Chris Paul leads Phoenix Suns to first playoff sweep of his career and into Western Conference finals, Monty Williams, Chris Paul share heartfelt embrace after Suns’ series-clinching win

Chris Paul leads Phoenix Suns to first playoff sweep of his career and into Western Conference finals, Monty Williams, Chris Paul share heartfelt embrace after Suns’ series-clinching win

Suns-Nuggets: Chris Paul, Devin Booker rewriting false narratives as Phoenix moves one step from NBA Finals

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Ten years after they were first player and coach, Paul and Williams have taken Phoenix back to the Western Conference Finals.

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Monty Williams and Chris Paul.

Seconds after he posted a season-high 37 points on 14-of-19 shooting with seven assists and three rebounds in the Phoenix Suns’ 125-118 win over the Denver Nuggets in Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals on Sunday night, Chris Paul shared a long embrace with coach Monty Williams, a person who is “a lot more than a basketball coach” to him.

In many ways, that hug was an embodiment of how their relationship has come full circle. Williams led Paul in his first season as an NBA coach with the New Orleans Hornets in 2010-11. When Williams lost his wife to a car accident in 2016, he said Paul was there for him at “the darkest point of my life.”

And together they stood — Paul under Williams’ shoulder — as they took the Suns to the Western Conference Finals for the 10th time in franchise history and first instance since 2009-10.

“I got a chance to play for [Williams] that one year in New Orleans, and it was a special season,” Paul said. “I got some of my greatest relationships with guys off of playing that one year for him, and I don’t know. I don’t know, sometimes you have coaches that are just coaches. But sometimes, you have relationships that last a lifetime.”

Added Williams: “With Chris and I, for me to coach him my first year and then he went on to a different team, for us to be together again and be in that moment and know that we can accomplish more, it’s pretty cool. At the same time, I wanted to take a second to just feel that for a minute, feel that for a second with him.”

With the Suns’ win over the Nuggets, they have now won seven postseason consecutive games, their longest streak in franchise history. Williams has four times the amount of playoff wins in this run (eight) than he had in two with the New Orleans Hornets/Pelicans in 2010-11 and 2014-15.

Paul will be participating in the Western Conference Finals for the second time in his career, with the only other moment coming with the Houston Rockets in 2017-18. Houston led that series against the Golden State Warriors three games to two, but Paul suffered a right hamstring injury in Game 5 and was not available as Golden State won the last two contests.

Paul and Williams will be looking to lead the Suns to their first NBA Finals appearance since 1992-93, when they lost to Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls in six games. The Suns are 2-7 in their history in Western Conference Finals appearances.

Here’s more of what Paul had to say after Phoenix’s series-clinching win.

Chris Paul

On his emotions of advancing to the Western Conference Finals and sharing embraces with Williams, Nuggets coach Michael Malone and his family:

“I ain’t really had a chance to process it. It’s a lot of people on that team that I’m close to. Mike Malone is one of my favorite people in the world. Ryan Bowen, assistant coach for them, was a teammate of mine in New Orleans. To have my family here always means a lot.”

On the moment with Williams after the game:

NBA: Phoenix Suns at Sacramento Kings
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“Man, it’s emotional. Mont has been through things in his life that a lot of people don’t necessarily come back from. The mental stamina, who he is as a person, basketball aside, he means so much to me and my family. To be on this journey with him and to see it paying off is nice. And we’re a lot alike, we stay locked in. Like, I don’t feel good until the buzzer sounds and Mont’s the same way. So when the series is over and the game is over, it’s nice to share those moments.”

On his crafty dribbling to create space in the third quarter and when he started doing that:

“I started that back in like 2007 when they tried to switch the balls on us, when they tried to switch the basketballs on us and it was like a different material. If I could throw that basketball way out and make it snap and come back to me. So then we switched back to the regular basketballs, it just — with me, I’m obviously not 6-foot-5, 6-foot-6, not the most athletic or whatnot. So I’ve always had to develop my ball handling and things like this to keep guys off balance.”

On what Williams has meant to him:

“Man, everything. Everything. I got a chance to play for Mont that one year in New Orleans, and it was a special season. I got some of my greatest relationships with guys off of playing that one year for him, and I don’t know. I don’t know, sometimes you have coaches that are just coaches. But sometimes, you have relationships that last a lifetime. Mike Malone was on that staff when I played for Monty, and Monty is a lot more than a basketball coach. So I appreciate him.”

