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Player Preview: Rasheer Fleming has a chance to be impactful early

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Rasheer Fleming​


Power Forward, 6’9”, 240 pounds, 21 years old, rookie out of St Joseph’s University

Going into the second day of the 2025 NBA draft, it did not look like the Phoenix Suns were going to be in a position to select Rasheer Fleming. It was somewhat of a surprise the forward dropped to the second round, and the Suns were slated to draft in the backend of the second.

However, as the day went on, the Shams notifications kept coming in, the Suns found themselves with the first pick in the second round and selected Fleming, something that he said he appreciated on draft night.

“It’s a great feeling for me, because it’s kind of that same feeling I had with St Joe’s coming in, coming into college. It’s a team that really sought out for me and think I could contribute just to the team and organization overall, just as a person, as a player, kind of everything. So I really appreciate them taking that chance on me, and I can just go out there and do,” Fleming told Bright Side on draft night when asked what it meant to him that the Phoenix traded a lot of their minimal draft assets to draft him.

With Kevin Durant now on the Houston Rockets and the Suns taking a more developmental approach than previous seasons, the 21-year-old has the chance to play meaningful minutes for the Valley this season.


College Career Recap


Fleming played three seasons for Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia. In his freshman year, he was a part-time starter and an inconsistent three-point shooter, averaging just 5.8 points per game. By his junior year, his final season of college, he was a full-time starter shooting 39% from three, averaging 14.7 points and 8.5 rebounds per contest.

With a 7’5” wingspan, he was very productive in transition, and his lateral quickness gives him the ability to guard multiple positions. Averaging nearly 3 stocks (steals and blocks) per game, his agility and hands helped St. Joe’s achieve their best record in nine seasons.


Contract Details​


After being drafted 31st overall, Fleming signed a four-year, $8.7 million deal with nearly $6 million guaranteed, according to Spotrac. For the 2025-2026 season, his base salary will be about $1.3 million. The Suns have a club option for Fleming for his fourth season that doesn’t become fully guaranteed until 2028. He’s set to become an unrestricted free agent in 2029.


Strengths & Weaknesses​


His 7’5” wingspan makes him able to guard multiple positions and protect the rim at an above-average level for a forward. With his length, he’s also able to be disruptive in the passing lanes.

While he averaged a block and a half his junior year at St. Joe’s, his 27-inch standing vertical ranked just 52nd out of 72 participants at the NBA Combine. Fleming is also a strong rebounder. He averaged 8 boards a game his last two seasons of college.

What makes Fleming an enticing rookie, and how he could crack the rotation, is his shooting. He shot just 31.3% his first two seasons of college, but last season he shot 39%, averaging nearly 2 more threes per game more than he averaged his first two seasons. If he’s able to continue his shooting development over to the NBA and be a steady shooter, he has an opportunity to not just be an impactful player in the second unit, but also alongside the starters.


One Key Factor​


If Royce O’Neale is traded, something that has to be considered a real possibility considering the years left on his deal, his age and the direction the Suns appeared to be heading in, Fleming could naturally see more playing time, especially at the power forward spot.

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Not only do they play a similar position, they both project to play similar roles on the court for the Suns this year. Both play both forward spots and are known for their ability to defend and space the floor. O’Neale is obviously the better player at this point, but Fleming is younger and more athletic.

Likely playing with the second unit for the majority of his minutes, playing alongside a floor spacer like Grayson Allen could help him have more room to operate, but the team lacking a true, reliable point guard, could cause him to struggle to get open looks, especially as he gets acclimated with speed of the NBA game.


Prediction Time​


Just like his college career, I see Fleming improving as time goes on. His size and ability to space the floor, tied into the youth movement the Suns appear to be taking apart in, I see him carving a solid role for himself on the team, especially if Royce O’Neale is traded. There will definitely be some bumps, but his skill set should carry him to some solid stretches.

Stat Prediction: 70 games played, 8.9 PPG, 4.9 RPG, 1.3 APG, 0.9 BPG, 0.7 SPG on 42/33/74 shooting splits


Final Thoughts​


The Suns invested a ton of their limited draft capital to get Fleming: expect them to invest a lot of time in developing him as a result. With Ryan Dunn the only other young forward on the team, he has a real chance to solidify himself as a member of the team’s core for not only the future, but also for this season.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-scouting-report-contract-rotation-prediction
 
Game Recap: Phoenix Mercury lose Game 1, 76-69

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The Phoenix Mercury opened their first-round, best-of-three playoff series against the New York Liberty, and for a moment, it felt like they were about to seize Game 1. A blistering 30-point second quarter had Phoenix in control, and when the fourth quarter began, they held a 57–55 lead.

Then the game tightened. And so did the Mercury.

Both teams struggled down the stretch, trading stops and missed opportunities. The Liberty scratched together 10 points in the fourth. Phoenix managed only 8, going 3-of-16 from the field, leaving the door cracked open for someone to take it.

That someone could have been Alyssa Thomas. With the ball in her hands on the final possession of regulation, she drove the paint, spun free, and found herself staring at the rim for what should’ve been a game-winning layup. It rolled off. The moment — and the game — slipped away.

Alyssa Thomas misses a layup with two seconds left and the Liberty will have one final chance with 0.9 seconds left. #WNBA pic.twitter.com/nqwbgz0WKv

— Desert Wave Media (@DesertWaveCo) September 14, 2025

Overtime belonged to New York. The Liberty outscored Phoenix 11–4 in the extra frame, sealing a 76–69 win and sending the Mercury back to the locker room with a long list of what-ifs. Thomas finished with 14 points, 9 rebounds, and 8 assists, but not the result she wanted.

“It’s just an unfortunate roll. I’ve made that shot thousands of times, but for me, it’s no big deal,” Thomas said after the game. “There’s still a lot of basketball to play.”

It was an ice-cold night for Phoenix, shooting 32.5% overall and 23.1% from three. Kahleah Copper went 5-of-13, while Satou Sabally endured a brutal 2-of-17 performance and finished with a team-worst -18.

New York was led by former Mercury guard Natasha Cloud, who poured in 23 points against her old team. Breanna Stewart added 18, and Sabrina Ionescu chipped in 16 to give the Liberty the edge.

Now the series shifts to the Big Apple, where Game 2 at Madison Square Garden looms large. Win and the Mercury bring the fight back to Phoenix. Lose and the season ends on Broadway.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...wnba-playoffs-2025-game-1-loss-overtime-recap
 
Player Preview: Isaiah Livers, closer to an NBA court than ever before

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Isaiah Livers​


Forward, 6’7”, 230 pounds, 27 years old, 3 years of NBA experience

Isaiah Livers is closer to an NBA court than ever before. Not because he’s simply signed another deal, but because for the first time in years, his body has allowed him to chase the game without compromise.

The Suns’ two-way wing isn’t a headline-grabber; his résumé won’t echo like All-Star intros. But in the margins of resilience, rehab, and hard-won health, he’s built something fans can feel: the possibility of a player who’s ready not just to return, but to contribute.

And he’s ready to go. Now.

Phoenix Suns two-way signee Isaiah Livers said he'll be ready for training camp after having right hip surgery October 2024 and missing the entire 2024-25 season.

"I'm ready to go now. If they want to play 5-on-5 now in two hours, I'll be there. I feel really good." #Suns pic.twitter.com/A2nZ60brAl

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) July 13, 2025

2024–25 Recap​


There is no “recap” in the usual sense. Last season is a file folder labeled ‘absence’. In October 2024, Livers underwent right-hip resurfacing — major work, not a maintenance tune-up — and didn’t play a minute all year. His last NBA game was Jan. 12, 2024, after a stop in Washington, where he never suited up.

The telling moment came from him, not about him: “I am a big believer in dealing with the cards that are dealt in your hand, while taking control of this situation and making a change,” he wrote on Oct. 23, 2024.


Contract Details​


Fast forward to a couple of months ago…On July 8, 2025, the Suns signed Livers to a two-way deal. For Phoenix, it’s pragmatic and hopeful at once: a wing with size and a repeatable stroke, no cap pyrotechnics required. For Livers, it’s a doorway. From the Valley Suns minutes to NBA minutes, practice court to rotation, anonymity to habit-forming trust.

First-year head coach Jordan Ott spelled out the thesis:

“Isaiah brings a shooting piece, size piece we’re looking for on this roster… he’s fully healthy.”


Strengths and Weaknesses​


Strengths: The shot is real. Not loud, but real. Spot-ups, pick-and-pop, the weak-side “lift” three when the ball finds him late. He doesn’t need touches to be valuable; he needs gravity. He’s 6-‘7” with the frame to guard across lineups, the temperament to fit next to scorers, and enough connective passing to keep the possession alive.

Weaknesses: Availability has been the story he’s trying to stop telling. And he’s not a primary creator. He won’t bend defenses off the dribble. However, when a return to health and a return to competitive basketball has been the summit, Isaiah Livers has been climbing without fear.

Ultimately, the only abiding weakness may be something out of his control; will he be given enough runway to show how far he can fly?


One Key Factor​


When you strip the game to its essentials, though, Livers’ recent injury history isn’t a deciding factor for Phoenix. The opportunity and the promise far outweigh any preconceived limitations—personal, court-specific, or otherwise.

Livers’ best version amplifies others: a wing who spaces, competes, and doesn’t blink. Rhythm. After a year away, the first victory isn’t a box score; it’s breath. Can he build NBA timing in 3-minute stints, then 8, then 14, without chasing it?

Two-ways can live on the margins, but rhythm is what moves you from “break-glass depth” to “coach can trust him on a Tuesday in Memphis.”

Livers’ shooting gives him a lane. His game-to-game rhythm will decide if he passes traffic in the slow lane.


Prediction Time​


The two-way contract ensures that Phoenix will start him with the Valley Suns to harden the legs and re-train the reads. Let’s call it prepping for match-fitness.

The call-ups follow if the shot is there and the positioning holds. In NBA minutes, think clean, low-usage production: corner threes, second-side drives, a rebound that ends a possession at the right time. Something like 12–15 minutes a night once he’s in, low turnovers, a threes-made ledger that keeps growing. Not splashy. Sustainable.

POTENTIAL 2025/26 SEASON STAT LINE CEILING:

33 NBA games played (and remaining healthy all season!), 16.8 Minutes Per Game (perhaps getting “decent minute” call-ups during injury windows or trade scenarios involving other wing players), 5.4 PPG (on good efficiency), 3.1 RPG, 1.1 APG



Final Thoughts​


Every roster needs a few stories that don’t hog the spotlight but hold the season together. I, for one, will be rooting for an Isaiah Livers appearance all season long.

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Livers has the tools — size, touch, temperament — and he now has the health to test them honestly. Suns fans will recognize the type: the pro who does the next correct thing over and over until trust sneaks up on everybody.

If you’re looking for a single stat to track, try this one: appearances. Not points. Not percentages. The steady drumbeat of availability. If that number climbs, the rest of his game will say the quiet part out loud. And somewhere between the practice court and a fourth-quarter corner three, you’ll remember why Phoenix brought him here: not to save anything, to belong to it.

That’s what this season represents for Livers: proximity becoming reality. The court he’s inched toward for two years is finally within reach. If he can stay healthy, hit shots, and give Phoenix rotation minutes that ripple beyond the box score, he’ll prove that “closer” isn’t the right word anymore. He’ll simply be there, on an NBA floor, in a Suns uniform, where resilience itself counts as the defining stat.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...season-preview-injury-update-two-way-contract
 
Player Preview: Royce O’Neale could be the odd man out in the Suns rotation this season

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Royce O’Neale


Small Forward, 6′6″, 226 lbs, 2 years old, 8 years of NBA experience

So far, the Phoenix Suns are keeping Royce O’Neale on their roster heading into the 2025–26 season. There may have been a few trade feelers floated in hopes of landing draft picks in exchange for him, but for now, he remains a Sun. The question is whether he truly aligns with the direction and the fight that this team is expected to display next season.

For me, it feels like Royce is the odd man out in a rotation that’s shaping up to be sharper and more aggressive. While he brings value as a floor spacer and a versatile defender, his more relaxed style doesn’t quite match the intensity this Suns team will need to contend in the Western Conference. Whether he adapts and finds his place, or eventually becomes trade bait, will be one of the quieter but telling storylines to follow.


2024-25 Recap​


From catch-and-shoot threes to grabbing rebounds that sparked fast breaks, Royce gave the Suns a legitimate threat as a versatile wing. He played bigger than his size in key moments, keeping the Suns alive with timely production off the bench.

He was a solid piece to add alongside Kevin Durant and Devin Booker, but the Suns never managed to get out of the mud, sinking quickly toward the bottom of the Western Conference standings as the season wore on. Shooting over 40% from three, Royce was deadly at times from beyond the arc, but as the season spiraled, his role became more one-dimensional, often reduced to simply standing on the perimeter and launching threes.

179 of them going in.

Royce had his moments but struggled to maintain consistency throughout the year, though he did deliver a few huge games for the Suns when they needed it most.

Playing anywhere from the two through the four, he was shifted between starting and coming off the bench so sporadically that it’s no wonder he could never really find a rhythm. That constant role change made it difficult for him to build momentum, leaving his impact more scattered than steady.


Contract Details​


On July 6, 2024, Royce O’Neale secured a 4-year, $44 million fully guaranteed deal with the Phoenix Suns, a contract that includes no player or team options. The agreement came shortly after Phoenix traded three second-round picks to acquire him from the Brooklyn Nets earlier in the year. O’Neale’s prior contract was a 4-year, $36 million pact signed in 2020.


Strengths & Weaknesses​


A knockdown shooter from the perimeter and a power forward in a small forward’s body, Royce is a valuable asset as a plug-and-play option off the bench. He can knock down threes off the catch-and-shoot while also holding his own defensively against opponents several inches taller.

Increasing his three-point percentage to over 40% last season, Royce delivered exactly what was asked of him in catch-and-shoot situations. He also stepped up when needed to secure key rebounds. A high-IQ player, he brings energy and toughness, though his impact is somewhat limited when it comes to ball-handling and playmaking.

What makes Royce even more valuable is his adaptability in different lineups. Coaches can trust him to fit seamlessly alongside star players without disrupting offensive flow. His ability to stretch the floor and defend multiple positions gives him staying power in tight playoff rotations, where versatility and efficiency often separate role players from true difference-makers.


One Key Factor​


The big question is whether O’Neale truly fits into the Suns’ current plans. Are the Suns content with being a scrappy, middle-of-the-pack team, or are they still operating under a championship-or-bust mentality? Royce is the type of player who thrives in a winning environment — a perfect fit for a team with established stars that needs reliable role players to glue things together. That was exactly the logic two seasons ago when the Suns went out and acquired him.

If the organization is serious about chasing a title, O’Neale’s shooting, defense, and toughness make him an ideal complementary piece. But if the Suns are simply looking to compete and hang around the play-in picture, his skill set may be more valuable to a contender than to a team in transition.


Prediction Time​



I don’t see Royce finishing the season with the Suns. It really comes down to how competitive this team can be in securing a top-four seed out West, a goal that feels close to impossible right now. O’Neale will be a better fit on another roster, and the Suns are likely to look for draft capital in return.

According to trade machine scenarios, the Suns could potentially land a first-round pick from the Dallas Mavericks. That would be an intriguing move, as Dallas could use O’Neale’s shooting and defensive versatility to fortify their playoff push. For the Suns, recouping a first-rounder would provide a much-needed asset to balance the books and plan for the future. A midseason move like this seems realistic — and possibly inevitable — if Phoenix fails to establish itself among the West’s elite early on.

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Stat Prediction: 32 games played with Suns before trade, 7.6 PPG, 4.2 RPG, 42.3% from three


Final Thoughts​


If Royce sees a future in Phoenix during the opening weeks of the season and the team’s chemistry feels right, he has the tools to be a high-level contributor off the bench.

That said, being realistic, the situation may not align with his long-term goals. If the Suns struggle to establish themselves and the vibes shift, it’s reasonable to think O’Neale will eventually ask out when the time is right. In that case, Phoenix would likely pivot toward moving him for draft compensation or depth at another position, rather than risk losing him for nothing.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/suns-analysis/89101/player-preview-royce-oneales-place-in-phoenix
 
Inside the Suns: Leadership, the Dan Majerle Hustle Award, our questions

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Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team.

Each week the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — give their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week​

Q1 – In a recent interview, former Sun Vasilije Micic stated, “He (Booker) respects KD so much that his leadership took a backseat.” What are your thoughts about this statement?


Ashton: It just sounds like an excuse statement. I am not sure what Micic is hinting at, as he only saw the floor for five minutes as a Phoenix Sun. Was he in the locker room? Sure.

I was treated to Book and KD attending Diamondback games on TV and never really questioned their relationship. Let’s not forget the 2024 Olympics.

I question this statement. Because they both seemed fine to me in the public eye. And if there was something going on outside of the public eye, then the local and national pundits failed to report it. It is their job.

Eventually, someone may write a book on what happened in 24-25, or even 23-24, but this is the hottest take I have responded to.

I do not trust the source.

Rod: It doesn’t surprise me as it seemed pretty obvious that he did the same thing when the Suns acquired Chris Paul. That, however, worked out well as CP3 is a natural leader who thrived in that role and made the whole team better. KD…well, we all saw the results of Book deferring leadership to him.

I’m not sure that Book really knows how to be a team leader, not everyone does, but this year he won’t have someone more accomplished on the roster that he can defer leadership to. I read not long ago that Dillon Brooks was a strong leader in Houston, and I wouldn’t mind him taking on that role with the Suns, too. It would probably be best if Book could successfully take on that leadership role, but pushing him into a team role he’s not suited for might be as big (or even bigger) a mistake as playing him out of position at PG or SF.

Voita: I’ve been waiting to dive into this topic for a while. I’ve seen the comments from Vasilije Micic, I’ve kept quiet, but thanks to Rod for raising the question, it’s time to weigh in. Let me start with the disclaimer: this is speculation. Micic came to the Suns late in the season, and what he experienced was second-hand, not the full two-plus years of Devin Booker and Kevin Durant sharing the floor. Still, if there’s truth to his statement, it perfectly captures the problem with Durant’s time in Phoenix.

I’ve always advocated for Durant because of his sheer basketball ability. That’s what we’ll miss this year. When possessions broke down, when the game got tight, you could count on him to create something, to score when nobody else could. That’s rare. That’s hard to replace.

But here’s the challenge: Durant’s presence carried such weight, such reverence, that it muted the players around him. Teammates didn’t play with the same freedom you’d expect, because they grew up idolizing him. To them, he wasn’t just a teammate, he was something more, almost untouchable. That’s not his fault, but the result was the same. He didn’t raise all ships.

Think back to the 2023–24 roster. Keita Bates-Diop, Chimezie Metu, Yuta Watanabe, Jordan Goodwin. On paper, all were the kind of role players who could fill gaps and contribute. But when they shared the court with Durant, they looked hesitant, like they were afraid to make mistakes. The infamous Durant death stare? It’s real. They played tight, outside of who they were, because they didn’t want to let him down.

And if there’s any truth to the idea that Devin Booker checked his leadership because of that same reverence for Durant, then it’s another sign that moving on might be addition by subtraction. Not because Durant isn’t great — he is — but because it may unlock Booker, both as a player and as the leader this franchise has been waiting for him to become.

Q2 – It’s way too early to speculate on who will win the Dan Majerle Hustle Award, but who would you most want to see put out the kind of effort it takes to win it this season?


Ashton: I really want it to be Koby Brea, but he will not get the minutes. I sure liked his hustle in Summer League though.

Realistically, I think it could be Dillon Brooks. I have questioned his character time and time again on this board, but if he is locked on the game of basketball, with defense and offense, I see no reason why he should not enjoy the reward and a free libation at Majerle’s Sports Grill in downtown Phoenix.

Rod: It’s likely just wishful thinking, but I can’t help but wonder what sort of player Book could be if he displayed that kind of non-stop energy on both sides of the court. I’ve seen that of him in spurts, but getting that kind of energy and hustle from him for a full game would go a long way in pushing this team back into contention…and perhaps be the best way for him to become a leader on the court.

Voita: I think Dillon Brooks is a perfect candidate to win the Dan Majerle Hustle Award, because that’s exactly what he was brought here to do. To be a pest, to disrupt, to deter. And the only way to truly embody those traits is to hustle, every possession, every minute he’s on the floor. Brooks is that kind of player, relentless in effort, willing to do the dirty work, and in doing so he has a chance to endear himself to Suns fans the way Thunder Dan once did.

Q3 – If you could ask one question each of Mat Ishbia, Jordan Ott, and any single Suns player (3 questions total) and be guaranteed an honest answer, what would those questions be?


Ashton: This is why you do not give me press credentials for Sun’s Media Day on September 23rd. The answer is no questions. Unless they all start with “WTF?”.

What a fun question, and one that should fill the comment box.

But it comes down to taking a 50,000-foot view (corporate speak) and seeing the “forest through the trees” (corporate speak) to realize that Matt Ishbia actually tried to deliver a championship team to the Valley. This after the Sarver-era that saw misogyny and front office bullying that led him to be forced to sell his controlling interest in the team from the NBA.

MI is good in my book, and most of the “inside men” in the front office need to get their feet wet before they are truly fielding questions.

Players? See the above. I am not about to ask Book if he can carry the team as an SG and PG. Okay, maybe that one.

Also, I am the kind of person who likes to read the room. Let the press handle the questions, and if I am the fly on the wall, so be it. But I would like to see where the uncomfortable questions come from and the resulting body language from the person answering them.

Rod: What I’d ask Mat Ishbia for is his true estimate on how long he thinks it will take for the Suns to rebuild/retool and become a real contender again. I’ve heard all the things he’s already said, and I’d like to know if he really is as positive as he puts on. I’m not as negative as some fans are regarding the Suns’ future, but I’m far from being optimistic about a relatively quick turnaround. My greatest fear about him is that he’s not just saying positive things to soothe the fans, but that he actually believes it isn’t going to be a difficult process.

As for Jordan Ott, I’d ask for his honest opinion on how well playing Booker and Green as the Suns’ starting backcourt will work. I’d love for the Suns to have a real starting-level point guard on this team, but that’s not happening, so I’d like to hear Ott’s opinion on how well he really expects this backcourt lineup to work out this season.

And lastly, I suspect that Ryan Dunn’s free throw shooting woes are in his head and I’d really like to ask him about it. It may seem like a small thing to ask about but I don’t see any other reason for him to be such a poor FT shooter.

Voita: People love to say it’s easy to walk into a press conference and fire off the hard hitters, but it’s not. I know my strengths, and I know I haven’t fully found my voice in that space yet. God bless Dave King, he had the courage to do it. I’m still working up to that point. It’s not as simple as it looks. You’re in a room full of professionals, and whether you like it or not, there’s always a layer of politicking baked into the process. That’s something I haven’t mastered.

For Ishbia, there’s really only one question I’d want answered honestly: has the Bradley Beal debacle strained his relationship with Josh Bartelstein, knowing Bartelstein’s father is Beal’s agent? Because from start to finish, that move set this franchise back half a decade, and the nepotism at the heart of it makes the whole thing feel even heavier. If that’s created friction in the front office, it matters for the direction of this team moving forward.

For Jordan Ott, I’d want to know how he plans to strategically approach the season. Specifically, how he balances development with culture, with schemes, with wins. I believe the rookies should be brought along with patience and purpose, not rushed into roles they’re not ready for. Is that part of his map for the season? Or is he going to feel things out week by week, adjusting reactively as the team performs? His perspective on that would tell a lot.

And for Devin Booker, the question is simple but massive: what does leadership look like to him this season? Because for the first time, the full weight of it is his. The team is his. He’s always carried himself with a calm, almost casual coolness. Don’t mistake that for indifference, because he’s as locked in and serious as they come. But he’s never had the full burden of leadership squarely on his shoulders. That’s new. Hearing him articulate what leadership means, and how he intends to embody it, would be fascinating. You can learn a lot about a player when they’re asked to define that role.

As always, many thanks to our Fantable members for all their extra effort this week!


Suns Trivia/History​


On September 16, 1974, the Suns acquired Curtis Perry, Dennis Awtrey, Nate Hawthorne, and a 1976 first-round pick (Adrian Dantley) from the New Orleans Jazz for Neal Walk and a 1975 second-round pick (Clyde Mayes).

Walk, the Suns’ first ever draft pick (#2 in 1969), averaged 14.7 points and 8.9 rebounds per game, only missed 2 regular season games during his 5 seasons in Phoenix, and in 1973 averaged 12.42 rebounds per game, which is the 2nd highest single season RPG average in Suns history behind only Paul Silas’ 12.53 rpg in 1971. His career high for the Suns was 42 points vs. the Milwaukee Bucks on Jan. 11, 1972. The Suns won 115-114 and Walk outscored future Hall of Fame member, and the man picked #1 above him in the 1969 NBA Draft, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 42-27.

In 1988, while Walk was living in Phoenix, it was discovered that he had a benign tumor enveloping his spine. Following surgery, he was left in a wheelchair, from which he played wheelchair basketball for the LA-Phoenix Samaritans in the Southern California league of the National Wheelchair Basketball Association. In 1990, he was honored at the White House by President George H. W. Bush as the “Wheelchair Athlete of the Year.”

He later worked for the Phoenix Suns in the Community Affairs department and sadly passed away on October 4, 2015, due to an unspecified blood disease..

The draft pick that would eventually be used to select future 1976-77 Rookie of the Year, 6-time All-Star and 2-time NBA scoring champion Adrian Dantley was later traded by the Suns to the Buffalo Braves on draft day for their 1975 first round draft pick (16th), which the Suns used to select Ricky Sobers.

On September 20, 2000, the Suns were involved in the 3rd largest trade in NBA history, a twelve-player, 4-team deal between the New York Knicks, Seattle SuperSonics, LA Lakers and Phoenix Suns.

In the trade, New York got Glen Rice, Travis Knight and a first-round pick from LA; Vladimir Stepania, Lazaro Borrell, Vernon Maxwell, a first-round pick and two second-round picks from Seattle; Luc Longley from Phoenix. Seattle got Patrick Ewing from New York. LA got Horace Grant, Chuck Person, Greg Foster and Emanual Davis from Seattle. Phoenix got Chris Dudley and a first round pick from New York.

There were a lot of moving parts in that trade but essentially the Suns got Chris Dudley and a 1st round draft pick for… Luc Longley. Longley’s career stats for his 2 years as a Sun were 7.1 pts, 4.9 rebs, 1.1 asts and 0.6 blocks per game.


Last Week’s Poll Results​


Last week’s question was, “Which position do you think the Suns will be weakest at this season?

60.31% – Point guard.

01.53% – Shooting Guard.

00.76% – Small Forward.

36.64% – Power Forward.

00.76% – Center.

A total of 131 votes were cast.


Important Future Dates​


Sept. 23 – Media day
Sept. 24 – Training Camp opens
Oct. 3 – Preseason game vs LA Lakers @ Palm Desert, CA
Oct. 10 – Preseason game vs Brooklyn Nets (China)
Oct. 12 – Preseason game vs Brooklyn Nets (China)
Oct. 14 – Preseason game vs LA Lakers @ Phoenix, AZ
Oct. 20 – Rosters set for NBA Opening Day (5 p.m. ET)
Oct. 21 – Regular Season Begins
Oct. 25 – 2025 NBA G League Draft (1 p.m. ET)
Oct. 27 – Nov. 6 – NBA G League Training Camps open
Nov. 6 – Rosters set for NBA G League Opening Day (5 p.m. ET)
Nov. 7 – NBA G League Tip-Off Tournament begins
Jan. 5 – 10-day contracts may now be signed
Jan. 10 – All NBA contracts are guaranteed for the remainder of the season
Feb. 5 – Trade deadline (3:00 pm ET)
Feb. 13-15 – 2026 NBA All-Star weekend in Los Angeles, CA



This week’s poll is…

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...eadership-kevin-durant-dillon-brooks-analysis
 
Where the Suns stand in ESPN’s 3-year outlook

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Positivity will be a rare commodity as the Phoenix Suns shuffle into the 2025-26 season, and it begins with the lists. We are less than a month away from tip-off, which means we are entering the annual ritual of rankings. The best players. The best teams. The best situations. A tidal wave of lists is about to crash across the NBA landscape, and for Phoenix, those waves will not carry much sunshine.

However it is sliced, the Suns will find themselves climbing toward the top of lists that no fan wants to see.

It is a sharp change from the last two years. Back then, Mat Ishbia and James Jones built a roster with a swollen payroll that placed Phoenix front and center. The expectations were monumental, the lists were filled with the Suns, and the outcome is now a bitter memory.

Today, the franchise finds itself in a different phase. Rebuilding and retooling are no longer optional; they are the reality. A youth movement has begun, born from necessity rather than choice, since the team holds little control over its future draft capital. Development becomes the focus, with the hope that three or four years from now the young core blossoms, and Devin Booker remains a force. Add Jalen Green into that picture, a player who, in that same timeframe, will be entering his prime, and the vision of a brighter tomorrow begins to take shape.

But visions are one thing, and ESPN is another.

Power rankings fuel the conversation, and ESPN has published its latest Future Power Rankings, an exercise in projecting the three-year outlooks for all thirty teams. At the top stands the Oklahoma City Thunder, a franchise crowned champion, armed with draft picks, and managed with precision. ESPN measures players, money, draft assets, market, and management. The Thunder sit comfortably at the summit in players, draft, and management.

And then there are the Suns. Where do they land? How does this franchise measure up? If your instinct says rock bottom, you would be right. ESPN Insider Bobby Marks put it in writing.

It was only three years ago when Phoenix ranked third in the FPR and had a solid foundation of young players and future draft assets. That foundation no longer exists, thanks largely to the Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal trades. Both players are no longer on the roster, and though Phoenix isn’t in financial purgatory and still has All-Star Devin Booker, its path back to relevancy is unclear. The Suns have no tradable firsts in the next seven years and have $23 million in dead money on their books in the next five years. One positive is that Phoenix has shifted away from building around multiple high-priced veterans to trading for former first-round picks Jalen Green, Mark Williams and selecting Khaman Maluach in June’s draft.

As far as rankings go, where do the Suns land?

Players: 26th​


That one gives me pause. When I scan some of the other rosters in this league, I see less talent than what Phoenix has in place. Make no mistake, there is talent here. Devin Booker is an All-Star caliber player, Jalen Green has upside waiting to pop, Dillon Brooks is a building block you can win with, Mark Williams is a quality center, and the youth movement can surprise teams on any given night.

Money: 22nd​


That is a leap forward compared to last year, when Phoenix carried the most expensive roster in NBA history. It is never ideal to pay players who no longer wear your jersey, but the Suns have maneuverability now. What they do with that flexibility over the next three years will determine everything, but hope exists in this category.

Draft: 30th​


This is the wound that will not heal, because the Suns have forfeited control of their draft picks for seven years. The future in this area is barren. So I see why Marks has Phoenix ranked 30th here. Because no team is in a worse draft capital situation than Ishbia and the Suns. Yeah, we might not care about an 8th grader right now, but having outs creates opportunity. Opportunity the Suns simply don’t have.

Market: 6th​


The size of the Valley and the hunger of its fan base continue to push Phoenix high in this category. The city is ready, the loyalty is not in question. Phoenix continues to grow (per Wikipedia, the city is up 4.04% since 2020). Yeah, it’s an influx of transplants who bring with them their own loyalties. But if the product is good enough, we can get them to change their ways. If the product is good enough…

Management: 28th​


This one is easier to understand. A general manager who has never managed, a head coach who has never coached from the first chair, and a vision that has yet to be proven. Only Sacramento and New Orleans rank lower.



So here we are, at the bottom of another list. Dead last. No list is good to be on when you find yourself buried at the bottom. Did ESPN get it wrong? I believe they did. Sacramento and New Orleans are in worse shape. And maybe it is the optimist in me speaking, but I think the Suns will outperform these projections. None of that matters until the games are played, until the wins and losses tell the story.

More lists are coming, and more of them will bury Phoenix in negativity. I will be here to break them down and give the same closing thought each time: We will see.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-espn-nba-power-rankings-2025-26-team-outlook
 
Kevin Durant “was a little upset” that the Suns put him on the market

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Kevin Durant fatigue is real, and I’ve got it in spades. Two-plus years of covering one of the greatest basketball players of all time in Phoenix should feel like a gift, but the truth? It felt more like standing in the eye of a tornado. The talent, sure, I’ll miss that. The pull-up jumpers, the effortless scoring, the gravity he commanded every time he touched the ball. But everything else? The weight, the expectations, the endless swirl of narrative and noise? That I won’t.

Durant is a fascinating contradiction.

He’s one of the few superstars who actually engages on social media, who shares pieces of himself in a way fans constantly demand from athletes. And yet, when he does, people hammer him for it. Transparency punished. Honesty ridiculed. That’s always struck me as bizarre.

But what really made the Durant era feel heavy wasn’t him. It was the context. The Suns with Durant simply weren’t very good. Not by the standard they set when they mortgaged their future for him. Not by the expectations that turned every game into a referendum. Winning stopped being fun because the only metric that mattered was the win column, and when you’re losing, there’s no joy left to scavenge.

That’s why next season might actually feel lighter for Phoenix. Not because the victories will pile up — they probably won’t — but because the small wins will matter again. A rookie showing flashes. A young player leveling up. A roster finding rhythm without the crushing weight of “championship or bust” hanging over its head.

Durant himself? He tied the bow on this chapter recently, speaking about his trade.

“I would say around February, the Suns had pretty much let the league know that I was on the market,” Durant stated while on CNBC’s Game Plan. “Initially, I was a little upset because I felt like we built a solid relationship, me and the Phoenix Suns. And to hear that from a different party was kind of upsetting, but that’s just the name of the game.”

“So I got over that quickly and was trying to figure out what the next steps were. I heard Golden State was in the mix around the trade deadline, but that’s when Rich (Kleiman) came into play and those relationships that we built around the league and also playing in Golden State helped. We was able to tell them kind of hold off on that.”

“Since me being on the market in February when there’s also a trade deadline, people were just kind of seeing how their seasons played out and what they needed for their teams. And we knew we would revisit that right around the summertime, and Houston kind of jumped on, and it happened pretty fast from there.”

Kevin Durant on the rockets trading for him and finding out the suns were trying to trade him at the deadline 👀 #LiftOff pic.twitter.com/e5y0uf7ulM

— KNAWTNINE (@knawtnine) September 17, 2025

Some have framed KD’s comments as bitterness. I didn’t hear bitterness. I heard humanity.

His employer wanted to move on, and he did what was in his best interest. That’s not betrayal. That’s business. He didn’t want to be traded midseason, and I don’t fault him for that. He knew the summer was the clean break. The relationship wasn’t severed, but it was fractured. Egos bruised, ambitions misaligned.

And honestly? Why wouldn’t he want out? Phoenix wasn’t a winning situation anymore. The roster-building had been fumbled, Bradley Beal’s acquisition slammed the door on flexibility, and the Suns had no draft capital to replenish the cupboard. Durant, late in his career, wanted a chance at something better. Houston offered him that. Phoenix couldn’t.

So yes, I’m fatigued. I’m ready to move on. And so was Durant. I can’t blame him one bit. I’ll watch the Rockets, I’ll let myself wonder what might have been, and then I’ll turn back to the Suns. To the slow grind of development, the flashes of hope, the little victories that remind you why basketball is supposed to be fun.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ra-ends-houston-rockets-future-nba-upset-cnbc
 
SunsRank: Tier 3. Where potential and unpredictability collide

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Tier 2 of SunsRank is in the books, and to be honest, there haven’t been many surprises. That’s what happens when you open the floor to enough people on a question as subjective as “who’s better than who.” Sure, there are always outliers. Some folks will hitch their wagon to a bias and ride it all the way from Independence to the Willamette Valley. But when you’ve got 300-plus votes rolling in, the trends overwhelm those stricken with dysentery.

Tier 2 — “The Pillars” — has now been locked in. These are the stabilizers of the roster, the players who carry weight without being the Cornerstones. And as it pertains to SunsRank Preseason 2025, here’s where we stand:

SunsRank-2025.png

It was close. Ryan Dunn earned the 5th spot by a grand total of…checks notes…1 vote.

Tier 2 really underscores why so many people are down on the Phoenix Suns. If Mark Williams is your third-best player, and he’s someone who has been plagued by injuries throughout his young career, then what is the true ceiling of this team? How good can they really be? There’s reason for optimism, sure. Williams has shown the talent to be a top-third center in the NBA. But the best ability is availability, and that’s been the one thing he hasn’t been able to provide consistently. Having him slotted as your third-best player says everything about where the Suns are right now.

And with that, we move on to Tier 3. The Wild Cards. This is where the youth lives, where potential upside sits down at the dinner table, where an old veteran gets one more shot at relevance, and where a backup point guard is finally put in a position to sink or swim. They’re wild cards for a reason. If they hit, good things can happen for the Suns and for the players themselves. But uncertainty will always be their destiny.

And the list is, going alphabetically by first name…

Collin Gillespie​


A year ago, Gillespie entered the season at the very bottom of SunsRank. But through effort, tenacity, and seizing every sliver of opportunity, he climbed all the way to number eight by the end of the year. By NBA standards, it wasn’t a standout season, but within the context of what the Suns were, his hustle and determination stood out.

Those qualities earned him the right to stick around, and now he enters this year as the backup point guard. This is his chance to carve out a true rotational role, to prove he belongs as a steady piece of an NBA roster.

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Khaman Maluach​


Ah, our first look at a rookie. The 10th overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, Khaman Maluach entered as the top big man prospect in the class. He fell to the Suns, fittingly with the pick that once belonged to them before it was sent away for Kevin Durant. That alone makes him more than just another draft selection. Maluach represents a shift in the franchise, a tangible reminder of a new era.

Gone is a Hall of Famer, in comes the promise of a potential foundational big man.

Koby Brea​


Another rookie, this one on a two-way contract. Koby Brea comes to the Suns as a pure sharpshooter, a specialist who can stretch the floor in a way every roster needs. He led the SEC in three-point shooting last season and the entire NCAA the year before. Over five years in college — four at Dayton and one at Kentucky — he buried 317 of his 730 attempts, a career mark of 43.4% from deep.

At 22, Brea has the potential to be a spark off the bench, the kind of player who can change the rhythm of a game with his shot. Long term, he could even slide into a role that looks a lot like the ones currently held by Grayson Allen or Royce O’Neale. Maybe not right away, but the skill set is there, and the opportunity will eventually come.

Nigel Hayes-Davis​


NHD. It’s a nickname that feels destined to stick, especially if he carves out a regular spot in the rotation.

What kind of impact he’ll make is still an open question, but from a talent standpoint, and from the ever-subjective “who is better” standpoint, where does he really land? He’s one of the most intriguing players on the roster, and it will be fascinating to see how the community perceives him once the votes are cast.

Oso Ighodaro​


Year two of Oso brings plenty of questions. What has he added to his game? How will the Suns use him? When will they use him? Does he have more than just a push shot in his arsenal? How does his rebounding look? Has he added gerth to his game?

A season ago, he entered SunsRank at 13th overall. By the end, he climbed to 10th. That’s a jump into the Wild Cards, and one he earned. All things considered, it feels like the right step forward. So here’s the next Oso question: where does he land now?

Rasheer Fleming​


That makes three rookies in The Wild Cards. Fleming’s talent is obvious. He turned himself into a force at St. Joe’s, and now the question is how he channels that talent at the NBA level. That’s the storyline to watch in 2025–26. We’ve seen plenty of wings with promise enter the league only to fall short of the impact we imagined. Earl Clark still lingers in my mind as the great “what if.”

So, how do you rate Fleming? Do you lean into the talent and the upside, or do you focus on the reality of where he stands right now…a true Wild Card?

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Now we know the players in the tier. Now it’s time to do what SunsRank is all about. Vote it out. Drop your rankings, and more importantly, tell us why. The “why” is where the debates live, and that’s where this whole thing gets fun. So flood the comments, make your case, and let’s see how it shakes out.



Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...h-brea-gillespie-fleming-ighodaro-hayes-davis
 
Player Preview: Koby Brea tries to break out onto the roster

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Koby Brea​


Shooting Guard, 6’6”, 202 pounds, 22 years old, rookie out of the University of Kentucky

The Suns were very active the two nights of this past NBA draft as they tried to fill out this new roster. In the two days, they made multiple trades that landed them several prospects, one of them being Koby Brea.

Brea was selected with the 41st overall pick in the NBA draft after the Suns had acquired it from the Golden State Warriors. See, the Suns had multiple second-round picks and wanted to move up as high as possible, and luckily, they got to the first pick on day two. By doing that, they then still had this leftover pick and used it to take the best three-pointer scorer in the class with Brea.

College Career Recap​


Brea played 5 seasons in college with two different teams. He spent his first four years at the University of Dayton, where he only started three games his first year. He continued to be someone who barely started for their team and then really turned it up in his last year there, where he shot 49.8% from 3 and 51.2% from the field. This gave him the go-ahead to enter the transfer portal and land at Kentucky with new head coach Mark Pope.

In his only year at Kentucky, the guard put on a show once again proving he was the best three-point scorer in college basketball this season. He was one of the better players on the team and hit big-time shots when the team needed them most. He scored 419 total points last year, which was his highest in his collegiate career, and on a better team against better opponents, shot 43.5% from three.

His biggest game of the season had to come in the March Madness tournament, where he helped lead the Kentucky Wildcats to their first Sweet Sixteen appearance since the 2018-19 season. As a three seed, they took down a solid Illinois team 84-75, where Brea led the team with 23 points, six rebounds, and an assist.

Contract Details​


Brea and the Suns agreed to a one-year two-way deal for the upcoming season. This allows Brea to play up to 50 games for the Phoenix Suns while also developing and growing with the Valley Suns. The 22-year-old guard is expected to be one of the better players for the G-League affiliate after a solid Summer League. If he can continue to thrive there, depending on how the team looks, it could present him with an opportunity to earn a standard deal before the season’s end.

Strengths & Weaknesses​


As we have discussed numerous times, there is a distinct strength to Brea’s game. It is his three-point shot and shot-making ability. The guard is not only lethal from beyond the arc but also has a killer mid-range game similar to Devin Booker. This is going to be key for Brea as he can utilize Booker as a leader and someone to mirror how he wants to attack opposing defenses. His frame of 6’6” also allows him to be used on the wing in some potential lineups as an extra sniper on the offensive end. One in the right lineup could be hidden and utilized to rain down from three-point range.

With his strengths, there are some weaknesses to his game, and that would be on the defensive end. He is a liability on that side, so having him play with lengthy defenders is the key to having him thrive. Luckily, the Suns have drafted that position in the last two classes with Ryan Dunn and Rasheer Fleming. With those two developing alongside Brea, this could make Brea more viable on the side of the ball he specializes in.

One Key Factor​


The key to look at with Brea was alluded to earlier: will he earn the standard deal by the end of the season? Truly, I think that he is going to be the best player on the Valley Suns and prove to be someone who is ready for the parent club. Similar to guard Collin Gillespie from last season, if injuries do occur or he just proves in practice, we could see him get some burn while on this two-way deal. If that case persists, depending on the record and direction of this team, by the trade deadline, we could see what path is ultimately better, and that could show for better or worse for Brea.

If the Suns look towards the bottom, they may sell off some of these veteran role pieces and run the young guns, trying to develop them into their rotation for the future. If the Suns are better than we anticipate, we could see Brea still held on that two-way until the following season.

Prediction Time​


With Brea being on the two-way contract I am going to take that into my evaluation of his stats. If he were to get more time or a standard deal by the end of the season, his numbers could defintely be higher.

Stat Prediction: 42 Games 4.2 PPG, 1.2 RPG, 1.8 APG, 0.3 BPG, 0.5 SPG on 44/41/87 shooting splits

Final Thoughts​


Ultimately, I’d love to see Brea on the main squad as early as possible. Earlier in the offseason, I had written an article comparing Brea to another player on this roster, and I genuinely think he can take that role if the team allows him to.

That being said, if the Suns do present them to be in the position of near the bottom of the West, I do not see the harm in giving him that opportunity if he is succeeding in his more minor role. I expect him to be someone who gets along with Devin Booker and has him as a mentor going into the year, which makes me even more confident in his role here.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-koby-brea-tries-to-break-out-onto-the-roster
 
A look at what the rest of the Pacific Division did this offseason

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Over the last five seasons, the Phoenix Suns lead the Pacific Division in total wins by 11 games. Despite their recent success, due to a failed Big Three experiment and poor asset management, the Valley is projected to win the least amount of games in their division according to FanDuel Sportsbook, with a lot of that being contributed to how they operated this offseason.

While it was a hectic and eventful offseason in Phoenix, here’s how the rest of their division behaved this offseason:


Los Angeles Lakers


Biggest Move: Extending Luka Dončić

Most Controversial Move: Signing Deandre Ayton

Biggest Loss: Dorian Finney-Smith

By extending Dončić and preventing him from hitting unrestricted free agency a year from now, the Lakers solidified their spot as a perennial playoff contender by employing one of the league’s best shot creators and play makers long term. While tensions with LeBron James appeared to be high earlier in the offseason, those have seemed to fizzle down. Los Angeles beefed their center position by signing the former Sun in Ayton, questions continue to hover around if he is the right person to play alongside Dončić and Reaves because of his motor and defensive impact.

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Golden State Warriors​


Biggest Move: N/A

Most Controversial Move:
N/A

Biggest Loss: Kevon Looney

Yep, that’s right. The Golden State Warriors have done absolutely nothing this free agency period. Outside of their two second round selections, Golden State has had one of the quietest off-seasons in NBA history, all due to their standoff with restricted free agent Jonathan Kuminga. If the Warriors sign other free agents, it could hard cap them to sign Kuminga, so they’re expected to fill out their roster once a solution with him is finalized. A resolution is expected soon, but as of right now, nothing has changed.


Los Angeles Clippers


Biggest Move: Trading for John Collins

Most Controversial Move: Signing Bradley Beal

Biggest Loss: Norman Powell

The Clippers were one of the most active teams this offseason. Slated to have one of the oldest teams in NBA history, Lob City projects to be one of the deepest teams in the NBA. Signing Brook Lopez and swapping Norman Powell for John Collins, they upgraded their size and have multiple floor spacing bigs. Signing Chris Paul and Bradley Beal add ball handling that they lost with Powell, but with both of their injury histories, it is yet to be seen how consistent of contributors they will be.

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Sacramento Kings​


Biggest move: Signing Dennis Schröder

Most Controversial Move: Hiring Doug Christie as head coach

Biggest Loss: Jonas Valunčiūnas

The Kings had a generally quiet offseason. Hiring Christie once they were eliminated from the play-in tournament, the Kings are bringing most of their roster back from a season ago, but now have the biggest replacement for De’Aaron Fox since they traded him back in February with Schröder. Expect 7’1” rookie Maxine Raynaud to replace Valunćiūnas at backup center, providing them with more youth in their rotation.



All told, the Pacific Division reshaped itself in distinct ways. The Lakers secured Luka Dončić while gambling on Deandre Ayton’s consistency. The Warriors practically stood still, their silence louder than any move. The Clippers doubled down on veteran depth, trading youth for experience and rolling the dice on injury-prone stars. The Kings, meanwhile, leaned on continuity, putting Doug Christie in charge and handing the keys of stability to Dennis Schröder.

Each path signals a different vision for contention. Which of these offseason shifts do you believe will echo the loudest once the games begin?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...rades-lakers-warriors-clippers-kings-analysis
 
Game Recap: The Mercury ended the New York Liberty’s title defense in dramatic playoff fashion

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The Phoenix Mercury entered their first-round playoff series against the defending champion New York Liberty with the odds stacked against them. Few expected them to advance, and most national analysts picked New York to roll through.

But on Friday night in Phoenix, the Mercury flipped the script. In front of a fired-up home crowd for a decisive Game 3, the Mercury stunned the Liberty 79–73 to knock out the reigning champs and punch their ticket to the next round.

Like we said, Mercury vs. Everybody.

(Except for Sean Hurd) pic.twitter.com/WJeAGzSLTZ

— Phoenix Mercury (@PhoenixMercury) September 20, 2025

Alyssa Thomas once again set the tone, recording yet another triple-double and further cementing her place in the history books. She now owns five of the seven total triple-doubles in WNBA playoff history, a staggering testament to her dominance.

With Thomas leading the way, the Mercury weathered New York’s push and sent the Liberty packing, closing the door on their repeat hopes. Breanna Stewart gave it her all, scoring 30 points for the Liberty, but 20 points from Thomas and 23 points from Satou Sabally were enough to give Phoenix the win. DeWanna Bonner had 8 rebounds off the bench, which passed Candace Parker for the most playoff rebounds in WNBA history.

With 8 rebounds tonight in the @PhoenixMercury’s win, DeWanna Bonner passes Candace Parker (610) for 1st all on the Playoffs rebounds list 🚨#WelcometotheW

WNBA Playoffs presented by @Google pic.twitter.com/cUKnJTIl3v

— WNBA (@WNBA) September 20, 2025

For Phoenix, it was more than just an upset win. It was a statement and proof that they’re far from finished in these playoffs.

Their reward? A date with the league’s best. The Mercury now turn their attention to the Minnesota Lynx, the WNBA’s top seed and a team that gave Phoenix fits all season long. The Mercury went just 1–3 against Minnesota in the regular season, setting the stage for an uphill battle in the semifinals.

Game 1 tips off Sunday at 2:00 p.m. in Minnesota, airing nationally on ESPN.

Congratulations to the Mercury for punching their ticket to the WNBA Semifinals. And for proving once again that postseason basketball is all about belief, resilience, and timely execution.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...rty-wnba-playoffs-alyssa-thomas-triple-double
 
Game Recap: The Mercury looked ready to steal Game 1 until the Lynx flipped the script

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The playoffs are unforgiving. They expose cracks, magnify mistakes, and punish hesitation. When you’re facing the top seed in the league, there’s no room for slippage. On Sunday afternoon, the Phoenix Mercury slipped, and the Minnesota Lynx made sure they paid for it, winning 82–69, in a game that swung not with a single moment, but with the slow, inevitable tide of adjustments.

For a half, the Mercury looked like they belonged. They threw haymakers in the paint, bullied their way to 42 of their 47 first-half points inside, and carried a seven-point lead into the break despite shooting an icy 13% from deep. It was gritty, it was physical, it was the kind of basketball that had Minnesota off balance.

“She gotta guard me too”

TALK YOUR TALK, AT pic.twitter.com/mZHx2CRwWF

— PHNX Mercury (@PHNX_Mercury) September 21, 2025

Then the script flipped.

The Lynx turned Phoenix’s strength into weakness, collapsing the lanes, gobbling up rebounds, and flipping the math. The second half was a clinic for Minnesota: 22–12 in the paint, 10 second-chance points, 11–0 in transition. The Mercury’s foundation crumbled, their rhythm dissolved, and what felt like control quickly turned into survival.

Courtney Williams was the dagger. Relentless and precise, she poured in 23 points on 11-of-19 shooting, sprinkled in seven assists, and steered Minnesota to a 1–0 series lead that never felt in doubt once the momentum shifted.

Courtney Williams masterclass today in an 82-69 Game 1 win against the Mercury:

23 points
11-19 FG
8 rebounds
7 assists
5 steals
+11 pic.twitter.com/XTT4fK0r2p

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) September 21, 2025

Phoenix, meanwhile, lived on the wrong end of variance, finishing just 3-of-23 from beyond the arc. You can win a half on grit alone, but you can’t win a series shooting like that. Not against the number one seed. Not in the playoffs.

“They really did a good job in the second half, to hold us to 22 points, they turned it up on that end,” Phoenix head coach Nate Tibbets stated after the Game 1 loss. “Obviously, we didn’t shoot it very well from three, that was another factor, but yeah, they did what they were supposed to do.”

The semifinals are not like the first round, which was a best-of-3 series. It’s a best-of-five. Game 2 will be in Minnesota on Tuesday night at 4:30pm Arizona time and on ESPN.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...lynx-wnba-playoffs-2025-game-1-recap-analysis
 
40 Questions Suns fans can’t wait to ask on Media Day

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For most of the NBA, Media Day doesn’t hit until September 29. But Suns fans won’t have to wait that long. Because Phoenix is one of the few teams traveling overseas this preseason, the organization gets a head start on the league calendar, with Media Day officially tipping off September 23. We are two days away.

Yay for Suns fans!

It might only be 6 days earlier, but after a summer of rumors, roster shake-ups, and that endless stretch of July and August with nothing but comment-section debates to tide us over (and we thank John Voita for getting us through it yet again), those six days feel like a delicious valley-centric headstart we deserve. For you humble, long-suffering, and comely Suns fans, it means an early peek at new faces and the first chance to see how the 2025–26 campaign begins to take shape.

Media Day might feature a baseline of staged photos and soundbites; however, it’s the unofficial opening to the season. It’s the place where optimism is tested, narratives are launched, and the long grind of the year ahead first comes into focus. As a fan base, we get the opportunity to hear what the playing group, the coaches, and the front office have to say about the state of things, where they’ve been and where they’re headed. If not literally, then perhaps metaphorically.

And with everything new in Phoenix (from the front office to the sidelines to the roster itself), there might not be a fanbase in the league hungrier to hear what’s next.

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The First Words From a New Era​


So, what kind of questions would we love to hear answers to?

You likely have a short list already going, and keep that close at hand. We’ll want you to share your thoughts shortly. Below, though, I’ve gone on the hunt for questions and have compiled a list of questions that may (or may not) be of interest to Suns fans. Ideally, we’d love to hear anything that the entire Suns organization has to say at this point.

As you meditate on the questions below, consider which player specifically you’d love to hear answers from. Perhaps it’s more than one?!

The Roster: Fitting the Pieces Together​


Training camp is about more than conditioning; it’s about chemistry. With so many new faces in Phoenix, fans will want to know:

  1. What’s the energy like in the locker room heading into camp?
  2. How would you describe the Suns’ identity right now?
  3. Who’s the loudest voice in practices so far?
  4. What’s one word you’d use to describe this year’s Suns team?
  5. Which teammate surprised you most when you first got on the court with them?

Role definition matters too — especially with a deep guard and wing rotation:

  1. How do you see yourself fitting alongside Devin Booker?
  2. What specific skills do you think you bring that the Suns needed last season?
  3. For the new guys — what part of the playbook are you picking up quickest?
  4. For returners — what feels most different about this camp compared to last year?
  5. Who do you expect to guard most in practice — and how does that sharpen you?

And then there’s growth. Every fan wants to know who’s leveling up:

  1. What did you focus on most in your offseason training?
  2. Which young player is going to surprise fans this season?
  3. How do you handle balancing your own goals with team goals?
  4. For the rookies — what’s the biggest adjustment so far?
  5. For vets — how do you keep camp fresh after so many years?

Finally, some fun — because personality is just as much part of the season as stat sheets:

  1. Who’s the funniest teammate in the locker room?
  2. What’s the go-to pregame playlist or song this season?
  3. Who’s the most competitive at non-basketball activities (cards, video games, etc.)?
  4. If you weren’t playing basketball, what would you be doing today?
  5. Who’s going to surprise fans with a breakout moment this season?

The Coaching Staff: Setting the Tone​


New head coach Jordan Ott enters his first Suns camp with plenty of eyes on him. What he chooses to emphasize now will define the season later.

  1. What’s the biggest emphasis you’re setting in training camp?
  2. How do you balance minutes for such a deep wing rotation?
  3. What does an ideal Suns pace of play look like to you?
  4. How do you envision staggering Devin Booker with the bench unit?
  5. What’s your approach to developing younger players while competing to win now?

But Media Day isn’t just about Xs and Os. It’s about philosophy:

  1. How do you instill accountability across such a diverse roster?
  2. What’s the one thing you want this team to be known for defensively?
  3. How do you personally define a “successful season”?
  4. What’s the most important lesson you’ve carried into your first Suns camp?
  5. Which assistant coach do the players respond to most strongly?

The Front Office & Ownership: The Bigger Picture​


When the cameras swing to GM Brian Gregory and owner Mat Ishbia, the focus shifts to vision.

  1. What’s the long-term vision for this roster core?
  2. How much input did players like Booker have in shaping offseason moves?
  3. How do you balance chasing a championship now with building for the future?
  4. What does success look like in Year 1 of this new roster construction?
  5. What’s your message to Suns fans about where the team is heading?

And sometimes, a little levity matters too:

  1. What’s your favorite part about Media Day?
  2. What has surprised you most about building an NBA roster from the inside?
  3. For Ishbia, do you still get competitive urges to jump into practices?
  4. If you could play one position on this Suns roster, which would it be?
  5. What makes Phoenix a unique basketball city compared to others in the league?


And there you have it, a cheat-sheet of sorts for your Media Day listening pleasure! It would be great to hear questions such as these asked of the players, coaches, and front office of our favorite basketball team.

Why Media Day Matters​


Media Day is about answers and interaction. It’s about opening the curtain and reminding fans that the long summer is over. It’s the start of a season of hopes, frustrations, comebacks, and surprises. And, as Dan-Fly would say, “there’s only 3 days to go!”

So, your turn! Drop your comments below.

(1) What questions would you love to ask/have answered?

(2) What kind of answers would you love to hear given on Media Day?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...estions-roster-coach-gm-jordan-ott-mat-ishbia
 
Suns Reacts Survey: How high can the Suns climb?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Suns fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.



Less than two weeks from the Phoenix Suns’ preseason beginning, it is time for some predictions from you all! After an offseason full of turnover, both on the roster and in the front office, the Suns have a completely new team compared to a season ago.

Devin Booker is still leading the team, but Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal are on the Houston Rockets and Los Angeles Clippers respectively, and despite being projected to win around 46-47 games last season according to most sportsbooks, the Valley’s over under is set at 31.5 for the 2025-2026 campaign on FanDuel Sportsbook.

The Valley’s squad, compared to a season ago, is younger and less proven. Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, and Mark Williams are all under 30 and have no all-star appearances between the three of them, and all of them are projected to play some of the largest roles of their careers as starters. Additionally, rookies and sophomores Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Flemin,g and Ryan Dunn all look to play significant roles this year all while first-time head coach Jordan Ott runs the show.

Many analysts have the Suns finishing near the bottom of the Western Conference, attributing it to the depth that the Western Conference has and the talent downgrades the team made. But what if everything goes right for the Suns? Alongside Devin Booker returning to an All-NBA player, what if Jalen Green and Mark Williams blossom in their new roles with a new team, Dillon Brooks plays at an All-Defensive level, and the young players are able to contribute at a more consistent level than anticipated? Where would the team be in the standings?

If everything goes right for the Suns, how many games can they win this season? 30,40,50, 60 wins? What do you think? Additionally, what needs to go right for the Suns to achieve their ceiling?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...survey-devin-booker-jalen-green-dillon-brooks
 
Steve Nash joins the Phoenix Suns as Senior Advisor

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The Phoenix Suns are bringing back a legend to the organization. MVSteve. The heartbeat of Phoenix for many years and the reason many folks became Suns fans in the first place.

Mat Ishbia took to social media to announce the return of Nash to the Suns’ organization, stating, “Steve Nash was an amazing player and exactly what the Phoenix Suns are all about. His grit, toughness, and winning mentality have defined our organization in the past, and I’m so excited to share that Steve is formally joining the

@Suns as a senior advisor and will help us define our future for years to come!”

Steve Nash was an amazing player and exactly what the Phoenix Suns are all about. His grit, toughness, and winning mentality have defined our organization in the past, and I’m so excited to share that Steve is formally joining the @Suns as a senior advisor and will help us define… pic.twitter.com/cm1VkMrBtv

— Mat Ishbia (@Mishbia15) September 22, 2025

Nash, 51, has had quite the ride since retiring from the league in 2015.

He worked as a consultant for the Golden State Warriors, then as the head coach for the Brooklyn Nets, and was preparing for a media career as an analyst for Amazon Prime Video and a co-host on the Mind the Game podcast with LeBron James. He also maintains roles as a co-owner of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC soccer team and has a philanthropic foundation.

PHNX’s Greg Esposito said, “Everything I’ve heard is that changes nothing in terms of the Amazon role. Will be interesting to see how much he truly will be involved.”

Steve Nash was expected to join Amazon Prime's broadcast team this season.

He was set to join former teammate Dirk Nowitzki and Blake Griffin on set.

Not sure if this deal changes any of that. Interesting little subplot to follow.

— Zona (@AZSportsZone) September 22, 2025

The two-time MVP and Phoenix Suns Ring of Honor inductee should provide a strong voice in the Suns front office. The advisor title gives him some flexibility to be involved in whatever capacity he (and the team) are comfortable with, with the ability to scale up eventually.

A Suns legend forever in our hearts. Welcome back to the Valley, Steve.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-senior-advisor-mat-ishbia-announcement-2025
 
3 reasons the Phoenix Suns won’t make the Playoffs

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We strive to provide a balanced mix of optimism, pessimism, and pure analysis covering the Phoenix Suns.

Bright Side’s Kevin just poured in some optimism, providing 3 reasons to be optimistic that the Suns will make the playoffs. Now, it’s my job to be the Debbie Downer and play devil’s advocate. I know, I know. There’s already plenty of “negative” coverage surrounding the Suns.

I try to view this from the lens of skepticism and pessimism, with the hope of being completely wrong. These are the flaws that many outsiders and skeptics see.

I’m in the camp that we need to be proven wrong and have the right to be cautious with any sort of optimism after how the past several seasons have gone. They owe it to us to prove us wrong.

Here are three reasons the Suns will miss the playoffs this season.

#1) Devin Booker and Jalen Green simply do not work together


This is a possibility you must brace yourselves for. There is no telling how this duo works together until we see it. It could be a home run, and they pleasantly surprise us with their ability to play off of one another. Or, it could be a disaster with too much overlap.

This is the most important piece to this Suns puzzle this season. If they exceed expectations, it starts with these two guys. If it falls apart, it’s likely because this duo didn’t click. Sure, “the others” matter — but this is the needle mover.

My main concerns are about the playmaking (or lack thereof), the defensive issues, and the overlap in their games. I’m not saying Jalen Green is Bradley Beal 2.0, but there are a lot of similarities in their games strictly from a “role” perspective. How will this pairing be any different? That’s a question Jordan Ott will have to address early on to make it work.

For Jalen Green, it’s been 3 years of shaky decision-making, streaky scoring, and subpar defense. If he doesn’t make “the leap” (and many guards never do), Phoenix could find itself relying on an inefficient volume scorer who doesn’t elevate teammates. If he plateaus, the Suns just traded for a name rather than a difference-maker, and their ceiling drops hard. We are hoping that is not the case.

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Booker needs to show improvement from long range. He’s coming off a season where he shot 33.2% from deep on career-high volume. Nearly half the year, he was a non-factor from long range. 37 games under 30% from three, 25 games with one or fewer makes. That’s not a small-sample slump. That’s inconsistency. If he hovers closer to last year’s number than his MVP-candidate 2021–22 splits, Phoenix’s offense simply doesn’t have the firepower to hang with playoff teams.

That is an area we need to see improvement in next season with an increased workload. The playmaking and playing off-ball will also be huge next to Green.

For this duo to mesh, Green’s playmaking and efficiency must improve, and Booker has to help stretch the floor and play on and off-ball efficiently.

#2) The West is too good


Simply put, the lack of talent compared to their peers could doom them. The West is loaded with not only elite teams, but there’s a large chunk of talented teams, and even some of the lower-end teams will be sneaky good and competitive. In other words, there will be very few “easy wins” for anyone.

If Phoenix were in the East, this would be an entirely different discussion. But… they are not. ESPN (somewhat) recently released its forecast for the season, picking the Suns to finish 13th overall with 30 wins.

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The Thunder, Rockets, Nuggets, Wolves, and Clippers look like the top dogs, with talented teams like the Lakers, Warriors, Mavs, Spurs, and Grizzlies lurking. That’s already 10 teams there alone, and then you factor in the sneaky talented Blazers and Kings, and you realize how deep the West is.

No easy nights. The Suns will be tested on a nightly basis. Phoenix needs to avoid letting it spiral or snowball during those tough stretches.

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#3) Dillon Brooks Is Not a Cure-All for the Defense​


I still have some concerns over this defense as a whole. Dillon Brooks brings attitude, hustle, and an edge. Nobody’s disputing that.

He’s not the kind of defensive anchor who single-handedly drags a unit from bottom-10 to playoff caliber. He shouldn’t be responsible for that type of overahul. In Houston, the Rockets improved defensively, but that was also tied to Alperen Şengün’s growth and a coach (Ime Udoka) who demanded buy-in across the roster on a far younger and more athletic team. Phoenix doesn’t have that infrastructure yet… though they are trying to build toward that.

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If Brooks is forced to cover for lapses everywhere else, his impact shrinks. And offensively, he can still be a black hole who hijacks possessions. Phoenix has a good start in building this identity with Ryan Dunn and Dillon Brooks, but the real question comes down to who else guards on the perimeter and who takes over as the defensive anchor?

Mark Williams has the chops, but hasn’t put it all together yet. We all know about the health issues, too. If he stays on the court, he has to be that guy for the Suns to make a defensive leap.

Phoenix is banking on a lot of “ifs”.

They need Booker and Green to blossom together. Brooks needs to get some serious help to elevate the defense. They have to take care of business in the tough Western Conference. But if even one of those bets fails, the Suns are staring at another sub-500 season and watching the Play-In from home.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-jalen-green-dillon-brooks-western-conference
 
Game Recap: Phoenix delivers historic rally and forces a deadlock with Minnesota

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After dropping Game 1, when the Lynx flipped the script with a dominant second half, the Phoenix Mercury answered with a script-flip of their own Tuesday night. Phoenix clawed back from a 16-point halftime deficit to force overtime and ultimately claim an 89–83 win, evening the series at 1–1.

Minnesota looked every bit the top seed in the opening half. Napheesa Collier poured in 17 points, Kayla McBride added 11, and Courtney Williams chipped in 10 as the Lynx built a 48–32 lead. Phoenix didn’t help themselves either, coughing up nine turnovers to Minnesota’s four.

But the second half belonged to the Mercury. Phoenix forced 11 Lynx turnovers and converted them into 16 points. They outscored Minnesota 47–31 after the break, fueled by 8-of-19 shooting from beyond the arc. That surge pushed the game into overtime, where Alyssa Thomas took over, scoring 7 of Phoenix’s 10 points in the extra frame to seal the victory.

Satou Sabally led the Mercury with 24 points, while Thomas added 19 points and 13 assists in her standout performance. Being down 20, it was the third-largest comeback in WNBA playoff history.

When the moment demanded, they delivered.

AT and Satou scored 48% of the team's 89 points in tonight's overtime win. pic.twitter.com/uhShYWCk6d

— Phoenix Mercury (@PhoenixMercury) September 24, 2025

“I think it just says we’re very resilient. We’re a tough group,” head coach Nate Tibbets said after the game. “It would have been very easy for us to give-in tonight. A lot of teams would’ve.”

With the series now tied, the action shifts to Phoenix. Game 3 tips off Friday at 6:30 p.m. at PHX Arena, with momentum up for grabs in this pivotal matchup.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ba-playoffs-game-2-comeback-overtime-win-2025
 
Open Thread: Suns Media Day

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It’s here. Finally, it’s here. Phoenix Suns Media Day has arrived.

No matter where you stand on this team — optimist, pessimist, or somewhere in between — you can’t help but feel a spark today. Media Day is that moment when hope kicks in. When you let yourself imagine the possibilities, however wild they might be.

This is our first real chance to see the squad together, to hear their voices, to feel the energy of a new season. The front office reshaped this roster all summer. We know the climb ahead won’t be easy (it rarely is) but today isn’t about the grind. It’s about the fresh start.

Basketball season is almost here. The weather’s turning, the vibes are good, and the Valley is ready.

So let’s dive in. Suns Media Day begins at 10 AM, and you can watch it right here. Jump into the chat and share your thoughts as the first chapter of this season gets written.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/suns-news/89553/open-thread-suns-media-day
 
Player Preview Anthology: The 2025-26 Phoenix Suns

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Media Day is tomorrow. The first real introduction to your 2025–26 Phoenix Suns. It’s our first chance to see the newly acquired players donning the purple and orange, to put faces to names, and to start shaping expectations for the season ahead.

For the past month, our Bright Side writing team has been pounding the keyboards, breaking down every player on the roster. We’ve looked at where they’ve been, where they might fit now, and where this season could take them. I don’t say it enough, but thank you to our team for the work they’ve put in. It shows, and it matters.

So here it is: the Suns roster, gift-wrapped. As you’re watching Media Day tomorrow, if a player pops on the screen and you find yourself wondering, “Who’s that guy?”, we’ve got you covered. Below are our predictions for each member of the team.

How accurate will we be? Time, as always, will tell.

Devin Booker​


Per Holden Sherman:

I think Booker will have a strong season, averaging around what he usually does, having a slight uptick in scoring, but his impact will go beyond the scoreboard. His influence on rookies Khaman Maluach, Koby Brea, and Rasheer Fleming will be what makes it a great year for him, not how many 40-point double-doubles he has.

In a time of retooling and realignment for the Valley, Booker needs to spearhead the way, and will do so for the 2025-26 season, and in the process break Tom Chambers’ single-season record for points per game in a season he set at 27.2.

Stat Prediction: 73 games played, 28.4 PPG, 7.0 APG, 5.1 RPG, 1.1 SPG on 48/37/87 shooting splits

Jalen Green​


Per Brandon Duenas:

I think Green will have a strong season. Stronger than the skeptics believe, and he fits better next to Booker than you’d think on the surface. That being said, I’m still not sold on the defense and ability to build a title contender with those two are your primary options. That leaves the Suns with a decision to make, especially with that much money committed to the guard duo.

Let’s roll with him playing in all 82 games again, because why put anything else into the universe?

Stat Prediction: 82 games played, 23.3 PPG, 4.5 APG, 4.4 RPG, 0.9 SPG on 44/36/79 shooting splits.

Dillon Brooks​


Per John Voita:

Ah yes, predictions. Trying to forecast Dillon Brooks feels slippery, because so much of his game lives outside the box score.

His value isn’t tethered to averages or percentages, it’s rooted in energy, effort, and attitude. Those are the things you feel more than you measure, and they are the things that tilt games. Still, if we’re going to attach numbers to his impact, I’ll play along.

Stat Prediction: 72 games played, 14.3 PPG, 3.6 APG, 3.1 RPG, 1.0 SPG on 42/38/80 shooting splits
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Mark Williams​


Per John Voita:

Mark Williams is one of the hardest players on this roster to project because everything hinges on that one variable: health. And if I’m being honest, I think it’s going to hold him back again this season.

The Suns know this, though. That’s why Nick Richards and Khaman Maluach are here. They’re like Geico geckos. Insurance policies in human form. Their presence means Phoenix can be patient, can give Williams the extra time he needs to get right without grinding him into dust. It’s all baked into the acquisition, part of the plan.

I don’t see him playing more than half the games. But in the ones he does play? He’ll matter. He’ll control the glass, tilt possessions, and give Phoenix the physical interior presence they’ve lacked. And for a team trying to rediscover its identity, that’s exactly where they need to start. By owning the boards.

Stat Prediction: 49 games played, 12.8 PPG, 2.1 APG, 10.8 RPG

Grayson Allen​


Per Holden Sherman:

If he’s on the team throughout the year, Allen has a defined role as the roster’s marksmen and will help both the team’s guards and bigs operate with more space. If he’s having a strong season, I think it’s more likely that he’s dealt because the Suns can clear more time for younger players and continue to recuperate all the assets that they’ve lost over the past few seasons.

If Jalen Green or Dillon Brooks are ever out of the lineup, expect Allen to take their spot and play alongside Devin Booker in the starting lineup, something he did two seasons ago. I expect a slightly better year from Allen compared to last year, with a more defined role.

Stat Prediction: 71 games played, 12.1 PPG, 3.2 RPG, 2.8 APG, 0.6 SPG on 46/43/86 shooting splits

Ryan Dunn​


Per Bruce Veliz:

With Dunn getting a bigger role within this group, I do see him taking the leap that is going to be needed for Phoenix this upcoming year. Since he is one of the best defenders on the squad, I see him prioritizing defense more than offense throughout the year. Even though that is the case, I do expect him to hvae some crazy dunks as we saw last year with Dunn soaring through the air to attack the rim. With Brooks being alongside him, I do see him being used less as a three-point scorer, but I do think in instances, he will be able to hit them when needed.

Dunn should expect the most development out of the young guys, and this will be shown with his playing time.

Stat Prediction: 78 games played, 8.3 PPG, 4.8 RPG, 1.6 APG, 1.0 SPG, 0.8 BPG on 45/34/53 shooting splits

Collin Gillespie​


Per Brandon Duenas:

Gillespie becomes a breath of fresh air for Suns fans clamoring about the point guard issues. I anticipate a strong season from him.

Stat Prediction: 75 games played, 8.0 PPG, 4.4 APG, 2.9 RPG, 0.9 SPG on 44/39/85 shooting splits.
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Royce O’Neale​


Per Matthew Lissy:

I don’t see Royce finishing the season with the Suns. It really comes down to how competitive this team can be in securing a top-four seed out West, a goal that feels close to impossible right now. O’Neale will be a better fit on another roster, and the Suns are likely to look for draft capital in return.

According to trade machine scenarios, the Suns could potentially land a first-round pick from the Dallas Mavericks. That would be an intriguing move, as Dallas could use O’Neale’s shooting and defensive versatility to fortify their playoff push. For the Suns, recouping a first-rounder would provide a much-needed asset to balance the books and plan for the future.

Stat Prediction: 32 games played with Suns before trade, 7.6 PPG, 4.2 RPG, 42.3% from three

Oso Ighodaro​


Per Bruce Veliz:

The last time we saw Oso Ighodaro out there on the court was the Summer League, and he impressed every Suns fan. The forward looked to be a different beast versus some weaker competition, where he could shine as one of the stars on the court. The Suns had Ighodaro playing power forward and center for this team, but were also letting him run some point forward for this team. Now this is something I don’t expect to translate into the season as much as we saw it, but it could be another facet of Ighodaro’s game that could see him get playing time. He looked more aggressive on the boards and looked more comfortable on the court with his poise on both sides of the floor. The big man can be disruptive in the paint with his long reach, and clearly was a difference for the Suns in that aspect.

Stat Prediction: 73 Games Played, 6.7 PPG, 6.2 RPG, 2.2 APG, 0.7 SPG, 0.9 BPG, on 67/18/70 shooting splits

Nigel Hayes-Davis​


Per John Voita:

For Hayes-Davis, it’s about being an energy player every night, an intangible addition whose hustle and presence ripple beyond the box score. Every team needs that player, the one who, when called upon, gives everything they have. If he can embody that role, he’ll find success not only in his own eyes, but in the hearts of the fan base as well.

Stat Prediction: 51 Games Played, 5.8 PPG, 4.1 RPG, 1.2 APG, 0.3 SPG, 0.9 BPG, on 48/35/72 shooting splits

Nick Richards​


Per Matthew Lissy:

Richards will have more highlights and his stats will improve by a smidge, but that small improvement is exactly what Richards needs to gain a little more traction ot respcect in the league.

At the end of this 2025-26 season, the Suns will likely be in the hunt for a play-in seed and I think Richards will be a big part of it. Not the guy to make the winning play at the end of the game, but just enough durring the game to keep the Suns close and maning the boards like the Suns need him to.

Stat Prediction: 72 games played, 10.2 PPG and 10.6 RPG

Khaman Maluach​


Per John Voita:

I’ll predict we see more of him than originally planned, simply because Mark Williams will miss time. That’s the cost of doing business with him on your roster. Circumstance will force Maluach into the spotlight sooner than expected, but I still believe the Suns will manage his minutes with development in mind.

That word, development, keeps circling back for a reason. It was one of the key phrases Brian Gregory leaned on in his introductory press conference, and it aligns with his reputation for scouting and growth. Everything about his track record suggests a deliberate approach, one built on patience and measured opportunity. Which means Maluach will play, and he should play, but within a framework designed to nurture rather than rush.

Stat Prediction: 38 games played, 7.6 PPG, 5.5 RPG, 0.8 BLK
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Rasheer Fleming​


Per Holden Sherman:

Just like his college career, I see Fleming improving as time goes on. His size and ability to space the floor, tied into the youth movement the Suns appear to be taking apart in, I see him carving a solid role for himself on the team, especially if Royce O’Neale is traded. There will definitely be some bumps, but his skill set should carry him to some solid stretches.

Stat Prediction: 70 games played, 8.9 PPG, 4.9 RPG, 1.3 APG, 0.9 BPG, 0.7 SPG on 42/33/74 shooting splits

Isaiah Livers​


Per Luke Dacre Tynan:

The two-way contract ensures that Phoenix will start him with the Valley Suns to harden the legs and re-train the reads. Let’s call it prepping for match-fitness.

The call-ups follow if the shot is there and the positioning holds. In NBA minutes, think clean, low-usage production: corner threes, second-side drives, a rebound that ends a possession at the right time. Something like 12–15 minutes a night once he’s in, low turnovers, a threes-made ledger that keeps growing. Not splashy. Sustainable.

POTENTIAL 2025/26 SEASON STAT LINE CEILING:

33 NBA games played (and remaining healthy all season!), 16.8 Minutes Per Game (perhaps getting “decent minute” call-ups during injury windows or trade scenarios involving other wing players), 5.4 PPG (on good efficiency), 3.1 RPG, 1.1 APG

Jordan Goodwin​


Per Brandon Duenas:

Goodwin comes in and is exactly what you expect him to be. A hard-nosed guard that provides gritty play and hustles every second he’s on the court.

Stat Prediction: 65 games played, 6.1 PPG, 1.9 APG, 4.1 RPG, 0.9 SPG on 42/33/78 shooting splits.

Jared Butler​


Per Bruce Veliz:

Ultimately, I am unsure if Butler will be on this roster, as he is on an Exhibit 9 deal and is reportedly in contention with Jordan Goodwin. That being said, even if he is here, his role will not be that expansive on this Suns team, unless the injuries come flowing like previous seasons. Therefore, if he stays, he will be that third ball handler in this rotation.

Stat Prediction: 51 Games Played 7.2 PPG, 1.8 RPG, 4.2 APG, on 47/33/85 shooting splits

Koby Brea​


Per Bruce Veliz:

With Brea being on the two-way contract I am going to take that into my evaluation of his stats. If he were to get more time or a standard deal by the end of the season, his numbers could defintely be higher.

Stat Prediction: 42 Games 4.2 PPG, 1.2 RPG, 1.8 APG, 0.3 BPG, 0.5 SPG on 44/41/87 shooting splits

CJ Huntley​


Per John Voita:

If you make your way down to Tempe, step through the doors of Mullett Arena, and catch a Valley Suns game or two, I’ll make you a prediction: CJ Huntley will pop. That’s the stage tailor-made for him. The G League runs like it’s plugged into a different voltage. It’s faster, looser, more chaotic, with every possession a chance to prove you belong. It’s basketball stripped of politics and rotations, a place where raw tools and effort show up immediately.

And that’s where Huntley will thrive. The athleticism, the hands, the late-bloomer confidence; those things translate in a hurry when the pace quickens and defenses aren’t fully formed. You’ll see the dunks, the blocks, the flashes of a stretch-four jumper, and for a moment you’ll let yourself wonder.

But the NBA isn’t built on flashes. Huntley’s contract makes him a two-way, and sure, that means up to 50 games with the Suns if the stars align. More likely, he’ll get a couple of call-ups here and there. Maybe when injuries pile up, maybe when the season drifts toward its finish line and experimentation sets in. Nothing more than that, at least not yet.

Stat Prediction: 5 games played, 2.1 PPG, 0.2 APG, 1.9 RPG


The predictions are in, and now comes the hard part: the journey back toward relevance. How will this Phoenix Suns team stack up in 2025–26? Soon enough, we’ll be rolling out our full slate of predictions. How the roster will perform, what the final record might look like, and where this group could realistically land in the Western Conference.

But that’s for later. For now, it’s simple. Media Day. The first step. The first glimpse. The start of whatever this season is going to become.

Let’s get excited.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...redictions-media-day-devin-booker-jalen-green
 
3 things to watch during Suns training camp

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Yep. The season is here. Yesterday, the Bright Side crew was on the ground for Media Day. We’ll have more to say about that as the week unfolds. Today, though, training camp opens. From here, the rhythm shifts into something daily. Sound bites will start to flow, patterns will begin to form, and we’ll gain the first hints of what this group might actually be.

This is the year the Suns have to walk the talk. We’ve heard an ocean of it since April, when the last version of this team collapsed under its own weight and left nothing but the acrid smoke of failure in its wake. Mat Ishbia tore it all down. A new general manager. A new head coach. A new system. Fourteen new players, younger and hungrier than what came before. With that came the buzzwords, sharp enough to cut glass: vision, alignment, identity. But training camp is where those words either grow legs or die on the page.

And camp will be more than diagrams on whiteboards or bullet points in press releases. It’s where bodies collide, chemistry sparks or fizzles, and the early shape of a season comes into focus. As Phoenix prepares for its first preseason game on October 3, here are three things worth watching as the work finally begins.

The backup to the backup point guard battle​


The Phoenix Suns brought in two players to battle for a single chair, and the music is about to start.

Point guard depth is thin, with Devin Booker and Jalen Green expected to shoulder the load in the starting lineup while third-year guard Collin Gillespie holds steady in reserve. That leaves one spot to be claimed, and both Jordan Goodwin and Jared Butler are circling it with intent.

Butler arrives on a training camp and Exhibit 10 deal, a prove-it opportunity carved out of hustle and hope. Goodwin, familiar to Suns fans, carries a non-guaranteed contract that locks in come January, a reminder that his foothold is as precarious as it is promising. This is the essence of training camp: competition stripped down to its core, two guards scrapping to show they belong.

Butler turned a sliver of opportunity into production in Philadelphia last season, thriving when injuries forced the rotation open. Goodwin, meanwhile, has already worn the Phoenix jersey, though on a roster that now feels like a distant memory.

The slate has been wiped clean, and the fight is live once again.

Who earns the power forward position?​


The power forward spot has been a source of endless chatter all offseason, and if you ask the community, Ryan Dunn is already penciled in as the solution. But fan belief and coaching reality are often two very different things. The Suns enter camp with a handful of options, each carrying a unique pitch to the role.

Nigel Hayes-Davis may be the sleeper. His Media Day presence was impressive. He was measured and cerebral, the tone of a player who understands the game beyond the stat sheet. Add in a steady three-point stroke, and suddenly, you have someone who can slide into the first unit and keep the offense humming.

Then there’s Dunn. Entering his second year, he carries the defensive calling card that makes him attractive. The question is whether the offensive gaps, most notably his perimeter shot, have begun to close. Defense alone can get you on the floor, but to stay there, especially next to Booker and Green, you need to punish teams that sag off.

The rookie Rasheer Fleming brings intrigue as a developmental piece, raw but brimming with potential. And let’s not overlook the small-ball card in Dillon Brooks, who could change the geometry of the floor if the Suns choose to go that direction.

Each of these players has a case to make. The job is open, the competition real, and the answer, whatever it is, will help shape Phoenix’s identity moving into the season.

The development of the rookie class​


From the wide-angle lens, perhaps the most vital storyline of the Suns’ season isn’t about rotations or schemes, but about development. Specifically, how do you bring the rookies along? There are four of them on the roster, though two are tied to two-way contracts. Labels aside, the organization made a conscious investment in youth, and now the task is to nurture it with intention.

Training camp is the first proving ground. This is where the rookies begin to absorb the pace, the language, the physicality of the NBA. It’s also where the Suns can be deliberate in shaping their growth, smart with minutes, strategic with matchups, thoughtful with roles. What matters is less about immediate production and more about the foundation being poured beneath them.

Equally important is listening.

How do the rookies talk about the game? How do they frame the challenge? What slips out in the post-practice interviews that hints at their mentality? That’s the early litmus test. It tells you how they’re processing, how they’re adapting, and whether the steep climb ahead excites them or overwhelms them. And that, as much as anything, will shape how Phoenix’s youth movement takes root.



That’s right. Basketball season is back, baby. The long summer lull is over, and the noise of the game is rising again.

Stay locked in with Bright Side of the Sun as we sift through the flood of quotes, track the growth of this roster, and keep a close eye on the position battles that will shape Training Camp 2025. The story of the season is beginning to write itself, and we’ll be here for every line.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ter-battles-point-guard-power-forward-rookies
 
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