SwingMan
12-24-2007, 10:18 PM
Unlikely to be a friendly affair (http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/articles/1224suns1225.html)
Suns' matchup today vs. Lakers
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/pics/1225sunsmain.jpg
There likely won't be much Christmas cheer tomorrow between the Suns and Lakers.
Paul Coro
The Arizona Republic
Dec. 24, 2007 09:05 PM
Tomorrow's Suns-Lakers matchup is the most appealing among tomorrow's three Christmas Day NBA games, but not just because their coaches verbally sparred in November or because they are separated by two games in the Pacific Division standings.
Those were just the teams' gifts to ABC, which has the Suns playing on Christmas for the first time in 11 years. The rivalry has turned in the Suns' favor after years as the West's bridesmaid, with the Lakers getting the ring.
"It's really good and that's why it should be a great game," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "Neither team loves each other for all the wars we've been through."
http://www.azcentral.com/imgs/clear.gifhttp://www.azcentral.com/imgs/clear.gif
The animosity did not start last month, but it sure did intensify when the Lakers spoiled the Suns' home opener with a 119-98 rout. The game's low point came when the Lakers led by 33 with 4:45 remaining and coach Phil Jackson doubled up on a D'Antoni timeout by calling his own. Jackson later said it was to avoid an upcoming television timeout and compared the finish to a "mercy killing."
D'Antoni was infuriated, shouting at the Lakers bench, "That's OK. We'll play three more times."
"My video guy was kind enough to leave that on tape this morning so we could view his demonstration after the timeout," Jackson told Los Angeles reporters Monday.
D'Antoni already was miffed before that Nov. 2 loss when he was relayed Jackson's comment that the Suns' window of championship opportunity was "closing real fast." The in-game incident had him boiling into the postgame.
"I thought he disrespected our players, but he likes to play the mind games," D'Antoni said then. "That's fine. He might want to try to do it in playoff time when we bust them every time."
The waters did not calm any when Jackson said D'Antoni was not "thinking straight" and that D'Antoni's "immediate response is to think it was about him and not about his team."
D'Antoni has not wanted to engage Jackson by revisiting the war of words.
"He likes to play those little games," said D'Antoni, who joked to Suns employees before the 2006 playoffs that he was reading Zen for Dummies. "Bottom line, we didn't play well and we were embarrassed and reacted to two straight timeouts. They're too good of a team to mess with him."
The disdain goes back the past two postseasons, when the teams faced off in the first round. The Suns sat out Steve Nash and Raja Bell for the 2006 finale to set up a playoff pairing with the Lakers rather than Sacramento. The Suns wound up having to fight out of a 3-1 hole to win the series.
Intensity escalated when Kwame Brown knocked down Boris Diaw and straddled him. It rose even more when Bell clotheslined Kobe Bryant.
Jack McCallum's book, :07 Seconds or Less, revealed more Suns coaches' criticisms of the Lakers behind closed doors, from calling Brown "awful" to calling Jackson "The Penguin."
"I love it," ABC analyst Jeff Van Gundy said of the coaches' contempt. "It's great. The only true rivalries occur in the playoffs when teams see each other numerous times. It's just natural when you play against teams over and over again, there's going to be generated dislike. It's a great subplot."
More than anything, Phoenix could use its first consecutive wins since Dec. 7.
"It's going to be a huge game," Suns center Amaré Stoudemire said. "We're definitely looking forward to it because of what happened here in Phoenix.
"We're ready."
Notes
The NBA's new Nash commercial will debut tomorrow.
• With 19 more minutes played, Phoenix's Shawn Marion will pass Dick Van Arsdale and trail only Alvan Adams' club record of 27,203. Marion is at 24,244.
• Nash is 14 assists shy of Lakers great Jerry West, who is 23rd on the all-time list.
Today's game
Suns at Lakers
When: 3 p.m.
Where: Staples Center, Los Angeles.
TV/radio: Channel 15/KTAR-AM (620).
Los Angeles update: The Lakers (17-10) won Sunday at New York when Kobe Bryant became the youngest NBA player to reach 20,000 points with a 39-point game. The Lakers have won eight of their past 10, and 20-year-old Andrew Bynum is having a breakout season, averaging 11.9 points, 10 rebounds and 2.1 blocks per game. Their bench, led by Jordan Farmar, has become one of the NBA's best.
