rsavaj wrote:http://www.hardwoodparoxysm.com/2010/05/03/nba-playoffs-spurs-suns-series-preview-the-welcome-embrace-of-ancient-enemies/
Loved that!
...thanks for the link
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rsavaj wrote:http://www.hardwoodparoxysm.com/2010/05/03/nba-playoffs-spurs-suns-series-preview-the-welcome-embrace-of-ancient-enemies/
Two familiar foes meet up in the second round of the Western Conference Playoffs in the San Antonio Spurs and Phoenix Suns after being left for dead during the regular season. It appeared as if both team's window had closed, but one will be in the Western Conference Finals.
These two teams last met in 2007-2008 when the Spurs made easy work of the Suns in the first round, eliminating them in five. Their most intense and controversial series occurred in 2006-2007 though when suspensions helped the Spurs get by the Suns en route to winning it all. We can only hope that this series is half as entertaining. It has the potential to be quite interesting and with the series opener coming later today we take a deeper look at the matchups.
Point Guard: Steve Nash vs. George Hill – The Spurs' first round series against the Dallas Mavericks was George Hill's coming out party. He showed why Coach Popovich gave him the nod over Tony Parker in the starting lineup by carrying the Spurs past the Mavs with clutch shooting and great defense. Steve Nash is still one of the league's best assist men and shooters, but he can't be looking forward to going up against the Spurs point guards.
Tony Parker has always given Nash trouble with his speed and quickness and Hill will present a different set of issues for him to deal with. Hill is better than Parker defensively with length that will give Nash trouble. With that said Nash is a crafty veteran that will undoubtedly get his, but it won't be easy against the surging Hill that will be looking to make a statement against the former MVP.
Advantage: Suns, but not by much.
Shooting Guard: Jason Richardson vs. Manu Ginobili – This is one of the most intriguing matchups in the series between two players that were red hot in the first round. Richardson poured in 23 points and seven rebounds while Ginobili averaged 19 points and five assists.
Both players are exciting in different ways, Richardson with his explosiveness and Ginobili with his creativeness. It sets up for a great battle, but Ginobili has the edge in experience and is slightly better defensively. Expect big numbers from both of these players throughout the entire series.
Advantage: Spurs
Small Forward: Grant Hill vs. Richard Jefferson – All season long Richard Jefferson has been a source of disappointment for the Spurs and he didn't do much to improve on that in round one. Jefferson contributed a modest nine points and four rebounds. His best performance came in the second game of the series when he had 19 points and seven rebounds.
Hill's numbers against the Portland Trail Blazers weren't much better but it's not his role to fill up the stat sheet. He provides the veteran presence that helps keep things stable on both ends of the court. Jefferson is younger and has a little bit more spring to his step than Hill does at this point, but by no means is Grant overmatched.
Advantage: Even
Power Forward: Amar'e Stoudemire vs. Antonio McDyess – On paper this may look like an incredible mismatch in favor of the Phoenix Suns. It looked the same when McDyess lined up opposite of Dirk Nowitzki too though and he more than held his own in that matchup.
McDyess is not going to back down from Amar'e and is actually just hitting his stride. He's going to make Amar'e work for everything he gets by being physical with him and playing sound defense.
This is an important series for Amar'e as free agency gets closer and closer. He was good for 20 points a night against the Blazers but only grabbed five rebounds a game. That's just unacceptable and it will not get the job done against San Antonio. He could spend a fair amount of time on Tim Duncan defensively, so he's going to have to be up to the challenge or else Duncan will have a field day every game.
Advantage: Suns
Center: Jarron Collins vs. Tim Duncan – Now this matchup is as big of a mismatch as the statistics indicate. Jarron Collins would be set up for failure if he was asked to man up against Duncan all series long.
Collins is the starter by title only though in Phoenix and will likely only see time against Duncan at the start of games and after halftime. Duncan will likely see every big man Phoenix has try to defend him, but they won't have much luck. As much talk as there is about his game declining, Duncan is still good for just around 20 and 10 a night.
Advantage: Spurs
Bench: Channing Frye, Leandro Barbosa, Louis Amundson, Jared Dudley and Goran Dragic vs. Tony Parker, Keith Bogans, Roger Mason Jr., Matt Bonner, DeJuan Blair - Tony Parker is the best 6th man in the playoffs and possesses game-changing ability that nobody on the Suns have. Channing Frye will present a different look at the center position from what the Spurs saw against the Mavericks. They didn't have to worry too much about Brendan Haywood and Erick Dampier offensively. Against Frye they'll have to be very aware of where he is at all times because of his lethal jump shot.
