Suns rookie is stacking muscle

gettyimages-2236953744.jpg


There’s no shortage of entry points into the story of the Phoenix Suns this season. The contrast is striking. On one hand, the infusion of youth brings a sense of curiosity and renewal. Ryan Dunn and Oso Ighodaro enter their sophomore campaigns with the weight of potential hovering over them. On the other, fresh rookies arrive, stirring a buzz that feels different from years past. It’s less about patching holes, more about building something that lasts.

Among them, perhaps the most compelling is Khaman Maluach, the 10th overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, better known by the moniker “Man Man.” At 19, he looks every bit the part of a player filling into his frame. The whispers about added size this summer weren’t smoke; on Monday, he stamped it himself: 261, 263 pounds, depending on when you caught him.

Rookie Khaman Maluach said he's up to 261, 263 pounds as he was listed at 253 on Phoenix Suns summer league roster. #Suns pic.twitter.com/FnM3DlYIMi

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) September 29, 2025

When you scour the internet for Man Man’s weight, you end up in a numbers maze.

ESPN lists him at 250. NBADraft.net bumps him to 255, the same site that once had Deandre Ayton tagged at 260 in 2018. The Suns’ Summer League roster slotted Maluach at 253. So which is it? Depends who you ask. But if Monday’s weigh-in holds true, Maluach is tipping the scale at 261, maybe 263. That’s ten pounds of added muscle draped over his already long, athletic frame.

The bulk matters. It’s survival gear for a league that punishes thin bodies and dares you to keep pace. The NBA is a collision of size and speed, and Maluach will feel both before the year is out. That’s the adjustment. Not whether he can run or jump — we know he can — but whether he can endure.

This season won’t be about dominance, it will be about development. Growing into his body. Learning the rhythm of the grind. Finding ways to handle the nightly physicality without losing himself in it. He’s just 19. Still a baby by basketball standards.

And the story of his rookie year won’t be written in stat lines but in patience, the kind that lets him stumble, recalibrate, and slowly become what he’s supposed to be.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...eight-gain-muscle-development-2025-nba-rookie
 
The WNBA Finals are set

gettyimages-2231704553.jpg


The Phoenix Mercury are heading back to the WNBA Finals, a stage that has both defined and eluded them over the years. This marks their sixth appearance, but the first since 2021, when the pursuit of a fourth championship fell short. Their history already glimmers with banners from 2007, 2009, and 2014, each title secured by different eras of Mercury basketball and each a reminder of their ability to rise when the odds are stacked.

This year’s run, though, feels like something out of a different script.

They weren’t the darlings of preseason predictions. No one circled the Mercury as a Finals lock. As the fourth seed, they entered the postseason with respect but not fear, overshadowed by the heavyweights above them.

Yet, in true Mercury fashion, they caught fire when it mattered most. They toppled the defending champion New York Liberty in the opening round. Then, with momentum building, they stormed past the top-seeded Minnesota Lynx, winning 3-1 behind a pair of heroic comebacks.

On Tuesday night, the Las Vegas Aces and the Indiana Fever clashed in a winner-take-all Game 5, fighting for the right to face Phoenix.The question lingered in the desert air: who will step into the ring against this unlikely, unflinching Mercury squad?

The answer: The Las Vegas Aces.

It took overtime, but the Aces prevailed, winning 107-98 against a Fever squad decimated by injuries. WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson had 35 points to propel the Aces to their fourth WNBA Finals appearance since moving from San Antonio in 2017. Las Vegas won the Finals in 2022 and 2023.

The Mercury were 1-3 against the second-seeded Aces this season and enter as +108 underdogs. Game 1 is on Friday in Las Vegas at 5:00pm Arizona time.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...als-2025-preview-underdogs-championship-chase
 
This precautionary measure very well may be a blessing in disguise for the Suns

gettyimages-2236953690.jpg


This may seem bad, but truly I think this shows the Suns understand the situation with this big man.

The Phoenix Suns kick off their preseason debut against the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday, and fans are eager to see them take the court. With all the new faces and significant changes this team underwent during the offseason, we expect a different outlook from past seasons.

That being said, there is one player who has already been ruled out for this contest, and that person is Mark Williams.

Per coach Jordan Ott, Mark Williams will NOT be playing on Friday

Also noted he has been a participant in everything but 5v5, & that this is all a part of their plan with him

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) October 1, 2025

Williams was brought over to Phoenix via a trade on Draft Night 2025. The Suns gave a good ole’ ring to their besties on the East coast in Charlotte and struck a deal to get the center over to the Valley. After a failed trade to the Lakers at the past trade deadline, it was obvious Williams would be looking for a different home. This trade seemingly failed due to him “being injured,” and even if we do not know the full extent of that, it has been a stain on the big man’s career.

His availability has limited him from getting the recognition he deserves, and he needs to prove that he is one of the better big men in this league. With that being said, this concern still seems to be a concern in the Valley ahead of their first contest, but ultimately, this may not be as bad as everyone makes it out to be.

Williams’ Injury History​


Injuries in his career have always limited Williams. In his first three seasons, the center has suited up for only 104 games, with a season high of 44. This has severely limited him from showcasing his ability to be the rim protector and shot blocker he truly is.

In that small sample size, though, he has been impressive, averaging 12.3 points and 8.8 rebounds. If he were to have a healthier season, the actuality of him averaging a double-double is possible, and something the Suns can see as well.

Why could this be beneficial?​


Having a player start the season not participating in the first contest is not a good look for Phoenix, but in this situation, it could be better than most think. If Williams is truly not ready for five-on-five contests, as coach Jordan Ott illustrates here, he should take it slow.

Jordan Ott's practice availability today started with an opening statement on Mark Williams. pic.twitter.com/rXJs2ivPHD

— PHNX Suns (@PHNX_Suns) October 1, 2025

Not to mention that the Suns have dealt with injury-riddled teams the past two seasons. With now having some insurance in their front court, featuring Khaman Maluach, Nick Richards, and Oso Ighodaro, this is no longer as glaring an issue as it was in the past. With this stability, Williams can fully catch up to speed and be ready when they need him most, by the regular season start.

With Charlotte also being an injury-riddled team in the past, it shows why they did not take this precautionary time with Williams in the past. Since they needed him, they would rush him out there, whereas Phoenix is doing the opposite, which could give some promise.

Final Thoughts​


This is not the best thing for the Suns, but it is not the worst thing that could happen to start the year. With them having the additional depth in the front court, this should allow the remaining centers to find their spot in the rotation. For Mark, it will enable him to be fully committed to the start of the season and give the team the best option for a promising building year out west.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-injury-update-lakers-debut-frontcourt-depth
 
Rasheer Fleming’s path to proving himself runs through defense

gettyimages-2224649358.jpg


The last rookie to go through the media session during this Training Camp, Rasheer Fleming talks to us about his defense, his strengths, and his inspirations.


Defensive Technique and IQ​


RF has many defensive qualities. According to him, his positioning would be his main asset:

“Really positioning like positioning on the floor, knowing where to be at different times when the ball is moving.”

He reflects on the impact his college coach had on his game. Physically, there is no doubt about his ability to keep up with the NBA pace.

Mentally, there may be a few more questions:

“So I think like five out spacing like we all Like. l’ve done that before at St. Joe’s the low all the all the shift spots on defense low man all the like I kind of the placement and stuff I kind of had a good idea already because I was at St. Joe’s. So I think my coach uh Billy Lang did a good job.”

Finally, he assures that Billy Lang has prepared him well for the demanding professional world of the NBA. It is under his guidance that he has been able to develop his defensive IQ and game reading.


