Suns Steal One at Home Over Pacers (129-122 OT)
If I get a chance tomorrow, I will re-watch the 20 or so minutes of game time I partially missed spanning the end of the second quarter and all the way into the fourth. I saw periodic bits and pieces, but being on the phone with the volume muted while also trying to fix a software problem doesn't make for the optimum circumstance to evaluate a game. I will say that the parts of the game I did watch with my full attention (both before and after Steve Nash's flu-induced exit) were very painful on the eyes. It didn't seem to me like either team was at its best, but that's probably understandable with the Suns playing without Grant Hill (appendectomy), and eventually without Nash too. The Pacers had their injury woes as well with Jermaine O'Neal out.
The Suns won the first quarter and even had 35 points, despite seeming a little out of sync. The Pacers were doing a nice job of defending any plays involving Nash and Amare Stoudemire, so we ended up with lots of open three pointers. Fortunately, the Suns were making those, although not quite at the pace they were a couple of nights ago against Denver. But the Pacers outscored the Suns by 10 in the second quarter, and continued to outplay the Suns through much of the third. The Pacers led by 16 at one point, but a mostly-second unit of Brian Skinner, Shawn Marion, Boris Diaw, Leandro Barbosa, and Marcus Banks keyed a run to bring the Suns back to within four heading into the fourth. Without Nash and Hill, and with Amare in occasional foul trouble, the Suns hung in there, tied it up, and had the ball with a second to go at the end of regulation. Leandro Barbosa appeared to be fouled on a shot at the buzzer (or to be more specific, it looked like Mike Dunleavy tried to take his head off!), but that old "let the players decide it" adage prevailed, and overtime it was. As is often the case when the home team rallies back for the extra period, the Suns finally got it done in the closing minutes. This certainly wasn't the prettiest game to watch, with lots of plays best categorized as "bone-headed" by both teams, but under the circumstances, I'll just be happy with the win.
I'm going to forgo Player of the Game and other "honors" tonight. First of all it's late. Second, I missed several key moments (including most of the big runs by both the Suns and the Pacers), so it wouldn't be a fair judgment anyway. I will say that it was very nice to see Raja Bell get his three-point shot back, and that he and Amare probably had the biggest impact in helping the Suns finally put this one away. Raja was 6-of-11 from three. I guess it's not hard to figure out who Marcus Banks passed his hot hand too.
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Nice to see Suns Rally Back
I'm not sure if anyone else noticed but those refs were calling questionable fouls often. It got to a point where everyone was ready to pounce on #58 (looked strangely like Donaghy) Thus STAT found himself on the bench more often than not (though he really did have one boneheaded play)
Besides that though the Suns came out flatfooted, sick (ie Nash), and short one former All Star (Hill). Not a good recipe for a win. Surprisingly though the Suns put themselves back together just in time for a W.
All in all I just want this game behind me. Get the injuries out of the way and continue upon the path to glory, thats what I want. Thus by the All Star week the Suns should be back in business (knock on wood) and God willing we shall have beaten those scumsucking Fakers as well.
by Turambar on
Jan 9, 2008 11:23 PM MST
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Pacers game
- We got to see how the team responds to Steve's absence
- GHill gets some rest without having a leg injury
- Ind plays a lot like GS with O'Brien's new offense
by Hawk42 on
Jan 10, 2008 5:47 AM MST
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So many fouls!
Boris looked really good early, but then wandered off back to wherever he's hanging out these days.
I don't think the Suns really deserved this one, but (as the AZ Republic noted) Jamal Tinsley inexplicably morphed from a point guard into that a-hole at the park that shoots the ball every time he gets it, and his dead legs bailed out the Suns.
Rebounding is by far the biggest issue for this team, and was a sad but familiar theme for this game. Hope Nashy can make it to Utah, little worried about tonite, and the hated Lakers are poised to pass the Suns in the standings.
by SoCalSun on
Jan 10, 2008 10:37 AM MST
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