On what drives him in his career still:

“Competition. Competition. Like, I don’t really play for anybody else or whatnot… I wasn’t this phenom, I wasn’t supposed to be here. I played two years of [junior varsity] basketball. It ain’t always been sweet for me. I’ve always had to grind, and I like that mentality. And that’s always been who I’ve been, and I’m going to stay that way. If you like it, cool, if you don’t, it’s cool too.

“I always say this: I know who I am. I know the type of work that I put in, and I’m grateful for my team around me. Like my family, my chef, Aaron, Ann, switching it over to DBC (Fitness) in (founder) Donnie (Raimon) and trainer [David Alexander] and everybody there at DBC man. I’ve got an unbelievable team, and then all you got to do is do the work. Put the work in and it’s exciting and it’s nice to be with a team that everybody has the same mindset.”

On what it’s like to see Booker have this moment in his career:

NBA: Los Angeles Lakers at Phoenix Suns
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“This is my second time in the Western Conference Finals, so it’s dope. And we still got a long ways to go but to see his brother right there, I think his mom and his sister was here. Dad was here the last game. They, just like my family, have been here. They’ve been with you the longest, entire journey and they’ve seen the work that Book has put in year in and year out. And to see it paying off, I’m happy for him.”

On jumping from sixth to second in defensive efficiency in the postseason and the type of grown he has seen on that end:

“Man, a lot. A lot of growth. Like I said, it’s a shoutout to our coaches. We’re prepared every game, we’re prepared every game. Win or lose, one thing we won’t be is we won’t be underprepared. And just the attention to detail. We have slip-ups here and there, but the sign of a good team is when you can lock in defensively. And that’s where we try to hang our hat.”

On hitting several consecutive mid-range jumpers in Sunday’s game and when he started to feel like he got his touch back after he suffered his right shoulder contusion suffered in the first round:

“I’m good now. I’m good now, I don’t even remember. But I’m good now.”

On how much his shoulder injury was bothering his jumper before:

“I don’t know. I don’t know, we just, we got through that series. We good now.”

On summarizing his emotions of the win:

“I don’t know. You just try to stay in the moment. I mean, my teammates will tell you, it was 18 seconds on the clock and I was still on their ass. That’s just the way I am. Monty always talks about playoff games and the heartbreaks that you can have, and I’ve been a part of those heartbreaks, right? So I’m not comfortable until the clock says zero, zero on it. So a lot of things, haven’t really had time to process it. But I’m going to get on the bus and first and foremost, call my kids.”

On how much Booker means to him:

“I say it all the time man: If I don’t know nothing else, I know basketball. So when I saw that Phoenix was an opportunity to come play here, I knew what we’d be capable of because I know Book and I know how he competes and the energy that he plays with. It’s just dope to see everything come together since the trade happened. The day after I got traded, we was in the gym working together. And I think that says a lot about why we are where we are right now, is trust.”

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When the Rockets flamed out the next season to those same Warriors, without Kevin Durant, in the second round, that felt like the actual end. Paul, who laid a 3-for-14 egg in Game 5 with the series tied 2-2, would never be the same player. His best and last shot at an NBA Finals berth had passed him by.

The Rockets traded him to Oklahoma City. Everyone wrote him off. I remember walking into the CBS newsroom the morning after that trade and suggesting to Raja Bell that the Thunder actually got the better end of it, that Paul, though a diminished version of himself, was still better than Russell Westbrook.

Bell laughed at me. Waved me off like a lunatic. It turns out, we were both wrong. There was nothing diminished about Paul when he stunned everyone, including myself, by leading what was assumed to be a pitiful Thunder team to the playoffs. He looked as great as ever. And he still does.

On Sunday night, Paul authored his latest masterpiece as the Suns finished off a second-round sweep of the Denver Nuggets, finishing with a season-high 37 points on 14-of-19 shooting, including 9 for 9 from the free-throw line. He didn’t make, or even take, a single 3-pointer. He didn’t need to. Paul has adjusted his game slightly as the analytical age has tried to faze him out, but not by much. He remains a mid-range master.

This is but one of the many narratives Paul continues to disprove. You don’t have to shoot 3s at a disproportionate clip to win in today’s NBA. You just have to be great at the shots on which you do rely. If you are, then any shot is analytically sound, and Paul, by any reasonable measurement, is still great. He finished fifth in MVP voting, and he has the Suns, a team that had gone a decade without making the playoffs prior to his arrival, in the conference finals. The path to his first NBA Finals, a potentially his first championship, is as open as it has ever been in his career.

I mean look at those numbers. Ridiculous. We talk about what LeBron James is doing at 36 years old, but perhaps you don’t realize that Paul is the same age.

