Tim Duncan
|
|
| Position |
Power forward, Center |
| Nickname |
The Big Fundamental[1] |
| Height |
ft in ( m) |
| Weight |
lb ( kg) |
| Team |
San Antonio Spurs |
| Nationality |
USA |
| Born |
April 25 1976 (1976--) (age 31)
Christiansted,
U.S. Virgin Islands |
| College |
Wake Forest |
| Draft |
1st overall, 1997
San Antonio Spurs |
| Pro career |
1997–present |
| Awards |
USBWA College Player of the Year
(1997)
Naismith College Player of the Year
(1997)
John Wooden Award
(1997)
ACC Player of the Year
(1996, 1997)
NBA Rookie of the Year
(1998)
NBA MVP
(2002, 2003)
NBA Finals MVP
(1999, 2003, 2005)
NBA Champion
(1999, 2003, 2005, 2007)
NBA All-Star Game MVP
(2000 Co-MVP) |
Timothy "Tim" Theodore Duncan (born April 25 1976 in
Christiansted, St.
Croix, United States Virgin Islands)[2] is an American professional
basketball player for the San Antonio Spurs of the
National Basketball Association (NBA). The 6'11" (2.11 m), 260-pound
(118 kg)[3] power forward is a four-time NBA champion, a three-time NBA Finals Most Valuable Player, and the current captain of the Spurs. He has also
won the NBA Most Valuable Player Award twice,
and has been voted into nine All-Star games, ten All-NBA
teams, and ten All-Defensive teams.[1]
Duncan started out as a swimmer and only began playing basketball in ninth grade, and had difficulties adapting. However, he
soon became a standout for St. Dunstan’s Episcopal High School, and
had an illustrious college career with the Wake Forest University
Demon Deacons, winning the Naismith
College Player of the Year, USBWA College Player of the Year and
John Wooden awards in his final year. Duncan graduated from college before entering
the 1997 NBA Draft as the number one pick, and his list of accomplishments and leadership
in the Spurs' NBA title runs in 1999, 2003,
2005, and 2007 have led basketball experts to
consider him to be one of the greatest power forwards in NBA history.
Off the court, Duncan is known for his quiet and unassuming ways, as well as his active philanthropy. He holds a degree in psychology and created the Tim
Duncan Foundation to raise general health awareness and fund
education and youth sports in various parts of the United States.[4]
Biography
Early life
Duncan is the only son of Ione and William Duncan, a midwife and a mason respectively, joining his two older sisters Cheryl and Tricia in a middle-class family in Christiansted. In school, Duncan was a bright pupil and dreamt of becoming an
Olympic-level swimmer like his sister Tricia.[5][6] His parents were very supportive and Duncan excelled at swimming, becoming a teenage
standout in the 50, 100 and 400 meters freestyle and aiming to make the
1992 Olympic Games as a member of the United States Team.[5]
When Hurricane Hugo destroyed the island's only Olympic size swimming pool in 1989, forcing Duncan to swim in the ocean, he soon lost
enthusiasm due to his fear of sharks.[4] Duncan
was dealt another emotional blow when his mother was diagnosed with breast cancer and died
one day before his 14th birthday.[5] In her
last days, she made Duncan and his sisters promise to finish college with a degree, which would later explain Duncan's reluctance
to leave college early.[7] Duncan never swam
competitively again, but was inspired by his brother-in-law to turn to basketball.[7]
Duncan initially had difficulties adapting to the game he thought would help relieve his pain and frustration. Nancy Pomroy,
the athletic director of the St. Croix Country Day School was quoted: "[Duncan] was so huge. So big and tall, but he was awfully
awkward at the time."[8] He overcame this to become a
standout for the St. Dunstan’s Episcopal High School, averaging 25
points per game as a senior. His play attracted the attention of several universities, despite having only picked up the game in
ninth grade.[4] Wake Forest University basketball coach Dave Odom in
particular grew interested in Duncan after the 16-year-old allegedly played NBA star Alonzo
Mourning to a draw in a 5-on-5 pick-up game.[5] Odom was searching for a tall, physical player to play near the basket, but because of the
relative diminutive size of Wake Forest, potential recruits were uninterested.[5] Given the weak level of basketball in the Virgin Islands, Odom was wary
about Duncan at first, especially after first meeting him and thinking him to be inattentive; Duncan stared blankly at Odom for
most of the conversation.[9] However,
after the first talk, Odom understood that this was just Duncan's way of paying attention, and discovered that Duncan was not
only athletically talented, but also a quick learner.[9] Eventually, despite offers by the University of
Hartford, the University of Delaware and Providence University, Duncan
joined Odom's Wake Forest Demon Deacons.[5]
Wake Forest University
The Wake Forest Demon Deacons had previously reached the Sweet 16, but lost main scorer Rodney Rogers, who had entered the
1993 NBA Draft.[5] Duncan struggled with early transition problems and was even held scoreless in his first
college game, but as the year progressed, he and team mate Randolph Childress led the
Deacons to a 20–11 win-loss record. Duncan's style of play was simple but effective, combining an array of low-post moves, mid-range bank shots and tough defense. He
was chosen to represent the U.S. in the 1994 Goodwill Games.[5] Duncan worked towards a degree in psychology and also took classes in
anthropology and Chinese literature.[9] Despite focusing heavily on basketball,
Wake Forest psychology department chairperson Deborah Best was quoted: "Tim [...] was one of my more intellectual students. [...]
