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Chris Paul vows to continue playing afters Suns collapse against Mavs

It was more heartbreak for the Phoenix Suns and veteran Chris Paul, who insists he will be back playing in the NBA next season.

Update:
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 15: Chris Paul #3 of the Phoenix Suns reacts during the second half of Game Seven of the Western Conference Second Round NBA Playoffs against the Dallas Mavericks at Footprint Center on May 15, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Mavericks defeated the Suns 123-90. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.   Christian Petersen/Getty Images/AFP
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Christian PetersenAFP

Chris Paul vowed to carry on playing after the Phoenix Suns suffered more playoff heartbreak by going down to the Dallas Mavericks in Game 7 of the Western Conference semi-finals.

A year ago, the Suns blew a 2-0 lead to lose the NBA Finals to the Milwaukee Bucks but responded by recording the best regular-season record in the league this campaign. Once again the Suns were heavily fancied and even more so after taking a 2-0 lead against the Mavs. But on Sunday it was a feeling of déjà vu as the Suns were blown out of the water in a 123-90 defeat to crash out of contention. At one stage the Mavs led by 46 points, while the Suns had just 27 in a disappointing first half – veteran Paul not registering his first field goal until the third quarter.

With Paul now 37 years of age, and reportedly playing with a quad issue, naturally there was talk of retirement, but the 12-time All Star plans to continue as he chases that elusive first NBA championship. “You play long enough and you don’t win, every time you lose, they’re going to say it was your best chance,” he told reporters. “But I think for me, us, it’s we’ll be right back next year. I’ll tell you that much. I’m not retiring tomorrow, thank God. Hopefully, I’m healthy coming back. But I’m [going to] keep playing.”

Paul’s series mirrored the Suns’ fortunes. He averaged 23.5 points and had just two turnovers in the Suns’ opening two victories but in the following five that slipped to just 9.4 points and an average 3.6.

He said now the Suns simply have to put the defeat behind them and get back to work. “It was just a tough game. All season long, we tried to lean on our defence and tonight our defence wasn’t there and our offence wasn’t there either,” he explained. “I think coach [Monty Williams] said a lot of it. You play all season to be in this situation and it didn’t work out for us. There’s probably no greater message than get back to work. At the end of the day you at least had a shot at it, one of 16 teams in the playoffs and a great regular season, but we didn’t reach our goal. I don’t think anything matters except everybody just trying to get a little bit better for next season. It’s tough. Obviously we got further last year, but we didn’t reach the goal. We’ve got a lot of young guys on our team and I think, even just this experience of this playoffs is better than not. It’s unfortunate in the fashion that we lost, but we’ve got to try to figure out ways to get better. At the end of the day, they just executed better than we did. Defensively, we just never caught up with the ball. They were making tough shots, they were getting threes, lay-ups, a little bit of everything and we never made the game competitive.”