Mindset and Inspiration​


Rasheer Fleming already impresses with his mindset. Confidence in this half of the court, he insists and explains that he is already defending at a very high level, and that it is this consistency that will propel him onto the courts:

“I think especially right now uh guarding the way I do I think I’ve been guarding like at a super high level. So if I continue to do like do that and do that in the games and stuff I think that’s going to take me far.”

He builds on his learning — both technically and mentally — from a player like Ryan Dunn, who isn’t afraid to go into battle every night against the best scorer in the league:

“It’s been more like technique stuff like in terms of like placement and stuff. but I can see it in his game like how he’s just a fearless defender. Like he can guard one through five. I think I can be in that same level as that. So, I kind of just take heed to how he plays defense and just take heed to what he tells me and its just go from there.”

Rasheer Fleming knows what he needs to do to improve and earn playing time. He knows who he can rely on to progress (even if Ryan is just a sophomore).

Perhaps a little too humble and reserved, he could establish himself firmly in an NBA rotation if he lets loose.


Physical Assets and Concrete Impact​


The transition from college to the NBA seems to be doing him good. His game has gained in mobility and confidence, which is reflected in the quality of his footwork:

“I’m moving my feet much better.”

Beyond this technical progression, Rasheer Fleming primarily highlights the positive impact he can have on possessions. He does not settle for being a mere positional defender; he wants to influence the course of the game:

“Like guarding multiple positions, high level, but like really getting us possessions like and not just being out there defending. Like if I can get steals because of my length, being able to get steals, offensive rebound like really rebound, I’m they like me at the rebounding area too because of my like attributes.”

This versatility, coupled with his physical attributes, allows him not only to contain different opposing profiles but also to turn his defensive efforts into opportunities for his team.

As he mentions at the start, it is thanks to his consistency combined with his defensive volume and statistical production (rebounds, steals, stops) that he will quickly make a name for himself in an NBA rotation.


In an NBA where every minute is precious, especially for rookies, Fleming knows what will enable him to prove himself: his defense. It is his foundation, his common language with the staff, and his ticket to gaining the trust of a group.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ning-camp-defense-strengths-inspirations-2025
 
Game Preview: WE SUNS HAVE BASKETBALL TONIGHT!

gettyimages-2187079228.jpg


Who: Phoenix Suns (0-0) @ Los Angeles Lakers (0-0)

When: 7:00pm Arizona Time

Where: Acrisure Arena, Palm Desert, California

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

Listen: KMVP 98.7



Without further ado, the curtain lifts on the first step toward the 2025–26 season. No, the result won’t matter in the standings. But this isn’t Summer League, and it’s not a scrimmage tucked away from the spotlight. This is the Phoenix Suns, lacing up under the lights, presenting a glimpse of the team that will define the months ahead.

There’s a spark in the air, the kind that crawls across your skin before the tip, because tonight, the Phoenix Suns play basketball.

gettyimages-2236953314.jpg

It begins in Palm Desert, where the Suns meet the Los Angeles Lakers in the first of four preseason tilts. From there, it’s a journey across the globe, as the team heads to Macao, China, for a two-game showcase against the Brooklyn Nets before returning home.

Four games in total, a slim slate by NBA standards, but enough to whet the appetite and shape first impressions.

This moment is less about wins and losses and more about unveiling. For the first time, we see the Suns stripped of the “highest payroll in basketball” label, yet free from the crushing weight of last year’s expectations. It’s basketball in its most intriguing form: a preview, a promise, a chance to watch the raw clay take its first steps toward becoming sculpture.

Probable Starters​


I’m taking a stab here. It’s the preseason, after all.

Game-Matchup-4.png

Injury Report​

Suns​

  • Mark Williams — OUT (Coach’s decision)
  • Jalen Green — OUT (Hamstring)

Lakers​

  • LeBron James — OUT (Glute)
  • Maxi Kleber — OUT (Quad)
  • Marcus Smart — OUT (Achilles)
  • Adou Thiero — QUESTIONABLE (Knee)

What to Watch For​


I’ll be watching everyone tonight. Not for the box score, but for the little things. How they move. How they carry themselves in live action.

And then there’s Jordan Ott.

This is our first chance to see his fingerprints on the Suns, both offensively and defensively. Early whispers point to a philosophy built on chaos: extra possessions, crashing the glass, full-court pressure, disruption at every turn. It’s ambitious, it’s risky, and it begs the question: how will it actually look when five players are trying to execute it in real time? More importantly, how will this roster respond?

Layer that with his first crack at rotations. Preseason lineups are never gospel. No one should overreact to who checks in at the eight-minute mark of the first quarter. But they do offer hints. The choices Ott makes now, even in a game that technically doesn’t matter, will ripple forward into how this team begins to define itself.

And of course, the rookies. This is their night. Devin Booker won’t be playing 35 minutes in Palm Desert, but that only widens the stage for fresh legs. Rasheer Fleming, Koby Brea, Khaman “Man Man” Maluach. Their real introduction comes here. Not Summer League speed, not practice reps, but NBA pace against NBA players.

Key to a Suns Win​


Wins don’t matter in the preseason. Not in the box score, anyway. The column doesn’t count, the standings don’t shift. What matters is far less tangible but infinitely more important.

A win is seeing a group of players buying in, voices rising in unison as they communicate through new systems placed before them. A win is confidence pulsing through rotations, movements that look less like guesswork and more like instinct. A win is the chatter on defense, the quick handoffs on offense, the kind of dialogue that turns schemes into muscle memory.

Most of all, a win is attitude. Effort. The unteachable pieces of basketball that you recognize not in the stat sheet but in the body language, the energy, the way five players move as one.

That’s the win column that matters in early October.

Prediction​


Predictions don’t matter in the preseason. They’re about as useful as Summer League box scores or August power rankings. But fine. I’ll throw one out there anyway.

Suns 107, Lakers 103

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-vs-suns-live-stream-tv-channel-injury-report
 
Ryan Dunn secures another year on his rookie deal

gettyimages-2191625691.jpg


In a move that barely registers as news yet still needs its moment in the ledger, the Phoenix Suns have exercised their team option on second-year wing Ryan Dunn. Drafted 28th overall in 2024, this is the expected outcome. The ink still has to dry, the paperwork still has to be filed, and the “t’s” and lowercase “j’s” still have to get their ceremonial dots.

The Phoenix Suns have exercised their 2026-27 rookie scale team option for forward Ryan Dunn, a league source told @spotrac.

This is Dunn's third-year option. He'll be under contract for next season at $2.8M.

— Keith Smith (@KeithSmithNBA) October 2, 2025

Dunn’s rookie deal was four years, $13 million, though anyone who’s followed this league knows the fine print is where the story lives. The first two years guaranteed, security in the short term. The last two tied to team option, a test of belief and patience.

Today’s decision locks him in at $2.8 million for the 2026–27 season. One year from now, the choice escalates: exercise the option and Dunn earns $5 million in 2027–28, decline, and he’s standing on the doorstep of restricted free agency with an $8 million qualifying offer and a $15 million cap hold looming over the books.

OFFICIAL: The Phoenix Suns exercise third-year option on Ryan Dunn. pic.twitter.com/r5sPNGs84c

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) October 2, 2025

Dunn enters year two carrying the weight of expectation, the whispered hope of a leap, the growing murmur that he could be the Suns’ starting power forward. It’s a role both natural and unnatural for him. Natural because his length and instincts make him a defensive disruptor. Unnatural because his offensive game is still an unfinished sketch, with lines sharp on one side, smudged and incomplete on the other.

