Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Warriors’ offseason should be about emulating the Suns

- Dieter Kurtenbach

In public and behind closed doors, members of the Warriors’ organizati­on haven’t hesitated in trashing the Phoenix Suns. Draymond Green has called the Suns organizati­on “terrible” — and worse — in post-game media scrums. He advocated on national television for Devin Booker to force his way out of Phoenix. And the things that Warriors both with and without connection­s to the Suns organizati­on have said when the cameras aren’t rolling and phones aren’t recording are even more damning.

Truth be told, many of these criticisms of the Suns’ organizati­on were and are fair.

But there’s a hilarious irony to the current hierarchy between the teams on the court.

The Warriors were a dynastic team not long ago, but they’ve missed the playoffs the last two years, falling in the play-in tournament this season.

The Suns, meanwhile, are in the Western Conference Finals after impressive playoff series wins over the Lakers and Nuggets. They’re the favorites to win the Western Conference, as they wait for an opponent in the conference finals who still has to win two more games.

Yes, the tables have turned. Now it’s the Warriors who need to look towards the Suns for guidance.

What happened to the Suns and can the Warriors replicate it?

It might not be so tough.

Chris Paul is, no doubt, the story of the postseason. The 36-year-old point guard has been the ultimate operator and a mid-range maestro for the first two rounds, pushing the Suns to heights they haven’t seen in more than a decade.

There are only a few players like that in the history of the NBA — an exact replica isn’t in the cards for the Warriors — but Paul is merely executing the well-establishe­d requiremen­ts of playoff success.

An amalgamati­on of Steph Curry and Draymond Green can operate the offense, getting the Warriors into the right sets in the most serious moments. Adding a wing that can run point — a la Andre Iguodala or Shaun Livingston — would go a long way with this team, though.

The Suns’ success isn’t all Paul, though. Major credit needs to go to Booker, who is thriving off-ball, and the Suns’ coterie of shooters that space the floor around Paul and center DeAndre Ayton.

Booker handles the ball better than Klay Thompson, but Thompson is a better shooter. Let’s call that a wash.

Andrew Wiggins is coming off his best season as a profession­al, taking the next step in his career as a viable two-way force. It’ll be fascinatin­g to see how his career and that of Phoenix wing Mikal Bridges coincide. Bridges was only revered by hipster basketball fans before this postseason — especially after posting an effective field goal percentage of 64% in the regular season — but now everyone is being forced to admit that he’s the prototypic­al

3-and-D wing.

Wiggins could be exceptiona­lly effective in a more condensed role, like Bridges’.

He could also take another step forward and relegate Thompson to the 3-and-D role while he takes on a more shot-creating position in the offense.

As has been said countless times since he was acquired, Wiggins’ success will determine the Warriors’.

Around those players, the Warriors, of course, need to add as many shooters as possible — they need to become significan­tly deeper after being forced into an eight-man rotation at the end of the season. Phoenix is one of the deepest teams in the NBA and its role players — Bridges included — have their roles down pat. Add in the positive energy the team’s bench players bring the court every night and you have a great example of strength in numbers. Remember when that was the Dubs’ thing? The Suns are hardly a juggernaut — they’re just a really good team. They have been all season.

The bad news is that the Dubs must now turn the tables in the Western Conference again.

 ?? DOUG DURAN — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP, FILE ?? The Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) guards the Suns’ Devin Booker (1) in the first quarter of their May 11 game at Chase Center in San Francisco.
DOUG DURAN — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP, FILE The Warriors’ Stephen Curry (30) guards the Suns’ Devin Booker (1) in the first quarter of their May 11 game at Chase Center in San Francisco.
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