Suns' matchup today vs. Lakers
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/suns/pics/1225sunsmain.jpg
There likely won't be much Christmas cheer tomorrow between the Suns and Lakers.
Paul Coro
The Arizona Republic
Dec. 24, 2007 09:05 PM
Tomorrow's Suns-Lakers matchup is the most appealing among tomorrow's three Christmas Day NBA games, but not just because their coaches verbally sparred in November or because they are separated by two games in the Pacific Division standings.
Those were just the teams' gifts to ABC, which has the Suns playing on Christmas for the first time in 11 years. The rivalry has turned in the Suns' favor after years as the West's bridesmaid, with the Lakers getting the ring.
"It's really good and that's why it should be a great game," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "Neither team loves each other for all the wars we've been through."
http://www.azcentral.com/imgs/clear.gifhttp://www.azcentral.com/imgs/clear.gif
The animosity did not start last month, but it sure did intensify when the Lakers spoiled the Suns' home opener with a 119-98 rout. The game's low point came when the Lakers led by 33 with 4:45 remaining and coach Phil Jackson doubled up on a D'Antoni timeout by calling his own. Jackson later said it was to avoid an upcoming television timeout and compared the finish to a "mercy killing."
D'Antoni was infuriated, shouting at the Lakers bench, "That's OK. We'll play three more times."
"My video guy was kind enough to leave that on tape this morning so we could view his demonstration after the timeout," Jackson told Los Angeles reporters Monday.
D'Antoni already was miffed before that Nov. 2 loss when he was relayed Jackson's comment that the Suns' window of championship opportunity was "closing real fast." The in-game incident had him boiling into the postgame.
"I thought he disrespected our players, but he likes to play the mind games," D'Antoni said then. "That's fine. He might want to try to do it in playoff time when we bust them every time."
The waters did not calm any when Jackson said D'Antoni was not "thinking straight" and that D'Antoni's "immediate response is to think it was about him and not about his team."
D'Antoni has not wanted to engage Jackson by revisiting the war of words.
"He likes to play those little games," said D'Antoni, who joked to Suns employees before the 2006 playoffs that he was reading Zen for Dummies. "Bottom line, we didn't play well and we were embarrassed and reacted to two straight timeouts. They're too good of a team to mess with him."
The disdain goes back the past two postseasons, when the teams faced off in the first round. The Suns sat out Steve Nash and Raja Bell for the 2006 finale to set up a playoff pairing with the Lakers rather than Sacramento. The Suns wound up having to fight out of a 3-1 hole to win the series.
Intensity escalated when Kwame Brown knocked down Boris Diaw and straddled him. It rose even more when Bell clotheslined Kobe Bryant.
Jack McCallum's book, :07 Seconds or Less, revealed more Suns coaches' criticisms of the Lakers behind closed doors, from calling Brown "awful" to calling Jackson "The Penguin."
"I love it," ABC analyst Jeff Van Gundy said of the coaches' contempt. "It's great. The only true rivalries occur in the playoffs when teams see each other numerous times. It's just natural when you play against teams over and over again, there's going to be generated dislike. It's a great subplot."
More than anything, Phoenix could use its first consecutive wins since Dec. 7.
"It's going to be a huge game," Suns center Amaré Stoudemire said. "We're definitely looking forward to it because of what happened here in Phoenix.
"We're ready."
Notes
The NBA's new Nash commercial will debut tomorrow.
• With 19 more minutes played, Phoenix's Shawn Marion will pass Dick Van Arsdale and trail only Alvan Adams' club record of 27,203. Marion is at 24,244.
• Nash is 14 assists shy of Lakers great Jerry West, who is 23rd on the all-time list.
Today's game
Suns at Lakers
When: 3 p.m.
Where: Staples Center, Los Angeles.
TV/radio: Channel 15/KTAR-AM (620).
Los Angeles update: The Lakers (17-10) won Sunday at New York when Kobe Bryant became the youngest NBA player to reach 20,000 points with a 39-point game. The Lakers have won eight of their past 10, and 20-year-old Andrew Bynum is having a breakout season, averaging 11.9 points, 10 rebounds and 2.1 blocks per game. Their bench, led by Jordan Farmar, has become one of the NBA's best.