He averaged 6.9 points as a rookie while launching 3.6 threes per game, hitting only 31.1%. His free throws? A jarring 48.7%. The defensive IQ is there, the motor is undeniable, but in today’s league you don’t survive as a wing-forward hybrid if you can’t make defenses pay. And Dunn knows it.

This is the crossroads. The youth movement in Phoenix has given him space to fail and room to grow, but it won’t grant him immunity. His efficiency has to climb, and his offense has to matter. And tomorrow night, under the lights against the Lakers in the Suns’ first preseason game, we’ll begin to see whether Ryan Dunn is a project waiting to blossom or a role player fighting to stick.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...an-dunn-rookie-contract-future-role-2026-2027
 
Game Recap: Suns show grit and glimpses of identity in 103-81 preseason win over Lakers

gettyimages-2238681466.jpg


It was a game that will never touch the standings, yet tonight in Palm Desert, under the preseason lights as the Phoenix Suns opened the 2025–26 campaign against the Los Angeles Lakers, it felt like it mattered. Phoenix stands at an inflection point, a franchise bending its trajectory. New head coach. Fourteen new players. A philosophy that is more blueprint than certainty. This was our first glimpse of what the purple-and-orange could become.

And they impressed.

Communication was sharp, hustle relentless, turnovers forced, offensive rebounds piled high. All the buzzwords Brian Gregory spoke when he stepped into the role of general manager — alignment, identity, accountability — took form on the hardwood. Seeds planted months ago are beginning to break the surface, fragile yet promising, a harvest hinted at beneath the desert lights.

Bringing this hustle to a court near you soon 💪 pic.twitter.com/v782FePEIv

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) October 4, 2025

Devin Booker poured in 24 points across 25 minutes, carrying himself like the alpha he once was, before a pair of mercenaries wandered into town and muddied the hierarchy. Dillon Brooks, meanwhile, was everything his reputation promised: relentless, frenetic, a defensive dog gnawing at every matchup in sight.

The scoreboard will tell you 103–81, a preseason footnote with no bearing on April or May. But for a franchise starving for clarity, for cohesion, for a compass pointing north, the signs of potential were etched into the Coachella Valley night. It was a reminder that direction can matter more than the destination when the journey is beginning anew.

Game Flow

First Half


A new season begins in the preseason. Dillon Brooks at power forward, Oso Ighodaro at the five. It’s a lineup that may never resurface when the games truly count, yet it wasted no time offering a glimpse of contrast.

Brooks as the shapeshifter, sliding from perimeter defense on one trip to wrestling with Deandre Ayton in the low post the next. His presence was unavoidable. Relentless energy, versatility as a weapon, the constant chirp toward officials, a body in motion in every frame. Brooks didn’t ease his way into the night, he stamped it.

Watching Dillon Brooks off ball is worth the price of admission

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

With Jalen Green unavailable, Grayson Allen slid into the starting lineup and the fit felt natural. The give-and-take with Devin Booker, the way they mirrored and fed off one another, carried a rhythm you could recognize immediately. It wasn’t forced. It wasn’t tentative. It was a welcome sign of chemistry, the kind that hints at something sustainable once the season takes shape.

For a team that lacked hustle a season ago, the opening quarter felt like a recalibration. Every player who checked in carried a pulse of urgency, a sense that effort was non-negotiable. Active hands disrupted passing lanes, pressure turned possessions into opportunities, and by the time the scoreboard read 26–15 with 2:31 left in the first, the Suns had already carved out something that looked a lot like “identity”.*

*I know, I know. It’s only preseason.

Phoenix opened sharp, hitting 42.9% from three in the first quarter (6-of-14), while the Lakers managed only 1-of-7. The Suns forced 6 turnovers and turned them into 6 points, all while committing just 2 of their own. But the number that told the story? 13 second-chance points, nearly matching the Lakers’ entire output for the period.

Am I reading that box court right? Suns had 13 second chance points in the first? And the Lakers scored 16 total? And they turned over the Lakers 6 times?

Interesting…

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

After one, it was all Suns, 31–16.

The pace dragged in the second quarter as the Lakers stormed out on a 12–3 run, cutting the lead to six. It wasn’t effort that slipped, it was the shooting that cooled. And then, in a scene as familiar as Hollywood reruns, the whistles tilted. Even in preseason, the Lakers find a way to get the calls. Los Angeles shot 22 free throws in the half.

Free throws were the glaring miss in the first half. Phoenix was 8-of-15 from the line. For a team that has to squeeze every ounce of opportunity this season, those freebies can’t be left behind.

We saw more of Devin Booker and Dillon Brooks than expected, each logging 15:36. Booker tallied 14 points on 4-of-9 shooting with 5 assists, while Brooks knocked down all three of his threes for 9 points, added an assist, a rebound, and plenty of well-placed trash talk.

Booker hit us with something we don’t see every day. The sky hook. Or in this case…

Sky Book pic.twitter.com/Go6dLhA6bE

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

The Lakers edged the Suns 28–26 in the second, paced by 9 from Austin Reaves and 7 from Jake LaRavia. Even so, the Suns carried a 57–44 lead into the half.

Second Half


The starters opened the third with a burst, ripping off a 6–0 run capped by a possession that featured three offensive rebounds and ended with a Grayson Allen three. If Jordan Ott’s vision is built on extra possessions, tonight was the blueprint.

Nick Richards added his own stamp, flashing the kind of activity and positioning that anchored the Suns’ success. He denied entry passes, battled with purpose, and played with an authority that set the tone.

Nick with AUTHORITY! pic.twitter.com/7wdeQHiRsN

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) October 4, 2025

The attitude, the effort, the hustle; it all carried through the third.

The ball zipped, the opportunities opened, and Phoenix stretched its lead to 27. The Suns hit 50% from the field while smothering the Lakers to a meager 22.2%.

Extra possessions told the story: six more shots than L.A. in the quarter, led by Devin Booker’s 10 points, Grayson Allen’s five, and Dillon Brooks punctuating it all with a hustle-fueled steal that felt like a statement.

The amount of “give a shit” I’ve seen from the Suns in this preseason game is so very refreshing to see pic.twitter.com/YeojqxXNVO

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

With a little over two minutes left in the third, the curtain lifted on the 10th overall pick of the 2025 draft—Khaman Maluach. First impression? He looks big.

After three quarters, the Suns held a commanding 87–62 lead.

Fleming’s length on defense stood out immediately. Pair that with his athleticism, and you had a rookie flying around with purpose. His closeouts were relentless, the kind of energy that jumps off the floor, and easily the most impressive thing I saw in the final nine minutes.

But as Phoenix sputtered, managing only three points in the first six minutes, the Lakers crept back in. RJ Davis and Dalton Knecht started heating up, sparking a 13–3 run that chipped away at the Suns’ cushion.

The final highlight of the night came via Man Man on a highlight dunk with three minutes left.


Up Next


It’ll be a week before we see Phoenix play again, as they are preparing to head to China to play a pair against the Brooklyn Nets next Friday.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-recap-devin-booker-dillon-brooks-phoenix-win
 
Impressions from the Phoenix Suns’ preseason debut

gettyimages-2238684538.jpg


I found myself mowing the lawn on this pleasant October morning, AirPods jammed in my ears to muffle the whir of my battery-driven mower. Yes, battery-driven. I abandoned the gas guzzler this past summer, not because I suddenly cared about saving the planet, but because the old beast was unreliable. Sure, I could’ve fixed it. It’s probably a fuel pump issue, but why wrestle with combustion when lithium-ion offers quiet obedience? Too much information? Probably. But bear with me. I promise there’s a point.

