http://tinyurl.com/zys7w
This Time, Mavs can stop Nash
by Tim Colishaw
Dallas Morning News
[SIZE=-1]Wednesday, May 24, 2006
[/SIZE]
You must be registered for see images
Steve Nash is coming back to Dallas to flaunt another league MVP trophy in Mavericks' fans (and Mark Cuban's) faces.
When he leaves this time, don't expect him to be headed for another series as he was a year ago.
Last year, Nash crushed the Mavericks by averaging 30.3 points and 12 assists and led Phoenix to a 4-2 series win to advance before losing to San Antonio. This time the Mavericks already have discarded the champion Spurs and are prepared to avenge last year's playoff defeat to Phoenix.
It won't be easy.
It will be done.
"We don't want to trade baskets with them," Mavs forward Jerry Stackhouse said. "That's not this team's style. We want to play like we did against the Spurs, keep it right around 100 points."
The Mavericks learned the need to do that a year ago. When Phoenix scored 110 or more points against Dallas, the Suns won all four games. When the Mavs held them to 109 or fewer, Dallas won.
They know what to do. Doing it comes next.
The Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers tried to slow the Suns. They did it for stretches, but not when it mattered in seventh games. The temptation to follow Nash into the lane and run away from the Suns' array of 3-point shooters is simply a difficult natural instinct to put aside.
"I know I'm getting paid to figure out how to [slow down Phoenix]," coach Avery Johnson said. "But if someone has a suggestion, I will listen because I haven't seen anyone do it."
But the fact is that these Suns, though in the Western Conference finals for the second straight spring, are not as dangerous as last year's Suns.
In 2005, Amare Stoudemire emerged as a true star in this league. He killed the Mavericks with 28.8 points and 12.5 rebounds per game.
Stoudemire isn't playing in this series, barring some miracle recovery that Phoenix has managed to keep quiet. He missed all but three games this season following knee surgery.
And Nash, though voted MVP once more, isn't the same Nash he was last May. Fatigue is going to play a role in this series. There are no extra off days between games and the Suns have had to battle through 14 games to get here.
A year ago Nash averaged 30.3 points and 12 assists against Dallas. He tore them apart. Coming off three days' rest before Game 7 on Monday night, Nash scored 29 to get his average over 20 for the playoffs.
He has been a reluctant 3-point shooter at times and is hitting 34 percent from long range, well below his norm.
"We have to make it harder for him this year," said Johnson.
The man who can do that, if he can recover just part of his offensive game, is Devin Harris. He played only nine minutes against Phoenix in last year's playoff but should be more of a factor this time.
On the flip side, Dirk Nowitzki is not the same Dirk as last year, which is good news for Dallas. His maturation, if it wasn't evident to everyone before, was on display with his 37-point night in Game 7 against the Spurs. If Nowitzki wants to show people he was a more deserving MVP than his buddy Nash, this is the perfect stage.
Other reasons you have to believe this series favors the Mavericks include the 3 R's:
• Rebounds – Phoenix got crushed by the Lakers on the boards. Then the Suns got crushed by the Clippers on the boards. They are getting outrebounded by nine per game.
The Mavericks have outrebounded the Grizzlies and Spurs by six per game. Johnson has transformed the Mavs into a team that pounds the boards. The Suns have no chance in this department.
• Results – Phoenix took seven games to beat a 45-win Lakers team. The Suns took another seven to beat a 47-win Clippers team. Dallas opened against a 49-win Memphis team and won in four straight. The holes in the Mavericks' game are much harder to exploit than those in the Suns'.
• Revenge – The Mavericks were embarrassed by this team a year ago. At least they should have been. And right after Dallas lost to Phoenix, the Spurs knocked out the Suns in five games, showing what a team with a real commitment to defense and a post-up game on offense could do to Phoenix.
Johnson was only beginning to install those traits in the Mavericks a year ago. They are much closer to being a complete part of this team now.
So is the understanding that beating the Spurs, though a major accomplishment, means nothing more than the Mavericks are halfway home.
Dallas in six.
Last edited: