Still searching
The Suns do not have to officially report until Oct. 1 so there are still plenty of big man shopping days remaining as Phoenix continues to look for the right fit in a 13th man.
This week, they have taken a free look at Rodney White, the former Nugget and Warrior who has been out of the league the past two seasons. He paid his own way to come in and play in Phoenix's informal games.
White, 27, has been impressive and probably needs to be after being known for inconsistent effort and unfulfilled potential. At 6 feet 9 and 230 pounds, White mostly played at small forward in the NBA. But if he found a way to stick in Phoenix, he would take that versatile inside-outside offensive game to the four spot. He was a career 31.4 percent three-point shooter in the NBA. Signing White would not address the cries for a classic big man. The reviews on his defense and rebounding were mixed, especially in the context of being the 2001 draft's No. 9 overall pick. He has spent the past two seasons in Spain and Italy.
On Thursday, the Suns may be taking a look at the final big man candidate they need to see. Brian Skinner will visit along with swingmen Yaroslav Korolev and Richie Frahm.
Some more slices of orange:
* Steve Nash and Leandro Barbosa are back on the practice court after their trip to China last week with Alando Tucker for the Nash-Yao charity game. Tucker is now in New York with D.J. Strawberry for the league's rookie orientation program.
* Amare Stoudemire, back in the gym after a coach-mandated break, will be making his own trip to China next week for an endorsement deal with Inner Mongolian milk producer Manging Dairy Group. That's the official dairy product of the NBA in China. Seriously, it is.
* Back on the big man thing, have you noticed how the candidate list is shrinking? Elton Brown, here for a workout last week, signed with the Lakers. Malik Allen, who Phoenix was very much interested in checking out, took a partially guaranteed deal with New Jersey. Reports from abroad indicate Esteban Batista could end up in Boston. And even before things got serious, Alexander Johnson (who intrigued Phoenix before the 2006 draft) signed last month with Miami.
* There will be a Steve Nash Celebrity Roast on Oct. 12 at the Hotel Valley Ho. Tickets are $1,500 a pop so all those Nash haters should be happy to come and help the Steve Nash Foundation, which will use all proceeds to benefit Arizona youth with educational programs. Plus, John Legend is performing live. Call 1-877-341-NASH for tickets.
* This non-Sun-but-somewhat-Suns-related mention comes at the risk of infuriating those who don't want to hear of any Marion-for-AK47 talk. But as you diehards probably already noticed, Andrei Kirilenko was the Eurobasket 2007 MVP as he (along with Benetton Treviso's latest American coach, David Blatt, and "citizen" and former Bucknell Bison J.R. Holden) led Russia to a title game upset of reigning world champion Spain. Only Dirk Nowitzki, Tony Parker, Hedo Turkoglu and Pau Gasol averaged more points per game than Kirilenko's 18.0 average. He also averaged 8.6 rebounds, 2.4 assists, 2.2 steals, 1.8 blocks and 1.0 Utah Jazz rips per game. He was at it again this week, writing of a trade request in his blog, as was translated here by the Salt Lake Tribune:
www.sltrib.com/Sports/ci_6937904
* And while we're at it, let's address what seems to be a frequent mention out there that Marion would sulk this season because he is not going to get a $20-million-a-year extension (a number often heard in the league's inner circles but has not been confirmed by the Marion camp). The logic here says that Marion would actually play like a man in a contract year if he truly believes that he could exercise his early termination option next summer. And then if he stayed for his paltry $17.8 million salary in 2008-09, well, there is another contract year.
It is very feasible that we might see another slight slip in Marion's numbers if Stoudemire continues to rebound like he did late last season and Grant Hill is as effective offensively as the Suns believe he will be. But he'll still be a hero to every one of his fantasy basketball owners around the nation.
The trade debate seems to always bring up the idea that Marion is not a playoff performer. Not fair. Does he always play great and clutch in the playoffs? Heavens no. Should the team's highest paid player do so? Maybe. But the playoff criticisms should not come with such a broad brush. How about the 2006 playoffs? The Suns are one and done without his tap-out rebound to set up Tim Thomas' heroics. He scored 30 or more points in Games 3, 5, 6 and 7 against the Clippers (Phoenix won three of those games). In 2005, Marion helped close out Dallas with 38 and 16 in Game 6 on the road.