Other than his height, I couldn't tell him from any other student at Wake Forest."[9] Duncan also established his reputation as a stoic player, to the extent
that opposing fans taunted him as "Mr. Spock", the prototypical logical, detached character from
Star Trek.[9]
In the 1994–95 NCAA season, the sophomore was soon called one of the most eligible
NBA prospects, along with his peers Joe Smith, Rasheed Wallace and Jerry Stackhouse.[5] Los Angeles
Lakers general manager Jerry West suggested that Duncan might become the top pick in
the 1995 NBA Draft if he went early, but Duncan assured everyone he had no intention of
going pro until he graduated, even though the NBA was planning to add a rookie
salary cap in 1996. He was giving up a lot of money, but was determined to stay in
school.[5] In that season, he led the Demon
Deacons into the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) championship game against a
Rasheed Wallace-led North Carolina Tar Heels. During that game, Duncan
neutralized the threat of Wallace, while Childress sealed the win with a jump shot with four
seconds left in overtime.[5] In the NCAA Tournament, the
Demon Deacons reached the Sweet 16, and playing against Oklahoma
State, Duncan was shut down by Bryant Reeves, and his team lost 66–71. Still,
Duncan ended the year averaging 16.8 points and 12.5 rebounds per game, was named Defensive Player of the Year and became the third-best
shot-blocker in NCAA history with 3.98 denials per game.[5] He was also voted All-ACC First Team, a feat he would repeat in each
of his two years at Wake Forest.[10]
In the following 1995–96 NCAA season, Wake Forest had to deal with the loss of
Childress, who entered the NBA. This provided an opportunity for Duncan to show his leadership qualities, and his inexperienced
team lost only four games in the entire ACC season.[5] The Demon Deacons won the ACC Finals again, but in the Sweet 16, Duncan came down with flu, and
his team missed the Final Four by one win. He completed
another remarkable season with averages of 19.1 points and 12.3 rebounds per game, and was again voted Defensive and ACC Player
of the Year.[10] At the season's end the Wake
Forest star was rumored to enter the NBA Draft early, but in the end, he stayed in college.[5]
In the 1996–97 NCAA season, Duncan was helped by the addition of future NBA player
Loren Woods, a 7'1" player who eased the pressure on Duncan close to the basket. The Demon
Deacons won their first 13 games, but then got into a slump and failed to win a third ACC title.[5] The NCAA campaign was just as frustrating, as Stanford University led by future NBA point guard
Brevin Knight eliminated Duncan's team with a 72–66 win. Duncan finished with an
individually impressive season though, averaging 20.8 points, 14.7 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game while shooting .606 from the field
and winning the Defensive Player of the Year for an unprecedented third straight season. He earned first-team All-America honors for the second time, and was a unanimous pick for both USWBA and Naismith College Player
of the Year.[5] Duncan led the
1996–97 NCAA Division I in rebounding, was 10th in blocked shots (3.3 bpg) and 28th in scoring (20.8 ppg).[10] He was voted ACC Player of the Year again and won
the 1997 John Wooden Award as the NCAA's best overall male player based on the
votes of sportscasters and newswriters.[11]
In contrast to contemporary prep-to-pro players like Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant or LeBron
James, Duncan stayed at college for a full four years. During that period, he was a two-time ACC Player of the Year, and
an unprecedented three-time NABC Defensive Player of the Year. The
power forward also made the All-ACC Tournament between 1995 and 1997, the All-ACC First Team between 1995 and 1997, and was named
Most Valuable Player of the 1996 ACC Tournament. Further, 1996 was the year where
he led the conference in scoring, rebounding, field goal percentage and blocked shots, becoming the first player in conference
history to lead all four of those categories.[10] Overall, Duncan led his team to a 97–31 win-loss record and finished his college career as the
leading shot blocker in NCAA history, and remains one of only ten players with more than 2,000 career points and 1,500 career
rebounds. He was also the first player in NCAA history to reach 1,500 points, 1,000 rebounds, 400 blocked shots and 200 assists.
