Outstanding game by the phoenix Suns last night. At least for 3 and a half quarters.
The Suns thoroughly kicked the Spurs arse last night, but they stepped up when it counted, and the Suns clearly stepped down at the same time. Could have been exaustion, or as I think, clutch plays by the Spurs down the stretch. Shame that any highlight of this game is followed by "but the Suns were down two of their best players." If the Suns ever want to get where the Spurs level, they are going to have to take que from coach Popovich, and play through. You don't hear much finger pointing coming from the Spurs after a loss, they just deal with it.
What they say and what they do during and after a loss should not be equated. They can say all the right things to the media so they appear genuine and upstanding to naive fans, but Horry's little play late in game four, with the outcome clearly decided -
THAT is how the Spurs are perceived to "deal with it".
Horry's comments later should also be noted. He inferred Nash was acting it up by making getting slammed into the scorer's table and bounced off the floor of little, direct consequence from the hip shove he gave the smaller man. That Nash seemed to recover rather quickly and go after Horry apparently does not enter into this "acting" scenario that "Bopping Bobby" declares is "typical" Nash.
Way to not finger point and deal with it.
BTW, from just about every corner of the land, fans who had little interest in the outcome of the Suns/Spurs series have suddenly become very vocal Suns fans. The Spurs have become the enemy overnight because of this, and Stern played into the scrum by denouncing Diaw and Stoudemire as "wrong, wrong, wrong" for leaving the Suns' bench, and the Suns coaches as failing to control their players after an altercation on the court. Unfortunately, this just proves that Stern, after some other, questionable moves he has conducted recently, to completely blow the commissioner's credibility out of the water. His comments came in defense of some attacks against the League from the media in regards to the 'leaving the bench' rule. Stern should have just stuck by the wording of the rule instead of attacking the players and coaches of the Suns, who are perceived as the victims in all of this.
Now, he essentially comes off sounding like the evil Simon LeGree, who viciously supports the actions of the malevolent Spurs, instead of falling back behind the letter of the rule instead, which would be weaksounding but at least not put him on the side that is looked upon as the instigator to the wrongs brought onto the Suns.