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Game Recap: Suns with a blowout win, 111 to 87, over the Blazers

2025 NBA Summer League - Portland Trail Blazers v Phoenix Suns

Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images

All around team effort closes out the Summer Suns season

I am back! But not like AC/DC Back in Black. Nobody wears black clothes in the desert in the summer. Also, we recognize the tourists and recent transplants with black cars. Pizza ovens there that will soon need new paint jobs.

Just when I thought I was out, I was pulled back in. Somehow the short-straw keeps showing up for the “Rook” on the writing squad. Maybe, because I was late on washing the writer’s jock straps.

Okay, I followed all your game chat comments. Some were naughty and some were nice, but we are not celebrating Christmas in July. We are celebrating that we finally had basketball, until, we don't. Welcome to the end of the Summer Suns and welcome to Summer. Get your vacay time in while you still can.

Game Flow​

First Half​


The fans were not treated to a Hanson Yang vs. Khaman Malusch battle, which should have been the main event. Both are DNP. No Dunn, Oso. or Koby either. Let’s really see what the other players can do with those minutes.

Suns roll out Rasheer Fleming ,CJ Huntley, Moses Wood, Boogie Ellis and Khalif Battle as the starters.

Portland counters with Dmytro Skapintsev, Rayan Rupet, Sidy Cissoko, Caleb Love, and James Bouknight.

In the first quarter, with 2:26 left, the Suns would successfully challenge a three-point foul call to turn it into an inadvertent whistle. Challenge preserved and the foul was reversed. No three FTs for Portland. Play of the game for me, because it so rare to see these calls get reversed. Ultimately it would not matter, as Portland leads 25 to 19 heading into the second. CJ Huntley wins the first quarter Suns player MVP with perfect shooting and seven points. Coaching was not that bad either to win the challenge.

Second quarter started hot with three-point shooting from Boogie Ellis and he would remain hot throughout the half. Portland would lead by ten at one point but Boogie just kept it going. Not only would he assist on a Battle three but would shoot a few of his own to give the Suns the lead at 42-37. The announcers are loving “The Boogie Show”. He is good folks and deserves the the second half MVP. He assists, he passes, and he scores. Also need to give kudos to Battle and Huntley.

Suns up 49-38 after a 22 to 1 point run (read that again) before Caleb Love sunk a free throw to break the streak right before the end of the half. Boogie would finish 5-7 from three.

I am starting to think, I need to do more of these recaps. I get to see the good games.

Second Half​


Suns will keep the “Battle” going into the third quarter and start off with hot shooting, mainly from the hot hand of Khalif Battle. Alex Schumacher also needs his third quarter kudos for just straight up battling. I was actually watching good Suns defense for most of the quarter. I have not been able to type that for awhile, especially in the third. At the end of three Suns up on top, 77-61.

In the fourth quarter. Probably the biggest news is that Boogie has to sit with a possible leg injury. Suns make another challenge, but this time it is unsuccessful. Well, so much for riding the hot hand on two fronts. But the Suns continue to pull away and I really like Alex Schumacher’s all-around game. I would give him fourth quarter MVP.

Great win by the Suns to close out the Summer League season. They finish at 2-3.

This should be a good Bright Side Baller survey. The reality is, I saw a team effort throughout the entire game on offense and defense. I vote on these surveys and I am not a politician. so I do not want to unnecessarily influence you (it was Boogie). But if you said another player, I would probably just do the shrug emoji and go “yeah, you are right”.

Up Next​


Preseason! Friday, Oct 3rd against, you guessed it, the Lakers at the Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert. TV is still TBD, but based on LA traffic, I think the local Suns fans have a decent chance to drive out with tickets and beat the Laker fans to the best seats. Not only that, but the Suns play the Lakers twice in the preseason, which means a lot of DA comments.

But wait there is more! Itching for some jet lag and want to head over to China for some more preseason action? Two games are scheduled in the Global Games. Oct. 10th in Macau,China against the Nets. And another against the Nets on Oct. 12th. Same Venetian Arena, so get the two-fer-one pack. TV is still TBD.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...with-a-blowout-win-111-to-87-over-the-blazers
 
The Suns have two roster spots left and one familiar name might be the perfect fit

Utah Jazz v Phoenix Suns

Photo by Kelsey Grant/Getty Images

Call him “Non-Stop”.

