<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">The Los Angeles Lakers had them. The Los Angeles Clippers have them. Heck, the San Antonio Spurs have a spectacular one. What we need to do is get some for the Suns because they're clearly operating at a disadvantage in these NBA playoffs. We don't mean players. The Suns have lots of those, and most of them are better than those who wear the uniforms of the Lakers and Clippers. (The Spurs are another story.) No, we mean celebrity fans. The Lakers come with Jack Nicholson, Denzel Washington and Dyan Cannon. The Clippers, despite their woeful past, can bring Billy Crystal, Frankie Muniz and this just in - Dr. Phil. Who knows how many more shots of Eva Longoria we'll see if the Spurs stay alive? Not enough, come to think of it. The Suns? Occasionally Muhammad Ali and other celebrities drop in with Jimmy Walker, who handles retirement planning and investments for high-profile types and chairs Celebrity Fight Night to raise money for the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center at Barrow Neurological Institute and other charitable organizations. Hey, half the fun of attending a Suns game is checking out who Walker has with him in his courtside seats across from the Phoenix bench. "My first option is my wife, but she's been to so many games she's getting burned out. I take a little razzing for that," said Walker, who once played for Ned Wulk at Arizona State. "I was the third guard," Walker deadpanned. "Then Ned got a look at me and I was the fourth guard." Musician Alice Cooper was sitting with him during Game 6 of the 1993 NBA Finals when Chicago's John Paxson put that dagger in the Suns' hearts with a decisive three-point shot. "Alice always says he could have tripped him," Walker said. "It was right in front of us. In hindsight, he definitely should have." Crystal sat with Walker earlier in the Clippers series, and will be here again if there is a Game 7, and possibly even tonight for Game 5. Matt Leinart sat with him during the Lakers series - and cheered for Kobe Bryant! "I'd like to have some guys sitting there cheering for the Suns," Walker said. "The one guy I won't have sit with me - at least not for a Lakers game - is Nicholson. That would be stretching the envelope." What the Suns need is their own Nicholson or Crystal, a celebrity identified as a Phoenix fan. Hey, we'd settle for a Muniz at this point. During the first couple of years Charles Barkley played for the Suns, actor David Keith - he's the guy whose character committed suicide in An Officer and a Gentleman and who played the cowboy in The Indian in the Cupboard - used to hang around, although nobody really seemed to know why. Then there was a stretch when David Spade was often seen courtside. Spade is a Scottsdale Saguaro graduate who briefly attended Arizona State, so that made sense. Grammy-winner Bruce Hornsby is a big Steve Nash fan and even dropped in for a Phoenix practice last season. Jenna Jameson evidently lives around here, but so far we haven't spotted her at any games. We tried contacting Spade to find out where the heck he's been, because he has a movie out called The Benchwarmers that isn't doing too well and we thought it might help him out. But, his publicists said it would be at least "a couple of weeks" before they could process the request.</div> Source
Maybe you can get Steve Nash's wife (LOL i forgot who she is but i think she is famous) and maybe she will drag more Hollywood people.