SirChaz said:Besides the obivous rebounding issue the inexperience is the biggest issue to me.
We simply don't know how they will respond to playoff pressure. There will be even more for a #1 seed with the best record in the league. I sure hope the young players can handle it and the veterans can step up and lead.
elindholm said:Just a reminder to all prospective front page writers -- Put your real names on the pieces you write.
Funny that you mention that. I did submit it with my real name, but somehow it got converted to "Elindholm" by the time Mike (?) posted it. If there's any easy way to change it to my actual name, that's fine by me.
Anyway, thanks to everyone for the kind comments.
elindholm said:Just a reminder to all prospective front page writers -- Put your real names on the pieces you write.
Funny that you mention that. I did submit it with my real name, but somehow it got converted to "Elindholm" by the time Mike (?) posted it. If there's any easy way to change it to my actual name, that's fine by me.
Anyway, thanks to everyone for the kind comments.
If I remember correctly, we did have good scorers on the 92-93 team - Ceballos, Ainge, and Richard Dumas was a rookie who really played well and earned the nick name of Dr. Doom. Too bad he had lose nuts in his brain and got involved in drugs and destroyed his career.Multiple weapons. All five Phoenix starters have led the team in scoring at least a handful of times this year. During the course of the regular season, opponents haven’t been able to shut down everyone – if one Sun has a modest offensive game, someone else steps up big. The current Suns team is quite a bit stronger in this regard than the 1993 squad that went to the Finals. After Barkley, Kevin Johnson, and Majerle, no one on that team was as potent a scorer as this year’s fourth and fifth options, Richardson and Joe Johnson.
BbaLL_31 said:I have a bad memory, but I thought it was Ceballos hurt in Finals?
elindholm said:Okay, so that sentence of the article sucks. Let's just pretend it isn't there, okay?
Hugh Jass said:Detroit was offering up Dennis Rodman for Dumas at the trade deadline, and we turned them down. I remember from the Republic Jerry Colangelo's wife told JC not to do the deal because Dumas had overcome so much, had so much potential, etc... With Rodman in his prime, I can't see the Bulls beating us that year.
cheesebeef said:man - I'd like to believe that. I'd like to believe that if it went to Game 7 in Phoenix, that there was no way Barkley would have let us lose, but you know what - no matter what we say, in the back of my mind I truly believe this - with JORDAN in his prime, that team wasn't losing to ANYONE - no way - no how. Hell, he wasn't even very good in Games 5 and 6 - he was probably getting ready to go off for 70 in Game 7. Bottom line for me - I loved that Suns team unlike any other team in the history of sport, but you just can't beat God(and back in 1993 - that's EXACTLY what Jordan was on the basketball court).
Because everyone was concerned about Jordan. Didn't Ainge leave Paxson to double Jordon and he kicked it out to Paxson...Chaplin said:Of course, we eventually got beat by John Paxson, not Michael Jordan...
az1965 said:Because everyone was concerned about Jordan. Didn't Ainge leave Paxson to double Jordon and he kicked it out to Paxson...
SirChaz said:Not exactly, he left Paxon cover Grant.