Phoenix's second unit consists of more quality shooters outside of Frye. The Spurs perimeter D cannot falter while they are out there. Keep an eye out for DeJuan Blair, who could have a big series due to his strength and tenacity inside.
Advantage: Spurs
Coach: Alvin Gentry vs. Gregg Popovich – There's not a whole lot to discuss regarding who has the advantage here. Alvin Gentry would be the first to admit that Popovich is superior to him in every aspect of coaching, but it's not an insult. Popovich is simply one of the best coaches the league has ever seen and he's got his team peaking at the right time. Never has a seventh seed been feared as much as his Spurs currently are. The Spurs are definitely the favorites in this series and in order to pull off the upset Gentry will really need his group to play their best basketball. Trying to get Tim Duncan in foul trouble is a good start. Hopefully for Gentry's sake Amar'e steps up his play significantly playing opposite of Duncan.
Advantage: Spurs
Prediction: Spurs in 6
WTFsunsFTW wrote:Anyone able to post this story? ESPN Insider about matchup
http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/playoffs ... iem-100430
rsavaj wrote:http://www.hardwoodparoxysm.com/2010/05/03/nba-playoffs-spurs-suns-series-preview-the-welcome-embrace-of-ancient-enemies/
Tenacious Spur wrote:Suns did the correct thing letting him go. How they spended their money is the money.
dantian wrote:asubennett wrote:
If we were better we would have won game 6 and game 7 or not lost 2 of the first four. One game in a 7 game series does not change everything as you would suggest. Could we have won game 5 with Amare and Diaw? Yes. Could we have also lost? Yes.
The game was never played and thats the bottom line. However, we lost 2 of 4 with those guys. And we lost game 6 with them as well. So in a 5 game series we lost 3 of them at full strength.
Agree. In all those years, we were actually underdogs despite of our better regular season records, mainly due to DA's game plan. 2007 was the year with highest odd for us to beat the Spurs (40-60 in favor of Spurs was my estimate). But first, DA reinserted KT into starting lineup one game too late, second, we had the suspension. These ruined our final chance then.
G35 wrote:He may run a great offense but I wouldn't choose him over Amare to start a team.
Sun Scorched wrote:We need to give Amare the ball in the high post every other time (at least) down the court. There is no way that Duncan can guard Amare anymore and there is no reason we shouldn't be forcing the refs into calling the obvious fouls.
This next game, I want Duncan on the bench with three fouls before halftime. After that, Spurs have nothing and Amare can have a field day.
garrick wrote:Sun Scorched wrote:We need to give Amare the ball in the high post every other time (at least) down the court. There is no way that Duncan can guard Amare anymore and there is no reason we shouldn't be forcing the refs into calling the obvious fouls.
This next game, I want Duncan on the bench with three fouls before halftime. After that, Spurs have nothing and Amare can have a field day.
He has been playing better from the post this season and seems to have gone back to his fade away which we haven't seen for a long time now.
It's too bad Mike D never really made an emphasis on posting Amare up on offense to improve his post game.
dantian wrote:garrick wrote:Sun Scorched wrote:We need to give Amare the ball in the high post every other time (at least) down the court. There is no way that Duncan can guard Amare anymore and there is no reason we shouldn't be forcing the refs into calling the obvious fouls.
This next game, I want Duncan on the bench with three fouls before halftime. After that, Spurs have nothing and Amare can have a field day.
He has been playing better from the post this season and seems to have gone back to his fade away which we haven't seen for a long time now.
It's too bad Mike D never really made an emphasis on posting Amare up on offense to improve his post game.
True. DA gave Amare hope with lipservice like "point center", but never consistently tried to develop Amare there, as the alternative of having Nash create was so convenient. We have been wasting on Amare's talent/potential for so long, mainly using his athletic freak nature.
fromthetop321 wrote:I got Lebron number 1, he is also leading defensive player of the year. Curry's game still reminds me of Jeremy Lin to much.
albasuna wrote:Dare I say this but... Rondo might be above Nash. If Nash was younger this would obviously would be a no contest. His role in the team success is not nearly as much as it was back in the SSOL days.
Deron Williams
Chris Paul (healthy)
Rajon Rondo
Steve Nash
Chauncey Billups