He left college as the all-time leading shot-blocker in ACC history with 481 blocks – second in NCAA annals behind
Colgate's Adonal Foyle and third on the ACC
career rebounding list with 1,570 rebounds.[10]
With his college degree in his hands, Duncan finally made himself eligible for the 1997 NBA
Draft.
"Twin Towers" (1997–2003)
In the 1997 NBA Draft, the San Antonio Spurs drafted Duncan with the first draft
pick.[1] The Spurs were coming off a poor
1996-97 NBA season; their best player, David Robinson—himself a number one draft pick in
1987—was sidelined for most of the year with an injury, and they had finished with a 20–62 win-loss record.[12] However, as the 1997-98
NBA season approached, the Spurs were considered a notable threat in the NBA. With both an experienced center in Robinson and the number one pick in Duncan, the Spurs featured one of the best
frontcourts in the NBA. Duncan and Robinson became known as the "Twin Towers", having earned
a reputation for their exceptional defense close to the basket, forcing opponents to take lower percentage shots from
outside.[5] From the beginning, Duncan
established himself as a quality player: in his second-ever road game, he grabbed 22 rebounds against opposing Chicago Bulls power forward Dennis Rodman, a multiple rebounding
champion and NBA Defensive Player of the Year.[13] Later, when Duncan played against opposing Houston Rockets Hall-of-Fame power forward
Charles Barkley, Barkley was so impressed he said: "I have seen the future and he wears
number 21 [Duncan's jersey number]."[14] In his rookie
season, Duncan lived up the expectations of being the number one draft pick, starting in all 82 regular-season games, and
averaging 21.1 points, 11.9 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 2.5 blocks per game.[1] His defensive contributions ensured that he was elected to the All-Defensive Second Team and was also named NBA
Rookie of the Year.[4] Spurs coach
Gregg Popovich lauded Duncan's mental toughness, stating his rookie's "demeanor was
singularly remarkable", Duncan always "put things into perspective" and never got "too upbeat or too depressed."[15] Center Robinson was equally impressed with Duncan: "He's the
real thing. I'm proud of his attitude and effort. He gives all the extra effort and work and wants to become a better
player."[16]
The Spurs qualified for the 1998 NBA Playoffs as the fifth seed, but Duncan had a bad first half in his first playoff game against the
Phoenix Suns, causing Suns coach Danny Ainge to play
Duncan with less defensive pressure. The rookie capitalised on this by finishing Game 1 with 32 points and 10 rebounds[17] and recording 32 points and 10 rebounds in Game 2,[18] contributing to a 4–0 sweep against the team from
Phoenix.[5] However, the Spurs lost in the
second round to the eventual Western Conference Champions Utah Jazz.[19] In this series, Duncan was pitted against Hall-of-Fame power forward
Karl Malone. Duncan outscored Malone in the first two games which the Spurs lost,[20][21] but as the series progressed, the more experienced Malone shut Duncan down on defense and dominated
on offense, outscoring the young power forward in Games 3 to 5 with 10–18,[22] 22–34[23] and
14–24.[24]
During the lockout-shortened 1998-99 NBA
season, the Spurs started with a lackluster 6–8 record and Popovich came under fire from the press. However, Duncan and
Robinson stood behind their coach, and finished the season with a 31–5 run.[25] The sophomore averaged 21.7 points, 11.4 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 2.5 blocks in the regular
season, making both the All-NBA and All-Defense First Teams.[1] In the 1999 NBA Playoffs,
the Spurs defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves 3–1, swept the Los Angeles Lakers and the Portland Trail Blazers
4–0, and defeated the New York Knicks 4–1 in the Finals.[26] In this series, a
large contigent of Virgin Islanders flew over to support their local hero,[27] and were not disappointed. In the first two games, the "Twin Towers"
outscored their Knicks counterparts Chris Dudley/Larry Johnson with 41 points, 26 rebounds and nine blocks versus five points, 12 rebounds and
zero blocks.[27] After a Game 3 loss in
which Duncan was held scoreless in the third quarter and committed three turnovers
