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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, September 29, 2009

NBA: After Shaq experiment, Suns ready to go full speed


By BOB BAUM
AP Sports Writer

PHOENIX — With the failed Shaquille O’Neal experiment in their rearview mirror, the Phoenix Suns plan to put the pedal to the metal and hope for the best.

The Suns begin training camp with “a clear vision of how we’re going to play,” Steve Nash said at the team’s media day on Monday.
That would be fast and furious, just like in the days when Mike D’Antoni was coach.
“This year I think it’s going to be much clearer as to who we are and how we’re going to play,” Nash said, “and that’s going to allow us to build a chemistry and believe in one another.”
Phoenix failed to make the playoffs for the first time since 2004 a year ago in a tumultuous season that saw new coach Terry Porter fired at the All-Star break and replaced with assistant Alvin Gentry, who is returning the team to D’Antoni’s high-flying style.
There also was the trade of Boris Diaw and Raja Bell to Charlotte for Jason Richardson and Jared Dudley, and the serious eye injury that required surgery and sidelined Amare Stoudemire for the final 29 games of the season.
Considering all that happened, Nash said, “It’s not that remarkable that we didn’t make the playoffs.”
O’Neal and his hefty salary were traded to Cleveland, leaving newcomer Channing Frye and Robin Lopez to hold down the center position.
While O’Neal averaged 17.8 points and 8.4 rebounds per game, his absence will open the middle of the court for slashers Grant Hill and Richardson, and make room for the potent pick-and-roll game of Nash and Stoudemire.
Stoudemire is healthy but his position is tenuous. He is expected to opt out of the final year of his contract after this season, and that could make him a candidate to be traded if the Suns aren’t doing well.
Gentry said worrying about the issue is “a waste of time” and Stoudemire downplayed the chance of a midseason trade.
“I don’t think that far ahead,” he said. “Right now we’re just focusing on training camp.”
The team will train through Sunday in San Diego before playing its preseason opener Oct. 6 against European team Partizan Belgrade in Phoenix. That will be followed by an outdoor game against Golden State Oct. 10 in Indian Wells, Calif.
Gentry named Nash, Hill and Stoudemire co-captains. It’s the first time Stoudemire has worn the title. Gentry said it’s time for Stoudemire, a starter for the West in last season’s All-Star Game, to share the leadership role.
“I think he’s at a stage in his career where if he’s going to be around here, he needs to have some responsibility as far as leadership,” Gentry said. “Make no mistake about it, it’s Steve’s team. I tell everybody that, but we’ve got to have other leaders, also. I expect Grant and Amare to step up.”
Gentry said he told Stoudemire “as a captain of this team, you’re expected to lead by example, not just verbally, but you’ve got to lead by example.”
The coach said he expects to go nine or 10 deep in his playing rotation, with Lopez, Leandro Barbosa, Goran Dragic, Louis Amundson and rookie Earl Clark coming off the bench.
It’s not a roster that rivals the powerhouses of the West, but Nash, who signed a two-year, $22 million contract extension that runs through 2012, knows the franchise’s limitations.
“We don’t have the financial model that some of those teams have,” Nash said.
Owner Robert Sarver took major hits in his personal real estate and banking businesses in the recession.
Still, the Suns believe they have the talent to surprise opponents, especially if they can improve their most glaring deficiency — defense.
“We’re going to be a little bit more demanding defensively,” Gentry said. “I know every year we stand up here and say that, but I can honestly say that we are going to be more demanding defensively from the standpoint of just being more consistent in what we’re doing.”
The Suns don’t have to be Boston, Cleveland or San Antonio, Gentry said, “because we are very good offensively.”
“What we have to be able to do is consistently guard screen and rolls enough to where we come up with stops at the end of the game, and we have to be better in our rotation,” Gentry said.
At least the players should be playing a style they love.
“We’ve got to reinstate the culture that we had here,” Gentry said. “We’re going to attack. We’re going to score a lot of points.”