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Oh, and those three Spurs lost by a 28-6 count to a group of army veterans, playing at a rehabilitation center at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio on Tuesday. The Spurs got their tails handed to them.
From Scott Huddleson at the San Antonio Express-News:
The clinic, presented by Valero, San Antonio Sports, the Department of Veterans Affairs and U.S. Paralympics, has come to San Antonio for the first time, after similar events were held in Durham, N.C.; San Jose, Calif.; and Chicago. To add some fun and local flavor, organizers called on three Spurs to take on amputees who survived the double-elimination basketball tournament.
“We're here to win,” Bonner said Tuesday.
After a 20-minute game, the three veterans, Edwin Gonzalez, Matt Spang and Chris Pettway — all amputees — trounced the Spurs, 28-6. Gonzalez, from New York state, said it was generous of the Spurs to compete in wheelchairs.Army Sergeant Delvin Maston explained to Huddleson just why three NBA pros were demolished in a game of wheelchair basketball:
“You have to really dig into your mental game and be fundamentally sound,” Maston said. “Your athleticism is limited because you no longer have your legs. You have to be more technical.”Yeah, let’s step up your fundamentals, Matt Bonner. Get it together, hot dog.
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In other good-hearted San Antonio news, San Antonio mayor Julian Castro is performing a day of service in Miami on Wednesday, helping plant gardens and serving food to war veterans in Miami as a result of a “lost” bet with Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez.
The San Antonio Express-News reports that no city funds were used in Castro’s goodwill (and good food, with San Antonio’s Mi Tierra CafĂ© sending some Tex-Mex stylings along for the vets) trip to Miami.