News Suns Team Notes

After years of tracking numbers, these are the ones I still believe in

COLLEGE BASKETBALL: DEC 05 Minnesota at Mississippi State

Photo by Chris McDill/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Not all stats are created equal.

When the offseason rolls around, we all start looking for ways to pass the time. It’s been nearly four months since the Phoenix Suns played a meaningful game, and with no Olympics to distract us this summer, there’s been plenty of space for our minds to wander.

Me? I turn to podcasts.

On the way to work, mowing the lawn, cleaning out the garage. If I’m doing something, odds are I’ve got a podcast playing. Maybe that’s part of the reason why so many of us feel constantly overstimulated. We don’t allow ourselves to sit in silence. There’s always a voice in our ear, always something filling the gaps. For me, it’s stories told by strangers and observations sharper than my own. It’s comfort disguised as content. And it keeps the noise of the offseason at bay.

With all of that being said, I recently found myself immersed in a 30 for 30 podcast series about Martin Manley. Heard of him? Probably not. He’s one of those forgotten minds who existed on the fringes of the basketball world. A guy who, in the late ’80s, self-published three editions of a book called Basketball Heaven. His mission? To become basketball’s Bill James.


The 3-point shot changed everything. Martin Manley’s book “Basketball Heaven” pioneered analytical concepts around what drives the game today

30 for 30 Podcast: ‘Chasing Basketball Heaven’ premieres July 22nd on the ESPN App, https://t.co/W4a6zvOwfh, and wherever podcasts are… pic.twitter.com/5q0uoSTpbl

— 30 for 30 (@30for30) July 10, 2025

Manley was overanalyzing the sport before it was cool. He broke down the game mathematically, championing the value of the three-point shot when most coaches still viewed it as a gimmick. He dissected spacing, efficiency, and shot value with a level of rigor that, in hindsight, made him decades ahead of his time.

If Bill James fathered baseball’s sabermetric revolution, giving rise to Moneyball and the Oakland A’s braintrust, then Manley was trying to be that guy for basketball.

But the basketball world didn’t embrace him the same way baseball welcomed James. So, Manley moved on. He wandered into other corners of life, chasing projects, theories, and purpose. I won’t spoil the end of the podcast (it’s six episodes and worth your time) but let’s just say his eccentricity took him down a road that’s as fascinating as it is tragic.

As I listened, one question kept tapping me on the shoulder: what stats actually matter? What are the clearest indicators of a player’s greatness, or a team’s true success? In a sea of data, what signals cut through the noise?

I look at stats a lot. Probably too much. I have what some might call a PhD in navigating NBA.com and Basketball Reference, clicking and cross-referencing my way through rabbit holes of player data and team splits. I’ve got subscriptions to B-Ball Index and Stathead. My bookmarks bar looks like a crime scene investigation, except the only mystery I’m solving is why the Suns can’t defend the corner three.

But this is part of why I love writing for Bright Side.

It’s not just about watching the Suns play, it’s about what comes after. It’s about the process of observation, intuition, and then validation. I see something on the court, I scribble it down mentally, and then I dig into the data to find out if what I saw was real. Was it truth, or was it just a fleeting impression disguised as insight?

There are stats I naturally gravitate toward. Field goal percentages, like batting averages, are easy. They’re the low-hanging fruit. They give you a snapshot. But they don’t always tell the whole story.

If you tell me Devin Booker shot 33.2% from three last season, okay. Sure. That’s a number. But it’s not the truth. The real story is how he got those threes. Was it off the catch? Was he drifting to the corner? Was he creating off the dribble against a late closeout?

Because when you peel back the surface, you’ll find that Booker shot 36.5% on catch-and-shoot threes and just 30.7% on pull-ups. That’s a meaningful split. That’s the kind of number that tells me he’s better when playing off the ball, letting the game flow to him instead of forcing it from 27 feet out. And the fact that he took pull-up three’s 21.3% of the time? Not great, Bob.


Devin Booker's 3PT shooting last year:

C&S: 17.2% frequency, 36.5 3PT%
Pull-Up: 21.3% frequency, 30.7 3PT% pic.twitter.com/HZFW2RxYWU

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) August 3, 2025

That kind of nuance is my money spot. It’s where numbers start to mirror the eye test. I love effective field goal percentage for that reason too. It’s more accessible, more holistic. It accounts for the value of the three-ball and gives a clearer picture of a player’s overall efficiency. You can compare guys across the league and across roles without the noise.

To me, that’s the fun of it. The dance between what you see and what you can prove. The art of watching basketball through a human lens, and then trying to measure it in code.

Offensive and defensive rating are supposed to be the holy grail. The sport’s best effort to quantify a player’s impact on each side of the ball. In theory, they tell us how efficient a player is when they’re on the floor, how well the offense hums with them out there, how much the defense bends or breaks. But in practice? They’re team-dependent. They’re passengers on the lineup data train. You’re not just measuring one guy; you’re measuring five guys and all the noise that comes with them.

So yeah, I take them with a grain of salt. I use them, sure, to reinforce a point or add context to a conversation. But I’m not shackled to them the way some statheads are. If you want to tell me Player X has a 119.4 offensive rating and a 111.6 defensive rating, cool story. Now show me how that happened. Show me the film. Show me the why.

Now, apply that same metric to a team, and I’m listening. Because when you zoom out and look at offensive and defensive ratings in the aggregate, that’s where it clicks. That’s where it becomes useful. You’re taking in the totality of a team’s performance on both ends, stripping away some of the individual variance and focusing on collective outcomes. That’s why net rating might be the most important statistic we have for team success. It answers a simple but vital question: How much better is your offense than your defense? Or, if you’re the Phoenix Suns, is it better at all?

For individual players, I prefer the classics. Effective field goal percentage. Assist-to-turnover ratio. Rebounding percentage. They’re simple, but they paint an honest picture.

Effective field goal percentage tells me how well you’re shooting, without getting bogged down in the weeds of shot creation. Are you making the most of your touches? Are you punishing defenses from two and from three?

Assist-to-turnover ratio tells me whether you’re thinking the game or just throwing the ball around like it’s a live grenade. Did you make the right read? Did you value the possession? Or did you hand the ball to the guy in the wrong jersey?

Rebounding percentage? That’s all about effort. Not just how many boards you got, but how many chances you had to get them. It’s less about volume and more about will. Are you out there hunting rebounds, or are you watching someone else do the dirty work?

Stats like these? They mean something to me. They always have.

Back when I was 13, I used to build fake basketball leagues in the early versions of Excel. This was 1996. Dial-up internet. Windows 95. I was out there entering made-up box scores, calculating made-up stats, finding fake inconsistencies in my fake data, and fixing them like a lunatic. I didn’t think of it as analytics back then. I just thought of it as fun.

We all have our quirks. We all have our rituals to kill the dog days of summer. This is mine. Maybe yours is different. But whatever it is, I hope you’ve found a way to pass the time. Because soon enough, summer will give way to fall. The air will cool, the games will count again, and we’ll all go back to arguing about midrange shots and bench rotations like it’s the most important thing in the world.

And maybe, in some weird way, it is.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ll-analytics-phoenix-suns-efficiency-analysis
 
Suns Planet Podcast: What’s next for the Phoenix Suns with Gerald Bourguet

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The Suns’ podcast with 3 guys from around the Suns Planet.

Hey there, Planeteers!

This past week on the Suns Planet Podcast, we were lucky enough to get the luxury to have Phoenix Suns reporter, Gerald Bourguet as our guest. Join us as we discuss the latest news on the Phoenix Suns by asking Gerald the tough questions of this offseason.

We hope you enjoy the latest episode. As more news comes through, we will break it down for you.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ext-for-the-phoenix-suns-with-gerald-bourguet
 
The Suns have built great offenses before and it never got them a title

1993 NBA Finals - Game 3 - Phoenix Suns V Chicago Bulls

Photo by Lutz Bongarts/Bongarts/Getty Images

Offense vs. Defense: Which is more important?

There’s an old adage in sports: defense wins championships. And in many cases, it holds true.

Take the Cincinnati Bengals from a season ago, a team that could light up the scoreboard. They racked up 472 points and led the NFL with 43 touchdowns. Offensively, they were relentless. But their defense? A sieve. They gave up the second-most touchdowns in the league. And no matter how electric their offense was, the pressure to be perfect every drive became unsustainable. They missed the playoffs entirely.

In baseball, the San Francisco Giants come to mind, the ones who claimed three World Series titles a decade back. They didn’t overwhelm anyone with firepower. What carried them was pitching and defense. They knew how to control the flow of the game.