So there I was, pacing back-and-forth across the yard, juking around my 90-pound tortoise who believes lawn equipment is the enemy, when my brain did what it always does: reran last night’s Suns game on loop. A meaningless preseason tilt, yes, but one in which Phoenix dismantled the Lakers 103–81. The kind of game you’re supposed to dismiss, yet impossible to ignore. Because in a city starved for cohesion, even a flicker of teamwork feels like a revelation.

Amid the hum of the mower and the reptilian death-charge of my tortoise, my “The 90’s Rocked…Here’s Why” playlist shuffled to something that intrigued me: The Impression That I Get by the Mighty Mighty Bosstones. A ska-punk anthem that sparked a nostalgic swing movement in early 1997.

Have you ever been close to tragedy
Or been close to folks who have?
Have you ever felt a pain so powerful
So heavy you collapse
?

Why yes, Dicky Barrett, I have.

Last year for the Phoenix Suns was no quirky ska anthem. It was a funeral dirge, a season so heavy it threatened to crush us under the weight of its own disappointment. We all carried it, every fan, every hopeless optimist who thought they were buying into something real. And what we got instead was tragedy in sneakers, a collapse that redefined the word “underwhelming”.

But pages turn, even when they’re smudged with failure. This year is different. It has to be different. And last night, preseason be damned, we caught a glimpse of a team that may not conquer the league, may not overwhelm the standings, but might actually fight. Possession by possession. Game after game.

And after what we endured, those small sparks of effort, cohesion, and intent feel like oxygen in a room we’d long thought was sealed shut.

Have you ever had the odds stacked up so high
You need a strength most don’t possess?
Or has it ever come down to do or die?
You’ve got to rise above the rest


Is that Tim “Johnny Vegas” Burton on the sax?

And that’s where we are. The deck is stacked like a Vegas poker table with the dealer winking at your bad hand. The over-under is parked at 31.5 wins. Bleacher Report, in its infinite wisdom, has the Suns limping to 26. And some of the fine, jaded folks on this very site? They’ve got Phoenix scraping the bottom with fewer than 20.

So I did the only rational thing a man can do on a Saturday morning when faced with apocalyptic projections and a belligerent tortoise: finished the lawn, wiped the sweat from my forehead, and sat down to write out the impressions that I got.

Never had to knock on wood​


It wasn’t the headline moment of the night, but seeing Khaman Maluach on the floor flicked a switch inside me. Hope, or at least the early draft of it. I found some wood, and I began a-knockin’.

The kid is enormous. 260+ pounds, 7’2”, and somehow only nineteen years old. Yes, he played with a certain tentativeness, the kind you’d expect from a teenager suddenly squaring off against grown men, but there was also something else: fluidity. He wasn’t lumbering. He wasn’t awkward. He was colliding, moving, attacking space with a kind of raw athleticism that made you lean forward in your seat.

WELCOME TO THE ASSOCIATION, KHAMAN! pic.twitter.com/28T1VJ0178

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) October 4, 2025

It all culminated in a slam dunk late in the game, sure, but the true story was found in the in-betweens. The half-rolls instead of full ones. The missed box-outs where his size should have swallowed smaller bodies whole. These are the rookie wrinkles, the growing pains, the moments you file away rather than judge.

It’s preseason, game one, his first taste of NBA gravity. This is the opening paragraph of his story, not the epilogue. You don’t hang a conclusion on that. You savor the fact that, for a night, he looked like he belonged. And there’s real value in that.

As for Rasheer Fleming? His offensive awareness is still being mapped out, much as it was in Summer League. The timing, the spacing, the instinct of when to cut or float. It’ll take time.

But defensively? He stretched out across the court like a condor, wingspan swallowing passing lanes, closeouts disrupting three-point shooters before they could even commit. He made opposing shooters think twice. You could see it. The hesitation, the recalibration. That’s impact.

Will he change the course of the season? Probably not. But if he can carve out a role where his offense is steady enough to keep him tethered to the floor, his defense might well be the thing that cements his place.

And I’m glad I haven’t yet​


I’m glad I haven’t yet seen the team betray the promises the front office made. Because imagine if they had. Imagine if this first preseason glimpse was flat, disconnected, lazy. Imagine if all that talk about hustle and grit turned out to be another round of corporate spin. The backlash would’ve written itself.

But instead, what we got was a team that actually looked like it had a pulse. Full-court pressure. Active hands on both ends. Relentless rim attacks. All the philosophical bullet points we were spoon-fed this summer actually showed up in real time. And through one meaningless game in October, you walk away feeling…confident? Maybe not about wins, but about intent. And intent matters.

The most telling difference, though, was sound.

This Suns team talks

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

Last year’s team was silent. A mute, anxious collection of individuals who either didn’t know how to communicate or didn’t want to. Fear of being wrong, fear of confrontation, fear of stepping outside their own bubble. It all added up to a team that played in whispers.

Last night was different. There was chatter, constant and unapologetic. Rotations barked out. Switches called. A team sounding like a team. And maybe that doesn’t guarantee victories. Maybe the win total still lands south of respectable. But basketball history has a simple truth: teams win games more often than collections of players.

And for the first time in too long, Phoenix looked like the former.

Because I’m sure it isn’t good​


It’s not going to be good for opposing teams this year when they line up to play against Dillon Brooks.

I knew I was going to love him. Not the box-score stuff, not the highlight-chasing junk food, but the subtler art in the way he plays. Those little disruptions that change the temperature of a game without anyone noticing on first watch. The man is a floor-lifter, and it was obvious from the jump. Yeah, he’s knocked on wood.

There was a possession where he was guarding the weak-side perimeter player, but sagged into the paint to give a sneaky tug to Deandre Ayton, just enough to derail this movement. He then sprinted back to smother his actual man on the perimeter. Off-ball defense shouldn’t be this entertaining, but with Brooks, it feels like theater. He is a disruptor in every sense of the word.

It reminded me of the joy last season when Ryan Dunn started making his presence known, forcing turnovers, creating havoc. That joy was fleeting, though, because the Suns as a whole were allergic to disruption. They allowed opponents to waltz (or perhaps West Coast swing) their way through games. Brooks doesn’t allow that. With him on the court, and with teammates taking their cues from his approach, the vibe changes. The standard changes.

Even in the huddle, he was there. Pulling players in, locking eyes, echoing Coach Ott, making sure everyone was awake. You can dismiss a dive for a loose ball in the third quarter of a meaningless preseason game if you want. But in Phoenix, where we’ve been starved for sweat equity, that shit matters.

The amount of “give a shit” I’ve seen from the Suns in this preseason game is so very refreshing to see pic.twitter.com/YeojqxXNVO

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

And when I tossed this take on Twitter, it caught fire. The responses poured in, especially from Rockets fans. You could feel their ache through the replies. They know exactly what they lost. They know Dillon Brooks wasn’t just a player; he was connective tissue, the kind of guy you don’t miss until he’s gone.

And in Phoenix, he’s the kind of guy we’ve been waiting for.

That’s the impression that I get​


We’re in for a far more engaging brand of basketball this season.

Last year will always hang in the background, the scorned ex-girlfriend who refused to communicate, who let us down at every turn. And this year, this season, it’s the new relationship. The one we’ll constantly and unfairly compare to the last.

But I’ve got butterflies again. Yes, yes, it’s one effing preseason game. And I know disappointment will hurl me back to earth like gravity because of my Saturday morning optimism. But there’s going to be joy in watching this team this year. Joy in the hustle, in the small details, in the connective tissue of basketball that last year’s group refused to provide. That team gave us no joy; even their successes felt transactional, the bare minimum, the rent check sliding across the counter.