Thirteen players under contract. Two spots left. The Phoenix Suns, as of this moment, do not have a full roster. That means there’s room. Wiggle room. Breathing room. Yes, I realize this sounds like I’m walking you through kindergarten arithmetic, breaking down roster construction like it’s Snack Time with Mr. Numbers. And for that, I apologize.

It’s the question of the moment, isn’t it? What should the Suns do with those final two roster spots? Who’s out there worth the ink on a contract? Is there anyone who genuinely moves the needle, not just a body to fill space, but someone who might claw their way into the rotation, make an impact, or at the very least push the guys ahead of them in practice?

Do they want that? Or is this about development? About allocating minutes to young players, rolling the dice on upside, and leaning into the long view?

These are all valid questions. Necessary ones, even. Because the Phoenix Suns aren’t just filling a depth chart, they’re trying to build something real. Something lasting. An identity. A culture. And that doesn’t happen overnight. You don’t just declare yourself gritty and expect it to stick. Toughness is earned. Mentality is molded. That kind of transformation takes time. Sometimes a season. Sometimes longer. But it always starts with intent.

Which brings us here. The market is thin. The names are familiar. The dreaded retread conversation rises from the ashes once again. But among that pile of maybe’s and what-if’s, there’s one name that still makes a little sense.

Josh Okogie.


#Hornets have waived Josh Okogie, league sources told The Observer. His $7.7 million salary for next season would have been guaranteed today after sides agreed to push back original date.

— Rod Boone (@rodboone) July 15, 2025

We’ve danced this dance before, and we’re all well aware of his flaws. Limited offensive ceiling, streaky shooting, an occasional “what are you doing?” moment.

But let’s not pretend we didn’t love what he brought. The hustle. The defensive bite. The chaos he created on the boards. The pace. The pride. When the Suns were searching for an edge, he gave them one.

And it’s not just us. Warrior fans would love an Okogie. Lakers fans, too. Every team needs a guy like that tucked away deep on the bench, a plug-and-play energy source, ready to go to war the second his number gets called.

So yeah, I can see the vision. I can see a world where Okogie returns and fits like a well-worn glove in what this new-look Suns team is trying to become.

The real question is: does Phoenix’s front office see it too?

Sure, you’re not tossing a chunk of the midlevel his way. Not after clawing back this precious flexibility. But a vet minimum deal? A low-risk, high-character signing who might actually help you win a game or two down the line? That’s the kind of decision that might not make headlines...but might make a difference.



Listen to the latest episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below. To stay up to date on every episode, subscribe to the pod on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, YouTube Podcasts, Amazon Music, Podbean, or Castbox.

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-free-agent-options-depth-chart-needs-hornets
 
Inside the Suns - Topics: The state of the Suns post Bradley Beal buyout, Summer League observations

2025 NBA Summer League - Portland Trail Blazers v Phoenix Suns

Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images

Your weekly Inside the Suns analysis straight from the BSotS community who live and breathe the team.

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 - The Beal buyout is done. What are your thoughts on where this leaves the Suns now and in the future?

Ashton: I breathed a sigh of relief. There were so many countless articles and comments on the subject that I was beginning to suffer Beal fatigue.

Should he stay? Should he go? Who screwed up? Relief from the second apron? There is a myriad of ways to view this subject. and I was just quite frankly burned out from chatter and having my head spin through the discourse as well.

Peace out Bradley Beal. We barely got to know you and yes, the fans may have given you a raw deal. Coaching and management surely did when they overlooked the fit and decided to cut checks instead.

Time to move on, Suns fans.

OldAz: I have been fairly vocal on the chats with my opinion on this. I am glad that they are able to move on as he does not fit the teams new direction at all. However, that really only speaks to the buyout portion and not the stretch. I understand the math of this buyout equating to far less of the overall cap in years 4 and 5 but it is still almost $20M that could be used elsewhere in those seasons. I want to see another move this year that smartly uses this newfound flexibility before I can be happy about the “stretch” portion and its impact on future years.

