Here is a long post regarding Shaq's unsuccessful stay in Phoenix.
- Certainly, he deserves a lot of blame for their first round exit in 2008. He struggled a lot, but so did other people and bad luck certainly didn't help, either.
The Suns entered the 2008 playoffs with the best record in the Western Conference over the last 20 games of the season at 15-5 with Shaq in the line-up and everything was going perfectly.
Amare was averaging 28/10 and they finally got it together UNTIL:
- They lost Grant Hill to an injury right before the playoffs started; costing them their only quality defender on Tony Parker, their best all-round player, and he is also a future Hall of Famer who is still playing at a very high level. This was frustrating because, as I said, the Suns were just starting to click until Hill got hurt.
- Tim Duncan's 3 pointer which single-handedly started their downfall in that series.
The Suns were on the verge of beating the defending champions on the road in Game 1 which would have given them home-court advantage and continued their great momentum until Duncan hit that shot which saved the Spurs, cost the Suns the game, and in the process, destroyed their momentum completely.
Nash said the loss sucked a ton of energy out of the team and D'Antoni said it "changed us."
Popovich admitted the Spurs were "incredibly fortunate" to win Game 1.
Honestly, how often does Tim Duncan hit 3 pointers? It was the first 3 pointer of the season for him!
Remember, the Suns and Spurs played twice in the regular season after Phoenix got Shaq and Phoenix won both games, including a 96-79 win on the road during their last meeting of the regular season.
They outplayed San Antonio for 99.9% of that Game 1 until suffering an extremely unlucky loss.
We have seen examples in the past where suffering a tough loss like that can impact future games.
Look at how the 1995 Orlando Magic got crushed by Houston in Game 2 after they blew that 20 point lead in Game 1 and lost in over-time.
Look at how the 2006 Mavericks blew that 15 point lead with 5 minutes to go in Game 3 with a chance to go up 3-0 until they fell apart and got crushed in Game 4.
Look at the 2008 Spurs who blew a 20 point second half lead against the Lakers in Game 1 of the Conference Finals only to get crushed in Game 2.
I remember Jon Barry correctly predicting after that Game 1 loss that "This loss is going to hurt the Phoenix Suns because they blew so many chances to win it and it's a major lingering loss."
That Game 1 double-overtime loss was one of the unluckiest losses you will ever see in sports.
So, it was all downhill after that Game 1 loss.
A healthy Hill would have made a HUGE difference, in my opinion.
Shaq struggled, but so did others.
Let's continue from there:
Steve Kerr idiotically runs Mike D'Antoni out of town even though D'Antoni made the trade work at the end of the season (and also pushed for it), averaged 58 wins a season in his 4 years there, made the Conference Finals twice, and would have won the whole thing in 2007 if not for the suspensions.
D'Antoni was also EXTREMELY popular with the players.
So Kerr, for some strange reason, runs him out of town and replaced him with the very inexperienced Terry Porter who came in with a totally different system and personality.
Was Shaq to blame for that? Shaq LOVED playing for D'Antoni. D'Antoni left because him and Kerr did not see eye to eye. End of story.
So Porter took an offensive-minded, run and gun team and tried to turn them into a defensive-minded, half-court team built around an aging Shaq and minimized the effectiveness of their two best players in Stoudemire and Nash.
It was a horrible idea because, as Grant Hill said, "He took away what made us who we are."
So Porter lost the team very quickly and he turned out to be a disaster.
Shaq was NOT to blame for that. Shaq was the only one who played well for Porter and Porter ruined the first half of the season for them.
If Porter hadn't tried to change the offense, things would have gone better. Shaq's role under D'Antoni was perfect for him in the sense that all he had to do was rebound and guard the opposing team's best big-man while letting Amare do the scoring. That was perfect. Then Porter tried to change that.
Enough with this "He hurt Amare's game" nonsense...Amare averaged 28/10 with Shaq under D'Antoni.
Phoenix was not built to play the way Porter wanted them to play. They were better suited to play the way they did under D'Antoni and the way they are currently playing under Gentry.
Kerr was wrong for thinking Porter's system would be a good fit for them and Porter was wrong to slow the team down as much as he did.
Remember, under Porter, they averaged 104 PPG with the team at full-strength.
Under Gentry, they averaged 118 PPG WITHOUT Amare, who was a 28 PPG scorer in that offense with Shaq.
Just imagine how many PPG they would have averaged if Amare hadn't missed the second half of the season!
If that doesn't show how much Porter slowed the team down, I don't know what does.
The Seven Seconds or Shaq offense was one of the greatest offenses in NBA history and they scored 140 points in the only two games Amare was healthy after Gentry took over.
Seriously, they would have averaged over 120 PPG if Amare was healthy.
So, basically, the 2008/2009 season was a disaster because:
- Terry Porter ruined the first half of the season.
- The most dominant big-man in basketball missed the final 29 games of the season.
- Diaw/Bell were traded, which cost the Suns a very talented back-up for Amare and an excellent defender in Bell.
Let's continue:
- The 2009/2010 Suns were 31-22 this season at the All-Star break, just ONE game better than last season's record (30-23) which is when they lost Amare for the rest of the season.
Let's see Frye or Lopez average 18/8 on 61% shooting and lead a team to a 118 PPG scoring average without Amare getting all the attention and make the All-Star team and All-NBA 3rd team like Shaq did.
Oh, did I also mention that Shaq led the league in FG% and had one of the highest player efficiency ratings in the NBA last year?
AND, the difference is that these guys actually like playing for their coach, unlike last season when they made it no secret they hated playing for Porter.
Even Gentry has said "Shaq gets blamed for a lot of things he wasn't responsible for."
ALSO:
Shawn Marion has SUCKED since leaving Phoenix. He couldn't even last a full year in Miami and only averaged 11/7 this season for Dallas.
This is the same guy who forced his way out of Phoenix because they didn't give him a $20,000,000 a year contract extension.
This led to his trade demand and he has sucked ever since he left.
The media's treatment towards Shaq has been disgusting.
- Why not mention the bad luck they suffered when he was in Phoenix?
- Or that he has outplayed Shawn Marion?
And why blame him completely for Miami's 15 win season in 2007/2008?
Did he play well? No. But he also got hurt in the pre-season and his relationship with Riley deteriorated to the point where they nearly came to blows earlier that season and led to him demanding a buy-out.
There are many reasons Miami struggled in 2007/2008.
- Wade did not make a full recovery from his off-season surgeries.
- They let their only two good 3 point shooters leave in Jason Kapono and James Posey.
- They gave up a 1st round pick for Ricky Davis which turned out to be a disaster.
- Riley couldn't convince Mo Williams and Rashard Lewis to sign with them that summer.
- Shaq got hurt in the pre-season.
Shaq gets a raw deal from the media.
So, to recap, yes, Shaq deserves a lot of blame for their 2008 first round exit, but he does NOT deserve the blame for the Suns missing the playoffs last season and doesn't deserve ALL of the blame for the Heat's 15 win season two years ago.
One more thing I would like to add:
You have the media now saying that Shaq was a locker-room cancer in Phoenix and he's a "quitter" and stuff like that...really?
Is that why his own team-mates in Phoenix voted him as team captain last year?
Do they not know that Shaq turned down a move to Portland at the trade deadline last season?
Have they forgotten Shaq wanted to return to Phoenix even though everybody kept blaming him for everything?
Even Kerr said that "Shaq played better than we ever could have hoped for and did everything that was asked of him."
There were 15 teams interested in him this summer, according to Kerr.
And people still want to blame him?