Mark this day down folks. There was the first Media Day without Steve Nash in nine years. Check. Then the first training camp without Steve Nash in nine years. Check check. Then the first intrasquad scrimm... you get the drift.
Today, we had the first official team practice without Steve Nash (on the roster).
The Suns are finding their way to a new offense, one that is not centered around Steve Nash for the first time in nine years. There will be more screen-and-cuts, more passing out of the post, more time with the point guard playing off the ball.
The other day, Jared Dudley commented on the new offense to Paul Coro of azcentral.com.
"It's an IQ offense where it's cuts and reads," Dudley said after the scrimmage on Saturday. "It's not one person, ‘Hey, Jared, the ball is going to you.' I think we had one or two plays for me and that's just because I got hot. For the most part, it was just reads and me getting open. If you work hard and cut and set good screens, you're going to be the one who's open. I wish we could've had this with Steve (Nash)."
I repeat that last line: "I wish we could've had this with Steve (Nash)."
After Suns practice today, I had the opportunity to ask Alvin Gentry what he thought of Jared's comment.
"We did fine with Steve here, okay?," he said, his voice turning to steel in the face of the new guy with the iPhone, "I'll listen to anything, but I won't listen to anything about our offense (with Nash). If you go back, we were first, first, first, third and then fifth (in the NBA). Two straight years we led the league in scoring, field goal percentage, three-point percentage and assists.
"So, if somebody wants to change that then you should talk about changing Miami's offense too. Okay? So we'll leave it at that. All right?"
All right.
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Gentry on the players so far:
*At the end of practice, the Suns run a full-court layup drill where they had to make 40 layups on each end of the court with only two live basketballs that weren't allowed to touch the ground. Just four guys rotating as passers getting the ball back and forth to sprinters. Tough to describe, I guess, but it was impressive to me how fast these guys can move. They had to run it three times before getting to 80.
Other thoughts from the open part of practice:
That's all I got.