Nikolokolus
There's always next year
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Are the Suns becoming the new "old Blazers?"
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_y...?slug=jy-sarversuns021309&prov=yhoo&type=lgns
Excerpts:
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God. Reading this article really brought back the bad memories circa 2001-2005. I feel badly for Phoenix fans; it looks like they are enduring their version of Bob Whitsitt.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_y...?slug=jy-sarversuns021309&prov=yhoo&type=lgns
Excerpts:
“I’m trying to figure out what the focus is,” Stoudemire said. “I thought I was the future of the franchise, we were trying to win a championship here. It doesn’t seem that way anymore.
“… I’m not sure if the ultimate goal is to win a championship or just to save money.”
Flighty? Erratic? Impulsive?
For the Suns, that starts at the top. Suns owner Robert Sarver has put away his foam finger these days, which saves the locals from kindly suggesting another location for him to stick it. On a weekend that should have been used to celebrate the long, proud tradition of one of the NBA’s great franchises, Sarver instead has sent his team embarrassingly careening toward mediocrity.
“I’m not sure,” Stoudemire said, “if he’s totally familiar with the sport of basketball.”
Sarver increasingly has considered himself an expert on NBA matters, and that’s why the Suns find themselves in the mess they do today, one game out of the playoffs, pondering whether to fire their coach eight months after hiring him, exploring trade offers for everyone on the roster but Steve Nash. There’s no shortage of people to share the blame for the Suns’ predicament: Sarver’s hand-picked GM, Steve Kerr; Porter; Stoudemire; even D’Antoni. But the list starts with the franchise’s meddlesome owner.
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Unlike Jerry Colangelo, the Suns’ beloved previous owner, Sarver doesn’t have a basketball background. He’s a banker, and ever since he bought the team, he has craved the spotlight. He sat at center court. He danced with the cheerleaders. Once, he interrupted a D’Antoni timeout to borrow a player’s headband, then ran onto the court and dunked off a trampoline. When Gregg Popovich brought his San Antonio Spurs to town and decided to rest Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili, Sarver flapped his arms and shouted, “Chickens!” The Spurs laughed at Sarver, nearly won the game with their subs and have punished the Suns ever since.
At a home game against the Los Angeles Lakers this season, Sarver complained to security guards that actor Michael Clarke Duncan, a noted Lakers fan, was too close to the players when he stood up to cheer. Duncan moved back and then mocked Sarver for the remainder of the game. When the NBA implemented a sideline code of conduct for its owners a couple of years ago, the so-called “Mark Cuban Rule,” Sarver, who has since toned down his antics, become the first owner fined.
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For all his efforts, Sarver never has been able to win over his rank-and-file employees the way Colangelo did. During his first season as owner, he fired a longtime security guard at the US Airways Center for daring to tell him he couldn’t stand in a restricted area. These days, Sarver’s visits to the Suns offices are usually met with a roll of the eyes.
Midway through the 2005-06 season, Sarver allowed Colangelo’s son, Bryan, who had helped build the Suns into a contender, to leave for Toronto. Kerr, whom Sarver always had looked to for advice, formally took over as GM prior to last season. D’Antoni never warmed to his new boss, and Sarver somehow couldn’t broker a peace treaty between two of the nicest men in the league.
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And Sarver?
He needs to take his own bow. This weekend still is his stage, his moment. After five long years, he finally has become the face of the Phoenix Suns.
God. Reading this article really brought back the bad memories circa 2001-2005. I feel badly for Phoenix fans; it looks like they are enduring their version of Bob Whitsitt.
