USA TODAY US Edition

Booker, Ayton vow ‘just beginning’

- Mark Medina

MILWAUKEE – The locker room stayed mostly silent. Just moments after the Suns lost to the Bucks in the NBA Finals, most of the team members fought back tears while processing their grief internally.

Center Deandre Ayton finally broke the silent tension. He approached Devin Booker and shared his thoughts out loud.

“‘This is just the beginning,’ ” Ayton told Booker. “‘Now we know what we need to do. We’re going to keep each other accountabl­e for the rest of our careers together.’ ”

That exchange highlights an interestin­g crossroads for both the Suns and their young duo.

On the one hand, the Suns became encouraged with how they performed in their first NBA Finals since 1993 and their first postseason appearance since 2010. On the other hand, the Suns expressed disappoint­ment that they coughed up a 2-0 series lead to Milwaukee and vowed to use this painful losing experience to better themselves.

“We have a foundation, we have a base for us to learn from, an experience for us to learn from,” Booker said. “But there’s no moral winners in our locker room.”

Booker hardly sounded as giddy as Ayton did. Moments after he fought back tears about the Suns’ journey, coach Monty Williams stepped off the podium and hugged Booker. He then sat on the podium and outlined what he expects moving forward.

“Championsh­ip basketball, and nothing less than that,” Booker said. “So, going into next season, on a Tuesday night playing against Cleveland, if we don’t have it we will be quickly reminded about the details, and if you don’t want to give it your all right now, what can happen, and this feeling right now that we’re feeling can happen. So, this isn’t something you want to feel. I haven’t felt a hurt like this in my life.”

As for Ayton? Once his postgame interview ended, Ayton walked off the podium and flashed a smile. Before exiting the interview room, Ayton admitted, “Even though we lost, it was still fun.”

Booker and Ayton conveyed similar messages about what went into their growth and what it will take to build off of that.

After the Suns selected him at No. 13 in the 2015 draft, Booker showed he represents more than just being a dominant scorer on a losing team. He co-existed with Chris Paul by sharing ballhandli­ng duties and playing off the ball. He embodied old-school habits with his training regimen, film study and playing through pain. He mirrored Kobe Bryant’s footwork, post-up moves and high-volume shooting.

Occasional­ly, that led to the Suns becoming too dependent on him, particular­ly in their Game 5 loss. But Booker mostly embodied that scoring mentality, while involving others. No wonder Booker landed a second All-Star appearance following Zion Williamson’s injury and also landed a spot on the U.S. Olympic team for the Tokyo Games.

“I’m far from a spot-up shooter when I came into the league, and the reputation that I had,” Booker said. “But I just want to play winning basketball at all times. I don’t really care what people think of me or what they say about my game, they haven’t walked in these shoes and experience­d what we just went through.”

After the Suns selected Ayton at No. 1 in the 2018 draft, he impressed the Suns with his paint presence, his rebounding and his defense. Most important, the Suns appreciate­d that Ayton accepted a diminished offensive role behind Paul and Booker without complaint. They also observed that Ayton listened to the honest feedback that Paul and Booker often gave him. But during the playoffs, Ayton also appeared inconsiste­nt with his aggressive­ness on shots and on the glass. In Games 3 and 6, Ayton also struggled defending Bucks forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo without fouling.

“This series I got caught up in some foul trouble,” Ayton said. “But throughout the whole playoffs and Finals, I think I stepped up on my defense. Whatever the teams are throwing at us with their offense, I can adjust.”

Nonetheles­s, the different body language and tone conveyed varying messages.

Ayton spoke as if the Suns are playing with house money with their future.

“We feel it. It leaves a little bad taste in your mouth, but at the end of the day this is just the beginning, man,” Ayton said. “This is my third year and I’m already feeling it, you know?”

Booker spoke as if he realizes that a championsh­ip window remains fleeting in the NBA.

“We set a foundation and a base for our team, and we all have stuff to work on and we understand that,” Booker said. “So, we’re going to take this hurt and bring it into the summer and continue to get better.”

Because of the Suns’ promising future, Ayton and forward Mikal Bridges are expected to agree to rookie contract extensions. Cameron Payne also is expected to re-sign. And even though he declined to comment either way, Paul will likely exercise his $44 million player option to stay.

Nonetheles­s, how much better Booker and Ayton build off their growth will play a large part in the Suns’ championsh­ip chances next season. It will also determine how successful the Suns are with Paul gradually reducing his role in favor of Booker and Ayton.

Can Booker ease the burden off Paul more in case health issues arise? Can Ayton remain both patient with his limited offensive role and opportunis­tic with building his niche? Can Booker and Ayton remain just as amenable toward Paul’s demanding expectatio­ns? After all, Paul hardly was in the mood to run a victory lap after experienci­ng another postseason heartbreak.

“We grew all season long, especially starting out the way we did,” Paul said. “Nobody probably expected us to be where we are except for us. But it is what it is. Like I said all season long with our team, ain’t no moral victories.” So what’s ahead for the Suns? The 22-year-old Ayton must live up to his vow about wanting to grow and embrace being held accountabl­e.

The 24-year-old Booker must carry the mantle with maintainin­g his dominant scoring, helping the team’s ball movement and embodying his oldschool mentality.

 ?? MARK J. REBILAS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Suns young duo of Deandre Ayton and Devin Booker vowed to learn from the experience of falling short in their first NBA Finals.
MARK J. REBILAS/USA TODAY SPORTS The Suns young duo of Deandre Ayton and Devin Booker vowed to learn from the experience of falling short in their first NBA Finals.

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