in the last quarter, Duncan rebounded with 28 points and 18 rebounds in a Game 4 win,[27] and in Game 5, the Spurs protected a 78–77 lead seconds from the end
with the ball in the Knicks' possession. Double teamed by Duncan and Robinson, Knicks
swingman Latrell Sprewell missed a last-second
desperation shot,[27] and after closing
out the series with a strong 31-point and 9-rebound showing in Game 5, Duncan was named Finals MVP, bringing the first-ever NBA championship to San Antonio.[28]
The accolades for the Spurs soon arrived, with Sports Illustrated reporting that
the San Antonio "monkey has been shed", and that the Spurs were no longer known as the "San Antonio softies". The magazine
praised Finals MVP Duncan, who was later quoted: "This is incredible. We kept our focus and we pulled it out."[28] Sports Illustrated journalist and retired
NBA player Alex English added: "Duncan came up big each time they went to him with that
sweet turnaround jumper off the glass. He was the man tonight [in Game 5]." And Popovich later said to losing coach
Jeff Van Gundy: "I've got Tim [Duncan] and you don't. That's the difference."[28]
In the 1999-2000 NBA season, Duncan further cemented his reputation. He averaged
23.2 points, 12.4 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 2.2 blocks per game, earned another pair of All-NBA and All-Defense First Team
call-ups, and was MVP of the NBA All-Star Game.[1] However, the Spurs had a disappointing post-season. Duncan injured his meniscus shortly before the end of the regular season and was unable to play in even one post-season
game.[4] Consequently, the Spurs were
eliminated in the first round of the 2000 NBA Playoffs, losing 1–3 to the Phoenix
Suns.[29] Nonetheless, Duncan rebounded in the
next season, and with strong regular-season averages of 22.2 points, 12.2 rebounds,
3.0 assists and 2.3 blocks, earned himself yet another pair of All-NBA and All-Defensive First Team call-ups.[1] In the 2001 NBA
Playoffs, the Spurs eliminated the Timberwolves 3–1, defeated the Dallas
Mavericks 4–1, but then bowed out against the Lakers led by superstars Shaquille
O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, losing in four straight games.[30] Sports Illustrated described the series as a "[m]erciless mismatch", and Duncan
was criticised as "silent when the Spurs need him most".[31]
On the back of two consecutive playoff disappointments, Duncan improved statistically in the 2001–02 season. He averaged career highs in scoring (25.5 points per game, including a league-leading
764 field goals and 560 attempted free throws) and rebounding (12.7 boards per game, and his cumulated 1042 boards again led the
league), and also averaged 3.7 assists and 2.5 blocks per game, both personal NBA high scores. Coupled with another pair of
All-NBA and All-Defensive First Team call-ups, he was named the league's Most Valuable Player, joining teammate David
Robinson as the only Spurs members to earn the honor.[32]
On the other hand, Duncan's team struggled with the fact that the aging Robinson was no longer able to sustain his level of
performance, and backup center-forward Malik Rose had to step in more often.[5] In the 2002
NBA Playoffs, the Spurs were outmatched by the Lakers. Up against star center O'Neal once more, the Spurs were defeated
1–4 by the eventual champions.[33] Duncan, who managed 34
points and a franchise-high 25 rebounds in Game 5, stated his frustration: "I thought we really had a chance at this series. The
Lakers proved to be more than we could handle. Again, we had a (heck) of a run at it. We had opportunities to win games and make
it a different series, but that's just the way the ball rolls sometimes."[34] Nevertheless, nba.com praised Duncan as "phenomenal" and criticised his
supporting cast, stating Duncan "made 11-of-23 shots and 12-of-14 free throws, adding four assists and two blocks [a]nd once
again, he did not have enough help."[34] Also, Robinson said "Tim [Duncan] was like Superman out there", and conceded that the
Lakers were simply better, just like in the last playoffs campaign.[34]
The 2002-03 NBA season saw Duncan enjoy another standout season in which he
averaged 23.3 points, a career-high 12.9 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 2.9 blocks per game, and yet another dual All-NBA and
