Solar flare-out
Tuesday, January 30th, 2007Leave it to LeBron to lay down the jinx.
Following the Suns 115-100 road win over the Cavaliers on Sunday, the 22-year-old wunderkind spit out the following, doomsday quote.
“The way they’re playing right now, they’re unbeatable,” James said.
And with that one quip — Booom-shakalaka — the seventh-longest winning streak in NBA history was jinxed out of existence.
After winning 17-of-17 and 33-of-35, the Suns lost a road game Monday night at Minnesota. Now that the 17-game run is over, it is high time to break it down.
THE LOSSES
During the 35-game run of fun which began November 20 at Golden State, the Suns lost a 144-139 OT home track meet to the Bullets (I refuse to recognize that kinder, gentler name) and 101-99 to the Mavs in Dallas.
Bullets (that’s right – Bullets) 144, Suns 139, OT
Gilbert Arenas lost his mind that Friday night, going off for 54. His bank-in 3-pointer from the top of the key broke a stalemate late in the overtime period. If the game were played on a Philadelphia playground, however, the shot would not have counted because GA never called the bank.
Mavs 101, Suns 99
A loss is a loss, sure. But a road loss on a buzzer beater by the NBA’s best team bites like an orthodontist’s dog.
Jason Terry scored 32 points over the final 18 minutes and set up Dirk Nowitzki’s last-second 19-footer to steal the win.
Following that Thursday night loss in Dallas, the Suns ran off best 17-gamer.
So when you woke up Tuesday morning, who was the best NBA team? Dallas. No doubt.
Both teams are tied for the league’s best record, but if the Western Conference finals were to start today, only the most dedicated Phoenix homer could ride the Suns bandwagon into the finals.
The Suns are more entertaining, but the Mavs are more versatile and can almost run with Phoenix. In two head-to-head games, Dallas is 2-0. Enough said.
And now, more soccer silliniess from Nash. The guy banks in a 3 from about 40 feet. David Beckham, eat your heart out.