That does not mean using the MLE and magically competing this year. I am good with a rebuilding year or two if it means exciting basketball with more passionate and engaged young players. I would like them to use the flexibility to get off of Allen and O’Neale’s long term deals. Theoretically that could have been done while still over the aprons, but it may take aggregating someone like Richards to get back exactly what they want or need. If that return is expiring contracts to free up Allen’s and Oneal’s salary the next few years, includes picks, or brings back a young player that fits the teams new direction then it would make the whole Beal exit seem far better in my mind. This is similar to how the KD trade looked a lot better after the draft added Maluach, and allowed them to maneuver up to get Fleming and Brea.

One last note: I am split on a sign and trade for Kuminga being the move I describe above. I don’t mind them being hard capped in a rebuilding year because of a sign and trade, but I am not sure Kuminga is the guy worth doing that for. He is not much bigger than either of Dunn or Brooks so he might be duplicative at the wing position just like the logjam already at SG. If they are able to make this move for $15-18M a season while offloading Allen or O’Neale then it fits my description above perfectly and swaps out a bad contract for a young player with enough upside to justify giving minutes. However, if that S&T is for $20M+ (sending back Allen and Richards) then I feel like it may be piling a new mistake on right as they are trying to move on from the last mistakes.

Rod: Do I like all the dead money on the Suns’ cap sheet for the next 5 years? No. Do I believe it will completely cripple the team for years to come? Also, No. This pretty much came down to a choice between the lesser of two evils and there were cases to be made for both sides, both choices but no matter how strongly I or anyone else believes this was the right or the wrong choice to make, only time will tell how good or bad this choice was.

With that in mind, I prefer to remain cautiously optimistic. I am very glad that the team is now under both tax aprons and has gained a lot of flexibility moving forward. What they do with that added flexibility is the question now. With a new GM, we can’t really go by how well or how badly the front office has done in the past to predict the future but I can understand why some tend to predict gloom and doom but for me that’s just not worth the aggravation it would cause I will just wait until I see more of how the Suns are going to navigate this new reality before passing judgement.

Q2 - What are your thoughts on the rookies (Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, Koby Brea) after Summer League?

Ashton: The Suns are 2-3 in Summer League. The point is, that it is not going to cut it. What started as a promising blow-out over the Wizards, turned into losses with being blown-out by the Kings and Hawks, while playing an entertaining game against the Wolves. Suns followed up with a very convincing win over the Portland Trail Blazers with only Fleming starting and the other two were DNP.

What do three teams have in common in the loss column? They are all 4-0 in Summer League.

So, who can say how their performance was affected by going against the “Murderer’s Row”. I think all the players need improvement.

Khaman Maluach: Oh Vey (I am not Jewish, I just like the expression)! If he wins Most Improved Player this year, then you should have taken any Vegas odds at +20000 or above. He needs to stop with the three-pointers and focus on actually making shots around the basket, which was awful, just like his +/-. Not a good showing for the #10 pick in the draft He was a DNP against Portland when he clearly needed some more time on the court. It was basically handed to him as Hanson Yang was out. Load management, I guess. But I remain unconvinced.

Rasheed Fleming: Just too many DNPs due to injury for me to accurately judge. The jury is still out on him too. However, he did start against Portland, so the injury concerns are unjustified. And he recorded a respectable + 26 over 20 minutes of play. I need to see more, but he seems like a keeper.

Koby Brea: He could very well be a rotational player off the bench at a very loaded SG position. Lit the world on fire with his game against the Wizards to the point that some national pundits were wondering if he could be the steal of the draft. Inconsistent at times, but I remain hopeful. He was also a DNP with the blowout win against Portland. I would have liked to see more.

OldAz: I watched more Summer league this year than I have in all past seasons combined. That was 100% because of these 3 rookies and wanting to see what the Suns are getting. I tend to be fairly optimistic about young players and also recognize that significant development will be needed regardless of where they are drafted. With that said, here are my thoughts:

Maluach is really raw, but you can also see every bit of that potential everyone has been raving about. I get excited about young players developing and can see him being everything DA was for the Suns plus some of the things DA wasn’t. I am even more excited that they have another young center in front of him for now that has already proven to do some of these same things. It will give Maluach time to develop with much less pressure to perform immediately.