All-Defense First Team call-up, resulting in his second NBA Most Valuable Player Award.[1][5] At age 38, Robinson announced that year as his last season, and his playing time was cut by
coach Popovich to save his energy for the playoffs.[5] The Spurs easily qualified for the playoffs,
concluding the regular season as the Conference number one seed with a 60–22 record.[35] Although San Antonio now had new offensive threats in Tony Parker and Manu Ginóbili, during the playoffs, it was Duncan's
performance in the semi-finals against the Los Angeles Lakers which was singled out for praise by Popovich, who stated: "I
thought in Game 5 and Game 6, he [Duncan] was astounding in his focus. He pulled everyone along these last two games."[36] In the series, Duncan was matched up
against forward Robert Horry, dominated him the entire series[36] and closed out the series in style; Duncan finished Game 6 with
37 points and 16 rebounds, allowing Spurs coach Popovich to call timeout with 2:26 left
to instruct his team not to celebrate excessively.[36] The Spurs made it to the finals, and defeated the
New Jersey Nets 88–77 in Game Six to win their second ever NBA championship.[37] Helped by an inspired Robinson, Duncan almost recorded a
quadruple double in the final game,[38] and was named the NBA Finals MVP.[4] Duncan said of the victory: "We were all confident that something would
happen, that we would turn the game to our favor, and it did", but felt sad that Robinson retired after winning his second
championship ring.[38] Following this
successful Spurs campaign, Robinson and Duncan were named Sports Illustrated's 2003 "Sportsmen of the Year".[39]
Leader of the Spurs (2003–present)
Before the 2003-04 NBA season began, the Spurs lost their perennial captain David
Robinson to retirement. Embracing the lone team leader role, Duncan led a reformed Spurs team which included Slovenian center Rasho Nesterovic, defensive stalwart
Bruce Bowen, Argentinian shooting guard Ginóbili and
young French point guard Parker. Coming off the bench were clutch shooting power forward
Robert Horry, versatile Hedo Turkoglu and
veterans Malik Rose and Kevin Willis.[40] In retrospect, Robinson commented that at first, Duncan was reluctant to step into the void, still
needing some time to truly develop his leadership skills.[41] Statistically though, Duncan remained strong; after another convincing season with
averages of 22.3 points, 12.4 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 2.7 blocks,[1] he led the Spurs into the Western Conference
Semifinals. There, they met the Los Angeles Lakers again, split the series 2–2, and in Game 5, Duncan made a last-second
basket which put the Spurs ahead by one point with 0.4 seconds left to play. Despite the little time remaining, Lakers point
guard Derek Fisher hit a buzzer beater for an upset
Lakers win.[42][43] In the end, the Spurs lost the series 2–4, and Duncan attributed the strong
Lakers defense as one of the reasons for the loss.[44]
Duncan and his Spurs looked to re-assert themselves in the next 2004-05 NBA
season. Despite their new captain's slight statistical slump (20.3 points, 11.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 2.6 blocks per
game),[1] the Spurs won the second seed for the
2005 NBA Playoffs by winning 59 games.[45] In the first round, the Spurs eliminated the Denver Nuggets
four games to one, and met the Seattle Supersonics in the semi-finals. After
splitting the first four games, Duncan led his team to two decisive victories,[5] setting up a meeting with the Phoenix
Suns, known for their up-tempo basketball. The Spurs managed to beat the Suns at their own game, defeating them
4–1[5] and earning a spot in the
2005 NBA Finals. In the Finals, Duncan was pitted against the Detroit Pistons's defensively strong frontcourt anchored by multiple NBA Defensive Player of the Year Ben
Wallace. After two convincing Game 1 and 2 wins for the Spurs, the Pistons double
teamed Duncan and forced him to play further from the basket.[5] Detroit won the next two games and the series was eventually tied at 3–3, but Duncan was
instrumental in Game 7, recording 25 points and 11 rebounds as the Spurs defeated the Pistons.[46] NBA.com reported that "[w]ith his unique multidimensional talent, Duncan
depleted and dissected the Pistons... He was the fulcrum of virtually every key play down the stretch", and coach Popovich added:
