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D’Antoni takes shots at Suns; Sarver responds
December 12th, 2008, 3:43 pm · Post a Comment · posted by jerrybrown
With his return to Phoenix with the Knicks fast-approaching on Monday, Mike D’Antoni got the first shots in on the Suns in an interview with Peter Vescey of the New York Post. Vescey pumps up the quotes with his own lead-ins, but there is some meaty stuff there nonetheless. Have at it:http://www.nypost.com/seven/1212200...ch_rips_old_phoenix_bosses_143879.htm?&page=3
And in an interview with Gambo and Ash on KTAR (620 AM) this afternoon, Suns owner Robert Sarver reacted in detail:
His reaction to D’Antoni’s comments in the Post:
“I was very close to Mike and it kind of hurt, but as I’m learning it’s just part of this business. I don’t know if he’s just frustrated because he’s on a team that’s not winning and it’s an adjustment or what. In life, at times we all think the grass is greener on the other side. The comments about (GM) Steve (Kerr) are really inaccurate and untrue. Steve really let Mike do whatever he wanted.”
Sarver on when things started to change in the summer of 2007 when Kerr became GM:
“When Steve first came on board, he felt we needed a defense-minded assistant coach to replace (the departing) Mark Iavaroni. Steve called around the league (and) Tom Thibodeau was the name that Steve decided on. He came into Phoenix, we were going to hire Tom … and Mike decided he’d rather have his brother (Dan D’Antoni) at the front of the bench than Tom Thibodeau. Instead, he hired a relatively inexperience coach to sit at the end of the bench (Jay Humphries).
“Thibodeau went to Boston, they became the best defensive team in the league and they won the championship. In some ways, I think if Steve was more forceful with Mike it would have worked out better or us.
“No moves were made without Mike’s approval. The (Shaquille O’Neal) trade was made at the insistence of Mike and myself. Steve was on the fence for a long time about it … I had complete trust in Mike. He’s a super-smart basketball guy and we never did anything without his approval.”
Was D’Antoni too lenient with his players?
“The problem was the other players looked at it and felt it wasn’t good. I’m not going to name any names, but players on the team felt all the players should be held accountable. That was a concern among the players.
When you look at the negative issues with our team and the organization (this season), these aren’t new this year. These are issues that started festering last year. And a couple of the issues our players in general felt strongly about were: We need to defend better, we need to be able to stop teams at the end of the game, and we need to hold everybody accountable.”
On how the end came about after the loss to San Antonio last May:
“Mike decided to leave on his own. We didn’t want Mike to leave, we asked him to stay. I wanted Mike to stay. The only thing we asked was to add a defensive coach to the staff. When you have a boss, you kind of have to listen to him a little bit. If the GM can’t make any recommendations about anything, why would you even have one?”
“I was shocked. I had no idea Mike wasn’t interested in staying. And then (Sports Illustrated writer) Jack McCallum spent three days with Mike and the coaching staff (during the playoffs) and I sit down in my seat before (Game 5 in San Antonio) and I pull up an article from Sports Illustrated that talks about how Mike’s not coming back. That was the first I knew about it.”
On D’Antoni’s feelings that since the Suns didn’t win a championship “We didn’t do nothing.”
“Not true. I told him several times that wasn’t the case. I think some of that is coming from Mike. He is an extremely competitive guy. He wants to win more than anybody. And when we lost that overtime Game 1 to San Antonio and then got blown out in Game 2 and came out flat in Game 3, he was devastated.
“Only one team can win. I’ve always said to Mike and I’ll say to our fans: If you’re a top four or a top eight team every year and you compete every year and you’re really good – that’s doing pretty good. Yeah, you want to win, but I think a lot of that frustration … our whole team and organization it was part of all that – the injuries, the suspensions. Somehow, we all feel as a community that we’re entitled to a championship and we’re not.”
Couple of things:
1) I doubt Mike is frustrated that he's not winning as much considering his team's current record is viewed as a success and he's a candidate for coach of the year.
2) The Knicks only have a couple more losses than the Suns.
3) Sarver sounds like his usual whiney self when talking about Tom Thibodeau.