This is not to suggest Paul has done this alone. Far from it. The Suns hardly have a weakness to be found. Deandre Ayton has broken all the way out. Mikal Bridges and Cam Johnson are two-way studs. They’re deep. Versatile. Cameron Payne might be the league’s best career-turnaround story. Monte Williams connects with his players in a way few coaches do.

And Devin Booker is a superstar.

After scoring 47 in the Suns’ first-round closeout game vs. the Lakers, Booker put 34 on the Nuggets on Sunday in his second closeout game. Booker and Paul are the third pair of Suns teammates to record at least 34 points in the same playoff game — joining Charles Barkley/Dan Majerle in 1993 and Steve Nash/Shawn Marion in 2005.

Like Paul has done with the narrative that he was, or is, washed up — and frankly the idea that he was never really a winning playoff player in the first place, a media-made storyline based almost entirely on bad injury luck and playing in the Western Conference — Booker has made this good-stats/bad-team reputation with which he was saddled look utterly foolish.

Turns out, when you score 70 points in an NBA game, you’re pretty damn good. We do this a lot with young players, label them as this or that without consideration of context, try to outsmart what our eyes are telling us by indulging in these supposed all-encompassing statistics that infact fail to tell the whole story.

The Suns, from top to bottom, were trash through the first four years of Booker’s career. If you were watching, he was getting better all the time. If you didn’t think he was always a guy who could be a big-time scorer on a big-time team (if only he had a chance to play on such a squad), you didn’t know what you were watching. But the playmaking, the feel for the pick and roll, the commitment to defending, all this evidence that Booker has long been more than just a gunner without a cause had been readily available for some time.

Now we can’t ignore it. Just as you we cant ignore than Trae Young, another young player you could feel the masses wanting to toss in the good-stats/bad-team bucket, is a true-blue star. Young has had to get better over his first three years, and he’s still got the Hawks alive in the second round. But the incredible talent was always there. Same with Booker. The only thing is: Now he’s on a stage where everyone is getting to see it.

Where do the Suns go from here? First up will be a date with either Utah or the Clippers. The Jazz — a team that feels a lot like the Suns in that they are a sum-of-their-parts unit that is a lot better than probably a lot of people realize — lead that series 2-1 with Game 4 set for Monday night.

Phoenix can beat either one of those teams, and now with Kyrie Irving ailing in Brooklyn, and James Harden already out (so far) with an injured hamstring, whoever comes out of the East could be a highly beatable squad as well. If you’re one of the many folks jumping on the Paul bandwagon in hopes of seeing him get his long-awaited first title, or at least his first Final berth, you don’t want to get ahead of yourself. But it’s hard not to get excited. This is right there for Paul and the Suns, just when it was all supposed to be over.

For a moment, as he broke into the open court all alone, it looked like Chris Paul was thinking about dunking it. It would’ve been an emphatic final statement on the series, the play to cap off the complete dominance his Phoenix Suns showed over the Denver Nuggets throughout.

But there were still 3 minutes left in the game, and even with an 11-point lead, Paul wasn’t thinking ahead quite yet.

“You just try to stay in the moment,” he said. “My teammates will tell you, there was 18 seconds on the clock and I was still on they ass. That’s just the way I am.”

Even with league MVP Nikola Jokic ejected in the third quarter, Paul was playing this one to the buzzer, as the visiting Suns completed their sweep of the Denver Nuggets 125-118 on Sunday night to advance to the Western Conference finals.

“The emotions are happy, grateful, tired, relieved,” Suns coach Monty Williams said. “It’s one of those moments for me that, quite frankly, I never thought I’d have a chance to experience. For me I just have a level of gratitude that I can’t even explain.”

It’s the first time in Paul’s career that he has completed a playoff series sweep, something that was on his mind, and something he let his teammates know before the game.

“We were hyped, man,” Suns guard Devin Booker said of the postgame atmosphere. “Chris was saying before the game he’d never swept somebody, he had never beat somebody 4-0. I don’t know when the last time the Suns have been to the Western Conference finals, but tonight is one of the nights we celebrate in-house and then wake up tomorrow, we’re on to either the Clippers or Utah.”

To answer Booker’s question, the last time the Suns were in the conference finals was the 2009-10 season, when Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers defeated Steve Nash and the Suns in six games. They advanced back for the first time in more than a decade in style, dominating the series from start to finish, with an average winning margin of 15.7 points.