Fleming excites me the most despite us not getting to see too much of him. The simple fact that he displays NBA level talent in an actual NBA power Forward shaped body gets me excited. The Suns have not had that in a young player since Amare and even then they had to play him at Center. With Maluach and Williams, that won’t be a problem.

Brea looks to be a great value for where he was drafted and has such a pure and pretty jump shot. Some people compare him to a young Booker (a big stretch), but I would be happy just to get the sharp shooter and smart basketball player they had in Cam Johnson coming off the bench.

Rod: Maluach was pretty much what I expected, lots of potential, flashes of talent but needs time to learn and develop. He’s not a guy who’s going to come in and be a real force right away which is why getting Mark Williams will turn out to be a really smart move as Maluach will have time to adjust to the NBA without a lot of pressure to perform right away. My biggest concern with him right now is conditioning. I hope he will work to improve that during the rest of the summer before training camp opens in September.

I wish we had gotten to see more of Fleming but what I did see looked pretty good. He wasn’t flashy but payed well and under control. Offense mostly stands out in games but it might surprise some to know that Fleming lead the Summer Suns in defensive rating and a PER of 22.0. His per 36 stats for rebounding were 8.6 rebs which is encouraging. I’m encouraged by his performance but still want to see more of him in games with a more structured offense and defense (not Summer League).

Brea looks like he could easily get time this year as a microwave scorer off the bench. He might not be ready for a lot of minutes, but I think sticking into the lineup whenever team scoring goes flat might just kick start the Suns’ offense back to life. Getting him on a two-way contract is a very big plus and, depending on how the Suns’ season goes, he might wind up getting converted to a standard contract before the end of it.

Although CJ Huntley wasn’t mentioned in the question (an unfortunate oversight made by me), I was fairly impressed by his play too. He looked solid for a two-way player but still has a way to go before being a real factor on the court during a real NBA game. I’ll be following his progress in the G League this fall with interest.

Q3 - What are your thoughts on 2nd year players Ryan Dunn and Oso Ighodaro after Summer League?

Ashton: Talk about that second-year jump! Ryan Dunn was the leading scorer for the Suns in Summer League and Oso had a really nice game against the Hawks, but boy does he need to work on his FT shooting. Both were DNP against Portland in the last Summer League game of the year. Even Draymond Green is complaining about “Rest Management” in SL, but he complains about everything.

They received the most minutes on the team when I kinda wish that would have gone to other players. Boogie Ellis anyone?

They will both be rotational players on this year’s Suns squad, unless they become aggregation trade bait.

OldAz: Dunn was too good to be playing in Summer league and should have been pulled after the first game. You could tell that he had NBA experience and had worked on his game to get better since his rookie campaign. However, when he went down late in game 4 I cussed and shook my head and only felt a little bit better when they put him back in because it was not worth the risk. You can see that he works hard on his game and I expect him to take a significant leap given the youth movement and change in direction for the team. He should get plenty of minutes to continue his development. I see him on a similar trajectory as a young Mikal with the benefit of a bigger frame and possibly even better offensive mindset earlier in his career.

Oso is a tough read for me because we have yet to see what Ott’s offense and defense look like. While Oso has incredible basketball IQ, he is just not big enough to play center long term at the NBA level. There has been talk of playing him as PF, but without an outside shot I don’t see how that works. If he is hanging out at the corner on offense, you are basically allowing the defense to play 5 on 4. The Summer league did give some glimpse of his ability to help the offense as a facilitator and he continues to work on his shot from inside 10 feet, but it only worked because Maluach was able to man the center position on defense and then float out to the 3 point line on offense and provide the shooting threat that Oso cannot. I will be happy to be proven wrong, but I see Oso as a career bench player looking for minutes.

Rod: One thing about both of them impressed me. That was how confident and active they were on the court. Oso especially looked much more confident and aggressive offensively. Last season I was often frustrated at what seemed to be hesitancy on his part to make decisions and instead looked to just pass the ball off to someone else. Yeah, it was just summer league but I liked seeing that disappear and him aggressively taking the ball to the hoop rather than searching for someone else to pass to.

On the negative side, neither of them seem to have improved their free throw shooting much (Oso - 47.4%, Dunn - 60.0%). Watching Oso make only 3 of 10 FTs in the Minnesota game was exasperating. And he’s still not developed any kind of an outside shot...but at least he seemed to be a little more accurate with his push-shot floaters than before.

