[外電]Suns' Road Isn't as Smooth, but Is as Successful
Fourteen hours elapsed between celebratory news conferences at the US Airways
Center in Phoenix, and they told the story of the Suns' bumpy but still
relevant season.
Late Saturday night, the Suns exhaled after grinding through a taut
seven-game series against the Los Angeles Lakers. Coach Mike D'Antoni praised
his entire roster, from the guys who seemingly came out of nowhere (Leandro
Barbosa, Boris Diaw) to the star who was always there whenever they needed
him (Steve Nash).
Late yesterday morning, on another stage, in an adjacent room, it was Nash
alone in the spotlight, accepting his second consecutive N.B.A. Most Valuable
Player award.
The Suns remain alive in the 2006 playoffs because Nash was again the
league's most masterly floor conductor, but also because the Suns refused to
succumb to 10 months of misfortune and roster shuffling.
They did not wilt after losing Amare Stoudemire to knee surgery last summer
or after losing his replacement, Kurt Thomas, to a foot injury in February.
They are back in the Western Conference semifinals — they open at home
tonight against the Los Angeles Clippers — despite missing three starters
from last season (Stoudemire, Joe Johnson and Quentin Richardson).
Their victory total, 54, was eight shy of last season's record. Their
near-death experience against the Lakers revealed a vulnerability that was
rarely seen a year ago. But the Suns are still alive, with a good shot of
returning to the Western Conference finals.
"It's a little bit of everybody," said forward Shawn Marion, who bounced back
from a bad start in the first round to average 18.1 points and 9.4 rebounds
against the Lakers. "I think everybody brings something to the table. It's a
team. It's no one individual. Of course, me and Steve lead the way,
definitely. But it's like everybody's in tune with each other. Everybody's
got each other's back, and that's what it's about."
This is not the Suns team that cruised to 62 victories in 2004-5 and went
five games against the San Antonio Spurs in the conference finals. But the
joyride goes on, with 100-point games, lots of 3-pointers and a plug-and-play
lineup that seems to welcome anyone willing to run.
Johnson and Richardson were traded. But Diaw, acquired in the Johnson trade
with Atlanta, blossomed into a star against the Lakers, averaging 18.3
points, 6 assists and 5.9 rebounds. Barbosa, like Diaw a foreign-born player
with no real N.B.A. track record, also emerged, with a team-high 26 points in
Game 7. Tim Thomas, cast off by the Chicago Bulls late in the season, looked
perfectly at home with the Suns, leading them with 16 3-pointers in the first
round.
The entire cast gets points for surviving a difficult 10 months. But Nash
gets the trophy — again — for holding the Suns together. The league
announced yesterday what had been reported for weeks — that Nash was the
N.B.A.'s ninth back-to-back winner of the M.V.P. award. Nash joined Magic
Johnson as the only other point guard to win the award more than once.
Nash earned the award by leading the league in assists (10.5 a game) while
averaging career highs in scoring (18.8), rebounds (4.2) and field-goal
percentage (.512).
"I have to pinch myself," Nash said at yesterday's news conference. "I can't
believe that I'm standing here today. I couldn't believe it last year, and to
do it again is even more difficult to understand — but I'm not going to give
it back."
Nash earned 924 points in the balloting by 125 sportswriters and
broadcasters. Cleveland's LeBron James finished second, with 688 points,
followed by Dallas's Dirk Nowitzki (544), the Lakers' Kobe Bryant (483) and
Detroit's Chauncey Billups (430). In first-place votes, it was not even
close; Nash earned 57 to Bryant's 22.
Six Suns players — Raja Bell, James Jones, Barbosa, Diaw, Marion and Nash —
averaged career highs in scoring this season, a development that is often
attributed to Nash. It is also due, in part, to the Suns' frantic offensive
pace, which creates more possessions and more shots. But then, the
effectiveness of that scheme goes back to Nash's playmaking.
The Suns remain the N.B.A.'s most entertaining team, but with a slightly
harder edge on defense this season. They traded for Kurt Thomas from the
Knicks and signed Bell, who played for Utah last season, to improve their
defense. They were in the midst of an 11-game winning streak when Thomas went
down Feb. 22, but went .500 after the streak ended. He could return late in
the second round, if the Suns are still alive.
Bell harassed Bryant throughout the series, leveled him in Game 5, was
suspended for Game 6 and got the last laugh late Saturday night. With the
same words Bryant once used to dismiss him, Bell said, "We've got bigger fish
to fry now."
It was an interesting choice of words. Size has been an issue for the Suns
since they adopted their up-tempo approach. The Lakers exploited it for a
time, using Kwame Brown and Lamar Odom to dictate the pace as they won Games
2, 3 and 4. But the Suns reimposed their style in the final three games and
ran themselves into the second round. The challenge will be tougher against
the Clippers, who have a more formidable and physical front line with Elton
Brand and Chris Kaman.
The Suns, having survived everything else, do not seem overly concerned.
"I am going to steal a line from Walt Disney and say, 'It's a small world
after all,' " D'Antoni said, smiling with satisfaction Saturday night. "I
guess small guys can play."
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/08/sports/basketball/08suns.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
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