The Arizona Republic

Booker leans on past buzzer fails as rookie

- DOUG HALLER AZCENTRAL SPORTS

Devin Booker pointed it out about 20 minutes after he sank Saturday night's winning jumper to lift the Suns over the Dallas Mavericks. He’s hit clutch shots these past two seasons, but not all of them have dropped, each one a learning lesson for the young guard.

Before Sunday’s home game against Portland, coach Earl Watson recalled a couple times last season when Booker missed with the game on the line. Then a 19-year-old rookie, Booker was so upset at the time he sent a text message to his coach and apologized.

Then came last month’s game at Chicago. With the Bulls leading 108-106 in the final seconds, Booker drew a foul from Dwyane Wade while attempting a 3pointer with 1.5 seconds left. Booker calmly sank the first two free throws, but he missed the third, sending the contest into overtime, where the Bulls prevailed 128-121.

“That free throw in Chicago really bothered him. It really bothered him,’’ Watson said. “As soon as he missed, if you looked at his face, he was cussing the whole way to the bench. I’ve been around Book a long time and you can just see in his face (when) something is wrong. We lost the game in overtime and I could tell it really pissed him off. We talked about that free throw maybe two days later.” Fast forward to Saturday night. Booker, who already had scored 23 of his 36 points in the second half, was ready for the moment. With the score tied in the final seconds, he wanted the ball. Watson said the entire arena knew where the Suns were going and it didn’t matter.

“Now that he wants every big shot speaks volumes,” Watson said.

It does, however, present a minor issue. Watson knows that Booker wants the ball in clutch moments. He also knows Eric Bledsoe wants it just as much. On Nov. 2, the Phoenix point guard dropped a 3 at the buzzer to beat Portland in overtime. More recently, he twice scored in the final seconds of the Suns’ home win over Boston, production that helped set up Tyler Ulis’ game winner.

"It shows the identity of our backcourt," Watson said. "Those guys are comfortabl­e taking big shots. It’s a great problem to have as a coach because you go into that huddle and if two guys are going, they both want that shot. And sometimes that’s the most difficult decision. There’s been times when we went to Bled because Bled has been rolling and Book is just looking at me like, 'I want it.' Bled will say something before he’ll let me draw up a play. He’ll say 'high pick-and-roll,' so I know that means he wants the shot. And then in New York the play was for Bled and he kicks it to Booker for the shot, so sometimes it just happens organicall­y."

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