"[Duncan's] complete game is so sound, so fundamental, so unnoticed at times, because if he didn't score, people think, 'Well, he
didn't do anything'. But he was incredible and he was the force that got it done for us."[46] Detroit's center Ben Wallace remarked: "He put his team on his shoulders
and carried them to a championship [...t]hat's what the great players do."[46] Duncan won his third NBA Finals MVP Award, joining Michael
Jordan, Shaquille O'Neal, and Magic
Johnson as the only players in NBA history to win it three times.[4]
In the 2005-06 NBA season, Duncan suffered from plantar fasciitis for most of the season,[47] which was at least partly responsible for his sinking output (18.6 points, 11.0 rebounds, 3.2
assists and 2.0 blocks per game), and also for his failure to make the All-NBA First Team after eight consecutive years.[1] The power forward came back strong in the
2006 NBA Playoffs against the Dallas
Mavericks, where he outscored rival power forward Dirk Nowitzki 32.2 to 27.1
points, with neither Nowitzki nor Mavericks center Erick Dampier able to stop Duncan with
their man-to-man defense.[48] But after splitting
the first six games, Duncan became the tragic hero of his team in Game 7. Despite scoring 39 points in regulation time and
fouling out both Dampier and Keith Van Horn, Duncan only made one of seven field goal
attempts in overtime against Mavericks reserve center DeSagana Diop, and the Spurs lost
Game 7.[48]
The following season however was another championship year for Duncan and the
Spurs. Duncan averaged 20.0 points, 10.6 rebounds, 3.4 assists and 2.4 blocks per game in the regular season,[1] and was selected as a Western Conference starter for
the 2007 NBA All-Star Game, his ninth appearance in the event. In
the playoffs, he led the Spurs to a 4–1 series win over the Denver Nuggets in the
opening round of the 2007 NBA Playoffs, a 4–2 win over the Phoenix Suns in the second round, and a 4–1 win against the
Utah Jazz in the Western Conference Finals, setting up a meeting with the Cleveland Cavaliers in the the Finals.[49] There, the Spurs swept the Cavaliers 4–0, earning Duncan his and San
Antonio's fourth ever championship.[50] Duncan proclaimed
that that championship was "the best" of his four championships, and acknowledged he played "sub-par" and thus received only one
vote for NBA Finals MVP from a panel of ten.[41] His colleagues were more appreciative of Duncan; among others, ex-teammate David
Robinson referred to the Spurs titles as the "Tim Duncan era", and lauded his leadership. Coach Popovich also praised Duncan:
"Tim is the common denominator. He's [had] a different cast around him [in] '99, '03 and '05. He's welcomed them all. [...] But
he is that easy to play with, and his skills are so fundamentally sound that other people can fit in."[41] NBA commissioner David Stern added: "[Duncan] is a player for the ages. I'm a tennis fan, and Pete Sampras is one of the greats. OK, he wasn't Andre Agassi or
John McEnroe. He just happens to be one of the greatest players of all time. You take great
players as you find them."[41]
International career
Duncan's senior international career with the United States
national team began in 1999. As a member of the 1999 USA Olympic Qualifying Team, he averaged 12.7 ppg, 9.1 rpg and 2.4
bpg and assisted the team to a 10–0 finish en route to a qualifying berth for the 2000
Sydney Olympics; however, a knee injury forced him to stay out of the Olympic Games
themselves.[10] In 2003, Duncan was a member of
the USA team that recorded ten wins and qualified for the 2004 Summer
Olympics.[10] He started all the games
he played in and averaged team bests of 15.6 ppg, 8.0 rpg, 1.56 bpg, while shooting 60.7 percent from the field.[10] At the Olympics itself, the team lost three games
on its way to a bronze medal.[51] The record represented more losses in a single year than in the 68 previous years combined. It
was also the first time since NBA professionals became eligible that the
U.S. men's basketball team returned home without gold medals.[51] After the tournament, Duncan commented, "I am about 95 percent sure my FIBA career is over. I'll try not to share my experiences with anyone."[52] To date, Duncan has been a member of five previous USA
Basketball teams and has played in 40 international games.[10]
Player profile
Duncan plays the power forward position and is also capable of playing
