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San Antonio Spurs' Tim Duncan (21) passes under pressure from Phoenix Suns' Goran Dragic, of Slovenia, during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Matt York)
listen Listen: Lon Babby, Suns President of Basketball Operations
Doug & Wolf talk to Lon Babby about what the Suns' rotation is and how it's determined.

If the Phoenix Suns are trying to emulate other NBA franchises, the San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder would not be bad examples.

The Spurs, as we all know, have been one of the league's elite franchise for a decade and a half, while the Thunder appear poised to carry the torch for the foreseeable future.

"I think those are exactly what you try to accomplish," Suns president of basketball operations Lon Babby told Arizona Sports 620's Doug and Wolf Wednesday. "What they have done brilliantly in San Antonio is, first of all, build a team around the personality of their franchise player, which was Tim Duncan."

Babby pointed to the relationship between Duncan and head coach Gregg Popovich as being equivalent between the one Red Auerbach shared with Bill Russell, and said it's "a blessing when you have a player and a coach who can accomplish that."

Of course, Babby noted the Suns are not going to be able to draft a Tim Duncan. However, the Spurs have done an excellent job of creating a system that is easy to assimilate into, and it leads to players seemingly performing above their capabilities.

"If you look at the personnel they have you can see that," he said. "They have defined roles, they have an understanding of what they're supposed to do."

Babby has long maintained that is the goal in Phoenix, and that while the team may not be winning games this year, the foundation of a promising future is hopefully being put in place.

"One of my favorite quotes the last couple of weeks is Kevin Durant, when they were here, commenting on where we were relative to where they were, and he reminded people in his rookie year they were 3-30 at one point," Babby said. "But that what they were doing and what he looks back on now and appreciates is that they were being taught.

"And the lessons they learned then are the very lessons that are holding them in such good stead now, and that's exactly what we're trying to accomplish."

The Suns are 19-39 and tied for last in the Western Conference, so they've got a ways to go. But while it may take time and the team will need a little bit of luck, the blueprint is out there to be followed.

"If you ask me who is the quintessential model for what we're trying to accomplish, it's that culture," he said. "We're not necessarily going to play that way and we're not going to have a Tim Duncan to be sure, but you know you've got it right that when you plug in parts they all seem to work."

Adam Green, Web Content Editor - ArizonaSports.com

4 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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  • Abuse
    Whatashame wrote...
    No Kidding
    And while your at it look at that Gates guy. Boy, he sure does know how to make money now, doesn't he?
  • Abuse
    movingaz wrote...
    No Clue
    Why are the Suns collecting as many mediocre players as they can. They have 6 small forwards. NO True Power Forward. No real 2 guard. A very good point guard and and Average Center. What are you doing collecting young players. Suns management. Their is one ball and only 5 players who can play at a time. You have a roster full of Average players that on any given night one could step up but none consistently. ADD in the draft picks for 2013 and your making it worse we need more young players. TRADE AWAY a few players maybe a draft pick and get a STAR maybe 2 STARS.
  • Abuse
    MagicMann wrote...
    Accountability?
    The way young players get better is to hold them accountable in PRACTICE and to make sure they know what they are supposed to be doing before they get into a game. Of course they are going to make mistakes, and they might even stink at times. But, if they are practicing hard and know what they should be doing, but they get beat or have a bad few minutes, yanking them out of the game is not holding them accountable. It is messing with their minds and undermines their growth.
  • Abuse
    MagicMann wrote...
    Accountability? (Part II)
    OKC was not yanking KD out of games his rookie season and he had some bad games. Why don't the Suns just demand that all players on the court must play at an All-star level or they get benched. Would that be holding them accountable? Of course not. Bottom line: hold the young players accountable in practice, develop a professional approach, give them consistent minutes, and let them make mistakes during the game without fear of being benched. We are not making the playoffs anyway.
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