Going into this series, there was a real discussion about how the Suns core might be broken up if they do badly against the Spurs. After tonight's series, I think it is far less likely that this would happen.
Obviously the Suns luxury tax problem will remain a problem, but it seems clear that the sponsorship money generated by the Suns success is much larger than expected. This is not a lower playoff team with little chance of getting a championship, but instead a team that could very well be the best team in the league. Ripping this team apart could cost many millions in sponsorship money by destroying the Suns chances of winning it all.
Tonight showed just how close the Suns are.
In an article printed in a Dallas paper, one of their columnists suggested the Suns are a lot more likely to get to the finals than the Mavs. His reasoning was that the Mavs have a lot of mismatched parts that aren't going to be all that easy to trade, while the Suns have a solid core and likely a top draft pick.
Obviously the Suns luxury tax problem will remain a problem, but it seems clear that the sponsorship money generated by the Suns success is much larger than expected. This is not a lower playoff team with little chance of getting a championship, but instead a team that could very well be the best team in the league. Ripping this team apart could cost many millions in sponsorship money by destroying the Suns chances of winning it all.
Tonight showed just how close the Suns are.
In an article printed in a Dallas paper, one of their columnists suggested the Suns are a lot more likely to get to the finals than the Mavs. His reasoning was that the Mavs have a lot of mismatched parts that aren't going to be all that easy to trade, while the Suns have a solid core and likely a top draft pick.