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Suns Notebook: Suns Go For Sweep of East Teams on Road
By Jerry Brown
East Valley Tribune
Feb. 27, 2007
There was the double-overtime scoring fest in New Jersey. Leandro Barbosa’s dagger 3-pointer in Chicago preceded another rally in Toronto the next night. The Suns avenged home losses to Washington and Atlanta and were the beneficiary when they ran into injury-depleted teams in Detroit, Miami and Milwaukee.
But with only two road games against the Eastern Conference remaining – tonight against the Pacers and Wednesday against the lottery-bound Philadelphia 76ers – the Suns have a chance to become the first team in NBA history to sweep an interconference road schedule.
The 72-win Bulls – or any of their six championship teams – couldn’t do it. The “Showtime” Lakers or “Bad Boy” Pistons of the ‘80s couldn’t either. But in a season defined by Suns winning streaks, a fifth- and sixth- consecutive victory by Phoenix would erase the 11-1 record set by the 1982-83 Philadelphia 76ers, who had current Suns assistant Marc Iavaroni as a starting forward.
“I don’t know if we take any more pride in that than any other road win,” said coach Mike D’Antoni, whose team is 22-7 on the road this season (22-3 since an 0-4 start) and within striking distance of the 31-10 franchise record set in 2004-05. “We’ve not talked about it much because we have two tough games to get through first. But to be the first to do anything is pretty cool.”
BORIS RETURNS
The Suns will be at full strength for the first time in six weeks tonight. Boris Diaw practiced Monday and will return after missing the past six games with back problems. “I don’t think he’ll play a whole lot of minutes, but the key thing is to get him back on the floor because he’s missed more than two weeks,” D’Antoni said.
Kurt Thomas will remain the starter with Diaw coming off the bench for only the third time this season. D’Antoni said Thomas will definitely play more than the five minutes he saw Sunday in Atlanta – when the veteran started, came out and never returned.
Thomas also played only 12 minutes in Minnesota Friday. Thomas and Pat Burke played just under 10 minutes combined Sunday, leaving 230 minutes for the other six Suns players against the 22-34 Hawks.
“I (messed) it up. I’ll get him back in there,” D’Antoni said. “I just had it in my mind that they were athletic and running and I left the little guys in. But when you look at the tape, that was just me panicking and getting scared.
“He’s probably upset, and he’s right. I should have come back to him. But it’s not something that you’ll see a lot.”
BONUS SHOTS
The Suns continue to lead the league in point differential (7.8 points a game), an important statistic since 33 of the last 60 NBA champions led the league in that category. …
Leandro Barbosa is shooting 59 percent from 3-point range in the month of February (37 for 63) and is even better (16 for 25, 64 percent) the past three games.
http://www.nba.com/suns/news/tribune_notes_070227.html
By Jerry Brown
East Valley Tribune
Feb. 27, 2007
There was the double-overtime scoring fest in New Jersey. Leandro Barbosa’s dagger 3-pointer in Chicago preceded another rally in Toronto the next night. The Suns avenged home losses to Washington and Atlanta and were the beneficiary when they ran into injury-depleted teams in Detroit, Miami and Milwaukee.
But with only two road games against the Eastern Conference remaining – tonight against the Pacers and Wednesday against the lottery-bound Philadelphia 76ers – the Suns have a chance to become the first team in NBA history to sweep an interconference road schedule.
The 72-win Bulls – or any of their six championship teams – couldn’t do it. The “Showtime” Lakers or “Bad Boy” Pistons of the ‘80s couldn’t either. But in a season defined by Suns winning streaks, a fifth- and sixth- consecutive victory by Phoenix would erase the 11-1 record set by the 1982-83 Philadelphia 76ers, who had current Suns assistant Marc Iavaroni as a starting forward.
“I don’t know if we take any more pride in that than any other road win,” said coach Mike D’Antoni, whose team is 22-7 on the road this season (22-3 since an 0-4 start) and within striking distance of the 31-10 franchise record set in 2004-05. “We’ve not talked about it much because we have two tough games to get through first. But to be the first to do anything is pretty cool.”
BORIS RETURNS
The Suns will be at full strength for the first time in six weeks tonight. Boris Diaw practiced Monday and will return after missing the past six games with back problems. “I don’t think he’ll play a whole lot of minutes, but the key thing is to get him back on the floor because he’s missed more than two weeks,” D’Antoni said.
Kurt Thomas will remain the starter with Diaw coming off the bench for only the third time this season. D’Antoni said Thomas will definitely play more than the five minutes he saw Sunday in Atlanta – when the veteran started, came out and never returned.
Thomas also played only 12 minutes in Minnesota Friday. Thomas and Pat Burke played just under 10 minutes combined Sunday, leaving 230 minutes for the other six Suns players against the 22-34 Hawks.
“I (messed) it up. I’ll get him back in there,” D’Antoni said. “I just had it in my mind that they were athletic and running and I left the little guys in. But when you look at the tape, that was just me panicking and getting scared.
“He’s probably upset, and he’s right. I should have come back to him. But it’s not something that you’ll see a lot.”
BONUS SHOTS
The Suns continue to lead the league in point differential (7.8 points a game), an important statistic since 33 of the last 60 NBA champions led the league in that category. …
Leandro Barbosa is shooting 59 percent from 3-point range in the month of February (37 for 63) and is even better (16 for 25, 64 percent) the past three games.
http://www.nba.com/suns/news/tribune_notes_070227.html