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2021–22 San Antonio Spurs season

NBA professional basketball team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2021–22 San Antonio Spurs season was the 55th season of the franchise, its 46th in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 49th in the San Antonio area. For the first time since 2010–11, long-time point guard Patty Mills was not on the roster, as he signed with the Brooklyn Nets on August 10, 2021. Mills was previously the longest tenured player on the Spurs roster, and the last player from the 2013–14 championship season to remain on the roster. Mills' departure made sixth-year point guard Dejounte Murray the new longest tenured player on the roster.

Quick facts San Antonio Spurs season, Head coach ...

On April 5, 2022, the Spurs became the 20th and final team to clinch a postseason position, clinching a spot in the elimination round in the play-in tournament for the second consecutive year, qualifying for the second consecutive year in the first stage as the No. 10 seed. However, they lost to the New Orleans Pelicans in the Play-In tournament, eliminating the Spurs from playoff contention for the third consecutive season.

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Draft

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The Spurs currently carry one first-round pick and one second-round pick.[1]

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Roster

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Standings

Division

More information Southwest Division, W ...

Conference

More information Western Conference, # ...

Schedule

Preseason

More information 2021 preseason game log Total: 3–2 (Home: 2–1; Road: 1–1), Game ...

Regular season

More information 2021–22 game log Total: 34–48 (Home: 16–25; Road: 18–23), Game ...

Play-in

More information 2022 play-in game log Total: 0–1 (Home: 0–0; Road: 0–1), Game ...


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Player statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game

Regular season

More information Player, GP ...
  • Denotes player spent time with another team in the season. Stats reflect time with the Spurs only.
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Transactions

Trades

Five-team trade [2]
August 6, 2021 To Brooklyn Nets
  • 2024 second-round pick (from Washington)
  • 2025 second-round pick swap rights (from Washington)
  • Draft rights to Nikola Milutinov (2015 No. 26) (from San Antonio)
To Indiana Pacers
To Los Angeles Lakers
  • Russell Westbrook (from Washington)
  • 2023 CHI second-round pick (from Washington)
  • 2024 second-round pick (from Washington)
  • 2028 WAS second-round pick (from Washington)
To San Antonio Spurs
To Washington Wizards
August 8, 2021 To Indiana Pacers
  • 2023 SAS protected second-round pick[a]
To San Antonio Spurs
[4][5]
August 11, 2021 To Chicago Bulls
To San Antonio Spurs
[6][7]
January 19, 2022 Three-team trade [8][9][10]
To Boston Celtics
To Denver Nuggets
To San Antonio Spurs
  • Juancho Hernangómez (from Boston)
  • 2028 DEN protected second-round pick[f] (from Denver)
  • Cash considerations (from Boston)
  • Cash considerations (from Denver)
February 9, 2022 Three-team trade [11][12]
To Portland Trail Blazers
To San Antonio Spurs
To Utah Jazz
February 10, 2022 To Boston Celtics
To San Antonio Spurs
[13]
To Toronto Raptors
To San Antonio Spurs
[14][15]
  1. Indiana will receive the pick if it's No. 56-60, otherwise they receive nothing.[3]
  2. San Antonio will receive the pick if it's No. 56-60, otherwise they receive nothing. Indiana traded the No. 31–55 portion of this pick to Sacramento on February 8, 2022.[3]
  3. San Antonio has the right to swap its own pick for the worse of the picks originally belonging to Indiana and Miami.[3]
  4. Before this trade, Chicago had the right to trade its pick for Detroit's, with the worse of the two going to Sacramento; San Antonio could then swap the Lakers' pick for the better of Chicago/Detroit, leaving Chicago with the remaining pick. The pick traded here was the one Chicago would have ended up with after the swap rights were done. San Antonio traded the better of the Chicago and Detroit picks to Toronto on February 10, 2022.[3]
  5. Chicago already owes its protected 2023 first-round pick to Orlando, which will convert to two second-round picks if not conveyed by 2024. Because teams cannot trade future first-round picks in consecutive years, San Antonio may not be able to receive the pick until at least 2026. In the first eligible year, San Antonio will receive the pick if it's No. 11-30, in the second or third year (2026 and 2027 or 2027 and 2028) if No. 9-30, after which it will convert to Chicago's 2028 second-round pick.[3]
  6. San Antonio will receive the pick if it's No. 34-60, otherwise they receive nothing.[3]
  7. The worst of the four picks originally belonging to Houston, Indiana, Miami, and Oklahoma City.[3]
  8. San Antonio will receive the pick if it's No. 5–30, in 2023 if No. 5–30; if the pick is not conveyed by 2023, San Antonio will receive Portland's 2023 second-round pick and the better of 1) the 2023 second-round pick originally belonging to Houston (if No. 33–60) or 2) the worse of the picks originally belonging to Dallas and Miami.[3] San Antonio received the pick.
  9. If Boston's pick is No. 1, San Antonio will instead receive Boston's second-round pick if it's No. 31–45, otherwise receiving nothing.[3]
  10. The better of the picks originally belonging to Chicago and Detroit.[3]
  11. San Antonio will receive in 2022 if it's No. 15–30, in 2023 if it's No. 14–30; if the pick is not conveyed by 2023, it will convert to Toronto's second-round picks in 2023 and 2026.[3]

Free agency

Re-signed

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Additions

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Subtractions

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References

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