center. With a double-double career average
in points and rebounds, he is considered one of the most consistent players in the NBA. He has earned All-NBA and All-Defensive honors every season since 1998
while being a perennial candidate for the Most
Valuable Player and Defensive Player of the Year
awards.[1][53] Regarded as of the league's best interior defenders, Duncan also ranks
constantly as one of the top scorers, rebounders and shotblockers in the league.[1] His main drawback remains his average
free throw shooting, with a career average of less than 70%.[1]
Apart from his impressive statistics, Duncan has gained a reputation as a good clutch
player, given that his playoff career averages are higher than his regular-season statistics.[1] 11-time NBA champion Bill Russell
further compliments Duncan on his passing ability, and rates him as one of the most efficient players of his generation.[54] Because of his versatility and success, basketball
experts have spoken of Duncan as one of the greatest power forwards in history,[46][55][56] while coach Popovich
and team-mates Parker and Ginóbili have also credited much of San Antonio's success to him.[57][58]
Duncan's detractors however, label him as "boring" due to his simple but effective style of play. Following his first
championship ring in 1999, Sports Illustrated described him as a "quiet, boring
MVP",[59] a characterisation which persists
today.[54]
Duncan himself commented on his "boring" image, stating: "If you show excitement, then you also may show disappointment or
frustration. If your opponent picks up on this frustration, you are at an disadvantage."[60] Sports journalist Kevin Kernan also commented on Duncan's ability to relax and
stay focused, stating that having a degree in psychology, Duncan often not only outplays, but outpsychs his opponents.[61] Duncan has also stated that he especially likes his bank
shot, saying: "It is just easy for me. It just feels good."[62]
Honors
In his basketball career, Duncan has collected a number of individual and team honors, including being a two-time MVP (2002,
2003), four-time NBA champion (1999, 2003, 2005, 2007) and three-time NBA Finals MVP (1999, 2003, 2005). As a college player, he
was named ACC Male Athlete of the Year, won the John R. Wooden Award and was named
Naismith College Player of the Year (all 1997).[10] In his debut year in the NBA (1998), he was voted
Rookie of the Year and elected into the All-NBA Rookie Team, made the first of nine NBA All-Star Teams (eight First Team
nominations), ten All-NBA Teams (nine First Team nominations), and ten All-Defensive Teams (seven First Team
nominations).[1] With these impressive
performances, Duncan is one of only four players to receive All-NBA First Team honors in each of his first eight seasons
(1998–2005), along with Hall of Famers Bob Pettit (ten seasons), Larry Bird (nine seasons), and Oscar Robertson (nine seasons), and
is notably the only player in NBA history to receive All-NBA and All-Defensive honors in his first nine seasons
(1998-2006).[63]
Duncan was also named by the Association for Professional Basketball Research as one of "100 Greatest Professional Basketball
Players of The 20th Century", the youngest player on that list.[64] In the 2001–02 season, he won the IBM Player Award[65] and The Sporting News (TSN) MVP
Award,[66] becoming the third player to ever win the NBA
MVP, IBM Player and TSN Player Awards in the same season. In 2003, Duncan was ranked 55th by Slam
Magazine in their list of the "Top 75 NBA players of All Time". On February 18,
2006, he was named one of the Next 10 Greatest Players on the tenth anniversary of the
release of the NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team by the
TNT broadcasting crew.[67]
Off the court
Tim Duncan has two older sisters, Cheryl and Tricia.[5] Like their younger brother, they were gifted athletes: Cheryl was a
championship swimmer before she became a nurse, and Tricia competed for the U.S. Virgin Islands at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul.[68] He married Amy, an ex-cheerleader at Wake
Forest University,[4] and the couple welcomed
their first child, daughter Sydney, in the summer of 2005.[4] They recently welcomed their second child, a son, during the summer of 2007. Amy oversees the
Tim Duncan Foundation, which has been established to serve the areas