From a Phoenix Suns perspective, this becomes an even more compelling conversation. Because this franchise has recently delivered some of the most potent offensive basketball in its history.

Two seasons ago, they averaged 116.2 points per game. Last year? 113.6. For reference, the highest single-season scoring average in Suns history was 119.3 points, all the way back in 1969–70.


What is the highest points per game total in Suns history? 119.3 points

The year? 1969-70 pic.twitter.com/VN6IRNqZyl

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) August 4, 2025

This past year’s squad took and made more threes than any Suns team before it. Their offensive rating? Third-highest in franchise history.

And yet they didn’t even make the playoffs. Why? Because they couldn’t stop anyone.

Their defense ranked 27th in the league. On that end of the floor, they were turnstiles. The effort was inconsistent. The rotations were slow. They traded away their only rim protector midseason and left a gaping hole in the paint. The numbers tell you the story, but so did the eye test: they simply couldn’t defend. And no matter how beautiful the offense looked in moments, it was undone by a defense that couldn’t hold the line.

It’s because of all this — the numbers, the trends, the collapse — that the instinct is to side with defense in the offense-versus-defense debate. And for the most part, I do.

I’ve always had a soft spot for defense, regardless of the sport. Most of my Arizona Cardinals jerseys? Defensive players. Patrick Peterson. Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie. I’ve always admired the guys who could stare down a fully-loaded offense and simply say, “Not today.”

That mindset has shaped the way I view basketball, too. And maybe that’s why Shawn Marion was my favorite Sun for so many years. Because defense in Phoenix has always been the exception, not the rule. Marion made it an art form. He was everywhere, doing everything, and rarely got the credit he deserved.

Look at the history books. How many Defensive Player of the Year winners have worn a Suns uniform? Zero. How many Suns have made the All-Defensive First Team? Just ten. And nine of those were guards. Don Buse (3), Dennis Johnson (3), Jason Kidd (2), Raja Bell (1), Mikal Bridges (1). That’s the full list.

Defense has never been this franchise’s calling card. Which is exactly why it matters so much when it’s missing. So the natural instinct is to say defense is more important, especially when you consider the Suns’ history. This franchise has had electric offenses, historic scoring seasons, and All-NBA talents. But no championships.

The easy conclusion? They never defended well enough.

And yet, as I look toward next season, I’m not convinced it’s that simple. My fear is that the pendulum has swung too far the other way. That this Suns team might defend at a high level but struggle to score. I wonder where the points will come from, how they’ll close games, and what the offensive identity even looks like in crunch time.

I hope the defense can force enough turnovers to feed the offense in transition. But hope is not a strategy, and speculation is not a system.

In the big picture, balance is the equalizer. You need to score. The game demands it. But defense can shape the game in ways offense can’t. Defense disrupts rhythm. It turns talent into frustration. It gives a team its edge.

So if you asked me which side of the ball I’d choose to prioritize? It’s defense. Always. Because while every game is about putting points on the board, there’s something special about a team that knows how to keep them off. That’s rare. That’s disruptive. And that’s the kind of basketball I love to watch.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...istory-season-analysis-nba-playoffs-struggles
 
Inside the Suns - Topics: Mark Williams, Jordan Ott’s offense, the Suns’ third best offensive player

Phoenix Suns v Charlotte Hornets

Photo by Jared C. Tilton/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 - Mark Williams’ injury history rightfully concerns many fans. If he misses time this season, who would you prefer the Suns to start in his place at center?

Ashton: If Mark Williams misses a bunch of time due to injury, then that would mean the Lakers organization made the right decision in not trading for him due to a failed physical. In which case, I would start myself at center (I am 5’10”-ish), just to end my own suffering knowing that the Lakers won again.

Everything I am reading about Mark Williams involves ankle sprains and thumb injuries/surgeries, along with a rather disturbing “lower back issue” that has sidelined him for some time. This is the life of the Big Man, who does everything well but probably overexerts himself in pursuit of his craft.

To the question. I think you must roll with a small-ball line-up at the C for decent parts of the game. Nick Richards? Oso? They have most of the veteran experience, and I say that with tongue-and-cheek. But hey, at least it is not Mason Plumlee. This could allow a little more “rest management” for the starting C in Mark Williams.

Ultimately, the easy answer is to put Khaman Maluach in for some serious minutes as the rookie. Is it out of the frying pan, into the fire, then batter him up for a double fry in oil when going back into the frying pan?

Yes, and let’s see if he breaks or just how tasty he is to the Suns fans discerning talent eyes. If you see potential, then more minutes for KM with some starter opportunities.

OldAz: As it stands now, the options are really just Richards and Oso because Maluach is not ready for that, and it would probably set back his development to some extent. With that said, this really dovetails into my answer to #2 because I care more about which center can benefit them more defensively. Since we have not seen how all the parts fit together, my answer is a firm “I have no idea”.

While Oso is undersized, he has shown a much greater ability to switch on the defensive end, while Richards is clearly better equipped to hold his own against an opponent with a more traditional center. Oso also becomes an asset on the offensive end as a facilitator. I think I just talked myself into a center by committee if Mark Williams misses time early in the season.

Rod: If Nick Richards is still on the roster, I’d go with him, but I have my doubts that he’ll still be with Phoenix on opening night. If he’s traded before then, I’d go with Ighodaro because I believe that Maluach just isn’t ready to start in the NBA yet. He has the tools, but is still too young and too raw for it early on. I’d love to see enough progress from him during the season that he could get that nod perhaps later on this year, but I’m not hopeful of that happening quickly. Oso has his shortcomings, but has experience and the BB IQ to get the job done for the most part.

Q2 - Jordan Ott has said he wants the Suns to play at a faster pace this year. Do you like this idea?

Ashton: This is such lip service to the Seven Seconds or Less Sun fans that this question on its own could inspire questions for decades to come. Not naming any specific players here (Nash, Matrix, Stoudemire) that drove this engine and made it so fun for Sun fans to watch.

NY Times:

“Analytics didn’t drive the 2004-05 Phoenix Suns to change the NBA into its current look: four-out, one-in offenses, raining 3-pointers, broken up with the occasional 1-5 pick-and-roll lob”

Now, can this current iteration of Sun’s players do that? As Rod Argent likes to state at times. No.

This team is just not built for it. Book learned from CP3 on how to bring the ball up the court from CP3 while studying the defense. And would get trapped at the half-court line because teams knew he hated that in pick-up games. And 7SOL was a quick-moving passing game.

Turnovers were the bane of the Sun’s season last time. Where I would like to see a quicker-moving game, I just do not see the personnel to do it.

OldAz: Normally, when teams say this, they simply try to push the ball more and take the first open shot. This rarely works unless you have a great PG running the offense. That’s not the case here (Captain Obvious reporting).

However, the other way to play fast is to focus on the defense by playing aggressively, with active hands and clogging the passing lanes. Doing this and being aggressive with live-ball turnovers to increase fast break opportunities also looks a lot like “playing faster,” and I hope it aligns (there’s that word again) with the team's new identity.

Rod: I’ve been wanting to see them pick up the pace for some time now, and I think it will be good for the entire team. The Suns are going to have a lot of youthful legs on the court this season, and I think the faster the pace they play at, the more successful they can be. Let’s try to run the other teams to the brink of exhaustion going into the 4th quarter for a change. There’s a line from an old movie that went something like, “In confusion, there is profit.” Well, if the Suns get out and run early and often, opponents won’t always have time to get back and set up their defense before the Suns are already attacking the basket. In those moments of confusion, the Suns will at least have the opportunity to profit.

And while we know that Book isn’t the greatest passer in a slow half-court game but I’ve seen him throw some beautiful outlet passes on the fast break that led to Suns points in the past (many of which went to a streaking Mikal Bridges) and I doubt he’s lost that ability. All he needs is an offense structured to play at a faster pace to take advantage of that.

No matter how it all pans out, I’ll be happy to just see the team not walk the ball slowly downcourt on the inbounds anymore.

Q3 - Booker and Green are expected to be the Suns’ top 2 scorers this season. Who’s your bet on being their 3rd best bucket getter?

Ashton: Back to Q1. If Mark Williams remains healthy, then he could easily be the third-best bucket getter. Heck, he might be the second-best bucket getter as I am still not sure what Jalen Green brings to the table in this system.

It sounds so simple, but if the threes are not falling, atrocious turnovers are not being committed due to defensive pressure, then MW is your guy on the PnR.

