Jusuf Nurkic Vows To “Be A Pro” No Matter What Happens

Over the past two weeks, Jusuf Nurkic has been suspended, lost his starting role and heard his name mentioned in trade talks, but the veteran center is taking it all in stride, according to Duane Rankin of The Arizona Republic. Nurkic discussed the chaotic experience as he returned to the Suns‘ lineup Monday in Philadelphia, coming off the bench for the first time since the 2016/17 season.

Counting a draft-night deal in 2014, Nurkic has already been traded three times in his career so he realizes that it comes with the business. He and his representatives recently talked with owner Mat Ishbia, general manager James Jones and CEO Josh Bartelstein about his future in Phoenix.

“They were completely transparent that they’re not looking to shop us or whatever, but also, we’re not kids,” Nurkic said. “We understand that this is part of the job. There’s nothing you can do, at least in my situation.”

Nurkic has one more year left on his contract beyond this season at $19.375MM, and his decreased role with the Suns may limit the number of teams interested in taking a chance on him. He’s averaging 8.6 PPG, his lowest scoring mark in eight years, and his lack of mobility makes it hard to keep him on the court against smaller lineups.

“I don’t control those things, but understand this happens almost every day, every year, especially this time of the season,” Nurkic said. “You can see any name, not just myself. Might not necessarily be a bad thing or a good thing. I believe they will handle it properly and be honest about it, but even if it happens the way we don’t want it to happen, fine, it’s business. Ain’t no hard feelings.”

Coach Mike Budenholzer decided this week to move Nurkic and Bradley Beal to the bench to shake up the rotation amid a four-game losing streak. It worked on Monday, but the Suns followed that with a double-digit loss Tuesday night at Charlotte, keeping them in 12th place in the West at 16-19.

The last time Nurkic lost a starting spot was to Nikola Jokic in Denver in 2017. He was upset about the change then, but said he’s matured enough to accept it now.

“At the end of the day, I’ve been long enough in this league and certainly, no one cares,” Nurkic said. “At this point, the only choice I have is to be a pro and that’s what I’m going to do. I don’t want to make problems for my teammates or for the organization. I’ll be a pro as much as possible and do what people ask of me. Control what I can control and that’s the only way I can be.”

Nurkic stated that he doesn’t regret his actions in the December 27 fight against Dallas, even though it resulted in a three-game suspension that cost him $375K in salary, Rankin adds. The suspension was longer than it might have been because Nurkic and Naji Marshall tried to resume their hostilities outside the locker rooms after they had been ejected.

“It just happened randomly,” Nurkic said. “The way I was being escorted to our locker room, it’s kind of messed up because we’ve got to walk by (the visiting locker room) and he was coming from the other side. We kind of met in a hallway outside of their locker room. Certain things he was saying didn’t make no sense, but it was not something like he tried to come after me.”

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