This year feels different. There’s a chance for a culture shift, a chance for basketball that’s not only played but enjoyed. It might not cash out into wins. But it could cash out into something Phoenix hasn’t felt in too long: the thrill of loving the game again. And that’s the impression that I get.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...pressions-takeaways-booker-dillon-brooks-2025
 
Suns add longtime NBA executive Ed Stefanski as front office advisor

gettyimages-1151310130.jpg


The Phoenix Suns have added additional depth in their front office personnel. Longtime NBA executive Ed Stefanski will join the Suns’ front office as an advisor.

Marc Stein reported the new addition to the Suns’ FO. Stefanski has spent time with the Nets,76ers, Raptors, Grizzlies, and Pistons.

The Suns have hired longtime NBA executive Ed Stefanski as a front office adviser, league sources tell @TheSteinLine.

Stefanski joins former MVP guard Steve Nash as a recent Suns addition in an advisory capacity after stints with the Nets, 76ers, Raptors, Grizzlies and Pistons.

— Marc Stein (@TheSteinLine) October 4, 2025

Just days after announcing Steve Nash will be around, the Suns continue to show they are invested in collaboration and growth.

Stefanski most recently served as a senior advisor to Pistons owner Tom Gores, acting as the de facto head of basketball operations for two years until Troy Weaver was brought in as GM in 2020. His wealth of experience brings another basketball mind to a situation with a couple of “firsts” in head coach Jordan Ott and general manager Brian Gregory.

Fun fact: Ed Stefanski’s son is the head coach of the Cleveland Browns.

Ed Stefanski is, of course, the father of #Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski. https://t.co/CCwohrYUd2

— Danny Cunningham (@RealDCunningham) October 4, 2025

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...xecutive-ed-stefanski-as-front-office-advisor
 
SBN Reacts: Suns fans think this veteran is the most likely to be traded

gettyimages-2023790393.jpg


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



With the Phoenix Suns roster shifting younger compared to the last few seasons, it’s fair to assume that could continue as Brian Gregory and his new management staff continue to tweak the roster and make it their own.

Earlier this week, we asked Suns fans who the next victim veteran of the youth movement could be and here’s how they voted:

Phoenix_1_100325.png

While it wasn’t a blowout, Royce O’Neale got the most votes. Now going into his ninth season in the NBA, O’Neale has made the playoffs in all but one season (last year), and this Valley squad to projects to be the worst of his career.

At 32 years-old, he’s known for his ability to space the floor and defend multiple positions on the wing. Last season, he had career highs in both points per game and three-point percentage. He has three years, and about $33 million left on his deal. O’Neale’s contract could be too long for a team to want, but for a player with 7 years of playoff experience both as a starter and a reserve, he could be someone contending teams look to acquire for wing depth or if an unexpected injury happens as the trade deadline approaches.



While I was not surprised that Royce got the most votes, I was surprised that Nick Richards got 11% more votes than Grayson Allen. While Richards is less likely to play a vocal role for the team this season, Allen is someone who can significantly help a team’s floor spacing out immediately upon his arrival.

Leading the league in three-point percentage two years ago, his role and volume were down from a season ago, but he still shot it at an elite level, and has flashed moments as a Sun where he can be an elusive playmaker and proficient scorer. A main issue the Suns could have with moving Allen is his contract: he has three years at about $55 million left on his deal. Teams could be afraid to take on his salary without the Suns attaching a draft pick, something they have very little of.

Allen’s value could be dependent of the role teams project him to have with them, either as a starter or a reserve, and what the other options teams have on the trade market to upgrade their shooting. Just like O’Neale, because of his age and experience, he projects best with a team that has aspirations for a long playoff run. Before coming to Phoenix, Allen started alongside Giannis Antetokounmpo, helping the Milwaukee Bucks achieve the best record in the NBA in the 2022-2023 season.



Do you think anyone else has a chance to be traded this year? Let us know.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-this-veteran-is-the-most-likely-to-be-traded
 
There’s a new kind of expectation for the Phoenix Suns this season

gettyimages-2239086803.jpg


For the first time in two seasons, the Phoenix Suns don’t have a certain and set expectation for what needs to happen this season.

As unexciting as that sounds, it means the Suns have a lot of opportunity to grow as a team and as a franchise in hopes of establishing a winning culture once again. Other media outlets, such as Bleacher Report, are already setting the expectation that the Phoenix Suns will be a 26-win team. In reality, I think this team has a chance to be something special, and with as wide open as the NBA is, anything is bound to happen in today’s game.

gettyimages-2238681260.jpg

The Phoenix Suns traded Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal and added some youth and some guys that could be future contributors to a championship roster. Having a guy like Dillon Brooks is going to be key for setting a culture and expectation of playing defense, hustling, and making the other team work every second of the game.

Today’s modern NBA is not solely focused on how many superstars you can add to a roster and hope it works out. It’s more centrally focused on youth and athletic guys. I can say that Oklahoma City has perfected that over the past couple of seasons when building its championship roster.

The Suns already added to that curriculum last season with Ryan Dunn; they also drafted guys like Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Flemmin. I don’t have a floor or a ceiling set for the Phoenix Suns, but I do believe if this team gets going, they could be something special, and that can be said for a lot of teams in the NBA.

With Devin Booker finally having the franchise in his hands and being the vet guy to lead this team to the next level, he has a great supporting cast of veterans, such as Royce O’Neale and Dillon Brooks, to help mentor and set expectations for the future.

gettyimages-2239093952.jpg

If I were to make a comparison of this year’s Suns team to a team in the NBA last season, I would say this team is very close to the Houston Rockets. I draw this comparison with the young and athletic talent and where the Rockets fell last season. I could see the Suns being in the same position this season. The only difference between the two teams is that the Suns have an actual superstar-caliber player in Devin Booker.

If the Suns do end up being in a position to make the playoffs, I’m not sure how far that team could go because, like I said, the NBA is a very open competition-wise. If the Suns get hot at the right moment going into the playoffs, who’s to say what could happen, but to be transparent, the lack of playoff experience will hurt the Suns significantly.

Now it’s up to the Phoenix Suns to see where they fall this season and build off of it going into next season.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-leads-new-era-youth-talent-culture-reset-nba
 
How to make sure Bright Side of the Sun shows up in your Google search

gettyimages-2238251432.jpg


As many of you are likely aware, Google searches are…different these days.

The good news is Google is offering a solution for folks who like to get their news from specific sources. If you want to help Bright Side of the Sun — while also streamlining all your Google searches — there is now a way.

Simply click on this link and add Bright Side of the Sun as one of your “Source preferences.” That’s all there is to it!

Back in August, the tech giant debuted a feature called “Preferred Sources.” It’s a way for Google to prominently feature the results from websites you trust, like Bright Side of the Sun:

“With the launch of Preferred Sources in the U.S. and India, you can select your favorite sources and stay up to date on the latest content from the sites you follow and subscribe to — whether that’s your favorite sports blog or a local news outlet. …

When you select your preferred sources, you’ll start to see more of their articles prominently displayed within Top Stories, when those sources have published fresh and relevant content for your search.“

As some of you might know, AI searches are hurting outlets around the world and in all spaces. We’ve worked hard at Bright Side of the Sun to build a brand you can trust and rely on for Suns coverage. Our goal is to serve you, the fans.

If you’re a fan of our work and want to get the best Suns coverage possible, this is an excellent win-win to improve your Google searches while helping Bright Side of the Sun out.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ide-of-the-sun-shows-up-in-your-google-search
 
The strangest believers in the Suns are the ones who used to hate them

gettyimages-1326369710.jpg


Do you ever feel like the universe tilted a few degrees off its axis? Like gravity took the day off and what should be up is lounging somewhere below? That’s where we are in Suns-land as the 2025–26 season looms. We’re suspended in this strange new orbit where logic feels optional and the unexpected has unpacked a suitcase.

