Nash suffered a gash to his nose, which required six stitches after colliding with Spurs guard Tony Parker in the fourth quarter on Sunday, a 111-106 Suns loss. Nash missed nearly the entire final minute of that game, but came back in MVP form on Tuesday as Phoenix pulled away in the final quarter.
"I thought our energy was much better," Nash said. "I thought we did a better job with the game plan. We did a good job defending, in general."
Amare Stoudemire had 21 of his 27 points in the second half and totaled nine rebounds for the Suns, who used a different starting lineup than the opener, choosing to use Kurt Thomas at forward instead of James Jones. Thomas had 12 points on 6-of-7 shooting, but more importantly his defense on Tim Duncan helped Stoudemire use more of his energy on offense.
"When you can throw a guy like Kurt down there, it makes it a little more difficult on him (Duncan) so you don’t have to double team every time," Nash said. "It’s amazing to be able to have that sort of weapon where a guy can hold his own down there a little bit."
Duncan scored 29 points and pulled down 11 rebounds for the Spurs, who had a horrendous shooting night from everyone other than their star forward. Duncan went 12-of-20 from the field, but the rest of the team was 21-of-57. Parker, who had 32 points in Game 1, was limited to 13 on 5-of-14 shooting in the second game. Manu Ginobili was held in check for a second straight contest, scoring six.
"I thought they maintained an aggressiveness, a physicality, a pursuit of the basketball for 48 minutes," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said of the Suns. "We gave into that. We didn’t maintain it and the result is as you see it."
Game 3 of the best-of-seven series is Saturday in San Antonio.
Bruce Bowen’s jumper had the Spurs within 73-66 in the opening minute of the fourth, but the Suns responded with an 11-2 run. Nash hit a three and Thomas’ layup capped the burst for an 84-68 lead with 8:07 left. Another Thomas layup moved the advantage to 90-71 with 4:42 remaining.
Raja Bell scored 18 points and Leandro Barbosa 13 for the Suns, who ended at 52.6 percent shooting.
Shawn Marion had five points and 10 rebounds for Phoenix, but he, along with Thomas, picked up praise for strong defense.
"It allowed us to play really good defense," said Suns coach Mike D’Antoni, who celebrated his 56th birthday on Tuesday. "Shawn and Kurt together just took their guys that hurt us."
Bowen had 13 points and Michael Finley 11 for the Spurs.
Early on, Bell’s three-pointer boosted the Suns to a 7-1 lead, but San Antonio rallied for a 15-13 lead following a three from Finley. The Spurs expanded that advantage to 25-19 going into the second.
However, the second quarter belonged to the Suns with a 30-17 scoring edge. Ginobili’s jumper moved his team ahead 33-32 with 5:03 left in the half, but Phoenix embarked on a 9-2 spurt, culminated by a Marion three. Bell’s three- point play moved the margin to 49-39 before Bowen hit a three in the waning seconds of the half.
An emphatic slam by Stoudemire, off a feed from Nash, expanded the cushion to 56-44 with under eight minutes left in the third, but the Spurs rallied and got within five, but were still down, 71-64, going into the fourth.
"We feel pretty confident of where we were at certain points," Duncan said. "We just weren’t able to turn that corner."
Duncan scored the first 15 San Antonio points of the third quarter, but he picked up his fourth foul with 2:56 left in the period.
Game Notes
It was the largest margin of victory for the Suns over the Spurs in a playoff game...The Suns snapped a four-game home postseason losing streak to the Spurs...Phoenix snapped San Antonio’s five-game losing streak...The Spurs had 20 turnovers, leading to 24 Phoenix points.