powerpower
05-14-2007, 06:18 AM
After watching the postgame interview and sunday's practice comments, raja bell scares me to death.....he will try to do something ...and unfortunately the victim might be manu....or any of the spurs:(((
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/articles/0514NUsuns0514.html
Tough times
Suns focus on sticking to game plan against physical Spurs
Paul Coro
The Arizona Republic
May. 14, 2007 12:00 AM
SAN ANTONIO - Toughness. It's not just for the Spurs anymore.
That is how the Suns are approaching tonight's Game 4 in San Antonio.
They need to match the Spurs toughness, but it's not about muscle. Bringing down the Spurs will take more backbone than brawn.
They know the only way to avoid a sixth consecutive loss at AT&T Center and a 3-1 hole that has been death for all but eight teams in NBA history is to play through the hacks, kicks and knees.
They are down 2-1 because they were not steely in a Game 3 loss Saturday.
It showed in many ways:
• When Shawn Marion lost the ball on a sure layup and then stuck around to argue an ensuing play, resulting in two Bruce Bowen open three-pointers that gave San Antonio the lead for good.
• When Steve Nash missed two layups against Tim Duncan and lost two round-the-back dribbles as Bowen jostled him.
• When Amaré Stoudemire returned for one play before picking up his fifth foul to open the fourth quarter.
• When Leandro Barbosa went on a turnover spree as the team got "antsy," according to coach Mike D'Antoni.
"We're going to have to be as mentally tough as they are," D'Antoni said.
Nash recently said the Suns' toughness was underrated. Tonight's game could make a more convincing statement, especially when a win would flip perception by giving Phoenix home-court advantage in a best-of-three setup.
The Suns' Raja Bell returned to the arena Sunday with the same edge he had leaving it on Saturday. He wasn't up for talking about the Spurs' supposed toughness.
"I'm sure they (the Spurs) are having a real good time with it so it's time to stop talking," Bell said.
"If you try to play their game with them, you're going to lose. They're good. They've done it year in and year out. They've done the playoffs year in and year out. They've won championships doing it. You can't do that. You have to play your game. Being tough is sticking to your game plan, playing your game despite whatever is going on around you, despite what they're trying to do to you, despite what this crowd is trying to do to you . . . There are a lot ways you can be tough, and they're not all physical."
The Suns are shooting at a high percentage and scoring enough points, and their defense has been solid for most of the playoffs. But key moments get away from them, such as when Nash left the game with the Spurs leading 72-71 and 1:49 to go in the third quarter Saturday. San Antonio finished the quarter on a 8-1 run and made it 10-1 off Stoudemire's fifth foul.
"The tendency here is whoever plays hard and tougher gets closer to winning the game, so we're going to try to bring the same juice and aggressiveness," Spurs guard Manu Ginobili said.
"We need to match their intensity and physicality, but I wouldn't expect anything less anyways," Nash said. "To me, the mental toughness encapsulates physical toughness, whereas physical toughness does not always encapsulate mental toughness."
That includes moving past a bad call or bad play quickly, Nash said.
Even Ginobili acknowledged the Suns can be physical. Then he qualified it. "Well, of course, some of the guys," he said.
Ginobili said he expects "desperation" from Phoenix tonight.
Stoudemire declared it a "must-win game."
"I don't know how much bigger you can get it," D'Antoni said. "Can't you also say it's a must-win for them?"
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/articles/0514NUsuns0514.html
Tough times
Suns focus on sticking to game plan against physical Spurs
Paul Coro
The Arizona Republic
May. 14, 2007 12:00 AM
SAN ANTONIO - Toughness. It's not just for the Spurs anymore.
That is how the Suns are approaching tonight's Game 4 in San Antonio.
They need to match the Spurs toughness, but it's not about muscle. Bringing down the Spurs will take more backbone than brawn.
They know the only way to avoid a sixth consecutive loss at AT&T Center and a 3-1 hole that has been death for all but eight teams in NBA history is to play through the hacks, kicks and knees.
They are down 2-1 because they were not steely in a Game 3 loss Saturday.
It showed in many ways:
• When Shawn Marion lost the ball on a sure layup and then stuck around to argue an ensuing play, resulting in two Bruce Bowen open three-pointers that gave San Antonio the lead for good.
• When Steve Nash missed two layups against Tim Duncan and lost two round-the-back dribbles as Bowen jostled him.
• When Amaré Stoudemire returned for one play before picking up his fifth foul to open the fourth quarter.
• When Leandro Barbosa went on a turnover spree as the team got "antsy," according to coach Mike D'Antoni.
"We're going to have to be as mentally tough as they are," D'Antoni said.
Nash recently said the Suns' toughness was underrated. Tonight's game could make a more convincing statement, especially when a win would flip perception by giving Phoenix home-court advantage in a best-of-three setup.
The Suns' Raja Bell returned to the arena Sunday with the same edge he had leaving it on Saturday. He wasn't up for talking about the Spurs' supposed toughness.
"I'm sure they (the Spurs) are having a real good time with it so it's time to stop talking," Bell said.
"If you try to play their game with them, you're going to lose. They're good. They've done it year in and year out. They've done the playoffs year in and year out. They've won championships doing it. You can't do that. You have to play your game. Being tough is sticking to your game plan, playing your game despite whatever is going on around you, despite what they're trying to do to you, despite what this crowd is trying to do to you . . . There are a lot ways you can be tough, and they're not all physical."
The Suns are shooting at a high percentage and scoring enough points, and their defense has been solid for most of the playoffs. But key moments get away from them, such as when Nash left the game with the Spurs leading 72-71 and 1:49 to go in the third quarter Saturday. San Antonio finished the quarter on a 8-1 run and made it 10-1 off Stoudemire's fifth foul.
"The tendency here is whoever plays hard and tougher gets closer to winning the game, so we're going to try to bring the same juice and aggressiveness," Spurs guard Manu Ginobili said.
"We need to match their intensity and physicality, but I wouldn't expect anything less anyways," Nash said. "To me, the mental toughness encapsulates physical toughness, whereas physical toughness does not always encapsulate mental toughness."
That includes moving past a bad call or bad play quickly, Nash said.
Even Ginobili acknowledged the Suns can be physical. Then he qualified it. "Well, of course, some of the guys," he said.
Ginobili said he expects "desperation" from Phoenix tonight.
Stoudemire declared it a "must-win game."
"I don't know how much bigger you can get it," D'Antoni said. "Can't you also say it's a must-win for them?"