The Zion Williamson conspiracy theory behind the Suns' rise - Los Angeles Times
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Commentary: An NBA conspiracy theory about Zion Williamson may be responsible for the Suns’ rise

 Zion Williamson smiles while getting ready for a practice.
Some people believe that the NBA wanted to make sure during last year’s bubble restart that Zion Williamson and the Pelicans were included. In doing so, the Phoenix Suns qualified too.
(Winslow Townson / Associated Press)
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It’s all Zion Williamson’s fault.

He’s not on the Clippers. He’s not on the Phoenix Suns. But depending on your collection of tinfoil hats and contacts within the NBA deep state, he’s the reason why the Suns have been basketball’s hottest team since last August and are playing the Clippers in the Western Conference finals.

The theory goes like this: In an effort to boost ratings for the NBA’s return to action in the bubble last year, the league wanted to ensure Williamson’s New Orleans Pelicans had a chance to make the playoffs. And in an effort to shield their capitalistic impulses, they’d add more teams out of the playoff picture.

That meant the Phoenix Suns received a surprise invitation to keep their season alive, the 21st of the 22 teams sent to Orlando, Fla. (only the Washington Wizards had a worse record).

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So, thanks to Williamson, the Suns got to build confidence and momentum, winning eight consecutive games in the bubble while setting the stage for their Western Conference finals run one season later.

The truth isn’t as fun. NBA sources insist that Williamson’s inclusion in the bubble wasn’t a factor, that the league just wanted to bring teams still in contention for a playoff spot and safely play as many games as possible.

No timetable has been given by the Clippers for Kawhi Leonard’s return, but he remains a big part of the team’s planning in the Western Conference finals against the Suns.

June 21, 2021

It won’t stop everyone from debating the NBA’s intentions. But the results? They’re inarguable.

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The Suns’ eight-game winning streak in Orlando laid the groundwork for another eight-game winning streak, this one stretching through the three rounds of this year’s playoffs.

“Outside of the teams that either won the championship or competed for one, we had the most to gain because a lot of people thought we shouldn’t have been there,” coach Monty Williams said Monday. “For us, it was like a third training camp for us. We had the preseason training camp and then we had the madhouse [pre-bubble] training camp, and then we got to go to Orlando and have another training camp, so we were able to continue our program. Then we were just fortunate enough to play well and win a lot of games and built a ton of confidence.”

The Clippers shouldn’t be surprised. They had an early look at the Phoenix transformation.

As teams were getting used to bubble ball, Devin Booker stunned the Clippers with a last-second jumper to break a tie and give Phoenix a win. The shot became one of the more iconic plays of the experiment, an impossible turnaround with Paul George inches away.

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By then Booker had established himself as one of the NBA’s purest scorers, a 23-year-old with a bag full of tricks and traits normally reserved for more experienced players.

Here are six things the Clippers can do against the Suns to flip Sunday’s 120-114 loss into a win in Game 2 on Tuesday.

June 21, 2021

In the NBA, they call players like Booker a “three-level scorer” because he’s a threat from deep, from mid-range and at the rim. Booker’s had that in him for a while.

The swagger was already there too. After Booker’s rookie season, Williams saw the young guard take on members of the 2016 U.S. national team.

“You could see that he wasn’t afraid of going against the top guys,” Williams remembered.

That confidence has spread among his teammates — you can see it in big shots drained by third-year forward Mikal Bridges, the way second-year forward Cameron Johnson spots up or the way journeyman guard Cameron Payne attacks. And you can watch it as third-year center Deandre Ayton looks more and more like a complete player.

Add a veteran star like Chris Paul and established role players such as Jae Crowder and Dario Saric, and the Suns are three wins from the NBA Finals.

“When I first got here, Coach started texting me like, ‘Man, I think we’re a championship team,’” veteran guard E’Twaun Moore said. “… He acted like we were that team.”

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While the Clippers have problems slowing Suns superstar Devin Booker, limiting center Deandre Ayton is another area of concern following Game 1 loss.

June 20, 2021

If the Suns hadn’t been included in the bubble, Williams and Co. couldn’t have been so sure that they were a contender.

“It gave us a lot of momentum going into the season; a ton of momentum,” Johnson said. “Beyond that, let’s say we didn’t even make it to the bubble. That’s a lot of months without being together as a team.

“So the fact that we were able to get into the bubble, come close to the playoffs, maybe not make it, but it gave us a lot of steam, momentum, kind of showed that the work that we put in, the kind of culture that we built is starting to pay some dividends. It just gave us a lot of excitement going into the season.”

Clippers-Suns finals schedule
(Tim Hubbard / Los Angeles Times)
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