Deadline comes and goes, Stoudemire still a Sun
After weeks of trade discussions, the Suns decided the one player
they could not do without was Amare Stoudemire.
It is a gamble. All-Star starter Stoudemire can opt out of
the final year of his contract worth $17.7 million next season, and
the Suns will have nothing but a little extra money to spend next
summer.
Still, general manager Steve Kerr said he considered standing
pat at Thursday's NBA trade deadline was the best option for a Suns
team that has a three-game lead on a Western Conference playoff
spot with 27 games remaining.
"I've maintained that unless there was something out there
that improved our team and put us in a lot better position moving
forward, then we weren't going to do anything. And that was the
case," Kerr said.
"We contemplated a lot of things today. Nothing jumped out,
and we move on. Frankly, all of us are kind of relieved, because we
are excited about this team. We listened to a lot of people.
Multiple teams called us. We called a couple of teams just to
inquire about certain things. In the end, nothing really struck our
fancy."
Cleveland was the team most often linked to the Suns, with
J.J. Hickson and Zydrunas Ilgauskas mentioned as trading chips, but
Kerr said any trade with the Cavaliers "never really rang a bell
with us, frankly."
"It had to be better. It had to be a spin-off. There had to
be something else. That had a lot of different offshoots to it that
were tricky, and it just didn't happen," Kerr said.
Stoudemire, in his seventh season, is averaging 21.4 points
and 8.7 rebounds a game while playing for about $16.4 million. He
has until June 30 to decide if he will opt out.
Miami and Philadelphia also were mentioned as possible
trading partners, but it became clear that any deal involving the
Suns and Miami would have had to include a third team. Stoudemire
makes an offseason home in Florida.
"He's fine with what happened. He always has been with the
Suns. He likes the team. He loves the city. He'll go 110 percent
the rest of the year," said Stoudemire's agent, Happy Walters.
The Suns are in seventh place in the tightly bunched Western
Conference, although seedings can change daily. They are 3 1/2
games behind second-place Denver and three games ahead of
ninth-place Houston.
Phoenix has won six out of its last eight games, a streak
that began when Stoudemire was on the bench for the entire fourth
quarter of a 112-106 victory over Dallas on Jan. 28.
At the All-Star festivities, Stoudemire said he wondered why
he has been mentioned in trade talks in each of the last two
seasons, but Kerr said he did not expect any ill will moving
forward.
"It's not easy to have your name mentioned," Kerr said. "It's
harder when you are a first-team All-Star, because those guys are
not used to having their names thrown around. I don't foresee any
problems relationship-wise, but I'm going to talk to him. I expect
him to keep playing his heart out."
Kerr and Stoudemire's camp exchanged ideas on a new contract
for Stoudemire earlier this season, and Kerr said he hoped to
continue that process.
Walters said he is always open to listening.
"I don't know that we're going to reach an agreement. I've
been quoted as saying we're close, but I never said that," Walters
said. "Amare is an important part of their future - it is up to the
Suns to say how much.
"We've exchanged ideas. The ball is in their court. It's
going to be what he feels the team is going to do in the future.
Are they going to build the team, or stay where they are?"