Suns’ Nash benefits from Johnson’s return

Spurs at home tonight with 2-0 advantage in Western Conference finals

? The Phoenix Suns have plenty of reasons to be excited about having Joe Johnson back for Game 3 of the Western Conference finals tonight.

The biggest involves easing the huge burden the team has placed on Steve Nash – at both ends of the court.

On defense, Nash will no longer have to chase San Antonio point guard Tony Parker. He’ll be Johnson’s problem. Instead, Nash will get to cover the Spurs’ last scoring option, Bruce Bowen.

When the Suns have the ball, Nash no longer will be the second scoring option after center Amare Stoudemire. That’ll be Johnson’s job, too, as will running the offense so Nash can have some rare time off to catch his breath.

“I’ve had a lot of minutes in a lot of games and a ton of responsibility lately,” Nash said Friday. “I think it will keep me a little bit fresher, but I don’t know if that will have an impact on the game.”

It can’t hurt. As much as Nash has cleared any doubts about his MVP status with the way he’s played in Johnson’s absence, Phoenix still trails this series 0-2 with the next two games on the road. No team ever has come back to win the conference finals or Finals when facing those circumstances.

If the Suns lose Game 3, the odds really would be against them. No NBA team has rallied from a three-game deficit to win a series, in any round.

So, uh, welcome back, Joe.

“I don’t feel any pressure,” Johnson said. “I’m just going to go out and play. Whatever the results may be, that’s that.”

Johnson has been out since a face-first fall from the rim May 11 against Dallas. The Suns went on to lose that game and are 3-3 without their third-leading scorer.

San Antonio's Tim Duncan takes part in a team workout. Duncan practiced Friday in San Antonio in preparation for tonight's game against Phoenix.

His return was expected after he practiced Thursday. He received final approval from doctors Friday morning; he also had stitches removed from inside his mouth.

Coach Mike D’Antoni said Johnson would start and play as long as he was effective. The only limitation is a protective mask Johnson must wear.

“Hopefully, it’ll affect him more than he thinks it will,” said San Antonio’s Robert Horry, who knows from experience how uncomfortable it can be.

The layoff itself has been the toughest part for Johnson, who had played every game since joining the Suns three years ago. He’s so eager to get back that he’s not worried about further damage, which in turn could damage the payday he’s expecting when he becomes a free agent this summer.

“I’m not worried about my face,” he said. “I’m just going to come out and play like I always have. Nothing’s going to change because I’ve got a mask on.”

The change for Nash is that he can focus less on scoring and more on passing.

Although Jim Jackson did a nice job filling in as a starter, it was Nash who picked up the slack, averaging 34.3 points the last six games. To do it, Nash took at least 21 shots in every game, starting with the one when Johnson was hurt, after never having taken more than 20 all season.

Nash also played at least 42 minutes every game. While the Suns insist adrenaline and longer TV timeouts compensate for rest, something has caused Phoenix to wilt in the fourth quarter of Games 1 and 2. The Spurs scored 43 and 31 points in those periods, turning deficits into victories both times.

Nash’s minutes this series have been more grueling because of his defensive duties against Parker.

“It’s not fun,” D’Antoni said. “People talk about us having a pick-and-roll offense. They run a lot of them and Steve gets knocked off pretty much.”

Both teams should be refreshed from having three days off. And San Antonio certainly has an advantage being at home – the Spurs were a league-best 38-3 in the regular season and are 5-1 in the playoffs.