I realize this is more of a vanilla response, but we really do not know what Ott’s offensive philosophy will be for next season. Until we see it.

OldAz: Callback to question #1 here, as I think the injury concerns with Williams are overblown. Booker is at his best when playing the 2-man game with an effective big and I think Williams is set up to be an integral part of what they do offensively this season. Williams should be primed for an improvement over last season, where he averaged just over 15 points on about 10 shots a game.

At the height of the Suns' recent success, DA averaged 17 and 18 on 12-13 shots a game. DA was the Suns' 3rd leading scorer in 20-21 and actually ahead of Paul for 2nd in 21-22. Williams has the capacity to match or even improve upon those results. While Dunn (and Brooks) should see plenty of minutes, he (they) will be one of a few spot-up options on those PnR actions that will share opportunities. As long as I am right about him being healthy, it should easily be Williams.

Rod: I’m going with Mark Williams at the moment. There are a few other guys that I believe have a fairly equal chance of becoming that #3 scorer, but I think Ott is not going to design an offense that will ignore or minimize the center position on offense. Whether it’s Williams, Richards, Maluach or Ighodaro in the game, you’ll have someone out there at the 5 with the potential to put up points if they are fed the ball down low.

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


Suns Trivia/History​


On August 5, 1999, the Suns traded Pat Garrity, Danny Manning, a 2001 1st round draft pick, and a 2002 1st round draft pick to the Orlando Magic for Anfernee Hardaway. Two years later, as part of a three-team trade, the Magic would trade that same 2002 first-round pick back to the Suns along with Bo Outlaw in exchange for Jud Buechler in order to shed salary and create cap space. The 2002 1st round pick that was traded away and then later reacquired by the Suns was ultimately used by the Suns to draft Amar’e Stoudemire. If not for the Suns’ second trade with Orlando, Amar’e Stoudemire would have likely never been a Phoenix Sun.

On August 8, 2000, Kevin Johnson retired from the Phoenix Suns for the second and final time after being called back into service during the regular season after Jason Kidd broke his ankle. Although Johnson had not played in an NBA game since April of 1998, he stepped right back into the Suns’ starting lineup almost 2 years later to start in six of the Suns’ final 10 regular season games and came off the bench to play in all nine of the Suns’ playoff games before the team was eliminated in the 2nd round by the Lakers. After his 2nd retirement, KJ went to the NBA on NBC studios to call games during the 2000-01 regular season.


Last Week’s Poll Results​


Last week’s question was “Where do you expect the Suns’ defense to rank this season?

18% - Top 10.

73% - 11th to 20th.

09% - Bottom 10.

A total of 278 votes were cast.


Important Future Dates​


September 13 - Valley Suns Open Tryouts @ ASU Sun Devil Fitness Complex in Tempe (9 am-12:30 pm)

October 3 - Preseason game vs LA Lakers @ Palm Desert, CA

October 10 - Preseason game vs Brooklyn Nets (China)

October 12 - Preseason game vs Brooklyn Nets (China)

October 14 - Preseason game vs LA Lakers @ Phoenix, AZ

October 21 - Regular Season Begins

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



This week’s poll is...

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...illiams-injury-jalen-green-scorer-predictions
 
Welcome to the new Bright Side of the Sun: A fresh look, fewer ads and a new feature

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Things will look a little different around here today.

A few weeks ago we told you something new was coming to Bright Side of the Sun and today it’s here. Things are cleaner, faster and easier to use. There are the same writers, coverage, comments, and community you’ve come to rely on, now with less clutter and clunkiness.

Let’s dive in. If you scroll down the page on your phone or computer, it’s smoother. You’ll notice that the most talked-about stories have a bigger font displaying the number of comments. You’ll also see a section called Active Conversations to point you to the busiest conversations right now.

But there’s two changes we’re most excited to tell you about:

Fewer ads for logged-in users​


Our loyal readers and commenters are the heartbeat of our communities, and with this new design we’re excited to offer them fewer ads when they’re logged in. Specifically:

  • Video players will no longer chase you down the page. Just scroll past one and it will be gone.
  • Full page pop-ups that would sometimes interrupt your commenting experience have been disabled.

You can log in or sign up here and check it out.

A new feature by the community, for the community: The Feed​


Today we’re launching a brand new space for you to come together. The Feed is a running stream of posts and updates from you, the community, mixed in with links and updates from the team and our staff. Think of it as our community’s group text where you can easily grab your phone and share a link to a story, post a question or write your own post on the day’s news.

You can find it in two places:

  • On the homepage, adjacent to the top stories. Community participation is core to who we are, so we want it right on the front page to share your stuff.
  • A devoted homepage for The Feed where you can see the full stream of posts coming in from the community. You might want to bookmark that.

Log in or sign up here and you can start posting on The Feed and seeing fewer ads immediately.

Today’s launch is a big deal for our community, and it’s also a kickoff of broader efforts to build around the community we have here. Soon you’ll get alerts when someone replies to your comment or your post on The Feed, with more to come thereafter. We want to put the community in the driver’s seat, so let us know what you want in the comments below or in The Feed.

If you want to dig into more of this updated experience, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton, where he expands on the changes in our ads and design. Ed will be responding to questions in the comments. If you have any questions about how to log in to our new system, check out this article from last week.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-sun-a-fresh-look-fewer-ads-and-a-new-feature
 
Boston took a player the Suns could have used

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There aren’t many paths left for the Phoenix Suns to add to this roster. Jordan Goodwin sits on a non‑guaranteed deal for next season, and there’s still a window, however small, to bring in another piece.

If you look at the roster in full, most would circle the power forward position as the spot to address. That’s why names like Jonathan Kuminga surface again and again. The theory is simple: he could plug that hole. But I’ve long argued he’s undersized for the role, and his skill set doesn’t align with what this team truly needs.

And now, another option is gone. A player I’ve quietly wanted in Phoenix at different points over the years, yet it never happened. Chris Boucher, the last remaining thread to the Toronto Raptors’ 2019 championship fabric, is off the board.

Per Shams Charania, he’s gone. Bound for the Boston Celtics.

Free agent forward Chris Boucher has agreed to a one-year, $3.3 million contract with the Boston Celtics, agent Sam Permut of Roc Nation tells ESPN. Boucher lands a guaranteed deal with the Celtics and is expected to have a significant role in the frontcourt. pic.twitter.com/H13dHVyuu8

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) August 5, 2025

Chris Boucher was never the kind of power forward who would bully his way through the lane. At 6’9” and 200 pounds, he’s built more like a stretched‑out shooting guard than a bruiser. That frame is part of why “Slimm Duck” became one of his nicknames. But what he lacks in bulk, he makes up for with athleticism, timing, and the kind of relentless energy this Suns team has been trying to cultivate under Brian Gregory’s watch.

Now 32, Boucher will bring his two championship rings, one from Golden State in his rookie year, another from Toronto’s 2019 run, to a retooled Celtics roster aiming to climb even higher.

And the Suns? Their board is still open, their options still undefined. Maybe they add a power forward. Maybe they don’t add anyone at all. But with August here, the NBA’s true dead zone, I’m fine with the stillness. Sometimes the absence of movement says more than the noise of the market.



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/...options-chris-boucher-boston-celtics-nba-news
 
Structure, not minutes, will define success for Suns’ rookies

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The youth movement is alive and well in Phoenix. Next season, the Suns will carry four rookies and two sophomores, a level of roster inexperience the franchise hasn’t embraced in years. Ryan Dunn and Oso Ighodaro enter pivotal second seasons, each with the chance to prove they belong in a consistent rotation. For the rookies — Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, Koby Brea, and CJ Huntley — the year will be less about immediate impact and more about laying the foundation for what they can become. Out of 18 total roster spots, one-third will be filled by players still carving out their place in the league.

This is new ground for the Suns. True development hasn’t been at the forefront since 2018–19, when youth was a priority rather than an afterthought. Now the tide is shifting and the ship is set on a new course, one where patience and execution will determine how far this movement can go. Development can’t be a slogan. It must be deliberate. It means placing young players in positions to succeed, building confidence, and nurturing their strengths instead of tossing them into the fire to see who survives.

Done right, this isn’t simply a youth movement. It’s the foundation of the Suns’ next era.

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So, how do the Suns grow these young players the right way? How do they maximize the opportunities in front of them without burying their rookies under expectations that could fracture their confidence before it’s fully formed?

Because that’s the heart of it. Confidence. It’s fragile, and for players stepping into the blinding spotlight of the NBA, it can vanish as quickly as it arrives. Once it slips, talent follows. The game becomes heavier, the instincts dull, and what could have been a breakthrough season turns into a struggle to survive.

