I’m a Suns fan in this series, and hope they win, but I think many are overlooking the primary issue – namely Nash’s considerable decline.
There was a time when Nash would make a dozen or so jaw-dropping passes in a single quarter, along with half-a-dozen circus shots. Now he’s lucky to do same in an entire game.
Nash is getting old, like Duncan, but Duncan doesn’t have to run around the floor for an hour or two. PR says Nash has developed an injury on his hip, which I guess is legit, but perhaps age is the overriding factor. I DO NOT take pleasure in saying this, as I’ve always loved the Nash-pass-first-get-everyone-involved-tendency -- in fact, I think Nash inspired a whole generation of young short kids -- but I think Nash is almost out of gas.
What made Nash so special was his fearlessness, far and beyond a Jason Kidd; we see glimpses of the magic occasionally, eg when Nash did a left-hand wrap-around pass to STAT in game 6... but we also see hesitation – FEAR – which results in turnovers. Nash's game is contingent on a "free flowing" spirit. With the Spur’s stifling defense the errors will only increase.
Granted, the Suns have evolved from a pure Nash-centric offense, but Nash has been the engine of the Suns for the past decade. Look at Marion, a once respected player and recipient of dozens of great passes per game, resulting in an inflated ego. He actually thought he was a great player without someone to pass the ball directly into his hands while hovering over the basket. Ouch.
I’m hoping the Suns can pull it out, but I’m only semi-optimistic.
Here’s hoping The Suns – and Nash – prove me wrong. Does Stevie have it in him?
Either way should be a great series.
There was a time when Nash would make a dozen or so jaw-dropping passes in a single quarter, along with half-a-dozen circus shots. Now he’s lucky to do same in an entire game.
Nash is getting old, like Duncan, but Duncan doesn’t have to run around the floor for an hour or two. PR says Nash has developed an injury on his hip, which I guess is legit, but perhaps age is the overriding factor. I DO NOT take pleasure in saying this, as I’ve always loved the Nash-pass-first-get-everyone-involved-tendency -- in fact, I think Nash inspired a whole generation of young short kids -- but I think Nash is almost out of gas.
What made Nash so special was his fearlessness, far and beyond a Jason Kidd; we see glimpses of the magic occasionally, eg when Nash did a left-hand wrap-around pass to STAT in game 6... but we also see hesitation – FEAR – which results in turnovers. Nash's game is contingent on a "free flowing" spirit. With the Spur’s stifling defense the errors will only increase.
Granted, the Suns have evolved from a pure Nash-centric offense, but Nash has been the engine of the Suns for the past decade. Look at Marion, a once respected player and recipient of dozens of great passes per game, resulting in an inflated ego. He actually thought he was a great player without someone to pass the ball directly into his hands while hovering over the basket. Ouch.
I’m hoping the Suns can pull it out, but I’m only semi-optimistic.
Here’s hoping The Suns – and Nash – prove me wrong. Does Stevie have it in him?
Either way should be a great series.