Swingman Jalen Rose expects to be announced as the newest member of the Suns on Tuesday.
(Jeramie McPeek/Suns.com)
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Not surprisingly, the self-proclaimed “Rose That Grew From Concrete” wasn’t pounding the pavement for employment long.
A little over a week after being waived by the Knicks, 12-year NBA veteran free agent Jalen Rose signed with the Suns Tuesday. The 33-year-old swingman, who weathered a well-documented upbringing in the rough and tumble West Side of Detroit, will give the defending Pacific Division champs yet another go-to guy on a team chock full of them.
“They have great players already,” Rose smiled. “They have All-Stars Shawn Marion, Amaré Stoudemire and two-time MVP Steve Nash. I’m just happy to be one of the guys, fit in, be a veteran, provide some leadership and try and get this team to the top. Teams that have great success are teams with multiple players who can do multiple things. I’m one of those guys, also.”
Phoenix marks Rose’s sixth NBA team (Denver, Indiana, Chicago, Toronto, New York), and brings with him averages of 14.7 points, 3.5 boards and 3.9 assists in 31 minutes a night over 894 career games.
“You’ve seen Jalen’s stats,” Head Coach Mike D’Antoni said. “You’ve seen what he’s done with the talent he has. He can play at the three, two and one. He’s a veteran who understands what goes on, so he adds another player who can play. A playmaker with some good outside shooting – there are a lot of things he can help us with.”
Nash added, “I think it’s a great opportunity to sign a player of his caliber. He’s a talented basketball player who can shoot, pass and make plays. He gives us a lot of versatility, depth and talent offensively. He also gives Mike a lot of options. It’ll take him a little bit to figure out the rhythm and tempo we play at, but Jalen will figure it out.”
Figuring it out has been Rose’s forte ever since his three standout seasons at Michigan. Rounding out the Wolverines’ “Fab Five” of Juwan Howard, Chris Webber, Ray Jackson and Jimmy King en route to NCAA title appearances in 1992 and ’93, Rose was selected 13th overall by the Nuggets in the 1994 Draft.
The swingman went on to average double figures in scoring nine of his 12 NBA seasons, including the last eight. His 13,112 career points make him the most prolific scorer on the Suns' roster, 22nd among all active NBA players.
While Rose declined to reveal which Suns players helped convince him to make Phoenix his new home, it’s not like he didn’t know what the team had to offer. Moonlighting as a part-time broadcaster for the likes of ESPN, TNT, ABC and The Best Damn Sports Show Period has its advantages.
“Being able to cover this team in the playoffs,” Rose began, “that gave me an up-close and-personal look at not only the personality of the players on this team, but how they can get it done on the court with interchangeable parts.”
Jokingly mentioning “being traded once or twice” in his career, Rose said the key to staying positive was adjusting and rolling with the punches associated with playing in the NBA. Getting to choose his own destiny as a free agent, not to mention going to a contender, doesn’t hurt either.
“Sometimes you go home and wonder what’s in store,” he explained. “When I got traded from Indiana to Chicago and they were the worst team in the league, there was nothing I could do but drive up I-94 and be a pro about it. Getting traded from Chicago to Toronto, and then Toronto to New York, was pretty much the same thing. So, at the end of the day when you have the opportunity to be a free agent, if you have any brains you’d better pick a winner.”