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"Steve Nash came to me and was very disappointed" - Kevin Garnett on why he turned down going to the Phoenix Suns before being traded to the Boston Celtics

"Steve Nash came to me and was very disappointed" - Kevin Garnett on why he turned down going to the Phoenix Suns before being traded to the Boston Celtics

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"Steve Nash came to me and was very disappointed" - Kevin Garnett on why he turned down going to the Phoenix Suns before being traded to the Boston Celtics originally appeared on Basketball Network.
In the summer of 2007, Kevin Garnett stood at a crossroads.
One eye was still on his loyalty to the Minnesota Timberwolves, the other staring into the future, which seemed more uncertain than ever.
It's easy to draw a straight line from his eventual championship with the Boston Celtics to that period of reflection and quiet strategy, but in real time, the choices were neither clear nor easy.
There were no guarantees; it was just franchises trying to sell a dream and one of the game's fiercest competitors trying to protect what remained of his prime. After twelve seasons with the Timberwolves, seasons filled with MVP-caliber performances, grueling playoff exits and a franchise that could never seem to find the second star, Garnett finally reached the conclusion that the window in Minnesota was sealed shut.
Phoenix's pitch
Teams began to circle, offering promises, rosters and visions of championship gold; three franchises stood out in his mind, the Celtics, the Los Angeles Lakers and the Phoenix Suns.
For a moment, the Suns looked promising as they had the flash, but not the foundation. Garnett recalled that even before conversations got deep, there were cracks in the pitch as they were financially hesitant.
"Steve Nash came to me and was very disappointed," Garnett said. "He also apologized on behalf of Phoenix and ownership and he was very, very, very deliberate about how much he wanted to play with me."
The intent from Nash was real. But the call revealed the truth that Phoenix didn't want to admit out loud. The Suns of that era were basketball's version of a high-speed symphony.
With Nash orchestrating one of the most explosive offenses the league had ever seen, Phoenix had become the darling of the mid-2000s, a team that ran, gunned and dazzled.
On paper, pairing Garnett's defensive dominance and veteran grit with Nash's precision playmaking seemed like a dream. But beneath the surface, the structure wasn't as stable as it appeared. Garnett, in the final stretch of his peak, wasn't just looking for a new team; he was looking for assurance.
The Suns, under then-owner Robert Sarver, couldn't provide that. Nash had to deliver the news himself; not only would the former MVP have to take a pay cut to make things work in Phoenix, but the core pieces he wanted around him, players that would allow him to contend immediately, wouldn't be retained.
It was a no-win scenario.
That left Garnett with a decision that required more than just basketball logic. It was legacy arithmetic. There was no need to go to Phoenix if he got there and the roster had been gutted and there was no point in changing jerseys if the result was another season carrying too much on his shoulders.Joining Boston
With Phoenix fading from the picture, the focus shifted. The Lakers had Kobe Bryant, still in his prime, and they too were in pursuit. It would've been the fusion of two generational forces, Bryant and Garnett, both burning with the same relentless hunger for validation through rings. But complications on that front stalled and talks didn't advance the way many expected.
Boston, on the other hand, came armed with a plan. Danny Ainge, then the team's president of basketball operation had already begun reshaping the Celtics, orchestrating a move for Ray Allen and setting the table for a new era.
What separated the franchise was opportunity and preparation. They weren't offering Garnett a chance to figure it out once he arrived. They were presenting a complete package. Paul Pierce was already in place. Allen had joined. And they were willing to give up nearly everything else to make sure Garnett completed the trifecta.
The Timberwolves had to accept that Garnett, with free agency looming, had control. He'd done too much for Minnesota to be discarded like a disposable asset. He'd earned the right to guide his exit, and he knew it. The Wolves could either send him where he wanted or watch him walk for nothing. That leverage wasn't used recklessly; it was wielded with precision.
Boston, knowing what was at stake, offered a rare clarity. They were all in. There would be no half-measures. Garnett didn't have to wonder about ownership commitment, front-office vision, or roster depth. The pieces were there. The strategy was real. And most importantly, he believed in the fabric of the team being built.
They ended up winning the championship in Garnett's first season, his only title.This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 20, 2025, where it first appeared.
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