If someone told me four years ago that Grayson Allen and Dillon Brooks would be wearing purple and orange while I cheered them on, I would’ve checked their temperature. Then I would’ve asked, “What cosmic event led us here?” Yet here we are, and here they are. Two players branded with reputations that linger somewhere between villainy and volatility. They are now ours to rally behind.

We have Grayson Allen and Dillon Brooks on our team. Think about that.

Opposing fan bases gonna hate us.

Good.

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

Grayson Allen has found a rhythm in Phoenix, a blend of grit and sharp-edged confidence that fits this team’s current identity. And Dillon Brooks? After one preseason game, I can already feel myself buying stock in the full Dillon Brooks experience. It feels strange, maybe even wrong, but it also feels alive. In this upside-down world, maybe that’s exactly what the Suns need.

But if we’re staying in that same headspace — the one where reality feels like it took a wrong turn at Albuquerque — there’s another name that comes to mind when thinking about players who built their brand on chaos and confrontation: Patrick Beverley. Yes, that Patrick Beverley. The same one who sent Chris Paul flying with a shove to the back after the Suns bounced the Clippers from the 2021 Western Conference Finals.

It still feels surreal to even mention him in a tone that isn’t dripping with disdain, but here we are again, living in the timeline no one ordered. While the broader basketball world seems content to bury the Suns before the season even starts, Beverley, of all people, is one of the few lending his voice to their defense. On his Pat Bev Pod through Barstool Sports, he’s giving this team something rare: tempered belief.

Will the Suns make some noise this season? pic.twitter.com/yvskKcZ0DI

— Pat Bev Pod (@PatBevPod) October 5, 2025

“I think the Suns are going to be super competitive,” Beverley recently said.

“I think they can get in a situation at the end of the year…’If the Suns win the last three out of five, they could make the Play-In.’ I think they’re a team that can do that,” he continued. “Over a seven-game series, are they the best team I would put my money on? Probably not, but if you were to bet on the Suns on a Play-In game, I’m betting on the Suns.”

So if the Suns make the Play-In, Pat Bev’s putting his money on us. That’s something, right? A strange kind of cosmic endorsement, but we’ll take it. Because truthfully, that might be the ceiling of expectation this year. There’s no misunderstanding what this roster is or what its limits might be.

Sure, surprises happen. They always do. And when you look at the fact that Phoenix now has two starters from a Houston Rockets team that finished second in the West last season — their top scorer and best defender, no less — it gives a flicker of hope. This team has bite. They’ll compete. They’ll make opponents work for every possession. But in a conference stacked top to bottom with talent, it’s hard to imagine them clawing for anything beyond a Play-In spot.

Still, that’s why the games exist. They’re here to defy what the spreadsheets and sportsbooks say. Nobody had the Colts and Jaguars running the AFC, or the Chiefs under .500 five games in. The world tilts when you least expect it.

I’m still trying to adjust to this new version of reality, one where Phoenix is built on grit and attitude, where the villains are wearing our colors, and where Patrick Beverley is out here saying nice things about us. It’s disorienting. It’s bizarre. But maybe that’s the point. Maybe this season isn’t about returning to normal. Maybe it’s about embracing the strangeness and seeing where it leads.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-play-in-prediction-chaos-reality-2025-season
 
Possessions are the Suns’ new religion and Jordan Ott is the preacher

imagn-26420408.jpg


While watching the Suns face the Lakers in their first preseason game, something clicked. A question that had been rattling around my head all week came back to me: How should I cover this team this year?

It sounds simple enough, though it’s not. The easy answer? Honestly. That has always been my compass. Candidly. Transparently.

I’ve tried to write about this team the same way I talk about them at a bar: clear-eyed, occasionally irrational, but never insincere. Maybe that’s to my detriment. After all, I’m an “fanalyst”, not an analyst. This isn’t a sterile media outlet. It’s a place where thought, feeling, and frustration all sit at the same table. We know what happens. I’m more interested in why it happens. Or how. And maybe most of all, what we make of it.

When I asked myself last week how to cover this team via my week-to-week recaps, it wasn’t about structure, it was about soul. In years past, I’d latch onto one idea, chase it through stats and trends, and see if it ever grew legs. Numbers, three-point attempt rate, efficiency; all that good, nerdy stuff.

But as I sat there watching the Suns and Lakers trade baskets, something became clear.

Possessions. Possessions equal opportunity, and opportunity equals control.

That’s the heartbeat of this team. That’s the pursuit. Jordan Ott said as much when he took the podium as the new head coach.

“I think a way to look at it is playing earlier in the clock. We know the efficiency of offensive possessions start high and they drop. How often can we get a good look early in the possession?” Coach Ott stated at his introductory press conference back in June. “So we’re going to play fast. We’re going to move, and you know the cutting piece is important.”

And that’s the lens I want to use this season. Possessions. Last year, we were told that Mike Budenholzer’s schemes would translate into more three-pointers—and they did. We tracked it. We saw it unfold in real time. But this year feels different. This year isn’t about the shots being taken; it’s about the opportunities to take them.

I want to monitor the possession battle week by week. How often the Suns win it. How they earn it. Are extra possessions born from offensive rebounds? From forcing turnovers? Or are those lifelines missing entirely, leaving them gasping for air as games slip away?

Last season, that was one of many problems. The Suns lost the possession battle more often than not, and the numbers tell the story. Possessions are estimated through this little gem for my fellow stat junkies:

Possessions = FGA + (0.44 × FTA) − ORB + TOV

That’s the formula used by Basketball Reference and Cleaning the Glass (with minor tweaks). Using that framework, here’s what we know about last year:

  • The Suns lost the possession battle 44 times (54% of the season)
  • They lost it in 22 of their 36 wins
  • They lost it in 22 of their 48 losses

Looking closer:

  • They had fewer turnovers than their opponent 27 times (going 17–10 in those games)
  • They had more shot attempts than their opponent 23 times (going 8–15)

So, if I had a graph last year to look at the Suns’ possession differential, their turnover differential, and their cumulative relation to games over or under .500, this is what it would have looked like:

2024-25-Possession-Battle-1.png

Based on last season’s possession and turnover battles, one truth emerges from the chaos: volatility breeds inconsistency. The Suns lived on a pendulum, swinging wildly from control to collapse, from rhythm to disarray. Each week seemed to carry its own weather pattern. One game a monsoon of turnovers, the next a drought of possessions.

That volatility wasn’t random; it was a symptom.

Opponent strength, lineup tinkering, and pure execution swings all conspired to keep the team from finding any kind of sustainable groove. You could see the potential. But those moments vanished as quickly as they appeared.

Inconsistency defined their season. It wasn’t simply that they lost control of games. It was that they never learned how to hold it. Whether it stemmed from rotational instability, nagging injuries, or a lack of in-game adaptability, the result was the same: a team constantly chasing balance, never catching it.

And in basketball, as in life, volatility without adaptation doesn’t make you dynamic. It makes you dizzy.

So as we move through the 2025-26 season, 25 weeks of it, I’ll track that war for possessions. We’ll see if Jordan Ott’s philosophy, the one he’s hitched his reputation to, actually manifests on the floor. Even if it doesn’t translate to immediate success, we’ll know whether it’s taking root.

Because if the Suns are starting to generate more possessions, that means something is shifting. It means they’re hustling harder. Playing more disruptively. Creating chaos instead of being consumed by it.

That’s where culture begins. Not with slogans or quotes, but with sweat. With the grind. With the willingness to make one more play, one more effort, one more possession that tips the balance. And if this team can start winning that battle, they might finally start winning the war.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...y-volatility-jordan-ott-offense-analysis-2025
 
How the Suns can avoid a hot or cold start defining their season

gettyimages-2219301043.jpg


Let’s quickly rewind to the Phoenix Suns’ hot start last season.

