nashman
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Ridiculous would also be saying the Suns have fallen out of the NBA's elite! That may be one of the most ridiculous statements I have ever read on this forum. I think I need a break from the negativity geesh!
that was a serious question i asked.lol no sarcasm, no shots taken at anyone.lolSo? Amare was never "voted" in by the fans, so by that rationale, he should be held to the same standard as Shawn when it comes to being an All-Star.
that was a serious question i asked.lol no sarcasm, no shots taken at anyone.lol
since the fans didnt vote shawn into the all-star, he was voted in by the coaches a couple of times, right? im just wondering, that's all.
if the coaches did vote him in a couple of time, votes coming from coaches speaks a lot about what other coaches/players think about shawn.
even i was speaking with tone or sarcasm, where the **** did STAT come into this thread?lol
One thing about planning for use of Marion as a cutter is that it would end this "we don't run any plays for him" stuff. They should run plays with back screens and the like rather than leaving him to his own devices.
If you've watched many games since D'Antoni started coaching you'd know he doesn't instruct players to set off ball screens. With KT gone the number of them will probably drop dramatically because he set them on his own. Hill is a smart player so I imagine he'll set a few but not near the number KT did.
Generally D'Antoni focuses on "spreading the floor", but IMHO this does not make maximum use of his player's skills. I am hopeful that adding Hill and moving Diaw inside will trigger some ofther changes. But I'm with you in getting frustrated by how many opportunties are being missed.
We can't debate a term like "very good" without defining it. Marion is not one of the top 30 players in the league for the game that counts, which is playoff basketball. He's probably not in the top 50.
Either way, being stuck with Marion and unwilling to pay luxury tax means that the Suns have retreated from the league's elite.
Shawn averaged a double double in the playoffs. Please list me 30 other players that accomplished the same task.
Also, please include how many of those players guarded point guards, centers, and forwards.
Game 5 against the Spurs:
Yet, pre-season polls by sports analysts have us listed at #4.
Anyway, I should have defined my use of "elite." I'd say #4 is probably about right for the Suns, behind the Spurs, Mavericks, and Pistons but ahead of the Celtics, Jazz, Cavaliers, etc. What I meant was, they are extremely long shots for the title. When's the last time the fourth-best team in the league won the championship coming through the tougher conference?
#4 isn't elite if it means you aren't in the running when it counts. Fans of any high playoff seed like to believe that their team has a chance, but they don't. Last year was unusual in that there were three teams in the Western Conference with a legitimate title hope. With the Suns having taken a large step back this summer, they are no longer at the approximate level of the Spurs or Mavericks -- even though they probably haven't fallen behind anyone else.
I think we're a better team than the Pistons, for sure. But I really don't think they're that good anymore. And, I don't think that missing Kurt Thomas effects us against the Mavs. We could be worse than them, but not because of the players we lost.
Even by his his own analysis, the only team that losing KT would seriously impact is the Spurs.
The Suns problems with the Spurs are not unique to the Suns. Everybody else has the same defensive problems. They start with the fact that nobody is able to guard either Duncan or Parker with just one guy. It's not just Marion that couldn't stop Parker. Deron Williams is supposed to be a great defender and Parker did better against the Jazz than he did against the Suns.
One of reasons that the development of Strawberry is going to be such a big story is that he has the potential to be able to guard Parker.
And, I don't think that missing Kurt Thomas effects us against the Mavs. We could be worse than them, but not because of the players we lost.
I think that's an oversimplification. Under normal circumstances, Thomas wouldn't play much. But having him around would permit Stoudemire to make more of an effort on defense.
For years, the consensus on this board has been that Stoudemire plays such poor defense because he's afraid of getting in foul trouble, and the widespread speculation has been that D'Antoni lets Stoudemire's lapses slide -- or even encourages them outright -- because they can't afford to have him benched. Of course this problem would not have been so severe had D'Antoni recognized Thomas's value before the season's final five games.
With no backup big men, the Suns are going to be in panic mode with Stoudemire's fouls all season long. We can pretty much forget about the dramatic improvement in Stoudemire's defense that everyone keeps promising, because the referees are still going to be calling fouls on him.
Nash owns a psychological edge against the Mavericks and Dallas doesn't have much of an inside game, so the pipsqueak lineup with Diaw at center has some chance of success, as it did two years ago. But make no mistake: the Suns would be better off with Thomas, even against the Mavericks.
Okay, well argued. Let's hope we get the chance to find out in a playoff series next spring with all of the key players healthy.
Eric, your post was an attack on Marion which is what I responded to. My crack about KT coloring your mood is something I'll stand by, but my response was about you ragging on Marion's defense.
As for Strawberry making the team by default, I don't know where you get that.
The Suns people said they tried to trade up to get him but could not get the deal done and were shocked he fell to #59.
Clearly, the Suns think they can teach him to shoot.
Obviously they could be wrong, but it reflects a new approach for a team that has previously tried to teach shooters to play defense.
I love how the sky is falling without the season even starting. "We're no longer in the NBA elite" declared before a single whistle is even blown. Yet, pre-season polls by sports analysts have us listed at #4.
"Just to keep Amare from picking up fouls" is necessary for our post-season success. Keep him on the court and not be afraid to play defense....but really just to keep Amare from picking up fouls...