GAMBO

Gambo: STAT answers critics, Suns win

May 24, 2010, 6:24 AM | Updated: Jan 14, 2011, 4:21 pm

This is the NBA. You win and lose behind your star players. Not your
bench, not your role players.

So taking nothing away from how valuable
Channing Frye, Jared Dudley, Jason Richardson, Robin Lopez, Goran Dragic
and Grant Hill have been for the Phoenix Suns this season, when push
comes to shove this team will go as far as Steve Nash and Amare
Stoudemire can take them. And Sunday night the Suns’ dynamic duo was
every
bit as good as the Lakers dynamic duo of Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol.

There
will always be x factors in any one game and last night it was Robin Lopez
and his 20 points for the Suns. But Phoenix got Game 3 because
Stoudemire was unstoppable scoring 42 points and grabbing 11 rebounds
and Nash was brilliant with 17 points, 15 assists and just one turnover.

That Stoudemire had such a dominant game after all the criticism he came
under for his subpar performances in the first two games is a great sign.
Stoudemire answered the critics, he responded to the criticism and he
played with the energy, passion and heart that was necessary for Phoenix
to have come away with a victory. Plain and simple Stoudemire was
special. The Suns got him the ball on the elbow and in isolation and not
only was he hitting his jump shot he was blowing by Gasol and scoring at
the basket or getting to the free throw line.

The Suns played bigger with
Lopez getting 30 minutes and the bigger lineup favors Stoudemire
defensively. He is not a center in this league and he was exposed
defensively in Game 2 because the Suns went small with him at center and
Grant Hill at power forward. That lineup works offensively but is atrocious
defensively. Sunday the zone defense and bigger lineup forced the Lakers
to jack up shots from outside (32 three-pointers taken) and that took
some pressure of Stoudemire.

Stoudemire played the final two-and-a-half months of the season with a
chip on
his shoulder and he carried this team to the three seed tallying 13 30-point
games and 16 double-digit rebound games in that time. He again played
with a chip on his shoulder in Game 3 and took his frustrations out on the
Lakers.

Stoudemire is an enigma. I don’t remember a player who forces you
to change your opinion of him on a regular basis as much as STAT does.

One day you love him the next you don’t. One day you want the Suns to
re-sign him, the next you don’t. One day you believe he is worth the max,
the next you hope he walks. He is equal part frustration and elation. We
celebrate his greatness but harp on his weaknesses.

Just where the Suns first-round pick from 2002 plays next year is
anyone’s guess. While Stoudemire is a very good player in this league he is
not a true superstar and therefore it is debatable as to whether he is a max
player or not. But asking whether or not he is a max player is not the
question here. All it takes is one team in free agency to believe he is
worthy of a five-year max contract and then he is a max player. The
question
is do any of the teams with cap space want to use it on STAT?

The problem
for the Suns is there are quite a few teams with cap space and coming
from big markets that want to spend. Miami wants to appease Dwyane
Wade and make sure he re-signs with the Heat. Getting Stoudemire should
allow Pat Riley to accomplish that. New Jersey has a new billionaire owner
who wants to make a splash and they are moving to Brooklyn in a couple
of years. The New York Knicks have no problem spending money and can
afford
two max players and if they don’t get James are going to want someone.
Chicago would like Wade but if he stayed in Miami and the Heat added
Chris Bosh or Carlos Boozer, maybe the Bulls go after Stoudemire.

The Suns would like to keep Stoudemire but on their terms, which is for
four total years. Phoenix could be reluctant to go any longer on a deal
because of Stoudemire’s had microfracture surgery on his knee and there
could and should be questions as to whether he can hold up until his mid –
30’s. The Suns could look at second max contracts for Tracy McGrady and
Jermaine O’Neill to see examples of where second max deals backfired. But
in Stoudemire’s case — four years is not as good as five and certainly not
as good as six so what is likely to happen is that he will test the free agent
market, see what’s out there and then come back to Phoenix and say either
match it or do a sign and trade. A sign and trade doesn’t bring back value
but it brings back something either in players, draft picks and sometimes
trade exceptions and it is a heck of a lot better than losing him for nothing
and future cap space. If the Suns lose Stoudemire it’s not like they have
that 17 plus million to go spend, the would be roughly four to five million
under
the cap this year if he left. If the Suns lose him for nothing they will take a
major step backwards for the next few years and have to re-do the
franchise beginning a rebuilding process that is inevitable anyway with the
age of Steve Nash and Grant Hill.

What Stoudemire has to realize is that he is not the only player who has
received criticism for poor play in the playoffs. LeBron James, Joe Johnson
and now Dwight Howard have all felt the wrath of the fans and media for
playoff struggles. This is a what have you done for me lately sports world
so it may be in STAT’s best interest to make sure his last game is a good
one because it very well may dictate the pulse of the Suns fan and maybe
even the organization.

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Gambo

Phoenix Suns' Markieff Morris, left, drives past Cleveland Cavaliers' Kevin Love during the third q...

John Gambadoro

Markieff Morris situation is going to get real ugly for Phoenix Suns

Markieff is not calling back teammates and plans to be very standoffish when he reports to camp.

9 years ago

Arizona Diamondbacks’ Paul Goldschmidt, left, greets David Peralta as the two score on a sing...

John Gambadoro

D-backs should stand pat at the trade deadline

With the MLB trade deadline coming up on Friday to me it’s not so much about what the Diamondbacks need to do, but it’s about what not to do.

9 years ago

Follow @Gambo987...

John Gambadoro

Get rid of Markieff Morris? Phoenix Suns shouldn’t go there yet

Look, I get it. You don't like Markieff Morris. You want him gone ASAP. I understand where you are coming from. I do.

9 years ago

Follow @Gambo987...

John Gambadoro

Can Arizona State do better than Herb Sendek?

I do not blame Arizona State for wanting to do better. I question whether they can.

9 years ago

Follow @Gambo987...

John Gambadoro

If you love something, set it free

It will be hard to watch, but Shane Doan needs to finish his career elsewhere, with a chance to win the Stanley Cup.

9 years ago

Follow @Gambo987...

John Gambadoro

Bagging on the fans is a no-win situation

Bagging on the fans is a no-win situation. It's a fight you can't win.

9 years ago

Gambo: STAT answers critics, Suns win