DirtyDez wrote:The Suns started the 96'-97' season 0-13? Why the hell didn't they keep tanking? That was the Duncan draft!
The Suns were never tanking that season, and the 0-13 start constituted a shock to almost everyone. Phoenix began the year with one of the NBA's deepest rosters in terms of quality NBA players; as a non-Phoenix fan friend of mine told me in October 1996, before the regular season started, "The Suns are loaded."
But half of the active roster was new, the early schedule proved brutal (including two games against the defending champion Bulls), and as I indicated earlier, the Suns were without their best player and offensive linchpin, Kevin Johnson (a "Steve Nash-type," in the words of Kenny Smith on TNT in 2005, except with more explosive scoring ability and much better defense) for the first eleven games of the year. And Phoenix was without its defensive anchor, center John "Hot Rod" Williams, for the first twelve games of the season. (Additionally, the Suns were without arguably their second-best defensive big man, Mark Bryant, for that entire 0-13 stretch and beyond.)
Once Johnson and Williams returned, the Suns were not going to keep losing in that manner. Indeed, after the 0-13 start, Phoenix went 8-3 over the team's next eleven games, even though K.J. was not in "mid-season form" because he had had no training camp or preseason and just a couple of practices before returning from double-hernia surgery, which had sidelined him for about two months. Despite a general (and typical) lack of recognition, Kevin Johnson would emerge as the best guard in the NBA that season after Michael Jordan and actually enjoyed one of the unique seasons in NBA history. No one in league history has combined three-point shooting, playmaking, and the ability to reach the free throw line to the extent that Johnson did that year. Thus with Kevin Johnson (and he only missed one more game—due to the flu—after coming back from the double-hernia surgery), there was no way that the Suns would have been bad enough to realistically compete for the top pick in the draft. Phoenix could have tried to trade K.J., but Jerry Colangelo had made a verbal no-trade promise to him back in July 1994 when the point guard inked a one-year, $7M contract extension for the '96-'97 season (after which K.J. planned to retire). Moreover, Colangelo possessed no interest in Phoenix becoming a rotten team, and the Suns' roster possessed a plethora of quality veteran players. The nature of the roster was nothing like this year's team.
Finally, the team that possessed the greatest odds of landing the top selection, and thus drafting Tim Duncan, was none other than the Boston Celtics, who went 15-67 in '96-'97. And of course, the Celtics ended up with the third pick in the draft instead and would not make the playoffs for five more years. So "tanking" for Duncan certainly would not have guaranteed Duncan. Instead, on December 26, 1996, Phoenix traded Michael Finley (a future two-time All-Star), Sam Cassell (a future All-Star), and A.C. Green (a former All-Star) to Dallas for a twenty-three-year old Jason Kidd, who had been the second pick in the draft in 1994 and had shared the Rookie of the Year Award with Grant Hill in 1995 before making the All-Star team in 1996. Thus the Suns used their depth and accumulation of assets to procure a young franchise player via trade, which obviously guaranteed them a franchise player (provided that Kidd continued to develop) as opposed to playing the guessing game of the lottery. Of course, Kidd was not Duncan, but if the '96-'97 Suns had "tanked" for Duncan, they may well have ended up with Keith Van Horn or Chauncey Billups (who only developed into a major player after joining Detroit following the 2002 season, his sixth team in six years). Tracy McGrady was also available in the 1997 draft, but he turned out to be no more of a franchise player than Jason Kidd—possibly less so. Thus continuing to compete while using the trade avenue to acquire a young franchise player, rather than gambling on the totally uncontrollable lottery process, turned out to be the correct move. Sure, if the Suns had gotten lucky and drafted Duncan, everything would have been roses, but if Phoenix had gotten unlucky, like Boston, the Suns could have become a lottery team for years to come. And again, the Suns just were not going to be bad enough, with Kevin Johnson, to be in position to draft Duncan.
By the way, the Suns finished the '96-'97 season as one of the league's hottest teams, going 20-6 (.769, a 63-win pace per 82 games) in their last 26 regular season contests behind a radical four-guard offense that prefigured many of today's lineups, styles, and principles. Then, in the best-of-five First Round of the playoffs, they nearly knocked off defending conference champion Seattle and may well have down so if the referees had not evidently decided that they would not foul out Shawn Kemp (who had five fouls) in overtime of Game Four in Phoenix, thus allowing him to get away with multiple fouls on Kevin Johnson. But that game produced the greatest shot in NBA history:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cENqu-9-jD4[/youtube]
And the Suns won 56 games the next year.
But that '96-'97 Suns' team was arguably more rewarding than any in franchise history. They became the first, and to this date the only, club in NBA history to post double-digit losing and winning streaks in the same season, as the Suns won eleven in a row late in the year. When they were sixteen games under .500 in February 1997, Kevin Johnson reviewed the schedule and stated in the locker room that Phoenix could finish with a .500 record. Head coach Danny Ainge felt that K.J. was "out of his mind," and Jason Kidd said that "everybody thought it was funny at the time." But the Suns entered the final game of the regular season merely needing to defeat the worst team in the NBA, the second-year expansion Vancouver Grizzlies, at home in Phoenix in order to accomplish the feat. Almost inexplicably, the Grizzlies torched the nets and defeated the Suns 121-107, but Phoenix had still reached 40 wins, made the playoffs, and acquired a young franchise player.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199704190PHO.html