Thursday, February 28, 2008

Topsy-Turvy NBA West

Who would have thunk at the beginning of this season that late in to this season, the Fakers would be seeded number 1 in the mighty West with the Suns sitting at number 5. Granted, the Suns are just 2 games behind and the West is packed tight, but thats where we are now and this goes to show how quickly Championship windows can open and close. Especially with a big market team like the Lakers, they don't stay down for long. Frustrating if you are a Laker-hater like me. They are very much for real and their future only looks brighter. They were good even before the Gasol trade with their young players developing and role players on the bench stepping up. Now with the Gasol trade, the Lakers are scary good and are just blowing teams out.

I wish Mike D'Antoni knew how to use his bench. The Suns might already have a ring because they did have a bench the last 2 years. May be this is a downside of not having a system and just running and gunning. The team is like a chicken with it's head cut off as soon as Nash goes to the bench. Whereas with a system like the triangle, Phillip actually teaches and makes his bench play and produce. Bynum is still out and they may only get better when he comes back though they may not be able to get much better offensively. But Bynum might make them better defensively. Experts are beginning to pick them to win the West and thats BIG news given that this league has been about the Spurs, Suns and Dallas the last few years.

The Suns clearly are lost a little bit. Their bad performance against good teams continue. They are 2-3 since the Shaq trade, mostly because their schedule has been tough lately. They started against the Lakers at home, then Boston and Detroit at home. Then at Memphis and New Orleans. They won against Boston and Memphis. They got embarrassed by Detroit and were not much better against New Orleans. At least against the Lakers, they looked good and it was a close loss. They did look bad against Boston, but Boston was even worse and they won because of that. Essentially the Suns have been up and down and are clearly out of sync at times when Shaq is on the floor. He has actually out-performed my expectations numbers-wise. He is playing more minutes (29) scoring more per game (10.8) and rebounding more per game (10.4) than I expected, but he is still not entirely fitting in. He has not affected the bottom-line because the Suns are still losing to the better teams in the league and now the losses can get ugly because the offense is not what it used to be.

Shaq is explaining it all on the "adjustment period" and I don't think thats it. Thats part of it, but Shaq is just may not be the best fit for this team at this stage of his career. He just cannot make a move and score. Thats how offensively limited he is these days. He scores mostly on put-backs, alley hoops or open dunks and some free throws. I am yet to see him take the ball, make a move on his defender and score with authority. He is also causing spacing issues since he can't shoot from any kind of distance. Plus Tim Legler of ESPN is saying he has also made the Suns worse defensively - if thats even possible. He is saying between Amare, Shaq and Nash, they can't guard any pick-and-roll situation with any perimeter guard and there might be some truth to it. All in all, it feels like the Suns have not gotten much better and I don't know where the team goes from here in the brutal West.

Steve Kerr might get what I think he wants - firing coach D'Antoni if the Suns don't do very well this year. May be they can try next year with more of an half-court team, but this era of Suns basketball might be over unless the Suns go deep in to the playoffs this year in a difficult West. A lot of that will depend on how D'Antoni and Shaq make this whole marriage work. I sure hope time will heal things and make everything fit, but the jury is still out on this trade as of today.

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