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McDyess, Amare to play together
Bob Young
The Arizona Republic
Jan. 7, 2004 12:00 AM
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/0107suns0107.html
Tonight's game
SUNS AT BUCKS
WHERE: Bradley Center, Milwaukee.
WHEN: 6 p.m.
TV/RADIO: UPN 45/KTAR-AM (620).
SUNS UPDATE: The Suns hope to have newcomers Howard Eisley, Maciej Lampe and Antonio McDyess in uniform when they close out a four-game road trip. As expected, the team waived Charlie Ward.
BUCKS UPDATE: Milwaukee is coming on strong, winning six of eight games. The Bucks beat Eastern powers New Jersey, Detroit and Indiana in succession, lost at San Antonio and Dallas, then beat the Mavericks, Wizards and 76ers.
MILWAUKEE - Make no mistake. When the Suns traded Stephon Marbury on Monday, they didn't become Antonio McDyess' team.
They became Amare Stoudemire's and Shawn Marion's team.
McDyess, who spurned the Suns as a free agent in 1999 after they traded for him before the 1997-98 season, is the best player the Suns received from the Knicks in the eight-player deal. But if McDyess is to have an impact, it will be with Stoudemire, who remains the centerpiece of the team's future.
"When Amare comes back, we're going to go inside," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "Amare has to step up."
That won't happen yet. Stoudemire is close to a return from an ankle sprain, but the Suns won't have him tonight when they close out a four-game Eastern Conference road swing against the Milwaukee Bucks.
McDyess, point guard Howard Eisley and rookie center Maciej Lampe may be available tonight. Eisley and Lampe were to undergo physicals in Phoenix, then try to join the team. McDyess is coming directly from New York, and his physical is likely to be waived. The Suns know his knee history and that his contract expires at the end of the season.
Stoudemire's earliest return has been pegged for Tuesday against Denver.
The team is 11 games below the .500 mark and has been given up for dead in the Western Conference race, but D'Antoni said he believes the club can establish its identity and style of play.
Stoudemire and Marion are the key components to that plan. For now, McDyess is part of it.
But McDyess still is plagued by sore knees, and the Knicks gave up on him. He is in the last year of his contract, and the Suns can clear $13.5 million from their salary cap when the season ends by not re-signing him.
That seems the likely scenario for a team that is tightening its belt and hoping to get below the salary cap this summer.
Meanwhile, though, the Suns will have the luxury of two power forwards. D'Antoni, the coach in Denver the season when McDyess abandoned the Suns, knows what he has.
"I think we can play them both together," he said, meaning McDyess could play center alongside Stoudemire at the forward position. "(McDyess) is strong enough. He played (center) for me a lot in Denver. He's as strong as Jake Voskuhl is."
While Stoudemire's game is predicated on explosive quickness, McDyess is able to step out and hit the midrange jump shot or to post up. That could free up Stoudemire inside when McDyess is outside or allow him to come from the weak side for offensive rebounds when McDyess is in the post.
"I think they can complement each other for periods," D'Antoni said. "With Shaq (O'Neal) out there, we'll have to go to Jahidi White.
"But we can play Dice with Amare or behind Amare. We want (Stoudemire) to develop an all-around game. We want him to be like Kevin Garnett, to be a big inside presence."
Another priority will be getting Marion in a groove. He is at his best running the court, and D'Antoni promises to keep stressing an up-tempo style.
"If we're able to run more, that will help Shawn," he said. "We're going to try to get him out on the wings, where he's a slasher like he used to be, and try to develop that."
Of course, rookie Leandro Barbosa will play a bigger role at point guard, especially after his breakout game in Chicago on Monday, when he scored 27 points in his first start.
Bob Young
The Arizona Republic
Jan. 7, 2004 12:00 AM
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/0107suns0107.html
Tonight's game
SUNS AT BUCKS
WHERE: Bradley Center, Milwaukee.
WHEN: 6 p.m.
TV/RADIO: UPN 45/KTAR-AM (620).
SUNS UPDATE: The Suns hope to have newcomers Howard Eisley, Maciej Lampe and Antonio McDyess in uniform when they close out a four-game road trip. As expected, the team waived Charlie Ward.
BUCKS UPDATE: Milwaukee is coming on strong, winning six of eight games. The Bucks beat Eastern powers New Jersey, Detroit and Indiana in succession, lost at San Antonio and Dallas, then beat the Mavericks, Wizards and 76ers.
MILWAUKEE - Make no mistake. When the Suns traded Stephon Marbury on Monday, they didn't become Antonio McDyess' team.
They became Amare Stoudemire's and Shawn Marion's team.
McDyess, who spurned the Suns as a free agent in 1999 after they traded for him before the 1997-98 season, is the best player the Suns received from the Knicks in the eight-player deal. But if McDyess is to have an impact, it will be with Stoudemire, who remains the centerpiece of the team's future.
"When Amare comes back, we're going to go inside," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "Amare has to step up."
That won't happen yet. Stoudemire is close to a return from an ankle sprain, but the Suns won't have him tonight when they close out a four-game Eastern Conference road swing against the Milwaukee Bucks.
McDyess, point guard Howard Eisley and rookie center Maciej Lampe may be available tonight. Eisley and Lampe were to undergo physicals in Phoenix, then try to join the team. McDyess is coming directly from New York, and his physical is likely to be waived. The Suns know his knee history and that his contract expires at the end of the season.
Stoudemire's earliest return has been pegged for Tuesday against Denver.
The team is 11 games below the .500 mark and has been given up for dead in the Western Conference race, but D'Antoni said he believes the club can establish its identity and style of play.
Stoudemire and Marion are the key components to that plan. For now, McDyess is part of it.
But McDyess still is plagued by sore knees, and the Knicks gave up on him. He is in the last year of his contract, and the Suns can clear $13.5 million from their salary cap when the season ends by not re-signing him.
That seems the likely scenario for a team that is tightening its belt and hoping to get below the salary cap this summer.
Meanwhile, though, the Suns will have the luxury of two power forwards. D'Antoni, the coach in Denver the season when McDyess abandoned the Suns, knows what he has.
"I think we can play them both together," he said, meaning McDyess could play center alongside Stoudemire at the forward position. "(McDyess) is strong enough. He played (center) for me a lot in Denver. He's as strong as Jake Voskuhl is."
While Stoudemire's game is predicated on explosive quickness, McDyess is able to step out and hit the midrange jump shot or to post up. That could free up Stoudemire inside when McDyess is outside or allow him to come from the weak side for offensive rebounds when McDyess is in the post.
"I think they can complement each other for periods," D'Antoni said. "With Shaq (O'Neal) out there, we'll have to go to Jahidi White.
"But we can play Dice with Amare or behind Amare. We want (Stoudemire) to develop an all-around game. We want him to be like Kevin Garnett, to be a big inside presence."
Another priority will be getting Marion in a groove. He is at his best running the court, and D'Antoni promises to keep stressing an up-tempo style.
"If we're able to run more, that will help Shawn," he said. "We're going to try to get him out on the wings, where he's a slasher like he used to be, and try to develop that."
Of course, rookie Leandro Barbosa will play a bigger role at point guard, especially after his breakout game in Chicago on Monday, when he scored 27 points in his first start.
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