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Suns Eliminate Lakers From Playoff Race

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  • Suns Eliminate Lakers From Playoff Race

    "I think in their minds we were eliminated before tonight."
    - Lakers coach Frank Hamblen

    When the postseason starts, the Los Angeles Lakers' season will be over.

    They didn't go out in style either, falling victim to a record-setting 3-point barrage by the Phoenix Suns.

    Quentin Richardson scored 21 of his 25 points on 3-pointers, and the Suns routed the Lakers 125-99 Tuesday night to knock the defending Western Conference champions out of the playoffs for the first time in 11 years.

    "I think in their minds we were eliminated before tonight," said coach Frank Hamblen, who confessed to trying to play everyone so that the front office can evaluate the team's talent to rebuild in the post-Shaquille O'Neal era.

    "There's some guys that aren't here who, the last five years we were in the finals, so I'd say that's what the big difference is," Hamblen said.

    The Lakers, who lost for the 12th time in 13 games, played this one with Kobe Bryant resting his injured right leg.

    Richardson had 25 points and 10 rebounds, and the Suns won their sixth straight.

    Amare Stoudemire scored 23 points and Shawn Marion had 22 points and 12 rebounds. Marion and Leandro Barbosa, who scored 14 points, made four 3-pointers each as Phoenix set a franchise record with 17 from beyond the arc.

    The Suns, leading the NBA in 3-point percentage coming in, exceeded their average by making 17 of 39 (43.6 percent). The number of attempts tied a franchise mark set Dec. 8 against the Lakers.

    "When you're shooting that well, it definitely feels good," said Richardson (7-of-14). "Every time you touch the ball you just want to put it up."

    Bryant's shin bruise forced him to miss a game for the first time since he was activated from the injured list Feb. 13 after sitting out 14 games with a sprained right ankle. He had triple-doubles in the two previous games against Phoenix, forcing the Suns to rally for both victories.

    The Lakers couldn't afford another loss when Denver beat Memphis 94-91 earlier Tuesday night. The Suns completed the elimination and sent Los Angeles into the draft lottery for the first time since 1993-94, and only the second time since the NBA adopted the lottery system before the 1985 draft.

    "It is definitely a different feeling knowing that I'll probably be watching the playoffs this year from home," Devean George said. "So I guess it could be new motivation - you know, try to get my body right, work hard over the summer."

    The Lakers' only lead against the Suns came on a jumper by Caron Butler in the opening seconds.

    The score was tied four times after that before the Suns pulled away to increasingly larger leads.

    Butler had 30 points for the Lakers, with Chucky Atkins scoring 14 and George 12.

    Richardson made five 3-pointers in the first 5:44 of the second quarter, tying a franchise high with six in one half and sending the Suns to a 54-40 lead.

    The game got even more out of hand in the third when Richardson capped a 9-3 spurt with his final 3-pointer. It boosted Phoenix to a 79-62 lead with 10:01 to go.

    Atkins had two layups and two free throws in 2 minutes to get the Lakers within 90-80 with 2:57 left in the third, but that only started a 12-5 surge by Phoenix that Barbosa capped with two 3-pointers in the final 1:02.

    "We were hitting 3s and they were hitting 2s, and that'show we were cushioning our lead," Marion said.

    Reserves played much of the fourth quarter, preventing Phoenix point guard Steve Nash from matching John Stockton for the longest streak of double-digit assist games in the last decade. Nash had eight points and nine assists in 24 minutes, ending his career-best run of 14 straight games with at least 10 assists.

    "The bench came in and gave us a lift," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "It was good to be able to give Steve Nash 24 minutes and keep our other guys' minutes down."


    Last Time L.A. Missed Playoffs

    Year
    1993-94

    Record
    33-49 (.402)
    Ninth place in West

    Head Coaches
    Randy Pfund (27-37)
    Bill Bertka (1-1)
    Magic Johnson (5-11)

    Top Scorers (PPG)
    Vlade Divac (14.2)
    Anthony Peeler (14.1)
    Nick Van Exel (13.6)

    Next Draft Pick
    Eddie Jones, Temple
    No. 10 overall

    Next Finish
    48-34 (.585)
    Fifth place in West

    Source: AP

  • #2
    Review of the season

    What a lousy season, but about what I expected once all the injuries are factored in.

    The Trade. I know we're all sick of talking about it, and I know it's real easy to take pot shots now, but I think the Shaq trade was the right move. We all wish we had gotten more, but I'd take the current bunch over letting Kobe walk for nothing and having Shaq inked to a big-money extension. All that would have done is improve us from a lottery team to first-round fodder.

    Kobe. A great player, but a guy who is virtually impossible to discuss on this board because too many people get emotional about him. Again, he's an easy guy to take potshots at, but overall he had a good, if not great, season. There's only a handful of guys in the league I'd want to start a team with instead of him, even if he can be an arrogant jerk; but there are plenty of those types in the NBA -- and on this board

    Coaching. Rudy's illness was a terrible setback. That is what largely turned this into a wasted season.

    Odom. Good player; decent year. My strong sense is any team where Lamar is the number-two guy will at best be mired in mediocrity. I'd be looking to move him, if we could get a more legtimate big man in exchange. That might not happen though.

    Butler. He didn't run with the chances he got this year. He might end up being just an OK journeyman. I'd look to deal him if we could get enough in exchange.

    Mihm. He started better than expected, but then returned to form, which is mediocre. He's a career backup who starts because the league has so many terrible centers.

    Atkins. He is what he is -- a decent backup.

    Others. What can you say? None of them are anything special.

    Offseason. I don't see anyone who'll be available for mid-level that will make much of a difference. The hope is to luck out with a draft pick, which is always a crapshoot at where we'll be drafting, and try to move Butler, Odom, and some other guys for a building block. Next year, see if you can trade Grant to a team that wants to cap relief.

    Next 2-3 Years. This team will be mediocre at best, perhaps squeezing into the playoffs and being first-round fodder. But that's what rebuilding is about.

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