The smartest approach is to treat next season as a series of controlled steps rather than one unbroken sprint.

Break the seven-month journey from October to April into three distinct phases. The first phase runs from the opening tip in mid-October through the end of November, a stretch that allows rookies to find their footing before the G League season even begins. The second phase covers the grind of winter, where physical and mental fatigue will test their growth. The final phase, heading into April, becomes about applying what they’ve learned and seeing how their development holds under the weight of Play-In-level intensity.

By setting mile markers for progress instead of demanding instant results, the Suns can build a structure where learning is measured, confidence is reinforced, and talent is allowed to emerge at its own pace. That’s how you turn raw potential into long-term assets. Not by rushing the process, but by mastering it.

Phase 1: G League Reps Over NBA Minutes​


In the first two months, the strategy should be clear: utilize the G League.

Give players like Rasheer Fleming, Koby Brea, CJ Huntley, and Khaman Maluach consistent run with the Valley Suns. That doesn’t mean locking them away exclusively. They should remain available to the main roster if needed. But their minutes shouldn’t be prioritized at the NBA level. They should be prioritized where development is the focus, not survival.

The G League exists for this exact purpose. It’s a proving ground. A space where young players can get real reps, adjust to the speed and physicality of the professional game, and make mistakes without consequence. It’s where confidence is built, not broken. That early stretch of the season is the perfect window to let them sharpen their tools.

Meanwhile, the big-league club has its own priorities: establishing its identity, implementing new systems, and building chemistry among its veterans. If health holds, there’s no reason to rely on the rookies in meaningful minutes. The Suns have the depth without thrusting these players into high-leverage roles before they’re ready. This isn’t about hiding them. It’s about giving them space to grow. Deliberately, methodically, and without unnecessary pressure.

Phase 2: Gradual Burn, Not Trial by Fire​


The second phase of the season, mid-December through the end of February, is when the real implementation begins. This is where minutes start to materialize. By this point in the NBA calendar, injuries are inevitable, rotations begin to shift, and your hand may be forced more than expected. But rather than treating that as a setback, it should be seen as an opportunity.

This is the window to gradually integrate the young talent. Give Khaman Maluach 15 to 20 minutes a night. Let Rasheer Fleming log 10 to 12. These aren’t heavy burdens, but intentional spurts. It’s controlled exposure to the speed, physicality, and demands of NBA-level basketball. It’s less about leaning on them and more about giving them situational reps that build rhythm and confidence.

If they’re producing, let them ride a little longer. If they’re struggling, recalibrate without overreacting. The key is to treat this stretch not as a trial by fire, but as the next step in their evolution. You’re not tossing them in the deep end. You’re letting them wade in, one possession at a time.

Phase 3: Graduated, Not Gifted​


By the final third of the season, reality may set in. The Suns could find themselves scrapping for a Play-In spot at best. If that’s the case, the calculus changes.

Development begins to take precedence over desperation. Strategic rest for veterans like Devin Booker or Jalen Green, whether that’s a few games off or lighter minutes, opens the door for the rookies to step fully into the frame. That’s when you let Koby Brea run. Maybe Nigel Hayes-Davis or whoever is holding down the power forward spot stubs a toe or needs a breather. That’s the cue to hand Rasheer Fleming 28 minutes and see what he does with them.

This is when the baptism truly begins. Not reckless, not chaotic, but earned. These rookies will have gone through months of foundational work: G League reps, short stints in real games, confidence quietly building. Now, they’re ready to shoulder more. The minutes increase, the responsibility grows, and they begin to understand what it means to contribute, not in theory, but in real-time under the lights.

And that’s the beauty of this approach. It’s not about throwing them into the fire. It’s about preparing them to walk through it.



It’s been a long time since we’ve had to view rookie development through this kind of lens. Since we’ve needed to ask how, not if, the Phoenix Suns should invest in first-year players. Yes, there were glimpses of this last season with Ryan Dunn and Oso Ighodaro, but those moments were framed by a “win-now” mentality. Development took a back seat to urgency.

This season will be different. The Suns may not have the luxury of chasing a championship, which means the door opens for a more deliberate, long-term approach. It’s not about tanking (especially considering they don’t own the draft capital that rewards such a mentality), it’s about recognizing where you are and maximizing what you have.

For the sophomores, the time for experimentation is somewhat over. You’ve had a year to evaluate their skill sets and understand their limitations. Now it’s about trust and accountability. Dunn should enter the season as a starter, with Ighodaro ready to contribute meaningful minutes off the bench. Both are expected to produce, and both have the opportunity to play themselves into larger roles or out of them entirely. They are no longer developing in the shadows. They are in the thick of the rotation, and the only way out is backward.

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Next offseason will be pivotal. Not because of cap space or star hunting, but because by then, the Suns should have a much clearer picture of what they actually have. How these rookies develop over the course of the season will inform everything.

Did you draft wisely? Are any of these players potential cornerstones, or are they simply rotation-caliber contributors? Did you miss on them? The answers to those questions will shape the direction of the franchise. If even one or two rookies emerge as long-term assets, it changes how aggressive you need to be in free agency or on the trade market as you continue to retool around Devin Booker.

But none of that evaluation can happen without a proper development process. You can’t project their value if you haven’t given them the space to grow. That’s the real pressure this year. Not on the win column, but on the organization’s ability to develop, assess, and plan with purpose.

For the rookies, the strategy must be rooted in patience. Khaman Maluach, in particular, requires a thoughtful plan. He’s young, raw, and still growing into his body, both literally and figuratively. Big men take time, and expecting him to make an immediate impact would be shortsighted. The focus should be on giving him every possible opportunity to grow in environments that allow for mistakes, reps, and steady progression.

That’s how you build something sustainable. You don’t throw rookies into the fire and hope they survive. You put them in situations where they can succeed, where confidence has a chance to take root. You manage expectations, not because you don’t believe in their talent, but because you’re playing the long game.

And in Phoenix, it’s finally time to start playing the long game again.



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...er-minutes-growth-plan-khaman-maluach-fleming
 
Which jersey defines the Kevin Durant era in Phoenix?

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It’s funny how these little conversations start. The ones that only happen in August, when there’s not much going on. No games. No breaking news. No real urgency. So we talk. About roster construction, possible free agent targets, jersey designs, whatever sticks. You never know where it’ll go. That’s the beauty of it. Put two Suns fans in a room, and sooner or later, the conversation wanders somewhere unexpected.

One of those recent detours had nothing to do with schemes or rotations. We didn’t dive into stats or lineups. Instead? We talked about uniforms.

More specifically: when the Kevin Durant era comes up in the future, which jersey will come to mind?

His time here was brief. 189 games (of which he played 145), if we’re being precise. But it overlapped with a pivotal visual shift. The Suns changed their core look the season after Durant arrived.

The Association and Icon editions, white and purple respectively, were given a fresh coat of paint before the 2023-24 season tipped off. That’s what my friend thinks of. That’s the jersey he associates with Durant. And maybe that’s why he’s already itching for the team to switch them up again.

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For me? It’s the Statement Edition. The all-black ones with “PHX” splashed across the front in white, pixelated Valley gradients climbing up from the hem, echoing the Valley vibes without fully leaning into it. That jersey was there when Durant was introduced to the world as a Sun, held up between Mat Ishbia and James Jones, still shiny and full of promise.

Personally? I think those are a top-3 all-time jersey in Phoenix Suns’ history. Debatable? Sure. But behind the purple Wild West’s (which I still wish were the uniform of choice for the team) and the white Sun-bursts, the black Statements from 2022 to 2025 will forever be a simple, bold, iconic design.

And those jerseys? They’re gone now. They were worn for three seasons, all of which aligned with Durant’s tenure. That’s what makes the PHX jerseys feel so connected to Durant. Their time was short, like a limited-run series. In my opinion, they’re a top-three jersey in Suns history. And they belong to that era.

Next year’s Statement look will reportedly stay black, but the front will read “Phoenix” instead.

BREAKING: The Phoenix Suns will have a new black Statement Edition next season. The mockup below shows what we know as of now. We will post revisions as we get more details. The wordmark has a purple outline, while the number has a purple drop shadow (zoom in to see).

Confirmed… pic.twitter.com/6Hjes5TbI2

— ProLine Mockups (@ProLineMockups) June 7, 2025

So that’s my take. My visual timestamp for Durant in the Valley.

