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"Unless something dramatic has changed, from everything that I know, Steve is not planning to be back with Phoenix next season" - Ric Bucher, ESPN NBA insider on Arizona Sports 620's Doug and Wolf.

So you're saying Steve Nash is not going to re-sign with the Suns when his contract expires? Why wouldn't a 38-year-old former league MVP want to spend his final seasons with a team that has zero chance of winning an NBA championship, which just so happens to be the only thing Nash has yet to accomplish in his Hall of Fame career?

With the NBA's trade deadline just a couple weeks away, the team has done all it can to put any talk of trading Steve Nash somewhere to bed. Suns president of basketball operations Lon Babby has told anyone who will listen that the team will not move Nash unless he asks to be dealt, and since there's been on indication of that happening, no trade will be consummated.

Nash has talked about loyalty to his teammates and the Suns organization, and Babby has cited the same reason as for why the team won't actively pursue a deal, and that sounds all well and good.

But I'm going to submit another reason for why the team won't make a deal: fear.

The Phoenix Suns are afraid to trade Steve Nash.

It's no secret Nash is one of the most revered players in Suns history, and one who can still play at a high level. He's the voice and face of the Suns, and, as Babby has dubbed him, the sun, moon and stars of the franchise. As such you don't ship a player like that out without some serious thought behind the move.

Besides, does anyone really want to be "the one" who traded Steve Nash? As a new management team that gets little benefit of the doubt from fans, the Lon Babby/Lance Blanks combo is understandably hesitant to have their names attached to the move. It's not unlike when the Diamondbacks decided to part with Luis Gonzalez after the 2006 season, with the difference being that Gonzalez was not one of the game's best players at the time.

Then again, his obvious decline did not stop fans from blasting the organization for the move, which in turn caused them to overpay and keep Eric Byrnes.

But, as the Diamondbacks learned then what the Suns will learn soon, players don't bring fans to watch their games - winning does. The bitterness over Gonzo's exit subsided when the team reached the NLCS in 2007, and the fans stayed away when the D-backs bottomed out the following seasons, even with Byrnes on the roster.

So what to do with Nash?

If the thought is to re-sign the point guard when his contract is up, how come a deal hasn't been struck by now? Nash probably does want out, but is smart enough to not let himself become "the bad guy."

Everyone loves him - with good reason - but if people don't think winning is important to the guy they are sorely mistaken. But, as Harvey Dent said in The Dark Knight, "You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain."

Nash is doing all he can to keep his hero status, and it's hurting the Suns. Because, if you believe Bucher, the two- time MVP will reach free agency and very much consider leaving the Valley. Everyone will understand why he left, and no one will hold it against him. But the Suns will be left with nothing in return, and that's not good.

So, the Suns need to look at other options, and with the March 15 trade deadline fast approaching, time is limited.

While there's little chance the Suns will get a great package in return for their star, the point is getting something - anything - in return for a player who is likely to leave anyway. There'd be no shortage of options, according to Bucher.

"Obviously there's a tremendous amount of interest," he said of Nash if he were to be placed on the trade block.

A team's job is to do everything it can to win - and win big - and if that means making an unpopular move, so be it. Fans may hate you now (many already do), but if you build a winner all will be forgiven.

Franklin D. Roosevelt once said the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.

The Phoenix Suns are afraid of what life without Nash will be like, and even more concerned with how they'll be perceived if they're the reason he leaves.

It's understandable, but foolish. And it could cost the team as soon as this summer if they don't do anything about it now.

5 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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    jdlaw wrote...
    Ric Bucher
    Why would anyone believe anything that comes out of this person's mouth?
  • Abuse
    desert designer wrote...
    Sounds Familiar
    All these issues being brought up now reverberate in my brain when the STAT rumors were hot news. What happened? We lost STAT and got nothing in return. This was after management blew up the chemistry of the roster by trading Marion for Shaq. Marion now has a ring and Shaq is 400lbs and a chronic critic. Summary. It's time to move forward. I like the Orlando scenario more than a Nash for Kardashian scenario any time.
  • Abuse
    mtj8nau wrote...
    One thing that Adam is wrong on....
    He says if the Suns let Nash walk they will get nothing in return. Well at this point you probably aren't getting top young talent back for him and as far as a pick goes anybody with a good position in draft wouldn't trade for him because they are out of it anyways. So if you can't get top young talent back anyways/lack of good pick you might as well let him walk and clear up the 11 mil in cap space. What would be the point of trading for mediocre talent that fills your cap space anyways?
  • Abuse
    mesa mad man wrote...
    mtj8nau
    agree with you. the way we got nash wasnt via trade. we cleared cap space after making the trade with the knicks to get rid of starbury and let the contracts expire.
  • Abuse
    Tennisgrandpa wrote...
    Couple of Differences
    Let me ask you this, letting Amare walk work out for us? It cleared cap space. Ummmmm, no it didn't. The one thing about when we got Nash, it wasn't Sarver's idea. That's back when we still had Colangelo in the mix. Sarver doesn't know basketball, that's been pretty obvious by hiring Mr. Spur Steve Kerr, now Babby? This team is going nowhere and I'm tired of hearing about clearing cap space because it NEVER pans out to bringing in players. Look at how many dead contracts we've bought out, everyone in the league is rebuilding except the Suns. Pathetic
    Dale
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