First, they were 1-1. Then, they won seven straight for an 8-1 record. Then, they were 9-2. Things looked promising. The vibes felt… back? It’s important to remember what happened.

This was a snippet taken out of an ESPN recap article: “The Suns improved to 8-1 overall and 7-0 in games that are within five points in the final five minutes. The Suns extended their winning streak to seven games, the last three of which Phoenix’s opponent has had the ball on the final possession with the chance to tie or take the lead.”

Turns out, all the luck in those close wins ran out quickly. Durant getting hurt and missing the next 7 games after that didn’t help either, but that’s the reality of an NBA season. There will be adversity.

SEVEN IN A ROW.

8-1 MATCHING THE BEST START IN FRANCHISE HISTORY. pic.twitter.com/tsrNu3nZu0

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 9, 2024

Then, they lost five straight games, which gave them a 9-7 record, marking the beginning of one of the most disastrous seasons in franchise history relative to expectations.

Cardinal Connection

Our crosstown friends, the Arizona Cardinals, started this season 2-0. They have now lost three straight, including one of the most embarrassing losses in franchise history to the 0-4 Titans, to fall to 2-3 after their promising start.

The loss to the Titans feels like it could be the start of the wheels falling off entirely, but you aren’t here for Cardinals analysis. The point is, the start to the season (good or bad) should not and does not dictate how the rest of the season will go.

This will be the last ever football reference I will make, do not worry.

How can the Suns avoid this?


Of course, we’d all love to see another strong start from the Suns; just one that’s built to last. Whether they open 8-3 or 4-7, what matters more is how stable the foundation looks underneath.

That’s what this new regime — Jordan Ott and Brian Gregory — has been preaching. Identity. Alignment. Work over words. Gregory’s talked about “doing our own thing” and setting the tone through culture rather than hype. Ott has backed that up, emphasizing players who actually live it, from Oso Ighodaro’s summer grind to Dillon Brooks’ relentless habits.

"The edge and competitive spirit he plays with is unmatched… He's an incredible worker, one of the hardest workers I've seen."@Suns HC Jordan Ott with high praise for Dillon Brooks 👏 pic.twitter.com/H45rLF5QTj

— NBA (@NBA) September 24, 2025

The Suns need that mindset more than anything. Because the second adversity hits (and it will hit), we’ll find out who this team really is.

If the shots stop falling or injuries pile up, will they stay connected? If they rip off a few big wins, can they stay grounded? That’s where the growth happens. They showed some promise in their preseason opener of being a team that embraces diving for loose balls and making an extra effort. Yes, it’s preseason, and the Lakers were without LeBron and Luka, but that should be looked at on the flip side.

The fact that the fight was present in a low-stakes game without star power on the other side bodes well for the goal of this new regime coming into fruition.

A strong start means nothing if it leads to complacency. A slow start means nothing if it leads to panic. The real measure will be whether the Suns, from Booker down to the rookies, can hold the line when the easy stretch turns ugly. This is where they’ve failed in the past.

Professional sports seasons are marathons, not sprints. The Suns learned that the hard way last year. The question now: did they actually learn from it?

Hustle. Grit. Grind.#SunsUp pic.twitter.com/z780kjPKvU

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) October 3, 2025

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-culture-dillon-brooks-osso-ighodaro-analysis
 
By the Numbers: Over/Under on key Suns stats

Here’s a quick, fun over/under game with some thoughts on the upcoming season featuring key members of the Suns. The NBA season is a grueling 82-game marathon, so these numbers that accumulate have to be viewed in the big picture.

This will be interesting to revisit later this year to see how amazing (or poorly) I did here with these predictions. Let’s dive in!

Devin Booker


Over/Under — 3.5: 40-point games this season

OVER. I have Booker dropping exactly four games of 40+ points this season, including one massive 50+ point game early in the year, despite his typical slow starts. It will happen sometime in November. Bookmark it.

This is his team now. It’s time to unleash trigger-happy Book. We need him to take over games. Maybe not 70 or 62 again, but I’m feeling a breakout game this winter. Let’s get more specific… exactly 57 points.

Jalen Green


Over/Under — 4.5: Assists per game this season

PUSH. I have him at exactly 4.5 assists per game this season, as I wrote in my player preview of Green here. We need more attacking off the dribble like this… not just looking to get his, but adjusting and creating for others on the fly. He has the explosive athleticism to create advantages for himself. Now, it’s about putting it all together and making those reads in real-time.

I’m looking forward to seeing how he fits in Jordan Ott’s system, which seems to be predicated on ball movement and moving off-ball.

Jalen Green dump off pass to the cutting Amen Thompson. pic.twitter.com/zbkGRXqqJm

— Rockets Clips (@Rockets_Clips) April 5, 2025

Dillon Brooks


Over/Under — 0.5: Dan Majerle Hustle Awards this season

OVER. It’s his. Lock it up. Well, actually, maybe not so fast. Ryan Dunn will compete hard for it. Oso and Gillespie as well. There’s actually some stiff competition here, which is a good thing. Scratch that…it’s a great thing, especially after the year we just endured. But I’m going with DB here.

He is a culture-changer.

It’s 100% Dillon Brooks. He sets this tone. He demands this energy from his team. When you see a guy doing all of this just in preseason, it inspires the WHOLE team to care more.

Stuff like this doesn’t show up in the stat sheet and is NOT easy to replace. https://t.co/IA4qTZMr4I

— ᵂᴵᴸᴸ (@BiasedHouston) October 4, 2025

Mark Williams


Over/Under — 50: Games played this season

UNDER. Prove me wrong, Mark. I beg of you. Williams has played in 106 of a possible 246 games with Charlotte, barely more than 40% of his career. That is not encouraging! If history repeats itself, Oso Ighodaro, Nick Richards, and Khaman Maluach need to get ready. At least the depth is there this year.

Let’s hope it changes in Phoenix for the big fella.

Suns big Nick Richards said the hope is for Mark Williams to play “more than 70 games” this season.

Williams has played a total of 106 games in three NBA seasons.

“You want him to be healthy at all times, but just from being around him all the time, it doesn’t look like he’s… pic.twitter.com/6Yt41xRHVt

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) October 1, 2025

Grayson Allen


Over/Under — 41%: Percent shooting from deep this season

OVER. I’m feeling another ~45%-plus season from the former Duke Blue Devil. He should get plenty of open looks working off Devin Booker and Jalen Green, and the opportunity is there for him to have his best season yet. He looked sharp in the preseason opener.

This is no three, but the chemistry with Brooks looks good!

Dillon Brooks lob.
Grayson Allen reverse.

Suns rolling in their preseason opener! pic.twitter.com/efsOl65YUq

— NBA (@NBA) October 4, 2025

Koby Brea


Over/Under — 55: Games Played

This one is trickier than you might think on the surface. I’m going OVER. He will likely enter the season riding the bench behind a deep guard rotation despite the lack of a true point guard outside of Collin Gillespie. He is behind Booker, Green, Allen, and Gillespie (at least) on the depth chart as of today.

All it takes is for one of those four to have a minor injury or foul trouble for him to get an opportunity. You also have to factor in garbage minutes. But ultimately, this comes down to me thinking he will simply be too good to keep on the bench.

“Fuego” is ready to show he belongs. I have a feeling he won’t stick on the bench for long.