What’s yours? When you think back on his time here, when his name comes up years from now, what jersey do you see him in? And will that image fade, or only grow clearer as the distance between us and his time in Phoenix gets a little longer?



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ey-uniform-era-statement-edition-valley-black
 
Suns not playing on Christmas for the first time in 5 years

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For the first time in five seasons, the Phoenix Suns will not be playing on Christmas. After getting rid of all their star power and being projected to be one of the worst teams in the NBA, the Valley will not be playing on December 25th after playing on it the last four seasons.

🚨🎄 NBA Christmas Day 2025 on ABC and ESPN, per sources:

– Cleveland Cavaliers at New York Knicks

– San Antonio Spurs at Oklahoma City Thunder

– Houston Rockets at LA Lakers

– Dallas Mavericks at Golden State Warriors

– Minnesota Timberwolves at Denver Nuggets

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) August 8, 2025

The Suns, 13-9 all-time playing on the holiday, went 1-3 the past four seasons playing on Christmas, which is considered the premier holiday teams play on during the regular season, with their lone win coming last season in a 110-100 win over the Denver Nuggets. Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal combined for 54 points in the contest.

When Durant, one of the league’s most popular players and has been for more than a decade, off the Suns, it was inevitable the team would not be playing on the holiday, the moment he was traded. It’s now official, and his new team, the Houston Rockets, will be playing on the holiday for the first time since 2019, facing off against the Los Angeles Lakers.



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.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-schedule-kevin-durant-trade-houston-rockets
 
The Suns need more than rebounds from Mark Williams this season

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There’s one question you should always ask in an interview. You know the scene. Shirt freshly ironed, tie knotted just well enough to fool them, nerves twisting in your gut like a mid-range jumper in crunch time. You walk in, sit under flickering fluorescent lights, and get hit with the barrage: behavioral hypotheticals, personality probes, competency checklists. You do your best to sound insightful, specific, human.

And then comes the trapdoor.

“Do you have any questions for us?”

It’s the moment that separates the rehearsed from the ready. And as someone who’s sat on the other side of that table too many times to count, I’ll tell you, this is where most people freeze. It’s baffling. You want a job, maybe even a career, and you have no questions? No curiosity about what makes the place tick, how success is measured, or what it takes to thrive?

So here’s your cheat code, especially if you’re young and trying to break in. Ask this. “What does success look like in this position?”

That question, simple as it is, opens the door to everything that matters. Expectations. Metrics. Culture. The unspoken stuff that makes or breaks you.

And it’s also the driving force behind what we’re doing here at Bright Side this August. We’re launching a series that zeroes in on the Phoenix Suns roster, not with stats or fantasy projections, but by asking that same question: What does success look like for each player?

Not in vague terms. Not “Devin Booker should be an All-Star.” That’s obvious. The how and why, that’s the story. What does it take for these players to not just exist in their roles, but to excel in them?

Let’s start with one of the newest faces on the roster, a man likely anchoring the paint when opening night tips off: Mark Williams.

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Mark Williams checks all the physical boxes you want from an NBA big man. He has size, length, strength, and the athleticism to make a steady impact night in and night out. For his career, the 7’0” 241-pound bohemouth is averaging 15.2 points and 10.2 boards. His field goal percentage? 62.2%,

But when it comes to calling a season a success, it boils down to one brutal truth: health. If Mark stays on the court, the rest will follow.

Why? Because this guy is a bulldozer on the boards and a disruptive force on defense. He’s not destined to be an All-Star anytime soon, but in the value-for-money department, earning just $6.3 million this season, he’s a clear slam dunk. That value evaporates if he’s stuck on the sidelines.

Offensively, it comes down to consistency around the rim. The real test? Building chemistry with Devin Booker, who isn’t exactly known for pinpoint entry passes, and Jalen Green, who’ll need to deliver the ball in space where Williams can catch and finish before defenders close in. Hesitate, and defenders swipe the ball away. Quick decisions in the paint separate the effective from the invisible.

If we want to get granular, a double-double average over at least 64 games played is the yardstick for success. I’m betting Williams will miss some time to minor injuries and that rookie Khaman Maluach will see meaningful minutes late in the season as Phoenix shifts focus away from a playoff push. So hitting that 64-game mark means two things: surviving the grind and embracing his role as a foundational piece for a young roster.

Success for Mark Williams in 2025–26 will be measured in more than just box score stats and availability. It’s also about growth. Maturity. Composure. Not getting into shouting matches with your head coach would be a good place to start.

So would developing even a hint of playmaking ability.

This is one of the most overlooked aspects of his game, and one of the biggest red flags. Despite the physical tools, despite three years of NBA experience, Williams remains a black hole when it comes to passing. While Jusuf Nurkic and Mason Plumlee were both solid facilitators, Williams ranks in the 4th percentile league-wide in playmaking and received an F grade from B-ball Index.

We’re not asking for a Jokic imitation. He doesn’t need to be a point center. But if you can’t run a basic dribble handoff at the top of the key, or even make a simple read when the defense collapses, you’re limiting your own offense before the possession even starts. That’s a real problem.

Year four has to be about more than dunks and rebounds. It has to be about learning to see the game, not just power through it.

That’s my take on what success looks like for Mark Williams this season. What’s yours?

Keep your eyes peeled all month long as we break down what success means for every player on the Suns roster, one story at a time.



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...eason-outlook-success-metrics-growth-analysis
 
What does a successful rookie season look like for Khaman Maluach?

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We’re continuing our Bright Side series by exploring what success looks like for each Suns player in 2025–26.



With Mark Williams expected to be the Phoenix Suns starting center, Phoenix Suns lottery pick Khaman Maluach is expected to be the team’s backup center this season. Even though he’ll be in a backup role, Maluach has one of the highest upsides of anyone on the team.

Drafted with the 10th overall pick in the 2025 Draft, the Duke alum was compared to strong defensive anchors Rudy Gobert and Mitchell Robinson by the Ringer’s Kevin O’Connor. While he has strong upside, Maluach is considered to be a project because of his age (he’s still just 18 years old) and how late he started playing basketball.

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He averaged 8.6 points, 6.6 rebounds and 1.3 blocks a game in college on 71.2% shooting from the field. While he didn’t take many, Maluach shot a few triples in summer league but his shot is a work of progress.

Because of his 7’2” frame and nearly 7’7” wingspan, despite his age, Maluach should be able to contribute early on the defensive side of the ball, even if his instincts aren’t on an NBA level or he isn’t quick enough with his hands or feet to keep up with players inside.

With the Suns lacking many players outside of Devin Booker with high upside, a successful season for the lottery pick should be one filled with flashes, reps, and failure. Just like all rookies, he’ll hit a rookie wall and struggle at some point in the season as team’s get more familiar with his tendencies, but with a player with his attributes, motor and ability to finish at the rim, if Suns fans feel excited about the type of player he’s developing into, then that’s a success.

With the team not in contention for a title this season and the organization making a shift towards creating and developing a younger roster, Maluach should see consistent minutes this season, unlike first-round pick Ryan Dunn did last year, playing under Mike Budenholzer. With consistent reps, Maluach will be able to compete against some of the Western Conference’s best bigs and get familiar with how opposing centers play. If Mark Williams is out and Maluach starts against Nikola Jokić, and the MVP lights him up for a 35-point triple-double, Maluach will be given opportunities to learn from his experiences and grow as a player.

Maluach playing 65-70 games this year would be a success. It’s common to see young bigs struggle to stay on the floor in their first seasons in the league, look no further than the start of Joel Embiid, Chet Holmgren Kristaps Porzingis’ careers. While he played in all 39 of Duke’s games last year, the NBA schedule is longer and filled with more travel. If Maluach’s durability remains strong it’s a good sign for Suns fans when it comes to his future endurance.

Maluach, without a doubt, is one of the most intriguing players the Suns have on the roster this year and is one of the more unique players the team has drafted in recent memory. What do you think a successful season looks like for him?



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.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...son-outlook-backup-center-nba-draft-potential
 
No deal for Trae Young yet, and the Suns might be his perfect match

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Rumblings. Sometimes they spark excitement, a flicker of what could be. Other times, they light the fuse of frustration.

Take Jonathan Kuminga. His name’s been floating around all summer, and I can’t say it’s a sound that thrills me. Why overpay for an unproven player whose archetype and attitude tilt away from the roster you’ve built? That’s not intrigue. That’s redundancy with a side of headache.

But then there are the other rumblings, the rare ones that make you lean forward. The ones that feel like they might actually fit the Suns’ roster puzzle. They’re scarce these days, and for good reason. The math of the NBA is cruel. Free agency’s fading as a talent pipeline because smart teams don’t let their guys hit the open market anymore. Even if a player isn’t part of the long-term plan, you extend him, then flip him later for something you actually want.

Which is why the name Trae Young doesn’t just land. It reverberates. One guaranteed season left at $46 million. A $49 million player option in 2026–27 he’s unlikely to touch, because he’s hunting for the longer-term payday Atlanta hasn’t offered its two-time All-Star.

Then came the tweet. Trae responding to the Micah Parsons/Dallas Cowboys drama, sliding in a little manifesto about locking players in early.

This why you pay the man early, when someone will take less early to stay in a place he wanted to be forever, you do it… the price only goes up now!
Get what you deserve bro!

— Trae Young (@TheTraeYoung) August 1, 2025

And if that wasn’t enough smoke, ESPN’s Mark J. Spears dropped his own thoughts on NBA Today, pushing the conversation further into the “what if?” zone:

“What I’m hearing now at this point, and you can tell by Trae’s tweet, and I saw him during the Finals…I think he’s disappointed that it hasn’t come, it hasn’t been offered. So don’t be surprised if he plays this out and sees what happens next summer.”

Does this mean the relationship is fractured? That Young will be leaving Atlanta soon? Probably not. The Hawks and Young can work out an extension at any point next season. The fact it hasn’t happened yet, likely because the Hawks aren’t eager to hand him a max deal, creates a bit of a stalemate. And that stalemate? Intriguing for us here in Phoenix.

Young, while far from an elite defender by any metric, would be an ideal fit next to Devin Booker. This roster has been built with a defensive identity at the wing and center positions, giving a player like Young the perfect environment to thrive. Picture Trae Young throwing lobs to Mark Williams, fully unlocking that acquisition’s potential. That’s the dream. A true floor general.

Booker off the ball is the best version of Booker. Sure, he’s shown he can run point and handle primary duties, but that’s not where he’s at his most dangerous. Surround him with someone like Young and you’re fortifying his strengths, not diluting them.

Realistically, it’s unlikely Young reaches a breaking point with Atlanta. He’ll probably ink something in the De’Aaron Fox neighborhood. Maybe four years, $229 million. But until pen meets paper, there’s room for speculation. And speculating about Trae Young in a Suns uniform? That’s the kind of harmless basketball daydream that makes me smile…even if I know it’s a long shot.




Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...atlanta-hawks-extension-phoenix-suns-nba-news
 
Devin Booker was spotted at a Zach Bryan show

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It’s not every day two of my worlds collide in perfect harmony, but last night at the legendary Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Colorado, they did. There was Devin Booker. All-NBA guard, midrange assassin, stoic competitor. And what was he doing? Singing his lungs out to the closing song of alt-country rock artist Zach Bryan’s set like a man possessed by the moment.

Devin Booker was enjoying the offseason last night at the Zach Bryan concert at the Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre pic.twitter.com/uCZHS7Mg76

🌵 Mr. Az (@MrAzSports) August 11, 2025

“Baptize me with a bottle of Beam, put Johnny on the vinylllllllllllllll…”

Music, when it’s real, isn’t just entertainment. It’s spiritual. It’s primal. It hits you in the chest and reminds you that you’re alive. We all have those songs in our hearts and on our playlists. The ones that make you want to throw your head back and howl at the night sky, or crumble into tears over the stories they tell.

For me? I have plenty of ZLB tunes stored. I’ve been a Zach Bryan disciple for years. The man’s a poet with a guitar, spinning verses that paint scenes no one’s quite captured before. A turn of phrase that feels like it was written just for you. A life lesson tucked into a line that’s gone before you can brace for it. One of my favorite lyrical gut punches of his is: “Let it be, then let it go.” Simple. Applicable to everything from heartbreak to the mindless poison that drips across social media timelines.

So seeing Booker backstage, fist pumping, belting out Revival like it was a Game 7 bucket, was pure joy. We know he’s no stranger to concerts. He pops up at summer shows like clockwork, but I didn’t peg him for a Zach Bryan guy. Turns out, he’s got a taste for the same raw, unvarnished storytelling that pulls me in.

How an NBA star spends his offseason is as unique as the player himself. Some grind in the gym until the lights burn out. Some disappear to remote corners of the world. And some, apparently, find themselves at Red Rocks, singing along to one of the best lyricists in the game under the open Colorado sky.



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...n-concert-singing-offseason-phoenix-suns-news
 
Suns Reacts Survey: Who should start at the 4 this year?

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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 Phoenix Suns fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.



Devin Booker and Jalen Green are set to take on guard duties, Dillon Brooks will be one of the wings and Mark Williams will start at center for the Phoenix Suns, but it remains to be seen who will be playing at power forward for them to begin games. With the starting lineup lacking a strong defensive presence, the two main candidates two take the four spot are Ryan Dunn and Royce O’Neale: Here are their two cases.


The Case for Ryan Dunn​


Coming off an inconsistent rookie season, the University of Virginia alum should be seen as the favorite to secure the gig. He’s already got experience guarding some of the Western Conference’s best wings and his speed, agility, and nearly 7’1” wingspan give him the ability to hold his own on the defensive end.

90 seconds of Ryan Dunn blocks & steals for NBA Defense Week 💥 pic.twitter.com/rrgjgzdboJ

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) August 5, 2025

Starting Dunn would also be an extension of the youth movement that the Suns have taken this offseason. He started 44 games last season, and he averaged more points, rebounds and assists than he did coming off the bench.

While he’s definitely the best option to start from a defensive perspective, Dunn struggled to shoot from three on a consistent basis. He shot just 31.1% from deep on 3.6 attempts per game last year. Additionally, while he only shot 39 of them in his rookie campaign, he shot a poor 48.7% from the free throw line.


The Case for Royce O’Neale​


O’Neale is definitely the safest, most reliable option to start. He was a starter on the No. 1 seeded Utah Jazz in the 2020-2021 season and has started for multiple teams for multiple seasons in his career. Also a solid defender, O’Neale averaged a career high 9.1 points per game last year and shot a career best 40.1% from deep. With Green and Brooks not elite shooters, O’Neale would help the floor spacing in a starting lineup that is projected to struggle from deep.

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While his production is likely to remain the same, O’Neale is 32 and doesn’t project to be apart of the team’s long-term plans, and may not provide them with enough in the present to justify him taking the spot over someone younger than him who is apart of the Suns plans.

With three years left on his contract and a mid-sized salary, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Suns offload his contract, or trade him for someone younger during the season. That being said, while he’s on the team, he could be someone that they rely on in late game situations because of his experience and ability to stretch the floor.

He’s a bit shorter than Dunn and his wingspan isn’t as long, but with his playoff and career experience, he’s got a lot of time under his belt guarding some of the best forwards in the NBA.


The Case for the Others​


Rasheer Flemming and Nigel Hayes-Davis are the two other forwards on the team, but due to their inexperience and talent, they probably won’t be starting for the Suns at the four spot on opening night. However, like the Suns did at times last season, could the team roll out some untraditional lineups next year and have one of them, or the team’s other centers, start a contest alongside Brooks?

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Last year, when the team was shorthanded in an early-season contest against the Orlando Magic, the Suns rolled out a starting lineup with both Oso Ighodaro and Mason Plumlee in it. The Suns traded for Mark Williams at the same time they drafted Khaman Maluach, so the possibility of a world where they share the court together could be one they are looking to experiment with at some point during the season.

Koby Brea is 6’6” and could play some small forward, but with his size and natural position, the two spot, it’s unlikely to see him playing the four when he plays.



Who do you want to see starting at the power forward spot for the Suns? Let us know.



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.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...attle-ryan-dunn-vs-royce-oneale-lineup-debate
 
Does Phoenix have a modern-era NBA prototype in the making?

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We’re continuing our Bright Side series by exploring what success looks like for each Suns player in 2025–26.



Rasheer Fleming is the kind of prospect who makes scouts lean forward in their chair. Long, fluid, and comfortable guarding in space, the 6’9” forward doesn’t just check boxes; he sketches out the blueprint for what an NBA wing-big hybrid looks like in 2025.

Phoenix’s decision to invest in Fleming wasn’t about chasing an instant-impact rookie. It was about betting on traits that translate to the modern game: switchable defense, shooting touch, and an understanding of spacing that lets him float between roles without needing the ball.

Rasheer Fleming stands at the intersection of size, versatility, and high-level effort; a rare package in today’s NBA where two-way wings are worth their weight in talent. At 6’9” with a staggering 7’5” wingspan, Fleming isn’t just built like a prototype; he already embodies what NBA teams are chasing: a combo forward whose presence shifts the floor’s dynamic before he ever receives the ball.

His late-bloomer tag is well-earned. As the NBADraft.net outlook highlighted, he’s a “rapidly emerging combo forward with one of the most improved all-around skill sets in the country … a fast improving, high-energy four or small-ball five … rim protection, rebounding, and effort give him a strong foundation … frame and athletic traits NBA teams look for in a modern big.”

Saint Joseph’s coach watched Fleming grow into a player who impacted every stat, from cuts and rim finishes to catch-and-shoot threes. Yet, his production was strategic, not spectacular. Two-way boards, timely blocks, and the kind of hustle plays that help align second units are where he thrived. His season averages of 14.7 points, 8.5 rebounds, 1.5 blocks, 1.4 steals, and 39% from deep reinforce that all-around profile.

Aran Smith wrote this on Fleming for NBADraft.net:

Fleming projects as a fast improving, high-energy four or small-ball five at the next level. His rim protection, rebounding, and effort give him a strong foundation to build from, and he has the frame and athletic traits NBA teams look for in a modern big.

The quiet shift​


If Fleming thrives, it won’t just be about him. His development could unlock the kind of lineups that keep Phoenix dangerous deep into a playoff series, where every switch, every possession, and every inch matters.

And if he does, we may look back and see this as the year Phoenix quietly found its modern-era cornerstone. Not with a lottery pick or a blockbuster trade, but with a rookie who understood from day one that success isn’t always loud.

What does success look like for Fleming?​


It won’t be in a clear-cut rookie All-Star nod or spectacular outings filling up the scoring column. His value lies in the unseen shifts: stopping the ball, contesting shots without fouling, rebounding to start transitions, and spacing the floor as a low-usage cutter or pop man. His real ceiling is becoming the Suns’ glue. A two-way connector who smooths the team’s imperfections.

However, a few highlights like this for good measure wouldn’t go astray.

Picture this: a rotation lineup where the main scorers take shifts off, and Fleming slides in to guard mismatches, anchor weak spots, and turn loose possessions into something structured. That kind of subtle control can lift a team incrementally across 82 games.

He isn’t here to replace anyone, but if he embraces that glue role, he just might shape how the Suns operate as a whole. And that is a type of success that doesn’t always crack the box score, but it changes the game.

What does success for Fleming this season look like from your point of view?



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...phoenix-suns-switchable-defense-combo-forward
 
Where will Jalen Green get his shot to prove himself?

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Currently, it feels as if the Phoenix Suns barely exist. The NBA offseason is in dead silence, and the NFL is about to kick off in less than 20 days. That’s part of the anticipation for the NBA season. You almost forget about it, and then, when Media Day hits in late September, the excitement comes rushing back. For fans, it can be a nice break from the chaos, but for the players, the chaos of the NBA never really stops.

Jalen Green of the Phoenix Suns has a lot to prove this season, and the wait for action has to be grueling. Because in the NBA, anything can happen when it comes to trades.

A player like Green not only has something to prove but also has to get that chance before something changes, like a trade to the Atlanta Hawks for star guard Trae Young. That rumor has now surfaced, yet another wrench thrown into Green’s young career that could derail things quickly.

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If you’re Green, when do things start to feel like they’re slipping too far out of your control?

The Suns’ front office reportedly had plans for him to start alongside Devin Booker at point guard, but just like that, he’s back in trade talks.

This can be a crushing blow for a player determined to show that the Houston Rockets made a mistake trading him away after last season’s first-round playoff exit. If we can’t even get to tip-off with Green still in a Suns jersey, and instead he’s sent to the Hawks or somewhere else, sure, good luck to him. But it would also be deeply discouraging.

A player with as much passion as Green can turn rejection from a team into motivation to rise to the occasion on game night. But there’s also the risk he could fall into a pit of despair, mourning the loss of having a team fully back him as “the guy.”

The NBA can quickly take control of your career, and when you mix in the negative influence of social media and the constant chatter from talking heads on ESPN, one bad playoff series can change everything.

I’m not saying Green’s career is over, but it’s already taken turns he probably didn’t want, like getting traded to Phoenix in the first place. He’s accepted that fate and seems ready to prove the doubters wrong as a Sun. But now? The Suns might trade him again.

In the NBA, respect is something that must be earned, but it can also be taken away before a player even gets the chance to prove himself. With Green already caught up in trade rumors, the question is: can he block out the noise and stay locked in, or will it derail his motivation to remain in Phoenix?



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...rumors-trae-young-atlanta-hawks-nba-offseason
 
The Suns’ full 2025–26 schedule is finally here

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Schedule release day is more than a date on the calendar. It’s the unveiling of the season’s blueprint. It maps the rhythms and hurdles ahead, from grueling back-to-backs to extended road swings, from holiday showcases to pivotal home stands. Every storyline waiting to unfold now has its coordinates.

For the Phoenix Suns, the path for 2025–26 has been drawn. We know the when and the where, the peaks and the valleys, and the stretches that will test both endurance and chemistry.

As always, I’ll start with the visual. Here’s the full season schedule laid out in one (hopefully clean) graphic.

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The Suns’ 2025–26 schedule doesn’t pull any punches. The year begins with a quick test of stamina with six games in just ten days out of the gate. It’s a start that could set the tone or bury early momentum if the legs aren’t ready.

The longest true home stand comes later, a five-game stretch from January 25 through February 1. By contrast, the cruelest stretch away from Phoenix runs six games, January 13 through January 23, a trip that doubles as their longest absence from PHX Arena. And that’s before you factor in the 25-day marathon from December 26 to January 20 where the Suns never get two consecutive days off.

They’ll navigate 16 back-to-backs, and in nearly half of those (seven) they’re hopping time zones in between. The schedule-makers only handed them one true “baseball series,” both on the road in New Orleans right after Christmas, and not a single home-and-home set. They do, however, run into the same opponents in tight windows: the Clippers twice in three days, Utah twice in four, and Golden State twice in a two-day span.

Matinee basketball pops up three times, breaking the usual night-game rhythm. And the playoff-caliber gauntlet isn’t spread evenly. The team has distinct runs of facing nothing but postseason teams from last year, some lasting three games in a row.

Kevin Durant will make his return to Phoenix on November 24, just days before Thanksgiving. As for Bradley Beal? The Suns play the Clippers early and often, with his return to PHX Arena occurring on November 6.

National TV exposure is light compared to recent years: five on NBC, three on Peacock, and just one on ESPN. Nothing shocking there. The Suns, who currently have an over/under of 31.5 wins on FanDuel, aren’t really expected to be Must See TV across the league. The lone neutral-site spotlight is February 19 in Austin against the Spurs, a change of scenery in the heart of the playoff push.

There you have it. The blueprint for the 2025-26. What do you see? What are you looking forward to?


Longest home stand5 games — Jan 25, 2026 to Feb 01, 2026
Longest road trip6 games — Jan 13, 2026 to Jan 23, 2026
Back-to-backs16 total
Most games in ≤ 10 days6 games — Oct 22, 2025 to Oct 31, 2025
Matinee games (< 5 PM local)3 total
Back-to-backs with different time zones7
Longest stretch without two consecutive days off25 days — Dec 26, 2025 to Jan 20, 2026
National TV gamesNBC: 5, Peacock: 3, ESPN: 1


Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ule-release-dates-home-road-games-tv-matchups
 
Mat Ishbia says the Suns are building it the right way

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When I hear that Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury owner Mat Ishbia is setting aside time to sit down with Espo from PHNX on his Southwest Bias show, I sit up a little straighter. I’m locked in. I’ll listen. I’ll watch live. Not because I’m the type to throw harmless grenades in a YouTube chat. Though I am, and I know I can be an absolute thorn in the side. I’m a troll, sure. But I’m also curious. I want to see if this is going to be the same polished talking points or something that actually shakes the table. Will there be questions that push? Answers that reveal?

I know what it’s like to interview people, though I don’t have even a fraction of Espo’s reps. He earned his chops in the Suns’ marketing department and built his way into this space. Me? I’m a snarky blogger with a podcast, a handful of soundboard drops, and a knack for poking at the edges of the conversation.

Mat Ishbia’s a pro. He knows exactly what to say and when to say it. He can plant his feet, drive a point home, and make it sound bulletproof. And while I enjoyed the interview — Espo’s candid style always delivers — nothing Ishbia said really hit hard enough to shift my opinion. We already know the beats: he’s aiming for consistency, he wants us proud of the team, he’s committed to building it the “right way.”

But there was one thing that made me lean in a little closer. Because it fortifies an approach that has legs.

“This year, you’re starting to see it come together,” Ishbia said. “But we’re going to get better over the next two or three years. And hopefully you’ll see that with the Suns as we’re building it the right way and doing it every day…And the whole city of Phoenix will understand that and trust me and our organization by our actions, but we’re going to continue to do it, not just say we’re going to do it.”

Essentially? Well done is better than well said. Ishbia knows he can talk…and talk…and talk about the identity shift he’s bringing to this organization. And he will. The structure has changed. The mentality has changed. But until it shows up on the court with consistency, it’s still just that: talk.

It’s a sentiment that takes me back to the Monty Williams era, the first head coach Ishbia let go after arriving in Phoenix. Monty had his faults, sure, but one thing he excelled at was motivation. His “don’t be happy on the farm” mindset, his reminders that well done is better than well said. Those weren’t just about basketball. They were about life. I still find myself quoting him when I’m talking with colleagues about how to raise our day-to-day game.

And Ishbia recognizes that.

As Mat Ishbia talks about the team we love, the one he’s pouring himself into, you have to ask: are you buying what he’s selling? Truthfully, I am. I’ve said before, these are the learning curves of a new owner. He came in with his checkbook wide open, chasing elite talent. That gamble failed. Now comes the pivot, which involves building a structure that can sustain success over the long haul.

“You’re never going to question do we care,” Ishbia stated. “Everything around winning and around what the fans want because I’m a fan too, and we’re going to do exactly what fans want. Doesn’t mean we’re gonna win every year, and sometimes we’re going to make trades or draft picks or free agents that aren’t going to work out, but you know what? We’re going to try to win, and we’re going to try to compete every day.”

Why should fans trust the Suns and Mat Ishbia?

I asked the man himself directly. pic.twitter.com/hJCdecYlaI

— Espo  (@Espo) August 15, 2025

Is it counterintuitive to be a developmental team without draft capital? Absolutely. And that’s a problem Ishbia and the organization will have to solve over the next few years as they continue to shape their identity. But what he’s doing shouldn’t surprise anyone. He’s transplanting the mindset that made him successful in the private sector and embedding it into the franchise he owns. More defined roles. A sharper identity. Clearer structure.

There will be bumps. There will be mistakes. He admits as much. But I buy the vision. I believe this is the right direction for the Suns. I want an owner who will spend when the moment calls for it, yes, but more than that, I want one who is cerebral, tactical, and intentional. Someone who puts the right people in the right roles, then trusts them to do the work.



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...nterview-reaction-analysis-vision-consistency
 
Where and how much to watch Suns basketball this season

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The Phoenix Suns’ schedule is officially out. All 82 games, including their nine nationally televised contests and their lone neutral site contest, have been revealed. With the NBA’s new TV deal finally kicking in this season, here’s how much it will cost and where you can watch every Suns game this season.

***Disclaimer: It’s important to note that the subscriptions listed below you need to watch some NBA games provide more than just NBA content.***


Arizona Sports Family​


The Suns will play 73 games on Arizona Sports Family TV, where the local broadcast is the only option to watch.

Cable and Satellite: Cox Cable in many parts of AZ. It’s channel 13 in Phoenix and Flagstaff, in Tuscon it’s channel 19.

Streaming: You can watch on FuboTV or Suns Live TV. Fubo has a range of price options depending on the service you want, and Suns Live TV costs $14.99 per month or $109.99 a year.

If you’re not located in Arizona and want to watch local Suns games, you can also buy NBA League Pass, which is $24.99/month for the premium version and $16.99/month for the regular version. Additionally, you can watch Suns games through YouTube TV if you are not located in Arizona if you have League Pass.


ESPN/ABC​


The Suns have just one game scheduled to air on ESPN this season.

Many streaming services have access to ESPN, including YouTube TV, Fubo TV, Sling TV, Hulu+ and DirecTV Stream. Additionally, you can also access ESPN games through ESPN+, a live sports streaming service costing $11.99 a month or $119.99 annually.

The Valley will face off against the Los Angeles Clippers and Bradley Beal in their only game on the platform. The 2026 Western Conference Finals will also be airing on ESPN and ABC and the NBA Finals on ABC, which you can watch on ESPN+ and other streaming services.


NBC/Peacock​


The Suns have eight games slated on the Comcast-owned platforms this season, including Kevin Durant’s return to Phoenix on November 24th.

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Just like ESPN, you can watch NBC on many streaming platforms and your local NBC station which, for people in the Phoenix area, is channel 12. To watch NBA games on Peacock, you’ll need a Peacock subscription. Their annual plan is $109.99 a year, and their monthly plan costs $10.99 a month. 50 NBA games will be aired exclusively on Peacock this upcoming season, that includes both the regular season and postseason.

Additionally, the Western Conference Finals and NBA All-Star game will be aired on NBC.

This is the first time the NBA has been on NBC since 2002.


Amazon Prime​


While the Suns are not scheduled to have any games on Amazon Prime this year, they will if they advance in the NBA Cup.

In its inaugural season, NBA on Prime will air exclusively on Amazon Prime and costs $14.99 a month or $139 annually. NBA on Prime will air five-straight weeks of NBA Cup play, starting on Oct. 31.



Here’s a look at the NBA national television schedule:

Where to watch NBA action this season ⬇️

Season-long national games:
▪️ Mon: Peacock
▪️ Tue: NBC/Peacock
▪️ Wed: ESPN
▪️ Fri: Prime Video

Additional weekly national games starting midseason:
▪️ Thu: Prime Video
▪️ Sat: ABC | ESPN | Prime Video
▪️ Sun: ABC | ESPN | NBC/Peacock pic.twitter.com/eZgo8viuEX

— NBA Communications (@NBAPR) August 14, 2025


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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...hannels-streaming-prices-national-local-games
 
If the Suns survive scoring droughts it will be because of Grayson Allen

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We’re continuing our Bright Side series by exploring what success looks like for each Suns player in 2025–26.



Scoring. Strip the game down to its bones, and that’s what basketball comes down to. You’re either exceptional at putting the ball through the hoop or exceptional at keeping your opponent from doing it. The rare few who master both become All-Stars. Superstars. Champions.

Looking at the Phoenix Suns’ horizon, their greatest obstacle next season isn’t grit or defense. No, no my friends. It’s generating points. This isn’t a roster destined to crawl back to the 90s with 88-point box scores. But against the league’s middle ground, they project as a bottom-third scoring team.

The reasons aren’t complicated: too few players can reliably create their own shot, and elite shooters aren’t sprinkled across the roster like they are for the league’s most dangerous offenses. And when the final five minutes hit, when the floor shrinks, the whistle fades, and every possession becomes a chess match, I’m not convinced the Suns will have the variety or execution to beat a defense that already knows where the ball is going.

That’s why Grayson Allen isn’t a luxury piece. He’s a necessity. If winning is the metric, they’ll need his scoring in volume.

Grayson Allen is heading into his third season in Phoenix, the longest stretch he’s spent with any team. One year in Utah. Two in Memphis. Two in Milwaukee. Now three with the Suns. He’s logged 139 games in a Phoenix uniform so far, which is exactly one more than his total with the Bucks.

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A career 41.4% shooter from deep, Allen hit 42.6% last season, which was actually down from the absurd 46.1% he posted the year prior. His presence gives Phoenix flexibility; if the offense stalls, he can be inserted to stretch the floor and force adjustments. But it’s a trade-off. Allen’s minutes may often come at Dillon Brooks’ expense, making every substitution a choice between adding punch to the offense or reinforcing the defense.

Allen is also underrated when it comes to creating his own look. While most of his self-made buckets come in transition, he’s not afraid to put the ball on the deck and attack the rim, a skill this team sorely lacks. That aggression toward the cylinder, even if situational, is a weapon Phoenix can’t afford to leave holstered.

So what does success look like for Allen? Picture a firefighter. The alarms blare, the flames rise, and the situation is slipping toward disaster. Then GA checks in, hard hat and all, and suddenly the fire starts to die. That’s his job next season: extinguish scoring droughts, keep the offense breathing, and give the Suns a chance to survive stretches where buckets seem impossible.

It’s not about a Sixth Man of the Year nomination. It’s about being their sixth man. Every night, in every situation that calls for it. Because my gut says there will be plenty of fires. And they’ll need someone who knows exactly how to put them out.



Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-shooting-3-point-offense-nba-season-analysis
 
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