It’s the second time Paul has been to the conference finals, the last time being in 2018 when he was a member of the Rockets and missed Games 6 and 7 because of a hamstring injury as Houston fell in seven games to the Golden State Warriors.

Now, he’s four wins away from a first-ever NBA Finals appearance.

“A lot of things, I haven’t had a lot of time to process it yet,” Paul said. “But I’m going to get on the bus, and first and foremost call my kids.”

Paul scored 37 points on 14-for-19 shooting in the Game 4 closeout, capping off a series nothing short of magnificent. The 36-year-old future Hall of Famer finished the series averaging 25.5 points on 61.8% shooting, 58% from 3, 100% from the free throw line, plus an absurd 41-to-5 assist-to-turnover ratio.

“A couple years ago, they were writing me off. ‘You can’t do this.’ This ain’t about me, it’s about us,” Paul said on the court postgame. “Shows what you can do when you come together as a team. We’ve got a great team over there and it’s a lot of fun to be a part of it.”

Throughout the season, Paul’s control of the game was on display and his influence on the young Suns clear as he asserted himself at key moments to spark runs. He was particularly brilliant in the midrange, taking advantage of the NBA’s market inefficiency to carve up the Nuggets’ drop coverage scheme. In Game 4, he hit 10 midrange shots, the most ever in his career (playoffs or regular season).

After the Suns dispatched the defending champion Lakers in six games, the Nuggets posed a new challenge with the league’s MVP and a contrasting style. But with young big man Deandre Ayton and an up-and-coming cast of supporting role players around Paul and Booker, the Suns never looked anything but up to the task.

Paul shared a long, emotional embrace with Williams after the game. Their relationship dates back a decade, with Williams coaching Paul in New Orleans for a season in 2010-11. Paul and Williams stayed close even as they went their separate ways, and after tragedy hit Williams in 2016, when his wife Ingrid was killed in a car accident, Paul offered support.

“The darkest moment of my life, Chris was right there,” Williams said. “One of the highlights of my career, he’s right there.”

Said Paul: “It’s emotional. Mont has been through things in his life a lot of people don’t necessarily come back from.”

Since their run more than a decade ago under Mike D’Antoni and the Seven Seconds or Less revolution, the Suns have largely disappeared from Western contention. They were a consistent staple in the draft lottery but finally found some momentum in the NBA’s bubble last summer, going 8-0 and coming just shy of making an improbable run to the play-in game.

It established a new identity for Phoenix to build on, and then with the addition of Paul, the Suns have only continued to climb.

“It’s a feeling that’s kind of hard to put into words,” Booker said. “You always reflect after a game like this after you close a series out, you sit back and reflect a little bit and think about it. What we’ve been through as an organization and as a team.”

NBA MVP Nikola Jokic ejected as Suns dump Nuggets out of playoffs

  • Nuggets star says blow to Cameron Payne was unintentional
  • Milwaukee Bucks level series with ailing Brooklyn Nets
Nikola Jokic and Devin Booker exchange words after a play that would result in the NBA MVP being ejected from Sunday’s game
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Nikola Jokic and Devin Booker exchange words after a play that would result in the NBA MVP being ejected from Sunday’s game.

Chris Paul scored 37 points, Devin Booker added 34 and Phoenix beat Denver 125-118 to complete a four-game sweep of their NBA Western Conference semifinal series.

NBA MVP Nikola Jokic was ejected in the third quarter with his Nuggets trailing 83-76 after his hard swipe sent the basketball flying but also caught Cameron Payne in the face. Officials assessed a double technical on Jokic and Booker and ejected the MVP after upping the call to a Flagrant 2.

Jokic said he meant only to commit a hard foul on Payne to spark his team. “I wanted to change the rhythm of the game, I wanted to give us some energy,” Jokic said. “I tried to make a hard foul. Did I hit him? I didn’t know. I say sorry if I did because I didn’t want to injure him or hit him in the head on purpose.”

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Nikola Jokić: from EuroLeague reject to the NBA’s center of attention

 

Booker took umbrage at the hard foul and got in the big man’s face before teammates and coaches pulled everyone apart.

“It was just an emotional play,” Booker said. “I don’t think he meant harm by it. It was just a frustration foul. It was tough, just defending my teammate. That was it. I saw him go up to Cam after and apologize. I’ve played against the Joker multiple times. I know he’s not a malicious player.”

Jokic finished with 22 points and 11 rebounds in 28 minutes.

With their franchise-record seventh straight playoff victory, the Suns advanced to the conference championship for the first time since 2010, the last time they even reached the playoffs.

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