They don't call him Fuego for nothing 🔥

Koby Brea was on a heater last night:
☄️ 19 PTS
☄️ 7/10 FG
☄️ 4/5 3PT pic.twitter.com/NmPaGjw4v8

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) July 12, 2025

Let us know your picks for these over/unders in the comments below!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...dillon-brooks-over-under-nba-2025-predictions
 
Game Preview: Suns vs. Nets, China Edition, Volume 1

gettyimages-2239500263.jpg


Who: Phoenix Suns (1-0) vs. Brooklyn Nets (1-0)

When: 5:00am Arizona Time

Where: Venetian Arena, Macao, China

Watch: NBATV



The Phoenix Suns traveled over 7,000 miles across the world to play the Brooklyn Nets in Macao, China, at Venetian Arena on Friday. Remember to set your alarms or your DVR, as this game tips off at 5 a.m. Arizona time.

The Suns are coming off an inspiring performance one week ago, when they routed a Lakers team without superstars LeBron James and Luka Doncic, winning 103-81.

The Suns’ front office and players have preached a change in culture and identity all offseason, and showed one step in the right direction on night one of the preseason. In China, the Suns look to battle through the jet lag, battle through distraction, and string together two positive performances against the Nets.

Our guys at the @NBA China Games 2025 pic.twitter.com/PbIynbTWzD

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) October 8, 2025

Against the Lakers, all 14 Suns players who played saw at least 10 minutes of game action, with the starters all playing above 20 minutes.

After missing Phoenix’s first preseason game, Jalen Green is progressing towards making his return soon, via The Arizona Republic’s Duane Rankin. If Green can play, that will be the main storyline to watch on Friday. The chemistry between him and Devin Booker will be crucial to Phoenix’s success this season.

Mark Williams, the projected starting center for Phoenix, will remain out as he continues his slow build-up to playing in games.

Two-way signing Isaiah Livers and the Suns’ second-round draft pick and summer league standout Koby Brea were the two noticeable players who got DNP’s against the Lakers last Friday night. I would expect to see both to make their preseason debuts against the Nets.

Now to the Brooklyn Nets, who are in a similar situation to the Suns; they are in the midst of a rebuild after losing Kevin Durant. The Nets are a bag of misfit toys still trying to find their superstar player(s) and set an identity. The most experienced player on Brooklyn’s roster is Michael Porter Jr., who was acquired from Denver in a trade for Cam Johnson and center Nic Claxton. Former Suns nuisance Terance Mann also is playing his first season in Brooklyn. Cam Thomas, Brooklyn’s best scorer, is back to getting buckets after missing much of last season due to injury.

The Nets drafted four rookies in the 2025 draft and traded for a fifth, many of whom we previewed at Bright Side of the Sun because they were drafted in the late 20s and near the 10th pick of the draft. Egor Demin, the Nets’ no. 8 pick, is unlikely to play on this cross-the-globe trip because of a plantar fascia tear.

Other rookies Drake Powell, Ben Saraf, Nolan Traore, and Danny Wolfe will all log minutes as well as a plethora of other young second and third-year players fighting to stay in the NBA. Brooklyn defeated Hapoel Jerusalem B.C. 123-88 last Saturday in its lone preseason game.

Probable Starters​

Game-Matchup-1.png

Injury Report​

Suns​

  • Mark Williams — OUT
  • Jalen Green — DAY TO DAY

Nets​

  • Egior Demin — DAY TO DAY
  • Drake Powell — DAY TO DAY

What to Watch For​

No. 1 – Building off of Lakers’ win​


The Suns played with pace, intensity, and shared the ball extremely well in their first preseason game. The Suns had 29 assists and 16 turnovers while forcing the Lakers into 22 turnovers and allowing only 10 Lakers assists. The Suns outscored the Lakers 19 to 6 in fastbreak points as well.

With an almost completely revamped roster from the last two seasons, the Suns will need to build continuity quickly in head coach Jordan Ott’s new system. If the Suns can summon the same energy and effort they played with against the Lakers, it will be a good sign that this team will play hard this season, no matter the situation, a welcome sight to Suns fans’ eyes.

gettyimages-2238684887.jpg

No. 2 – Defending Brooklyn’s guards​


Brooklyn drafted three guards in the first round, a point center in Danny Wolfe, and already has a proven scorer in Cam Thomas. Phoenix held Los Angeles’ guards Dalton Knecht, Bronny James, and Austin Reaves to 9-of-33 shooting from the field and harassed them up and down the floor. Will Dillon Brooks and Ryan Dunn be as effective defending Brooklyn’s litany of young guards the same way they kept Los Angeles’s guards quiet?

No. 3 – 3-point shooting​


Against the Lakers, the Suns shot 13-of-41 from 3 and created open looks of dribble penetration and their relentless pace. Dillon Brooks, Grayson Allen, and Royce O’Neal combined for 9-of-16 from long range while the rest of the Suns shot 4-of-25. All three of the above-mentioned players last season shot above 39% from the 3-point line and were inside the top-50 last season in 3-point percentage. Is there anyone else on Phoenix’s roster who joins this group of elite shooters, and will that person begin to emerge on Friday? Ryan Dunn? Koby Brea? Nigel Hayes-Davis? Rasheer Fleming? The Suns’ 3-point shooting outside of Brooks, Allen, and O’Neal is a storyline I’m following this game, and for the rest of the season.

No. 4 – The Rookies​


Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming played one quarter against the Lakers, while Koby Brea got a DNP. Maluach had an alley-oop dunk, Fleming had a nice finish in the lane, but neither popped while watching. Will any of these three players pop in China and start to carve their way into the Suns’ opening day rotation?

gettyimages-2238684538.jpg

Keys to a Suns Win​


The number one key to victory for the Suns is to make it out of China injury-free. Regardless of the outcome on the scoreboard, especially since it is still the preseason. Whether the Suns win or lose, if every Suns player comes out and competes as ferociously as they did against the Lakers one week ago, it will be another positive step in the right direction.

For the Suns to achieve victory in this game, they will have to follow a similar blueprint they followed against the Lakers, where they targeted Bronny James and others over and over again to get easy baskets. Defensively, Phoenix has to pressure Brooklyn’s guards and force mistakes and turnovers.

Prediction​


Honestly, who knows, but I will go with the team that has Dillon Brooks, an absolute psychopath of a competitor, to set the tone for the rest of the team early. The Nets’ bench will make a run late, but the Suns will win game one of two in China.

Suns 111, Nets 104


Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...e-preview-suns-vs-nets-china-edition-volume-1
 
Report: Jalen Green and Mark Williams targeting to make Suns debuts on opening night

imagn-27158640.jpg


The Phoenix Suns projected regular season starting lineup has not been intact for the team’s first few preseason games. With hamstring and an undisclosed absences respectively, Jalen Green and Mark Williams have not made their debuts with the Phoenix Suns yet, but the team is aiming to have them play on opening day.

In the first quarter of the broadcast of the Suns’ game today in China against the Brooklyn Nets, voice of the Suns Kevin Ray gave an encouraging update on the status of the two players.

Phoenix Suns play-by-play Kevin Ray just said as of right now, Suns are 'targeting' Mark Williams and Jalen Green making their debut in regular-season opener Oct. 22 against Sacramento Kings at home.

Green missed preseason opener with left hamstring strain. Suns have had… pic.twitter.com/fWBCeffEAh

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) October 10, 2025

With the team trading away some of their most valuable assets to acquire Green and Williams, both are expected to play significant roles on the team alongside Devin Booker this year in the starting lineup.

Green, 23 years old, led the two-seeded Houston Rockets last year in scoring, averaging 21 points per game before being traded in the deal that sent Kevin Durant to the Rockets, while Williams, also 23, is heading into his fourth season after playing his first three with the Charlotte Hornets. