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Game Recap: Hot shooting third quarter leads Suns to a 116-110 victory in Jalen Green’s return

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PHILADELPHIA— The Phoenix Suns beat the Philadelphia 76ers 116-110 on Tuesday. Jalen Green returned from injury and showed flashes of his dynamic scoring ability but the main story of the night was the team’s strong shooting. Phoenix shot 41% from the behind the arc, hitting 16 threes on 39 attempts, following up their 20/39 three-point shooting night against the Brooklyn Nets last night with another great shooting performance.

Devin Booker led the team with 27 points and the team had three different players make at least three triples, including Royce O’Neale who had his 29th game of the season with three or more threes, tied for the most in the NBA this year.

With their second-straight game with a 40-point quarter, Phoenix pulled away in the third, outscoring the 76ers 40-31 in the frame and giving them a cushion when Philadelphia made a late push in the fourth quarter.

Now 27-17 on the year, Phoenix is now 27-17 on the year and have won three-straight all in a four-day span and look to be tied for fourth in Western Conference if the Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Lakers and Minnesota Timberwolves all lose tonight.

Game Flow​

First Half​


It took the Suns a second to get going, taking nearly 4 and a half minute to make their first shot. Around the six minute mark, Jalen Green made his long awaited return and he wasted no time, attacking the basket and going to the free throw line hitting two foul shots. He played off ball and got some opportunities to run the offense.

Jalen Green gets downhill, makes a nice read to Oso Ighodaro on the roll pic.twitter.com/MMdpQRnQlH

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) January 21, 2026

Phoenix struggled to knock down shots but thanks to their 11/11 free throw shooting, they trailed just 29-27 heading into the second quarter.

The Suns took their first lead of the game early in the second quarter thanks to Collin Gillespie’s hot shooting back in the area where he played his college ball. Philadelphia however would respond, going on a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter to put them back up 43-41 and forcing the Suns to call a timeout.

To close the half Phoenix and Philadelphia exchanged baskets, with both teams generating a lot of their offense through driving to the basket. The Suns led 57-53 with Devin Booker and Oso Ighodaro leading the team in scoring, going 13/13 from the line and limiting Philadelphia to 6/20 shooting from three. Kelly Oubre’s 16-point half led the 76ers.

Second Half​


The 76ers struck first. Philly started the third on a 13-2 run, getting out in transition and generating turnovers, taking a 66-59 lead 2:39 into the half, forcing the Suns into a timeout. After the break Phoenix responded, going on their own run and retaking the lead thanks to scoring 4 baskets all from threes. Royce O’Neale was apart of the three-point flurry, helping his ranking in a major three-point statistic.

This is Royce’s 29th game of the season with 3+ triples — tied for the most in the NBA this season. pic.twitter.com/7KUReEV3Rs

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) January 21, 2026

Jalen Green was also getting in on the three-point action. He hit a step back triple that had the Suns bench and fans excited.

THATS NASTY JALEN GREEN pic.twitter.com/NRtbITE1N4

— Cage (@ridiculouscage) January 21, 2026

After being down as much as seven, thanks to the three-point flurry the Suns ended the third on a 38-18 run and led 97-84 going into the fourth quarter.

The three point shooting continued to start the fourth quarter with Jordan Goodwin hitting a triple early in the frame.

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When the Suns’ lead got up to 17, the 76ers started to make a comeback, forcing Jordan Ott to call multiple timeouts as what was once almost a 20-point lead became a single digit one. However, as the Suns did against the Brooklyn Nets and New York Knicks, the team stayed composed and took home the victory.


Up Next​


Phoenix will head to Atlanta to face the Hawks. The Suns will have two days between a game for the first time since December. They haven’t won in Atlanta since 2014, two seasons before Devin Booker was drafted.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-to-a-116-110-victory-in-jalen-greens-return
 
Jalen Green finally returns and the early reviews are in

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At long last, we finally got to see Jalen Green in a Phoenix Suns jersey again. It was only the third time it has happened this season, and from where I sit, the early returns lean positive. Yes, it is one game. Nowhere near a real sample size. But there were moments that sparked excitement, moments that made you slow down and think, and moments that naturally open the door to bigger conversations about what this could become.

The final stat line? 20 minutes played, 12 points on 4-of-11 shooting, 2 rebounds, 3 assists, and a pair of turnovers.

Suns head coach Jordan Ott bringing Jalen Green off the bench in his first game back felt like the right call. He is coming off what was most likely a Grade 3 hamstring injury, and easing him back matters. He needed his legs under him again, because his legs are the superpower. That showed up immediately on Tuesday night.

For everything this Suns team does well, speed is not high on the list. They play at the 20th fastest pace in the league. Jalen Green changes that dynamic. He brings real burst. Watching him blow by defenders and get into the paint felt different, and it mattered. That pressure is going to pay dividends.

What stood out even more was his decision-making. Time and again, he got downhill, drew help, and kicked it out to shooters instead of forcing a look. That can be his secret sauce this season. Collapsing defenses and creating space for everyone else. It is also why I expect Devin Booker’s shooting efficiency to level out. He does not have to fight two defenders every possession anymore.

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Green’s handle looked tight. The jumper looked clean. He went 2-of-4 from deep and did not force anything. No rushed threes. No momentum killers. That was a concern coming out of Houston. We did not see it here. And that alone is encouraging.

The other question going into the night was simple: Whose minutes would he take? This is not a fringe rotation guy. This is someone who is going to play real minutes, one of the highest usage players on the roster, and someone the organization needs to evaluate over the rest of the season to truly understand who he is and how he fits. You are not bringing him back to play 20 minutes once a week and call it a day.

My assumption is this will be matchup-driven, with Jordan Ott doing some minute math on the fly. Shaving here. Adjusting there. Collin Gillespie. Jordan Goodwin. Grayson Allen. Those minutes are all going to feel the squeeze at different times.

Last night, though, it was Ryan Dunn. He played fewer than 9 minutes. Want a wild stat? That is the first time all season he has played fewer than 10. The same number of times as his jersey number. 0 before last night.

And it made sense. Philadelphia plays with small, twitchy guards. Dunn struggles there. He bites on first steps. That is not the matchup for him. So Ott countered by sliding Jalen Green into that role off the bench instead. As the season moves along, this is going to be something to watch closely. Whose minutes change, when they change, and why.

I also have to give Green credit for what he did on the defensive end, especially late while guarding Tyrese Maxey. That is not a friendly assignment. Maxey lives on first steps and chaos. If that matchup had fallen to Ryan Dunn, I think we would have seen a couple of clean blow-bys for easy buckets. Green, who is longer than people give him credit for, held his ground. He stayed attached, disrupted the rhythm, and at least made Maxey work for it. Through one game, this did not look like the traffic cone we were warned about.

The only real criticism I have for Green is tied directly to his speed. He can get to the rim almost whenever he wants. Sometimes it feels effortless. The issue is what happens after that. There are moments where he arrives at the cup without a plan.

We saw it late in the game on what I would call his lone untimely shot. The Suns were up 7 with three minutes to play. Green blew past his man and got exactly where he wanted. But once he was there, he did not look ready to finish the shot that presented itself. He rushed it. Threw up something ugly. That is where the opportunity lives. If he can marry the speed with a little more patience and intention at the rim, that is when things really open up.

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“You could feel his ability to get downhill to the rim, into the paint. Thought he made a lot of good downhill drives where he finished or tried to find a teammate,” Jordan Ott said after the game. “Just good to have him out there. It’s like his joy is back.”

Zooming out, Ott is correct. It was simply good to have Jalen Green back on the floor. He brings a certain zest. A pulse. He fits what the Suns are trying to build. You could feel it on the bench, the way his teammates reacted to his minutes. They are pulling for him. They want this to work, and they are invested in helping it along.

Now comes the real test. Can we get two straight games of Jalen Green on the court? We will find out on Friday when the Suns face the Hawks.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...tion-minutes-ryan-dunn-jordan-ott-depth-chart
 
Brent Barry peels back the curtain on a locker room that wouldn’t commit

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Last season, the Phoenix Suns managed to turn disappointment into an art form. The most expensive roster the league has ever seen could not even sniff the Play In, let alone the postseason. A masterclass in how fast things can go sideways. Most of us have tried to memory hole that year and move on, but every so often, a new detail leaks out. Another breadcrumb. Another explanation. Another quiet “why”.

This time, it came from Brent Barry. He popped up on an episode of the No Dunks Podcast and peeled back the curtain a bit on how that team actually functioned behind the scenes. And the picture he painted helps explain how something with that much talent unraveled the way it did.

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“The situation there overall, I would tell you guys, being on the inside, was it was a team that just didn’t know how to get along,” Barry stated. “They were all cordial towards one another. They all came to practice and were friendly, but it was one of those situations where you’re just not invested.”

“I thought it was going to be a slingback from what happened with Frank Vogel and the disappointment from the year before that there would be some piss and vinegar in the team and that these guys would want to show like, hey, we’ve got the highest salary in the league,” he continued. “We’ve got to figure this thing out together. Let’s use our superpowers to do that. Let’s use our superpowers for good. Unfortunately, they used them the other way and found ways to dismantle that roster. And sadly, they just didn’t commit to one another.”

“If clearly those guys don’t have a hierarchy and you’re not, as a member of the team, as a player, you’re not aware of which of the guys were leaning on the most, it confuses the rest of the team. And I think we had a lot of guys who didn’t exactly know what the expectations were. And again, this comes back to really good coaching and leadership. You have to define those for a team. And at no point did we do that for the Phoenix Suns last year.”

This was incredibly revealing. It highlights the contrast between last season and this one in bold print.

Starting with Bradley Beal, it became clear that he never fully bought into operating within a true team structure. He had been the alpha in Washington for so long that the adjustment never really took. When reports surfaced that he took offense to his head coach asking him to play more like Jrue Holiday, that told you everything you needed to know. That was a crack in the armor.

I have said it plenty of times. I liked the player. I did not like the contract or the situation. But once that detail came out, it reframed things. This was not only about fit on the court. It was about mindset. When a player resists being part of something collective, when the instinct is “me” over “we”, the whole thing starts to wobble. That mentality bleeds. And last year, it bled everywhere.

And if you take Barry’s comments one step further, they also shine a light on the challenge Kevin Durant brought with him.

You can talk all day about his greatness on the court, and none of that is up for debate. But the laissez-faire approach, the mentality of wanting to hoop and nothing else, showed up in exactly what Barry was describing. That disengagement, that singular focus, warped the hierarchy of the team and bled into the locker room. That’s the lack of investment.

With great power comes great responsibility, or at least it is supposed to. That has never really been Durant’s lane. He wants the praise. He wants the contract. He wants the freedom. He does not want the accountability that comes with steering a group. Last season made that painfully clear. When the players carrying the largest financial weight do not define or embrace their role, everyone else drifts. Structure erodes. Accountability disappears.

What you end up with is a roster full of mercenaries. Guys playing for themselves, not for each other. The coaching staff never had a chance to pull it back together because the egos were too big and the buy-in was never there. That was last year’s Suns in a nutshell.

Devin Booker was obviously part of that group too, and he even said early this season that last year was the toughest stretch of basketball he has ever lived through.

"Definitely the toughest two years of my career."

Phoenix Suns' Devin Booker discusses why the last couple of seasons were more difficult to navigate than even the lean years when winning didn't come easy.@BurnsAndGambo pic.twitter.com/AgcUrJubYK

— Arizona Sports (@AZSports) September 25, 2025

We do not know how much responsibility to pin on him for what did or did not happen, but one thing is clear. His voice was muted. Just ask Coach Bud, who, when the team was struggling, reportedly told Booker to “tone it down”. He’s not free of sin, but he’s the only one who appeared to try to vocalize the issue and was muted. When you stack that many stars together and no one clearly owns the room, even the franchise guy can get drowned out.

That is the clearest contrast to this season. This team works because everyone knows where they stand. There is a hierarchy. There is clarity.

You can hear it when guys like Jordan Goodwin, Collin Gillespie, Mark Williams, and Ryan Dunn talk on The Old Man and the Three Podcast. The reverence they have for Devin Booker. The respect they show for what Dillon Brooks brings. That stuff matters. It sets the tone. And it is a big reason why this version of the Suns feels connected in a way last year never did.

"There was a lot of noise outside last year." — Collin Gillespie + Ryan Dunn talk about the Suns this year vs. last year pic.twitter.com/OwIL7MORRH

— TheOldManAndTheThree (@OldManAndThree) January 1, 2026

The difference is obvious, and you see it every night on the floor. When there is a clear hierarchy behind the scenes, it shows up in how the team plays. Roles are defined. Effort lines up. Execution follows.

This team has already won 27 games. Last season, it took until February 22 to get there. 59 games. This group did it in 44. That is not coincidence. That is structure. That is buy-in. And it traces back directly to the issues Barry pointed out. When everyone knows who they are and how they fit, winning stops feeling accidental and starts feeling repeatable.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...eam-chemistry-superstars-hierarchy-leadership
 
National respect is finally catching up to the Phoenix Suns

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Crow. Best served cold, apparently. I should know. I have spent plenty of time eating it myself after takes that aged poorly. But around the league, there is a whole lot of crow getting passed around right now as the Suns keep churning out an unexpectedly successful season and quietly building one of the better stories in the NBA so far.

You do not have to take my word for it. National outlets are starting to say it out loud. Phoenix is earning respect.

John Schuhmann of NBA.com has the Suns slotted at the fifth overall spot in this week’s power rankings.

The Suns were without Devin Booker in Detroit on Thursday, when they blew a 16-point lead and lost by three, scoring just 15 points on 25 fourth-quarter possessions. Their offense hasn’t been great (115.8 points scored per 100 possessions) with Booker on the floor, but they’re now 1-3 without him, having scored just 101.3 per 100 over those four games. Of course, all four have been on the road and against teams — Houston, Minnesota, Oklahoma City and Detroit — that rank in the top nine defensively.

Booker returned on Saturday, when the Suns beat the Knicks, who were playing without Jalen Brunson. Mitchell Robinson was there, but the Suns outscored New York (21-17) on second chances. While Phoenix is one of nine teams that have scored fewer points per 100 possessions than they did last season, it’s seen the league’s biggest jump in offensive rebounding percentage, from 26.4% (26th) last season to 33.6% (sixth) this season.

The Suns’ starting lineup didn’t have its best night at Madison Square Garden, but bench minutes were huge as they erased two separate, 10-point deficits. Grayson Allen continues to close games, and the Suns have outscored opponents by 13.4 points per 100 possessions in 486 minutes with both Jordan Goodwin and Oso Ighodaro on the floor, and they have the league’s fifth-ranked bench overall.

ESPN dished out midseason grades, and Kevin Pelton gave the Suns an “A” for their efforts thus far.

Thus far, team owner Mat Ishbia was right and the experts (myself included) were wrong about the Suns’ offseason makeover, which saw them say farewell to marquee additions Bradley Beal and Kevin Durant. In their place, Phoenix has built a hard-playing squad in the image of newcomer Dillon Brooks that excels at forcing turnovers and has barely dropped off offensively from last year’s star-studded team, going from 13th in offensive rating to 15th. Collin Gillespie’s emergence as a capable starting point guard has been one of the season’s best stories — earning him the nickname “Villain Jr.” from Brooks — and new coach Jordan Ott looks like he’ll put an end to the revolving door on the Suns’

The Athletic is a bit more bullish on the Suns than most. They have Phoenix sitting ninth in their power rankings, tucked right behind the Golden State Warriors. Because of course they do. The Warriors are always going to live near the top of those lists. Clicks are undefeated.

Law Murray put it this way:

I don’t think it is likely that Booker gets selected as a starter, but I feel like he should be rewarded for a Suns team that basically is in the same spot in the standings as the Lakers despite significantly less talent. Jalen Green is expected to finally play his sixth quarter of the season this week. Booker is one of 20 players averaging at least 25 points per game, and of those 20 players, only Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Cade Cunningham and Jamal Murray have won more games than Booker this season.

ESPN’s power rankings have the Suns sitting in 9th, and despite a three-game winning streak, they dropped one spot in their rankings. Make it make sense. Dave McMenamin had this to say:

How will Jalen Green be integrated into their success?

After making his return Tuesday, his first game action since early November because of a right hamstring issue, the Suns’ rotation will now shift to fit Green into the rotation. Adding a 23-year-old dynamic scorer is undoubtedly a good problem to have for first-year head coach Jordan Ott; shuffling things on the fly, however, is always a challenge, and Phoenix has had a good thing going so far this season and is riding a three-game win-streak.

Does any of that actually matter? Not really. The Suns still have to look inward and keep doing the work. They are in the middle of reintroducing Jalen Green into an offensive and defensive system that has been working. That is not plug and play. A player with that kind of shot appetite is going to require adjustment. If they can navigate that while stacking wins, that is success.

What someone writes in The Athletic is noise. And yes, I know I contribute to the noise. Sometimes loudly. But what I think does not matter. What matters is what happens in that locker room, the alignment inside the organization, and the way this team performs on the floor.

This season has already been fun. The national guys are starting to notice. The best way to keep their attention is simple. And to keep doing it the same way.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...er-all-star-collin-gillespie-villain-jr-stats
 
Re-grading Brian Gregory’s first offseason

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Brian Gregory was a controversial hire. Mat Ishbia promoted yet another Michigan State Spartan to a position of power in an offseason where that became a trend, as new head coach Jordan Ott was a former video coordinator at MSU under Tom Izzo.

These days, most Suns fans have very little to critique about the coaching hire. Everyone who watched the last dregs of the Monty Williams era, the Vogel season, and the Budenholzer season is elated by the progress this team has shown under Jordan Ott, and I see many fans routinely discuss their contentment with the coach online.

One person who doesn’t seem to get his flowers as often is Brian Gregory. GMs tend to be judged over the course of many drafts and offseasons. The fruits of their labor can take years to be tasted. Coaches give us the here and now. We can see the difference a coach makes a minimum of 82 times per year.

Jordan Ott also had a proven track record as an assistant around the league. The only things we really knew about Gregory were his connection to the Spartans and his fondness for the word “alignment.”

BUZZWORDS COUNTER: Three things are clear from new #Suns GM Brian Gregory…

Alignment
Identity
Vision pic.twitter.com/kOO4S8Khp8

— Cameron Cox (@CamCox12) May 7, 2025

That said, we do have a sample size. 44 games are behind us. 53.7% of the season has come and gone and we are closer to the playoffs than we are to opening night. So, how has Brian Gregory’s first offseason aged?

The Kevin Durant Trade: Grade: B+​


The big one. The first item on the agenda. What was Brian Gregory going to do with KD. The Kevin Durant trade ended up being the largest trade in NBA history, comprising 7 teams.

The Suns traded Kevin Durant for Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, picks 10, 31, and 41 in the 2025 NBA draft, and two future second-round picks. At the time, I would have graded this a C- or maybe even a D. The best player the Suns received back played the same position as Devin Booker. After that, all the Suns got was a role player, one good pick, and a handful of second-rounders. When do late picks ever work out, anyway?

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As it turns out, I was a fool. Dillon Brooks has had a career season, even though he has begun to regress back to his mean a bit on the current road trip. His mean, however, is a good defensive wing who can space the floor and average 15 per game for his career.

Jalen Green has played just two full games on the season. In one of those two games, he looked like an explosive athlete who was going to be a dynamic backcourt partner to complement Booker. He scored an efficient 29 points and looked good doing it. In his return to the court in Philadelphia, he struggled with his efficiency a bit, but was showing some playmaking ability to make up for it. Most importantly, he looked healthy. While the Jalen Green sample size is not enormous, it does give us hope moving forward. Jalen Green still could have a “second star” in his future.

Meanwhile, the young player I desperately wanted from the Rockets, 22-year-old power forward Jabari Smith Jr., is playing…okay. He is averaging 15 points and 7 rebounds and is generally just a good basketball player. He would have probably played well under Coach Ott, but with the flashes Green has shown for the Suns, I think fans are expecting to be happy with the package they received.

The draft compensation received for Kevin Durant was about as good as Phoenix could have hoped for. We no longer live in the same NBA that was trading the farm for Rudy Gobert. A top ten pick and some future second-rounders in return for an aging star was a reasonable amount of draft compensation.

The most important thing the Suns received in return for Kevin Durant is the privilege of not having him in their locker room. At just the halfway point of the season, the vibes are already poor in Houston.

pic.twitter.com/2zGa9upoyy

— No Context NBA (@NoContext_NBA_) January 10, 2026

While Durant was in Phoenix, I thought that watching him play on the court for your favorite team must be the peak of basketball fandom. Unfortunately, watching everyone else on your favorite team be miserable playing with him was the curse that came with the boon.

This was a good trade for the Suns. Good is probably the right word, though, not great. But who knows if a great trade was ever going to be available? At the time of the trade, Durant’s value was at an all-time low for his career. Gregory did what he could with what he had and should be very happy with the results this trade has generated.

The Mark Williams Trade: Grade: A+


On draft night, the Phoenix Suns traded the 29th pick, Liam McNeeley, Vasilije Micić, and a 2029 first-round pick to the Charlotte Hornets for Mark Williams and a 2029 second-round pick.

At first glance, that first-round pick in 2029 might seem like a steep price given the Suns’ current lack of draft capital, but I invite you to look a little deeper with me. The pick that the Suns traded was the least favorable draft pick among the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Cleveland Cavaliers, and the Utah Jazz. At least two of those teams are likely to be playoff teams in 2029. What the Suns really traded away with that 2029 pick was a player likely to be in the back 5-10 selections of the draft.

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In return for that package, Phoenix received a young starter at what was, at the time, their weakest position. Williams is 24 years old, averages 12 points and 8 rebounds, and is five games away from a career high. He is the perfect high-motor big man to hold down the position for the next half-decade or more while the Suns’ center prospect develops, and they got him for a much lower price than they should have been able to. I give this trade an A+ for the sheer value returned for what was given up.

Every team in the league would trade picks 25 and 29 for a 24-year-old starter, and that is essentially what Brian Gregory did.

The Draft: Grade: C+


The thing about judging a draft during a rookie year is that, inevitably, very little of what we say about these guys now will actually be correct in the future. Cooper Flagg might win rookie of the year, but he also could be Michael Carter-Williams in disguise. While I think that is unlikely, I make that point to highlight how rookie seasons really shouldn’t be used to write off a player forever. With that disclaimer out of the way, let’s determine if we should write off these players forever.

With their selections, the Phoenix Suns chose Khaman Maluach with the 10th pick, Rasheer Fleming with the 31st pick, and Koby Brea with the 41st pick. All three of these guys were raw, and only one of them had an NBA-ready skill that they could exhibit (Koby Brea’s shooting).

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Koby Brea has played a total of eight minutes in the NBA so far. He is averaging 20.1 points in over 36 minutes in the G-League for the Valley Suns. Unfortunately, he is shooting just 31.3% from three. Brea is a player who got drafted because of his jump shot, and if he is going to make it in the NBA, he needs to be an above-average three-point shooter.

On the other hand, Rasheer Fleming has shown flashes. Fleming has averaged 7 minutes per game across the 24 games he has played. He has gotten into NBA games and looked like an NBA player. He is a long way away from being a high-level NBA player, but when you watch Fleming play you see a guy who is likely going to be in the Suns rotation in the next couple of years. Rasheer Fleming, Ryan Dunn, and Oso Ighodaro represent hits on late draft picks that most teams struggle to get. The ability to evaluate guys late in the first round and deep into the second round will continue to be critical for this team as all of their draft picks will be in this range for the foreseeable future

Maluach has been the player everyone has had their eye on. He has played just 4.7 minutes per game across 18 games this season. He is also 19 years old and likely still growing into his 7 feet 1 inches and 250 lbs. One bright spot is that he has dominated in the G-League. In his eight games for the Valley Suns, he is averaging 15.8 points, 12.3 rebounds, and 3 blocks. There are enough flashes with the teenage center that it probably isn’t time to hit the panic button, yet. Just do yourself a favor and stay away from the basketball reference pages of the guys drafted around him.

Three to four years from now, when Maluach and Fleming are rotation players, I think we are upgrading Brian Gregory’s first draft to a B+.

The Other Guys: Grade: A


This is where the Suns’ front office has truly shone. In addition to the Fleming draft pick, Gregory claimed Jordan Goodwin off of waivers and signed Isaiah Livers to a two-way contract. As a bonus point, Gregory also signed Jamaree Bouyea to a two-way contract, though the season had already started.

Following the Goodwin signing, Gregory then had to make a second decision. There was a tough preseason battle between Goodwin and Jared Butler for a spot on the roster. Ultimately, Gregory made the right choice. Goodwin is averaging 9 points, 4.7 rebounds, and 1.4 steals in just 21 minutes off the bench. He has been a spark plug on defense and a perfect fit for this team’s new identity.

Isaiah Livers is averaging 10 minutes across just 23 games, mostly filling in for whatever role has been needed of him, especially at the power forward position. While he isn’t on his way to a regular rotation spot, he has been a good signing for what could have been reasonably expected of him.

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The Suns have begun to gain a reputation for finding these guys. While Brian Gregory may not have been the general manager at the time, starting point guard Collin Gillespie was also a recent diamond in the rough that the Suns found, just waiting to be signed by anyone who would take him.

Final Offseason Grade: B+​


Brian Gregory and the Suns front office team did what I thought was going to be impossible. They turned the dumpster fire 2024-2025 Phoenix Suns into a real playoff team. They found their guys, they aligned their vision, and they proved they can do more than spout buzzwords.

The only thing holding back the score for this offseason is the draft. For the second year running, the Phoenix Suns have walked away from the draft with at least one and maybe two pieces that are likely to turn into long-term rotation players. However, this was also very likely the last time the Suns are going to have a top ten draft pick in the Devin Booker era. If they want to open up the contention window again, Maluach has to turn into something great.

We will see what happens. For now, I am excited to see what the Brian Gregory era has in store for the future.

What about you, Suns fans? How would you grade BG’s first offseason?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-williams-draft-analysis-jordan-ott-alignment
 
A way too early look at potential Suns playoff matchups

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Look, I admit it. I’ve gotten ahead of myself with this one here. There is still A LOT of basketball to be played.

The fact that the Phoenix Suns are in playoff conversations while boasting a record 10 games above .500 remains incredible given the low to modest expectations entering the season.

It feels like the Suns are playing with house money. They weren’t supposed to be here. The front office sold us a vision of what they wanted to be this offseason. It was met with plenty of eyerolls, but they sure as heck have delivered on those promises so far and then some.

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Jordan Ott has this team humming. They have a new identity that is the polar opposite of what it was a year ago.

They are currently 27-17, sitting just inside the top-6 at the 5 seed, sitting a half game ahead of the Lakers and Wolves. They are “tied” with Houston for the 4th seed (lose tiebreaker), which would give them home-court advantage in the 1st round of the playoffs if they can leap them. Is that goal too greedy?

Staying in front of the Lakers and Wolves feels realistic. So then it comes down to the Rockets, Nuggets, and Spurs. Denver isn’t budging as much without Jokic as many thought, and he returns soon. That may be a long shot. The Spurs have been steady. Ultimately, Phoenix just needs to continue stacking wins.

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Priority One: Just make it


The NBA giveth and the NBA taketh. Before we get too ahead of ourselves in discussing the playoffs, the Suns need to continue doing their job and make it.

The Western Conference is a beast, and every win counts. One game could be the difference between a home court advantage in round 1 or a play-in game. It’s going to be that tight.

Phoenix’s next stretch 5-game stretch includes a ton more Eastern Conference teams! And a chance to improve upon their positioning in the West as their opponents begin to play more games to catch up to the Suns, who seemingly have been 2-3 games played ahead of the rest of the West.

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Who should they want in round 1? Who should they try to avoid?

Let’s start with avoiding the Thunder and their side of the bracket. First of all, you don’t want them because that means you played yourself down into the play-in and maybe lost a play-in game. Next, try like hell to get a top-3 seed so we wind up on the opposite side of the bracket.

Look, they’re not an unbeatable juggernaut. But they are clearly the best in the West and have a tough home environment to win in. Avoid please.

The Spurs? Jordan Ott has done a masterful job of making life hell for Victor Wembanyama. They’re a tough team with great guard depth and a unique blend of size and speed. They are still very young and don’t have much playoff experience, so they’d be the lower of the four opponents. Denver is a tough one. They have the best player in the world in Nikola Jokic, and at full strength, they present some matchup problems for Phoenix.

Houston, we have a problem. Phoenix has struggled against them during the regular season, but each matchup has had its fair sahre of injuries on each side. The latest loss came at the hands of a KD game-winner in a super winnable game. I don’t feat them as much now as I did at the beginning of the year. But they have a ton of wings and big forwards, making it a tough matchup for Phoenix.

I’d rank these four teams in order of least wanting to play them to most as follows:

  1. OKC Thunder
  2. Denver Nuggets
  3. Houston Rockets
  4. San Antonio Spurs

The odds are Phoenix plays one of these four teams in the opening round, barring an unexpected injury or team landslide. Minnesota and Los Angeles are lurking as well, and in the next tier I’d go:

  1. Minnesota Timberwolves
  2. Los Angeles Lakers

These next few weeks will tell us a lot about these teams and should help the dust settle a bit. Or maybe we all stay bunched up, and it continues to be pure chaos. Either way, it’s fun to be in these discussions.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ions-seeding-race-matchups-analysis-standings
 
Game Recap: Atlanta delivered another painful chapter for the Suns

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The road trip is over, and the Suns are coming home limping, literally and figuratively. They went back to Atlanta, a place they have not won in since 2014, and I am fully convinced that city is cursed. In a 110–103 loss to the Hawks, Phoenix did not only lose a game, they lost $88.7 million in payroll.

It started with Jalen Green, playing only his second game back from a hamstring injury, exiting in the first quarter with hamstring tightness. Same leg. Same sinking feeling.

Jalen Green injury update:

Green (precautionary right hamstring tightness) will not return tonight.

— Amanda_Pflugrad (@Amanda_Pflugrad) January 24, 2026

And yet, the Suns rallied. Down as many as 11, they clawed their way back and carried a seven-point lead into the end of the third quarter. Then the other shoe dropped. Devin Booker went down.

Devin Booker rolled his right ankle pretty bad.

He is being helped to the LR now.

— Amanda_Pflugrad (@Amanda_Pflugrad) January 24, 2026

Now the Suns return home for a five-game homestand carrying more questions than answers. This is the kind of loss that lingers because we do not know the severity. We do not know timelines. Booker finished with 31 points. The Suns were in position to win, but once the stars were gone, the offense stalled, and execution vanished.

The road trip ends at 3–3. Respectable. But the bigger story is this. They are headed home, and they are hurt.

Game Flow

First Half


The Suns came out of the gate with good rhythm, knocking down six of their first 11 shots and hitting 2-of-3 from deep. Atlanta was sharper though, opening 8-of-12 and 3-of-4 from beyond the arc. Three different Hawks hit the five-point mark early, and that collective punch gave them a 19-14 lead heading into the first timeout.

There was one defensive possession that stood out immediately. Oso Ighodaro found himself defending a two-on-one break and held his ground long enough for help to arrive. The result was three straight missed shots by Atlanta. That is the kind of sequence he gives you quietly, consistently, and it still feels underrated, even as the appreciation for his work is starting to catch up.

Jalen Green checked in off the bench and showed a little rust early, which was expected. Then the speed showed up. He blew by Luke Kennard with ease, leaving him reaching for air and taking his ankles along for the ride. That burst changes the geometry of the floor every time it shows itself.

Oh dear lord Jalen Green…you didn’t have to take Luke Kennard’s ankles from him! That man has a family!

pic.twitter.com/p6TMcWcmZP

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) January 24, 2026

Unfortunately, right after that sequence, Green headed back to the locker room.

From there, the bench picked up right where it has all road trip. When Grayson Allen checked in, the Suns were down 19-14. By the time the first quarter ended, Phoenix was on top 31-27. Allen capped it with a driving finger roll as the buzzer sounded, finishing the quarter at +9 with seven points. The second unit drove it. 15 bench points, 7 of the final 10 shots made, and suddenly the Suns had momentum and a lead heading into the second.

GRAYSON BEATS THE BUZZER 🚨 pic.twitter.com/T8OG7Iex1E

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) January 24, 2026

Grayson kept it rolling to open the second quarter, staying active off the ball and cashing in on an easy look at the rim. But turnovers started to creep in, and they hurt. Phoenix coughed it up three times early, fueling a 16–9 Atlanta run that flipped the feel of the game.

Midway through the quarter, the Hawks pushed it further with an 11–2 burst that stretched the lead to eight. CJ McCollum, acquired in the Trae Young deal, was a problem. He poured in 16 first-half points off the bench, 14 of them in the second, and Phoenix never quite found the brake pedal.

Out of a timeout with three minutes left, the Suns answered. A quick 7–0 run tied it at 54–54, punctuated by a Devin Booker three. He followed it with another on the next trip, finishing the half 3-of-6 from deep with 15 points.

But McCollum had the last word, closing the quarter with a personal 5–0 run. Atlanta won the second 37–28, dominated bench scoring 20–8, and carried a 64–59 lead into the locker room. They had 17 fast break points to the Suns’ 4.

Second Half


As the second half opened, the Suns got the gut-punch confirmation that Jalen Green would not return, ruled out with hamstring tightness. And almost on cue, Atlanta twisted the knife. A 17–3 run.

If you are looking for insult layered neatly on top of injury, this was the moment. One piece of bad news, immediately followed by the game tilting hard in the wrong direction. You could feel it in the building. The air went out. The climb got steeper. And suddenly Phoenix was chasing both the score and the circumstance.

But the Suns did not fold. Not even close. Devin Booker grabbed the wheel and dragged Phoenix back into it, igniting a 20–9 run with shot-making and sheer force of will. He stayed scorching from beyond the arc, and after staring down an 11-point hole, he erased it himself. When Booker drilled his fifth three on his eighth attempt midway through the third, the Suns were suddenly back in front by one. Same building. Same game. Completely different energy.

This is where stars earn their status. With uncertainty around Jalen, Booker has stabilized the game, controlled the pace, and led by example.

Leadership isn’t always loud…but this one is. https://t.co/wW1hE9uhuC

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) January 24, 2026

And then the clamps came out. Phoenix turned the game into a street fight on defense, bodies on the floor, hands everywhere, every loose ball treated like it owed them money. They imposed their will possession by possession and pushed the lead out to seven.

Then, cruel timing struck again. In transition, Devin Booker glanced back, never saw Onyeka Okongwu step into his path, and came down on his foot. His right ankle twisted. Booker stayed down, pain written all over him, before being helped up and limping toward the locker room to join Jalen Green.

Devin Booker is serious pain after rolling his right ankle on Onyeka Okongwu's foot.

He limped back to the locker room. pic.twitter.com/nihBMpFtcL

— PHNX Suns (@PHNX_Suns) January 24, 2026

Booker had 16 points in the third and 31 in the game at the time of his injury.

The Suns won the third quarter 32-20, scored 12 points off 9 Atlanta turnovers, and showcased how disruptive they can be when locked in. They entered the fourth up 91-84, but down their two stars.

A 16–8 run by Atlanta opened the fourth quarter and immediately erased the cushion Devin Booker had built before everything went sideways. Jalen Johnson and Onyeka Okongwu each dropped 7 points to start the frame, and suddenly the Suns were scrambling.

Then we hit clutch time, and the obvious question was who was going to score. Collin Gillespie answered first, ripping off a quick 4–0 burst to put Phoenix back in front, 104–103. For a brief moment, there was order.

CJ McCollum ruined that calm. He had been a problem all night, and he stayed one, answering with his own 3–0 run to swing the lead back to Atlanta.

After that, the Suns offense flatlined. Completely. The final three minutes were chaos, perimeter passes with no purpose, rushed looks, heavily contested shots, nothing finding the bottom of the net. Atlanta closed on an 8–0 run, and that was the ballgame. Suns score 12 in the 4th and lose 110-103.


Up Next


The Suns head home after this long roadie and have the next five games at the friendly confines of the Morg. First up? The Miami Heat on Sunday at 6:00pm.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...len-green-hamstring-devin-booker-ankle-injury
 
Injury Update: Devin Booker departs with an ankle injury

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What’s the phrase, insult to injury. There is something about Atlanta. State Farm Arena feels cursed, at least for the Phoenix Suns. They have not won in this city since 2014, and on Friday night, the bad juju showed up again. Only his second game back, and Jalen Green was lost once more.

That kind of moment hits a team in the chest. This is a group that has lived the rehab with him, sweat by sweat, day by day. You can see how much joy he gets from playing with, how badly he wants to be out there, and when that gets taken away again, it lands emotionally. Hard.

Devin Booker tried to steady everything. He poured in 16 points in the third quarter and finished with 31, dragging the Suns forward with force of will alone. And then, because Atlanta apparently demands a sacrifice, it happened again.

With 5.2 seconds left in the quarter, Booker was running back in transition. He glanced over his shoulder, never saw Onyeka Okongwu in front of him, and stepped on his foot. His right ankle twisted. He hit the floor in pain, then limped off toward the locker room.

Devin Booker is serious pain after rolling his right ankle on Onyeka Okongwu's foot.

He limped back to the locker room. pic.twitter.com/nihBMpFtcL

— PHNX Suns (@PHNX_Suns) January 24, 2026

On a night already weighed down by losing Jalen Green, the Suns were forced to process losing Devin Booker too. I do not know much in this world. But I know this. I hate Atlanta.

The Suns lost the game 110-103 as their offense became inept in the fourth quarter, scoring just 12 points. And Booker? Per Jordan Ott, he left on crutches.

"You feel for them."

Jordan Ott as he confirmed right ankle injury for Devin Booker.

Booker left the locker room after the game on crutches, something players use so they don't put pressure on it.

He was struggling to put pressure on it when leaving the court with the injury.… pic.twitter.com/oQjqmu5r1e

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) January 24, 2026

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...jalen-green-injury-devin-booker-ankle-setback
 
The increasingly vicious nature of Stan Culture

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Stan Culture is everywhere these days. You really cannot avoid it. You know what I’m talking about. Those Twitter accounts that are unreasonably – ahem – enthusiastic about a player.

Not a state. Not a city. Not a team. A. Player.

Now, I won’t even try to get into the psychology of what compels a human being to create a Twitter account for the sole purpose of hiding behind a glorified Twitter egg profile picture and trying to suckle at the teat of an NBA player for whom they have what, in the very least, is a “concerning” level of interest. And the Stan does not exist for the mere purpose of supporting the object of the Stan’s affection, but instead, the Stan is willing to throw anyone and everyone under the bus to defend any perceived failure of said NBA player.

The net result? A collective headache for those of us out there who are sane.

That said, I assure you that I am not quite at the “old man yelling at a cloud” stage of my life, so I’m not here to complain about the existence of Stans in general. Are they weird? Sure. But aren’t we all a little weird?

However, there is a point where it goes beyond weird. It goes beyond a Stan just being a whiny, petulant brat. There’s a point where it just gets vicious.

Which brings me to the impetus behind all of this. Phoenix Suns fans watched Jalen Green leave the game last night, again, because of a hamstring. Then, as you scroll through Twitter, you see garbage like this:

Ahahahahahah suns fans ahahahahah https://t.co/XihMzJAjni

— Y🐍L Freddie💨 (@HeavyOnKD) January 24, 2026

And this:

Suns lost LMAO. I am telling you that team is so fraudulent. Dillion brooks culture setter 4-18 and 1-5 from 3. He’s fucking garbage. Jalen green a lost cause. Rockets absolutely fleeced the suns and by far won the trade. Suns are finished

— KDprime (@forthefacts) January 24, 2026

It goes beyond “weird“ when faceless Stans expressly take joy in the literal pain of another human being. There is nowhere within the bounds of human decency where that is acceptable. There just is not.

Certainly, the target of the Stans’ affection – in this case, Kevin Durant – would not support someone openly mocking an apparent injury to another NBA player, right?

Presumably not. But when someone calls out one of those Stans for mocking Green’s injury, and KD responds like this…

Your whole life is centered around banter on X…I feel for you Thomas….go find your purpose in life my son.

— Kevin Durant (@KDTrey5) January 24, 2026

…that certainly does not help dissuade the increasingly vicious nature of Stan Culture. One may even say that, perhaps, KD should do better.

But who am I to judge? At the end of the day, perhaps we can all rest easy just remembering that Stans are a bunch of weirdos.

Now, give me some prayer circle.

Suns Prayer Circle:

. 🕯 🕯
🕯 🕯
Jalen
🕯 Green’s 🕯
Hammy
🕯 🕯
🕯 🕯

— Bright Side of the Sun (@BrightSideSun) November 9, 2025
Suns Prayer Circle:

. 🕯 🕯
🕯 🕯
Devin
🕯 Booker’s 🕯
Lower Body
🕯 🕯
🕯 🕯

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) January 14, 2026

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...abilityasingly-vicious-nature-of-stan-culture
 
Update: Devin Booker will be re-evaluated in one week

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The Phoenix Suns may have dodged a bullet.

Per the Phoenix Suns’ communications department, Devin Booker will be re-evaluated in one week after suffering a right ankle sprain on Friday in Atlanta.

Devin Booker will be re-evaluated in one week after sustaining a right ankle sprain in Atlanta

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) January 25, 2026

That one-week re-evaluation doesn’t guarantee a return at that date, as you all know. But if he is cleared to begin ramping it up a week from now, that bodes well for an early February return with him missing 8 games or less in total, hopefully.

In related news, Booker has been spotted at Mullet Arena to watch his young teammates Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming as they are on assignment.

Stephen PridGeon-Garner notes that he is in shoes, not a boot or crutches. A positive development that pairs nicely with the update we received in our inbox.

Guess who's also at Mullett Arena, watching the Valley Suns game right now… Devin Booker.

"But it's actually really good to see him in his shoes, & not a boot or anything. So I'm really optimistic about that one week re-evaluation." ~Jeff Ayers on the Valley Suns broadcast. https://t.co/7e2vjDCBQF pic.twitter.com/Dmki8s9RYk

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) January 25, 2026

The Suns begin a 5-game homestand tonight against Miami that will run through next Sunday. Nine of their next ten games will be played at home in Phoenix.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...devin-booker-will-be-re-evaluated-in-one-week
 
Game Recap: Suns fall once again to Miami, 111-102

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It was a frustrating loss for Phoenix, beaten 111-102 by Miami in a game where the Suns never really found their rhythm. Jaime Jaquez (20 points, 5 rebounds, 6 assists) punished a too-permissive defense, while Brooks (26 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists) was one of the few offensive engines for Phoenix on an otherwise rough night.

The Suns lost the rebounding battle (59-56), had their shooting touch stay in the locker room (37% from the field, 20% from three, 80% from the line), and killed their own chances by committing 24 fouls. A perfect cocktail for spending the night chasing the score without ever truly threatening Miami.


Game Flow

First Half


A fairly tight start to the game that we could have largely avoided with a bit more focus and execution as the team had 4 turnovers in the first 3 minutes (7-7). Spoelstra calls the first timeout after nearly 6 minutes of play (13-15 in our favor). The tendencies of both teams are confirmed: the Suns shoot boldly from three, while the Heat attack aggressively in the short mid-range and in the paint.

After this timeout, Miami adjusts well: more defensive intensity and more presence on the offensive glass, snagging 5 offensive rebounds and 8 second-chance points. The Suns’ offense starts to stall, and the lack of rebounding forces Jordan Ott to call a timeout with 4 minutes left in the quarter. But the Heat keep pushing where it hurts and go on a 17-2 run since Spoelstra’s first timeout, with 2 minutes still left in the quarter.

Result: 32-21 for the Heat after 12 minutes. The Suns clearly were not in their game: 5 turnovers, 15 rebounds conceded, and already 10 fouls committed…way too much. They needed to shift gears and wake up, because the face they’ve displayed was far from pretty.

Phoenix was much better in the second quarter: more aggressive on the boards (5 to 1 in 3 minutes), which allowed them to cut the deficit to 4 points (38-34). The momentum gradually flips: Phoenix ramps up the intensity, goes on a 19-8 run and ties the game (40-40, 7 minutes before halftime).

The Suns even take the lead at the free-throw line (42-44), fueled by collective aggressiveness, much stronger defense — Miami goes 4 minutes without a field goal — and a very impactful stint from Livers (4 points, 4 rebounds, 2 stocks).

But at halftime, the Heat have almost regained a 10-point lead, and it makes sense. The Phoenix offensive flow was simply terrible as they were shooting from anywhere, at any time. Hard to expect better with a 2-of-19 from three, and nearly half of their shots taken more than a meter behind the arc. Where were they even trying to go with this?

Second Half


The start of the second half looked eerily similar to the beginning of the game: too many missed shots, too many poor offensive decisions. The Suns were a bit more present on the boards, but were still committing way too many fouls. Result: 67-56 after four minutes, and Jordan Ott is already forced to call a timeout.

It’s frustrating because the team is clearly capable of much better, but the upside of this team is that it never quits. A small 9-0 run forces Spoelstra to call a timeout in response: when the aggressiveness is there, and Phoenix attacked the easy spots, everything becomes much simpler.

The gap stabilizes around five points (78-73, 2 minutes left in the third quarter), and Livers’ energy is doing a lot of good. But if the Suns wanted to finally take the lead, they had to stop fouling: we’re already giving up 22 points at the line.

The quarter ends with the Heat up 82-77. We can thank Isaiah Livers’ prayer three-pointer for keeping Phoenix within striking distance heading into the final act of the night.

LIVERS AT THE BUZZER pic.twitter.com/8UxwSLmMgI

— Cage (@ridiculouscage) January 26, 2026

The fourth quarter starts poorly, and the punishment is immediate: down 12 (89-77). It’s almost logical in the end. The Suns’ offensive flow is simply horrible. It’s hard to say, but there’s no other word. With 10 minutes left, they were shooting 36% from the field, 21% from three, 79% from the line. Add to that an assist-to-turnover ratio close to even, and you get maybe one of their worst offensive performances of the season.

I’m not usually pessimistic, but down 15 with 7 minutes to go, given the flow of the game, it’s hard to see a scenario where Phoenix could actually take the lead. Coming back, sure. Taking the lead? I doubt it. They never managed to capitalize when we had the chance.

Jaime Jaquez has been hurting them since the end of the third quarter. He’s already at 18 points, 5 rebounds, and 4 assists: the Heat’s sixth man is finding easy shots, playing the right way, and getting rewarded. That’s exactly what Phoenix should be taking inspiration from if we don’t want to suffer through this closing stretch.

107-94 with 3 minutes left. The Suns try to make a push, but it feels too late. Classic basketball irony: it’s when there’s no pressure left that we start playing simply, attacking the right spots, sharing the ball. This loss is going to be frustrating.

Fleming and Maluach check into the game: time to prove something. Do what you have to do to earn credit. Hayes-Davis, Bouyea, and Dunn are also on the floor. They know, I know, you know: see you against Brooklyn in two days. Final score: 111-102.

Up Next​


After this very frustrating loss, the Suns will try to bounce back against the Nets in two days, a home game where we should normally be favored. But in the NBA, you never really know what to expect (tonight’s game was proof of that).

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ruggles-fouls-rebounding-shooting-road-defeat
 
Bright Side Wonders: The injury woes return

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The Phoenix Suns returned to Arizona after a six-game road trip against all East Coast teams. While they got Jalen Green back, he played just limited time before being ruled out again, and Devin Booker went down with an ankle injury. Phoenix is on a two-game losing streak.

Here are the main questions for Week 14 that we want your thoughts on:


The Injury Bug is Back​


After being fully healthy for one of the first times all season, both Green and Booker went down with injuries against the Atlanta Hawks. After being up 91-84 to end the third quarter, Booker left the game, and Phoenix scored just 12 points in the fourth to lose to Atlanta. Without Brooks and Green against the Miami Heat for the entirety of the game, Phoenix shot 37% from the field and 20% from three.

Booker will be re-evaluated in about a week, while Green could return as soon as tomorrow. The Suns have struggled with both out of the lineup this season, but have also picked up a few solid wins. How can the Suns withstand their absences if both of them miss more time?

A .500 Road Trip​


The Suns went 3-3 on their road trip, losing their first two (Devin Booker was out for the second one), winning their next three, and falling down the stretch in their last game vs the Hawks. The Suns played six games in 11 days, including one back-to-back on the trip. The team had a lot of strong shooting performances through their six games away from the Mortgage Matchup Center, but their offense went flat at times, and they struggled to contain teams’ runs.

What grade would you give the team’s road trip and why?

Going into the All-Star Break on a high note​


The Suns have nine games until the All-Star break, playing a mix of teams from both conferences and in varying parts of the standings. After a strong start to 2026, the team has simmered down a bit, going 3-4 in their last seven games. The nine games are against the Brooklyn Nets, Detroit Pistons, Cleveland Cavaliers, Los Angeles Clippers, Portland Trailblazers, Golden State Warriors, Philadelphia 76ers, Dallas Mavericks, and Oklahoma City Thunder in that order. Eight of the nine games are at home, with the onlyone not being against Portland. The only back-to-backs are the games against Detroit and Cleveland, and Dallas and Oklahoma City.

What is a realistic record for the Suns in their final games before the break? How long does Devin Booker and Jalen Green being out impact what you think their record will be?



For more questions on the Suns follow @HoldenSherman1 on X for content after every game.

Are you concerned about Jalen Green and Devin Booker's longterm health after their newest injury?

Green left due to precautionary reasons, Booker left late in the third after hurting his right ankle, the same one he injured last week. @BrightSideSun

— Holden Sherman (@HoldenSherman1) January 24, 2026

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...een-injuries-road-trip-all-star-break-outlook
 
Suns Reacts Survey: Who should steer the ship in Phoenix?

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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.



When injuries hit, the math changes. The vibes change. The pecking order gets shoved into a blender, and someone hits “high.” And when the guy who normally calms the room, the one who bends defenses just by standing there and breathing, goes down, the ripple effects are impossible to ignore.

That’s Devin Booker. Fringe All-Star or not, the Suns orbit around him, and Sunday in Miami was our first real reminder of what life looks like when the sun disappears behind the clouds.

Booker hasn’t had his most efficient shooting season, and that’s fine. That’s not the point. His gravity still warps the floor. His decision-making still lubricates the offense. With him out there, everyone else knows where to stand, when to cut, and why the ball is coming their way. Through 41 games with Booker, the Suns average 41.8 made field goals on 25 assists per night, good for a clean 1.6 assist-to-turnover ratio. Things make sense. The ball hums. The gears stay oiled.

Take him out, and the picture gets fuzzier. In the five games he’s missed, that drops to 37.4 made field goals and 22.8 assists, with the assist-to-turnover ratio dipping to 1.5. Not catastrophic. Not a five-alarm fire. But noticeable. You feel it. You see it. The offense hesitates, like it’s waiting for someone to raise their hand and say, “Alright, I’ve got this.”

Suns with and without Devin Booker this season:

With — Without —
117.7 ORTG (6th) 102.1 ORTG (30th)
113.0 DRTG (11th) 117.8 DRTG (26th)
+4.6 NETRTG (T-6th) -15.7 NETRTG (30th)

There is no doubt Devin Booker is… pic.twitter.com/VleuKdDDuQ

— Booker Muse (@DevinBookerMuse) January 26, 2026

And that’s the real question now. If Booker isn’t there to conduct the orchestra, who’s grabbing the baton?

Is it Grayson Allen, leaning harder into his ability to put the ball on the deck, touch the paint, and kick it back out before the defense can blink? Is it Royce O’Neale, quietly keeping things organized and unsexy while doing the connective tissue work no one puts in the box score? Is it Jordan Goodwin, turning pressure into playmaking? Or does Dillon Brooks need to embrace his inner point forward and focus less on shot hunting and more on keeping the ball alive?

Because against Miami, the ball stuck. It stalled. Possessions ended in isolation purgatory instead of movement and advantage. That’s not who this team has been, and it’s not who they can afford to be while Booker heals up.

That’s what this week’s Suns Reacts is all about. If the offense has to run through someone else for a stretch, who do you trust to steer the ship? Who should Jordan Ott lean on to initiate, organize, and keep the whole thing from drifting sideways?

Sound off. The floor is yours.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...grvity-offense-playmaking-jordan-ott-rotation
 
Game Preview: Suns’ look for season sweep vs the Brooklyn Nets

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Who: Phoenix Suns (27-19) vs the Brooklyn Nets (12-32)

When: 7:00 pm Arizona Time

Where: Mortgage Matchup Center – Phoenix, Arizona

Watch: Arizona’s Family 3TV, Arizona’s Family Sports

Listen: KMVP 98.7



The Suns are looking to bounce back in the Valley after two straight devastating losses in the past few days. They take on the Brooklyn Nets, a team that has struggled this season, but put on a decent show against the Suns in their last meeting. Even if it felt like the Suns were in control of that game entirely, the Nets did have some runs that made you realize, if they get hot, it could be over here.

Unfortunately for the Suns, the injury bug is still in town after residing in the Valley all season long. Suns star player Devin Booker has already been ruled out due to an ankle injury and will be reevaluated in a week. Their other primary scorer, Jalen Green, also aggravated his hamstring and missed their last contest, too. Hopefully, he can be back to help an offense that struggled without its two best scorers previously.

The Nets are scrappy, though, and have some solid names who have been showing out this season. A guy in Michael Porter Jr. has completely changed the narrative about him offensively in this new role. With Jordi Fernandez being a smart coach as well, this team has outdone expectations each season and could pull a fast one on the Suns fans while on the road.

Probable Starters​

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Injury Report​

Suns​

  • Devin Booker — OUT (Ankle)
  • Jalen Green — QUESTIONABLE (Hamstring)
  • Jordan Goodwin — AVAILABLE (Jaw Sprain)

Nets​

  • Noah Clowney OUT — (Illness/Back Soreness)
  • Tyrese Martin QUESTIONABLE —(Illness/Left Knee Soreness)
  • Cam Thomas PROBABLE — (Left Ankle Sprain)
  • Nolan Traore PROBABLE — (Illness)

What to Watch For​


For the Suns, we will watch to see how this offense looks without its two best scorers. The Suns seemed to struggle in their last matchup against the Heat. The Suns shot only 20% from three in that game, which is concerning given that their three-point shot is a main focal point of their offensive success. The Suns are going to have to be more consistent on that end to keep this game close. If they struggle once again from three, it will be interesting to see how they get the offense going.

For the Nets, it is very similar: will their offense also come alive? In their last game, their offense failed to show up, scoring only 89 points. With the Suns having a top-tier defense, the Nets will likely struggle, just as they have all season. That being said, if the Suns’ offense is not locked in, the defense has to be, for them to ultimately have a fighter’s chance.

Keys to a Suns Win​


Even with the Nets’ worst record, this will not be a cakewalk for the Suns. After getting embarrassed on their home court by the Heat and losing that season series, I expect the Suns to bring that same aggression against the Nets. Who cares if the Nets are a bottom-feeder team? Getting a series sweep would boost this team’s morale, which is still looking to rise in the standings.

To accomplish that, the defense will have to be locked in and give them their chance. We all know this team does not give up, and looking for that bounce-back game, they will show that hunger on the court. Having them relentlessly be pests for this Nets offense, forcing turnovers, will help this team get ahead. Then they also have to limit MPJ and make sure he does not have a historic night. If both of those things can come true, the fans should be blessed with a victory to celebrate.

Prediction​


Even with all the skepticism coming into this one, the better team will be victorious. That being said, the Suns will win and gain some much-needed momentum heading into the rest of this homestand.

Suns 108, Nets 96

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-jalen-green-status-devin-booker-out-analysis
 
Game Recap: Suns survived Brooklyn’s late push, 106-102

The Suns honored Dave King with a big win, and the kids rejoiced all night!


In a dogfight that went down to the wire, the Suns find themselves victorious, shorthanded, over the Brooklyn Nets, 106-102. In one that went back and forth and featured many physical altercations, it was nice that the Suns could pull this one out.

Not only was the win nice for the team morale, but this night was very special for our site. With it being Bright Side Night at the Mortgage Matchup Center, I know so many kids were lucky to attend this game due to all your donations. I also know how much Dave King meant to Bright Side, so I am very excited to say they won on his special night!

In a night when Mark Williams set a season-high with 27 points, he was a significant factor alongside Dillon Brooks and Grayson Allen, who made winning plays on both ends. With most of their shot creators out, they struggled from three again, but they still had 72 points in the paint, a season high, which was very impressive. Even with Michael Porter Jr. trying to will the Nets back with 36 points, it was not enough against this sound Suns defense.

Game Flow​

First Half​


In a night for the Suns missing a majority of the shot creators, it was going to be a rough start, sadly, which showed from the beginning, with both teams struggling in the first few minutes. Luckily, the Suns were saved by two players, Dillon Brooks and Mark Williams, who got involved early. Brooks made some big-time shots being the lead man, while Williams feasted down low, getting more touches in this game. He had found this hot hand in the previous matchup vs. Brooklyn, when they had no interior rim pressure to stop him.

For Brooklyn, they went to their main man, Michael Porter Jr., who was also finding ease to get to the rim and score. This matched the game a bit until Dillon Brooks received another flagrant foul, which was completely unnecessary. I did not notice it at first, but this lit a fire in the team not to back down. Phoenix then took a timeout and started going right back into the action with Mark Williams, finding him easy opportunities at the basket. This forced the Nets to take a timeout, following a Suns 8-0 run.

Sadly, this is where the Nets get their own 8-0 run as they found some ease scoring inside. Porter Jr., who has been their best player, cannot be stopped early, as he had 12 first-quarter points. Day’Ron Sharpe was also a beast inside for them. After the first, the Suns saw themselves down one, 29-28. After some shaky offense, it is clear that both teams will enjoy scoring in the paint tonight; it is just a battle of the big men.

Similar to the first quarter, it was rough for both teams to get it going offensively to start. With the Nets having Porter Jr. on the bench, they generated little and had some bad turnovers. The Suns, on the other hand, were led by a hot hand, Jamaree Bouyea. After being out a couple of games due to a concussion, he struck gold when the team needed him most. In just eleven minutes, he had 8 points and was attacking at all levels for the squad.

Luckily, in this quarter, the Suns were able to hold their own and take back the lead, 60-51. The one wild thing that transpired near the end was another hilarious call on Dillon Brooks. He received a technical foul for a “push” on Egor Demin, which is a bit weird. Since he already received a flagrant, the following technical results in a one-game suspension.

The Suns need to find a limit for Michael Porter Jr. in the second half, while also continuing these runs on offense. The defense has stepped up, even with a deeper rotation than usual due to injuries, as young guys learn on the fly.

Second Half​


Sadly for the Suns, Porter Jr. started to catch fire out ofthe gate once again and continued to strike this defense. Luckily for the Suns, he seems to be one of their only productive scorers, and the Suns’ defense is making that known. With fighting for loose balls and never giving up on the defensive end, guys like Jordan Goodwin are making key steals to keep the Suns in front.

Grayson Allen also made a huge three-pointer off of one of those turnovers caused by Goodwin, which lit the crowd up. At that point, the Suns had only made two threes in totality this game, and it was needed more than ever. Since they are struggling beyond the arc without their primary scorers, the defense needs to win this game for them.

With some more action, the Suns went back to what worked in the first quarter, playing through Brooks and Williams. Both found some tough buckets inside the paint and kept this run alive, while the defense locked down and gave every ounce of hustle they could. Unfortunately, Porter Jr. eclipsed 30 points in the third, but even with that, the Suns still held a seven-point lead, 82-75, heading into the fourth after a big three from Grayson Allen at the end of the quarter.

To start the fourth quarter, the Suns’ defense remained locked in and limited the Nets. They have forced some big turnovers that have led to some big shots to extend the lead. One big play was a corner three from Ryan Dunn, as the team has been quiet from three-point land overall.

Sadly, the fun did not last long, as the Nets actually made this a game after Terance Mann attacked the rim. This was the fourth time the officials went to review a technical or flagrant foul, and Allen was assessed a flagrant 1 following this review. The Suns were now down and had to crawl back in this one to give the hometown fans their money’s worth.

That’s where Mark Williams came to play late, making some tough baskets in the paint once again. He stopped a huge Nets run and then found his own way to keep them in this one. Even with Porter Jr. trying to match the score, guys like Brooks, Allen, and Bouyea continued to keep this dog fight alive.

The most entertaining part had to be the late-game scuffle. After a physical matchup with a lot brewing, it was bound to happen, with coaches running in to stop it. Following the scuffle, five players were assesed technical fouls. Those players were Egor Demin, Michael Porter Jr., Terance Mann, Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale. Funny part is Allen was not even involved in this conundrum.

Anyway, this led them to getting a free throw that Allen missed. This led to a jump ball, with the Suns getting possession in a close game. Even after losing that possession, the defense did what it does best and locked down Demin, who has had a hot hand alongside Porter Jr for the Nets.

In the end, Porter Jr’s electric night was not enough as Grayson Allen made another tough layup to secure the victory at home. A hard-fought night did not go wasted, and the Suns got the season series sweep over the Nets.

Up Next​


After an excellent bounce-back win on their home court, the Suns look to get another sneaky win against a top team in the East, the Detroit Pistons. After losing on the road, this team will seek revenge, regardless of who is available, with this next-up mentality instilled here in the Valley.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-mark-williams-career-night-bright-side-night
 
Suns JAM Session Podcast: Short-handed and Stubborn Suns Beat Brooklyn

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The original post-game podcast on Planet Purple!

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-short-handed-and-stubborn-suns-beat-brooklyn
 
Dillon Brooks is fighting an uphill battle against his own reputation

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This season has been a wild one for the Phoenix Suns as they look to embrace this new identity under head coach Jordan Ott. Even with key injuries, they have had a successful start to the season and have shocked many fans by exceeding expectations. One of their infectious leaders on this front is Dillon ‘The Villain” Brooks, and he has been getting a lot of heat recently.

As we all know, dating back to his Memphis Grizzlies days, Brooks has always been one to play with toughness or an edge. He is scrappy on defense, always trying to force turnovers. Not only that, but he is going to let you hear it on the court by chirping you out and getting under your skin. The ultimate definition of Brooks is the guy you want on your team, but you hate going against, and it’s totally understandable.

That being said, having this reputation leads people to associate you with a bad or “dirty” player, which Brooks is not. Yes, he plays with a fire lit underneath him 24/7, but that type of aggressiveness is what gets him hot and is also a great motivator for his teammates. Unfortunately, this reputation continues to follow Brooks to the Valley this year.

This season, he has received 14 technical fouls, and we are a little over halfway through. To me, this is just utterly absurd. Some are definitely technical, but looking at the one that was called yesterday, it is clear that some targeting of Brooks is occurring. If anything looks controversial, they immediately call it on Brooks, and then the league rescinds it the following day, just like last night.

Dillon Brooks’ (PHX) technical foul at 0:27 in the 2nd quarter on 1/27/26 (vs. BKN) has been rescinded upon league office review.

— NBA Official (@NBAOfficial) January 28, 2026

This type of behavior is utterly disrespectful to Brooks and the Suns in many different ways. For starters, it just shows the referee’s incompetence toward a particular player. As we can see here, the league has rescinded eight technical fouls this year, three of which have belonged to Brooks.

Assuming the league documents every rescinded tech with a post here, a total of eight have been rescinded in 2025-26.

It’s happened to Dillon Brooks three times. No one else has had it happen more than once. pic.twitter.com/qgG1v3M8Tf

— Gilbert McGregor (@GilMcGregor_) January 28, 2026

Even the flagrant Brooks received yesterday was outright ridiculous, as he was clearly trying to get a loose ball and showed no intent to hit Nic Claxton in the groin, but that is a completely different story.

Absolute reputation flagrant call on Dillon Brooks for his fourth of the year.

He was CLEARLY going for the ball, not trying to hit Nic Claxton.

He is two flagrant fouls away from a suspension. pic.twitter.com/SpbqZpVIwA

— Erik Ruby (@ErikRuby) January 28, 2026

Not only that, but two of those rescinded technical fouls have been called by the same referee. That man would be Curis Blair, who clearly either has an issue with Brooks or does not want to deal with his antics. When one player receives multiple techs and is called back numerous times, it clearly shows this is an officiating issue with the Suns.

Two of the three rescinded technical fouls were called by the same referee: Curtis Blair.

And my guess is that Blair will continue to target Dillon Brooks because @AlbertSandersJr and @ByronSpruell refuse to hold @OfficialNBARefs accountable.

Either the National Basketball… https://t.co/NFcc5kUsTR

— Immaculate Vibes (@SoSaysJ) January 28, 2026

Even Brooks himself had some words following the game on the tech he received from Blair. He knew it would be rescinded; as he said, the following two he got called on from him were also. If that is not a clear issue where the player knows he is being targeted, then what is?

Dillon Brooks said to @DuaneRankin what the explanation was between him and official Curtis Blair about the flagrant and technical fouls he picked up

“Well that’s getting rescinded. The same foul that Curtis (Blair) gave me before, and a month ago that got rescinded. It’s going… pic.twitter.com/Hx1UVfnxxh

— Hayden Cilley (@HaydenCilley) January 28, 2026

This team’s whole identity is physical play, and it’s outright wrong to watch it get punished for playing with effort and heart. We see it every night, even when the Suns had their scuffle at the end. Brooks was not involved, so luckily, he was not given anything, but Grayson Allen received a technical foul for also doing nothing. His reputation as a “dirty” player has died down since he arrived in Phoenix, but that still lingers in the refereeing world, I guess.

"I feel like as the game went on, the line between a no-call & an altercation got really thin."

"When we allow that physicality, from both teams, there's no way to not have an altercation like that."

Grayson Allen was candid about the Q4 mix-up that led to 5 techs handed out. pic.twitter.com/VaxSyBUAoA

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) January 28, 2026

These technical fouls also cost the Suns points they do not deserve to lose, and can shift the momentum of a run or a late-game scenario.

Brooks is also in a scary situation, resulting in receiving so many technical fouls. Under league rules, if he were to receive 16 technical fouls, he would be suspended for 1 game. With the latest one rescinded, this leaves him with two get-out-of-jail-free cards before he has to pay the price.

Dillon Brooks' 15th technical, received here.

Automatic suspension upon his next received technical. https://t.co/uf4lvGFLNw pic.twitter.com/ylmDZm6pFr

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) January 28, 2026

Unfortunately, I think Brooks will get this suspension, as we have seen the referees not care about him. It would be nice now that the league has taken back three of his technical fouls to approach refereeing Suns games differently. Especially if the man himself knows the call is getting rescinded, don’t call a pity foul just because of his name.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...on-tracker-nba-officiating-curtis-blair-stats
 
Game Preview: Suns host Pistons, look for revenge

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JANUARY 25: Dillon Brooks #3 of the Phoenix Suns reacts to referee Jacyn Goble #68 during the first half of the NBA game against the Miami Heat at Mortgage Matchup Center on January 25, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Who: Phoenix Suns (28-19) vs. Detroit Pistons (34-11)

When: 7:00 pm Arizona Time

Where: Mortgage Matchup Center – Phoenix, Arizona

Watch: Arizona’s Family 3TV, Arizona’s Family Sports

Listen: KMVP 98.7



The Suns are looking to take another game without Devin Booker. This time, it comes against a much stronger foe in the East-leading Detroit Pistons. These teams recently met in Detroit in a game that Devin Booker did not suit up in, and fell in a thriller, 108-105.

Detroit is opening as a -5.5 favorite, and looking to extend its win streak to three games and secure its 35th win of the season.

It’s Dillon “The Villain” Brooks night in Mortgage Matchup Arena tonight, with the first 5,000 fans receiving that awesome shirt in one of the best giveaways in recent memory.

"Definitely didn't expect it to look like that "

Jordan Ott's reaction to seeing Dillon "The Villain" Brooks t-shirt that will be given to first 5,000 fans at Suns-Pistons game Thursday at Mortgage Matchup Center. #Suns pic.twitter.com/YP4jrLuCf4

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) January 28, 2026

The Oregon product had his THIRD technical of the season rescinded yesterday, the second time by Curtis Blair. Let’s hope the officials do not become a factor by blatantly targeting Brooks in this one again. They’re going to need him without Devin Booker and Jalen Green.

Also, can we get fewer reviews, please and thank you! Signed, all Suns fans.

Dillon Brooks said to @DuaneRankin what the explanation was between him and official Curtis Blair about the flagrant and technical fouls he picked up

“Well that’s getting rescinded. The same foul that Curtis (Blair) gave me before, and a month ago that got rescinded. It’s going… pic.twitter.com/Hx1UVfnxxh

— Hayden Cilley (@HaydenCilley) January 28, 2026

Probable Starters​

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Injury Report​

Suns injury update: Jalen Green (hamstring) OUT.

Collin Gillespie (hand) QUESTIONABLE. #Suns

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) January 29, 2026

Suns​

  • Devin Booker — OUT (Ankle)
  • Collin Gillespie — QUESTIONABLE (Wrist)
  • Jalen Green — OUT (Hamstring)
  • Jordan Goodwin — AVAILABLE (Jaw Sprain)

Pistons​

  • Caris LeVert — QUESTIONABLE (Illness)

What to Watch For​


For the Suns, it will boil down to containing Cade Cunningham just as they did the last time these teams met. Insert Jordan Goodwin.

Detroit may have pulled off the 3-point home win against a shorthanded Suns squad, but Phoenix led most of that game and pushed them to the wire. Jordan Goodwin did an incredible job of pressuring Cade that game, and the team’s defensive game plan was sharp. He shot 3 of 16 with 5 turnovers and just 10 points in 38 minutes.

Multiple efforts with Jordan Goodwin.

Has mixed in unders well vs Cade Cunningham tonight. They late-switch the re-screen & watch his decision-making in gap help (calls off the scram switch before making the play too).

Another under mixed in, then swipes down for the steal. pic.twitter.com/zm6RkYD4H1

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) January 16, 2026

Detroit has role players that can make you pay if you leave them open. Tobias Harris, Duncan Robinson, and even Jaden Ivey can get hot in a hurry, as we saw him pour in 15 points in just 17 minutes against the Suns in their last meeting.

Phoenix will also need to rebound the ball against a big, physical Detroit frontline. They have positional size and versatility across the board.

Keys to a Suns Win​


The most glaring weakness from the Suns of late has been their spotty three-point shooting. They have connected on 12 of their last 55 attempts from deep, good for 21% three-point shooting during their past two games. It’s a miracle they split those games.

They have been one of the more consistent shooting squads in the association this season, too. They’ll need to snap out of it to have any shot against a tough Pistons squad, especially with Devin Booker out of the lineup again. Collin Gillespie is questionable… and boy, do they need him.

This is the first game of a back-to-back, which Jordan Ott addressed when talking about Jalen Green’s progress. We are likely going to see Ott play this cautiously, with him sitting the first of a back-to-back, then possibly suiting up tomorrow against the Cavs. Luckily, it’s a back-to-back where both games are at home.

From Wednesday:

Jordan Ott when asked about availability of Jalen Green (right hamstring injury management) as Suns enter back-to-back. "There's been no setbacks. He's still continuing to progress. We're into a back-to-back, which we're cognizant of. There's a plan. We'll see… pic.twitter.com/fTZXE2bJ7Q

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) January 29, 2026

We all know it’s going to be a physical game any time you play against this Pistons squad. Suns big man Oso Ighodaro said, “I think we can still be true to our identity and not go over the line, but we’re never going to let anyone push us around.”

Match and exceed their physicality. Knock down threes. Play hard. Contain Cade.

If the Phoenix Suns do those four things, they have a chance to “upset” the East-leading Pistons.

Prediction​


The Suns play the Pistons tough again, but run out of fuel at the end. Prove me wrong, Suns.

Suns 111, Pistons 117

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...me-preview-suns-host-pistons-look-for-revenge
 
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