Evil Ash
Henchman Supreme
Very good article by Bickley that summarizes how most of us feel
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/columns/articles/0602bickley02.html
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/columns/articles/0602bickley02.html
It was a great run
Suns' purple reign only starting as team wraps up its season of fun, brotherhood
Dan Bickley
Republic columnist
Jun. 2, 2005 12:00 AM
First, a message for the vanquished Suns:
Thanks. You've made basketball in Phoenix fun once again.
The pleasure was all ours.
"I'm almost sick right now," the Suns' Shawn Marion said. "I can't believe it's over."
Ah, but that's the thing. Get through the fog of heartbreak and you'll see that the wild ride is merely closed for the summer. A season might have ended with a 101-95 loss to the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday, leaving the Suns short of reaching the NBA Finals, but the purple reign is only getting started. It's as clear as the hunger in Amaré Stoudemire's eyes.
So cheer up. Training camp is just around the corner.
"It would've been a fairy tale if we came out and won the championship," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "That doesn't happen. You have to earn it, and you have to lose some battles along the way. But this is a great first step."
Hard to believe this dream team began as a wacky chemistry experiment. With no luck recruiting a center last summer, a scrambling coach made the decision to play his five best athletes and see what happened. Eight months later, they bowed out in the Western Conference finals, having won 78 of 105 games (including a 7-1 preseason record). And who knows how this series would've gone had Joe Johnson not broken his face.
"I think if we had J.J., we may have gotten a split at least in the first two (games)," guard Steve Nash said. "But we didn't, and that's a part of it."
Yet now that the Suns have been eliminated in five games, there will surely be an outcry from basketball purists in the Valley. They'll want more defense on the menu, a traditional center in the lineup and a team more suited for the rigors of the postseason.
Please stop now. The style employed by the Suns in 2004-05 should be coveted not scorned. Regular-season basketball is known to cause migraines in most cities. The Suns smashed that mold.
They made every game a highlight film. America West Arena became the hot spot in town. The Suns have recaptured their place atop our sporting landscape, and if you think a plodding team will aid them through future postseasons, you probably came late to the party. If so, you've missed the point and most of the fun.
"Sometimes, you have to lose to figure out how to win," D'Antoni said.
Even though hearts were heavy inside the losing locker room, the goals are now wonderfully small. They are better than every team in the Western Conference except one. The Suns must only find a way to trump the dreaded Spurs, and already, plans are being drawn.
They must find a reliable backup point guard, a big man with some muscle and another wing player with speed. These are not gaping holes. They are merely cracks that need some caulk.
Indeed, the most daunting task facing the Suns will come from within. The 2004-05 team was noted for its brotherhood and selflessness, and that will be hard to duplicate. Like weeds that somehow emerge on a sidewalk, egos and personal agendas can easily spoil a good thing.
The hope is that there are no problems re-signing Johnson and everyone signs off on playing the same system with the same zeal next season. And the fear, at least for the rest of the league, is that Stoudemire continues to honor his massive talent.
Incredibly, he grew even taller in the last two games of the series, and after his postseason performance, the MVP trophy currently in Nash's possession may remain in Phoenix for some time to come.
Even San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich, who issues compliments reluctantly, admitted he has no clue in how to handle this 22-year-old phenomenon.
"I don't know what to do with him," Popovich said. "I mean, he's just unbelievable. He's a real unique player."
Likewise, the Suns are a unique team, one that will certainly learn and grow from this experience.
It's a new day in Phoenix, a new era for the Suns, and the trail to the summit is open.
"This is our mountain to climb," D'Antoni said. "And our guys will climb it."
Reach Bickley at [email protected] or (602) 444-8253.