"We know the problem," D'Antoni said. "We've pinpointed it. Everybody knows
it. Now we'll see how much heart and fortitude we can put into it. If we do
that, we'll be fine."
The Suns have lost four of six and are 7-8 since their season-best 11-game
winning streak.
D'Antoni called the performance against the Clippers the team's worst of the
season, and All-Star forward Shawn Marion agreed.
"Like coach said, that was rock bottom last night," Marion said. "I think
everybody was a little winded last night, whether they're saying it or not. I'm
going to say it: I was tired."
No team relies more on energy and constant motion than the Suns.
"We're undersized," forward James Jones said. "Regardless of what schemes we
have and what things we do, we're still going to be undersized. I mean, you
can't get away from that. So if teams really hammer down and try to exploit
that, we have to give a little bit more energy and get up and down the floor to
neutralize their size."
Good shooting would help, too. The team was awful from the floor on
Wednesday.
The Suns have eight games left in the regular season, beginning at home
Friday against the Los Angeles Lakers, a team Phoenix could well face in the
first round.
Phoenix still leads the second-place Clippers by five games in the Pacific
Division, and will lock up the No. 2 seed in the West if it can hold on for the
division title. That would mean the Suns would not face either San Antonio or
Dallas through the first two rounds.
But that amounts to nothing if the team can't regroup and recharge the
run-and-shoot style that has led to 49 victories.
"It's good that we got slapped around a little bit to understand what we have
to do to win in the playoffs," D'Antoni said. "It hasn't gotten home yet, but
hopefully with last night, it will."