Phoenix Suns Trade Signals Complete Change. But at What Cost?
Thursday, December 11th, 2008
The Phoenix Suns, for years considered the most entertaining team in the NBA, known for its run-and-gun fast break philosophy and aversion to half-court offense, blamed coach Mike D’Antoni at the end of last season for his inability to coach the team to a championship. Mike D’Antoni went to New York, so the Suns brought in Terry Porter, a defensive-oriented half-court coach and the team seemed to lose their exuberance and their passion for the game, struggling to an 11-9 start.
So on Wednesday, they traded Raja Bell, Boris Diaw and rookie Sean Singletary to the Charlotte Bobcats for Jason Richardson and Jared Dudley. The trade of Raja Bell and Boris Diaw devastated Steve Nash who bonded with his former teammates over three-and-a-half seasons and called Raja Bell his best friend.
However, the trade signifies something else, a complete overhaul of the players favored in Mike D’Antoni’s system. Boris Diaw had a career season in 2005-2006 that led to him receiving a 5 year $45 million contract extension, however, he’s arrived to training camp out of shape and has played inconsistently in the past two seasons, souring management, and with General Manager Steve Kerr’s preference to not pay a 20 minute per game player starter money, Diaw was moved. Raja Bell’s trade is more problematic. The Suns lose their premiere defender for a player in Richardson, an athletic swingman who seems better fit for D’Antoni’s offense. While Richardson will relieve Nash’s scoring burdens, if his defense is not up to par, one has to wonder why the trade was made at all. Why did the Phoenix Suns partially abandon their philosophy only to revert to their original gameplan? When a team changes coaches and players, it is usually to win more or just win at all. The Suns were a perennial contender but appear to suddenly be in rebuilding mode. The situation in Phoenix must be watched carefully. It does not take much to fall from championship contender to also-ran. Sometimes the little changes are what brings catastrophe, especially when one loses one’s best friend.


