets or a more veteran star by trading

Ball? Maybe it brings Brandon Miller into play for No. 2 if they keep the pick.

Then there’s the Portland Trail Blazers at No. 3, which like San Antonio had a lot riding on their late-season tankapaloo­za given Damian Lillard’s age (32), his desire to stay in Portland if all things are equal and yet the reality that they haven’t been close to contending lately. The No. 3 pick – especially if Henderson is available – is a really prime asset if they are going to push all their chips into the middle. Or maybe Portland goes the other way, uses the pick and finally sends Lillard somewhere else.

Either way, those two scenarios set up some real intrigue and potential for mega trades as the NBA gets closer to the draft on June 22.

We won’t know for years if any of these players will change the face of the NBA.

But as always when there’s a truly special prospect at the top of the draft, the ironies and the narratives never cease to amaze.

 ?? DAVID BANKS/USA TODAY SPORTS first pick in the ?? Spurs managing partner Peter J. Holt celebrates after San Antonio won the lottery and right to select the draft.
DAVID BANKS/USA TODAY SPORTS first pick in the Spurs managing partner Peter J. Holt celebrates after San Antonio won the lottery and right to select the draft.
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