Tony Parker has watched old rivals Allen Iverson, Steve Nash, Chauncey Billups and Jason Kidd end their playing careers in recent years. Parker, however, isn’t eying his own retirement party anytime soon.
“The Spurs know I want to play until I’m 38,” Parker told Yahoo Sports in a recent phone interview. “That will be 20 seasons for me. That’s my goal. This year is No. 15. And if I’m lucky enough and I’m healthy, hopefully I can play 20 seasons and then I’ll be ready to retire.”
Parker, 33, made $12.5 million in the final year of his last contract last season. This season will be the first year of the 14-year NBA veteran’s new contract paying him a total of $43.3 million over the next three seasons. Parker said he has told Spurs coach Gregg Popovich and general manager R.C. Buford he wants a career-ending three-year contract in San Antonio after his new deal expires.
“Last year was the first year in my whole career where I had a lot of nagging injuries,” Parker said. “When I compare to all the other guys when you look at D-Rose [Derrick Rose], [Paul] George and Wesley Matthews, I feel very lucky and blessed that I have been able with my little body to play all those years.”
Parker also shot just 34.3 percent while playing in Eurobasket 2015 for his native France this summer. He said he felt “great physically” and his lackluster performance was because of rust, not recent injuries. Parker has told Popovich and Buford he will play his final season internationally for France next summer in its attempt to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics.
“I was just not in a good rhythm,” Parker said. “I didn’t play a lot in the [exhibition] games and I didn’t play a lot in the [preliminary] rounds because coach was sitting me because of my age.”
Spurs assistant coach Ettore Messina, who attended Eurobasket 2015, said Parker’s low shooting percentage for France was more a product of defenses focusing on primarily stopping him.
To better prepare his body and mind for the long NBA season, Parker said he sought advice from Nash on his old pregame and practice routines. Nash, now a consultant with the Golden State Warriors, played 19 NBA seasons and retired on March 21 at the age of 41. The two-time NBA MVP’s last three seasons were slowed by injury as he played in only 65 total games, including none last season after succumbing to a nerve issue.
He carried the load for their
team for many games…Messina
“I just wanted to see what he was doing and what could be helpful,” Parker said. “Everybody is different and does different stuff that works for them. But because he was a point guard like me with a great example of longevity who was still great at 38, an All-Star at 38, what did he do to make sure his body was ready?
“The main thing I learned is to do the routine every day. When you’re young you want to go out and play right away. But it doesn’t happen like that for me anymore. You have to make sure that you do all the exercises even when you feel good.”
This year is a great opportunity to…
Parker, along with Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Boris Diaw and Popovich, didn’t make the trip to the Spurs’ preseason opener on Wednesday night in Sacramento to get rest. With the additions of All-Star forward LaMarcus Aldridge and veteran forward David West, the already formidable Spurs appear even tougher.
“LaMarcus Aldridge and David West brought a new energy to our team,” Parker said.
Duncan, 39, and Ginobili, 38, are expected to retire several seasons before Parker. Without them, Parker still expects the Spurs to have a talented roster with Aldridge, Danny Green and Kawhi Leonard by his side.
“It’s very rare for any player in any sport – soccer, football, baseball – to play their whole career with the same team,” Parker said. “So it would definitely mean a lot to me to do like [former Spurs Hall of Fame center] David Robinson and Timmy and Manu. It would be great to be a part of the history of being with the same team.
“My time will come soon. But I definitely want to enjoy my last years in the NBA.”
Even as it was, I thought something of slipping out of the window, but it was the second floor back. I am no coward, but what to make of this head-peddling purple rascal altogether passed my comprehension. Ignorance is the parent of fear, and being completely nonplussed and confounded about the stranger, I confess I was now as much afraid of him as if it was the devil himself who had thus broken into my room at the dead of night. In fact, I was so afraid of him that I was not game enough just then to address him, and demand a satisfactory answer concerning what seemed inexplicable in him.
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