Warriors don't have to worry about Tim Duncan Kevon Looney was 16 months old when San Antonio selected a big man from Wake Forest with the top pick of the 1997 NBA draft. Tim Duncan developed into perhaps the greatest power forward of all time, leaving innumerable hours of fundamentally-sound video for aspiring players to study. Looney, based off the recommendation of his father, Doug, analyzed the subtleties of the two-time MVP's game: footwork in the low post, mastery of utilizing the backboard, crisp outlet passes. "He was someone I always watched," said Looney, a second-year forward for the Warriors. Every big man should watch film of him. Golden State's season opener Tuesday night at Oracle Arena marks the first time in 20 years the Spurs will play a game that counts without Duncan on their roster. Though the future Hall of Famer's production dwindled in recent seasons, the Warriors are curious about what the post-Duncan era holds for their biggest Western-Conference threat. Duncan partnered with Gregg Popovich to post 1,001 victories, the most by a player and coach in NBA history. San Antonio's 71-percent winning clip since drafting "The Big Fundamental" is the best stretch...