of health awareness/research, education, and youth sports/recreation in San Antonio, Winston-Salem, and the United States Virgin Islands.[4] The Foundation holds two major fundraisers each year: the annual Tim Duncan Bowling for Dollar$ Charity Bowl-A-Thon and the annual Slam
Duncan Charity Golf Classic.[4] Between 2001
and 2002, the Foundation raised more than $350,000 to help fight breast and prostate
cancer.[11] In those two years, Duncan was
named by Sporting News as one of the "Good Guys" in sports.[11] The Spurs captain also supports the Children's Bereavement Center, the
Children's Center of San Antonio and the Cancer Therapy and Research Center.[4]
Duncan cites his late mother Ione as his main inspiration. Among other things, she taught him and his sisters the nursery
rhyme "Good, Better, Best. Never let it rest / Until your Good is Better, and your Better is your Best", which he adopted as his
personal motto.[7] On and off the court, he believes
that the three most important values are dedication, teamwork and camaraderie.[7] The Spurs captain has also stated that he chose #21 for his jersey because that was his
brother-in-law's college number, since he was Duncan's main basketball inspiration, and cites Hall-of-Fame Los Angeles Lakers point guard
Magic Johnson as his childhood idol.[7]
For his mixture of success and low-key personality, Duncan has been honored with the St. Croix Medal of Honor, the highest
award that the territorial government can bestow on a citizen, and has been celebrated in several "Tim Duncan Day"
ceremonies.[69] In 2000,
St. Croix Senate president Vargrave Richards said: "He is a quiet giant. His laid-back attitude is the embodiment of people of
St. Croix, doing things without fanfare and hoopla."[69]
Regarding his own personality, Duncan compares himself to Will Hunting of the movie Good Will Hunting, which centers around the genial, but sociopathic character of Will Hunting, portrayed by Matt
Damon. He stated: "I'm just a taller, slightly less hyperactive version of the Damon character in the movie. I really
enjoyed how he probed people and found out their weaknesses just by asking questions and stating outlandish remarks."[70] He also admitted shunning the
limelight because "[fame] is not me".[70] Off the court, he has cited that his best friend is former Spurs colleague
Antonio Daniels, who himself describes Duncan as a cheerful, funny person off the
hardwood.[6]
Duncan also loves renaissance fairs and the fantasy role playing game Dungeons & Dragons.[71] An avid video game
player, he acknowledges a certain joy of playing "himself" on basketball video games. Duncan states if he had the chance, he
would challenge NBA legends Wilt Chamberlain and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to a one-on-one game.[7]
NBA statistics
- Correct as of 15 June 2007[72]
| Regular season |
Team |
GP |
MPG |
SPG |
BPG |
RPG |
APG |
PPG |
| 1997–98 |
San Antonio |
82 |
39.1 |
0.7 |
2.5 |
11.9 |
2.7 |
21.1 |
| 1998–99 |
San Antonio |
50 |
39.3 |
0.9 |
2.5 |
11.4 |
2.4 |
21.7 |
| 1999–2000 |
San Antonio |
74 |
38.9 |
0.9 |
2.2 |
12.4 |
3.2 |
23.2 |
| 2000–01 |
San Antonio |
82 |
38.7 |
0.8 |
2.3 |
12.2 |
3.0 |
22.2 |
| 2001–02 |
San Antonio |
82 |
40.6 |
0.7 |
2.5 |
12.7 |
3.7 |
25.5 |
| 2002–03 |
San Antonio |
81 |
39.3 |
0.7 |
2.9 |
12.9 |
3.9 |
23.3 |
| 2003–04 |
San Antonio |
69 |
36.6 |
0.9 |
2.7 |
12.4 |
3.1 |
22.3 |
| 2004–05 |
San Antonio |
66 |
33.4 |
0.7 |
2.6 |
11.1 |
2.7 |
20.3 |
| 2005–06 |
San Antonio |
80 |
34.8 |
0.9 |
2.0 |
11.0 |
3.2 |
18.6 |
| 2006–07 |
San Antonio |
80 |
34.1 |
0.8 |
2.4 |
10.6 |
3.4 |
20.0 |
| Career average |
|
|
37.5 |
0.8 |
2.4 |
11.9 |
3.2 |
21.8 |
| Career total |
|
746 |
|
595 |
1840 |
8866 |
2365 |
16288 |
| All-Star |
|
9 |
24.7 |
0.8 |
0.7 |
11.7 |
2.7 |
13.4 |
|
| Playoffs |
Team |
GP |
MPG |
SPG |
BPG |
RPG |
APG |
PPG |
| 1997–98 |
San Antonio |
9 |
41.6 |
0.6 |
2.6 |
9.0 |
1.9 |
20.7 |
| 1998–99 |
San Antonio |
17 |
43.1 |
0.8 |
2.6 |
11.5 |
2.8 |
23.2 |
| 2000–01 |
San Antonio |
13 |
40.5 |
1.1 |
2.7 |
14.5 |
3.8 |
24.4 |
| 2001–02 |
San Antonio |
9 |
42.2 |
0.7 |
4.3 |
14.4 |
5.0 |
27.6 |
| 2002–03 |
San Antonio |
24 |
42.5 |
0.6 |
3.3 |
15.4 |
5.3 |
24.7 |
| 2003–04 |
San Antonio |
10 |
40.5 |
0.8 |
2.0 |
11.3 |
3.2 |
22.1 |
| 2004–05 |
San Antonio |
23 |
37.8 |
0.4 |
2.3 |
12.4 |
|