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


Suns Trivia/History​


On July 24, 1996, the Suns officially signed their 1st round pick (15th) Steve Nash to a 3-year deal worth $992,300 a season. When asked what kind of player he expected to be, Nash joked, “Probably a little bit like Michael Jordan at first.”

On July 26, 2010, the Suns waived Taylor Griffin (the older brother of Blake Griffin) whom they had drafted with the 48th pick in the 2009 NBA Draft. Taylor turned out to not be anywhere near the player his soon to be NBA All-Star younger brother would become and played in only 8 games for the Suns (averaging only 4 minutes per game) throughout the season. He would not play in the NBA again although he was briefly picked up by the Charlotte Bobcats for 9 days in December before being waived yet again without seeing any court time there. Taylor did actually make the Suns’ highlight reel once though...

On July 27, 2013, the Suns traded Luis Scola to the Indiana Pacers for Gerald Green, Miles Plumlee and a 2014 1st round draft pick (Bogdan Bogdanović was later selected). Green and Plumlee played integral parts in the Suns’ short-lived turnaround in 2013-14 when they went 48-34. They improved by 23 wins over the previous season (25-57) and just barely missed the playoffs in an extremely tough Western conference.


Last Week’s poll results​


Last week’s question was “If the Suns make another trade this summer, who do you think is the most likely Suns player to be traded?

35% - Nick Richards.

48% - Grayson Allen.

17% - Royce O’Neale.

A total of 350 votes were cast.


Important Future Dates​


October 3 - Preseason game vs LA Lakers

October 10 - Preseason game vs Brooklyn Nets (China)

October 12 - Preseason game vs Brooklyn Nets (China)

October 21 - Regular Season Opening Night

Feb. 13-15 - 2026 NBA All-Star weekend in Los Angeles, CA



This week’s poll is...



Listen to the latest episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below. To stay up to date on every episode, subscribe to the pod on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, YouTube Podcasts, Amazon Music, Podbean, or Castbox.

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ey-beal-buyout-summer-league-observations-nba
 
Chris Paul and Bradley Beal unite in LA while the Suns watch from the sidelines

San Antonio Spurs v Phoenix Suns - Emirates NBA Cup

Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images

Be afraid. Be very afraid.

Are you kidding me?

Two former Phoenix Suns who were kicked out of Phoenix over contract negotiations are now teaming up in LA? You know, the retiring player’s salary place of choice was not Phoenix. Why not? Sunny summers, enough money to buy a house in an area that may burn up, and June gloom with the fog.

CP3 never had a chance to play with Beal, but one wonders if they had the chance to team up. Do you see the potential outlet pass to Beal? Another one to Booker as he actually breaks the half-court press because he is the pigeon?

If Chris Paul elevates Bradley Beal’s game, then every single Suns fan (or most of you) on this site should be ashamed of themselves. Or was this the most serious under-utilization of Beal’s talent ever without a point guard? Let's put this one on the front office. They listened and they tried to surround the shooting guard position with point guard talent, but it failed awfully due to the utilization of the coaching scheme.

Washington Wizards v Houston Rockets
Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images

Look, Chris Paul is not going in for the mid-range shot while drawing the foul at 40. That was his best quality, and he could sell you insurance. I would honestly worry if he hit the deck, attempting that signature move. Game Over on the career.

But, if those two players manage to bring the Clippers into the playoffs, Sun fans will regret not keeping both or not making negotiations to retain or bring back both.

The Suns gamble vs. the Clippers gamble? Who wins next regular season record for the playoffs? My guess is this that the Suns have to sit this one out while the Clippers will at least make a Play-In. Is this an “No Country for Old Men” analysis? Well. lets see.

Suns have a lot to lose on this one for their reputation. If the duo pairs up and starts to win games for the Clippers, then it was on the Sun’s organization not to see it. If the duo does not produce results, then the Sun’s FO made the right call.



Listen to the latest episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below. To stay up to date on every episode, subscribe to the pod on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, YouTube Podcasts, Amazon Music, Podbean, or Castbox.

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...eal-clippers-reunion-could-haunt-phoenix-suns
 
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