Looks like the pieces are falling into place that it will happen this way..
http://www.azcentral.com/members/Blog/PaulCoro/24837
http://www.azcentral.com/members/Blog/PaulCoro/24837
Does this mean Porter's the pick?
Los Angeles Lakers assistant Brian Shaw is out of the running for the Suns head coach job. He revealed that to the Orange County Register but that wasn't the biggest news he offered.
"He (Suns General Manager Steve Kerr) wanted to have a coach that had experience in terms of being a head coach," Shaw told the Register.
Of what we know (Kerr did suggest there were new names coming), Porter is the only Suns candidate with head coaching experience (Paul Silas was interviewed as possible lead assistant).
Couple that revelation with news out of Detroit that Flip Saunders has been fired and Michael Curry will be named his replacement this week and it looks like Porter is in line to be Phoenix's next coach.
Porter was the lead assistant in Detroit, where Curry was also an assistant but it was always thought he was being groomed to be Saunders' successor.
Porter has been declared the favorite for the Suns job all along from many people around the NBA. He fit what Kerr described as his ideal hire on several levels:
* Experience. He has been an assistant for Rick Adelman in Sacramento and Saunders in Detroit but also was a head coach for two years in Milwaukee, where he took the Bucks to the playoffs in his first year before losing T.J. Ford to set up a losing season in his second year. He was told he would return until Milwaukee won the No. 1 pick in the lottery and he was fired because the Bucks thought they could land a big-name coach before settling for Terry Stotts.
* Versatility. Porter has been working for one of the best defensive teams in the league the past two seasons to bring that emphasis to the Suns but won't have to do it with a departure from the Suns' high-scoring identity. He had Milwaukee at fourth in the NBA in scoring in 2003-04. Porter played for a variety of coaches, including Pat Riley, Jack Ramsay, Gregg Popovich and Dick Bennett (college).
* Respect. Porter, 45, would have the respect of the veterans as a highly regarded point guard and court warrior who competed against some currents Suns. His career included two All-Star appearances and two NBA Finals trips. He also won the NBA's citizenship award and played the final two seasons of a 17-year career in San Antonio as Kerr's teammate. In a 2003 Yahoo! column, Kerr wrote, "Terry Porter is one of the best people I've ever met in the league and I think he'll make a fine coach."
Porter interviewed for a second time with the Suns on Monday but was in Phoenix for it this time. They met for hours, much like previous head coach candidates who flew into the Valley.
Shaw's Monday comment, if correct, would seem to mean that Houston lead assistant Elston Turner and Utah assistant Tyrone Corbin may not be in the running despite second interviews last week in Orlando. That would also seem to rule out today's visitor, San Antonio lead assistant Mike Budenholzer. The three assistants have not been head coaches, other than in the case of an ejection or summer league duty.
Of course, Saunders is available and has been a head coach but he would cost more than these candidates who the Suns have invested a lot of time and consideration for already. Kerr said at the start of the search that no current head coaches were candidates.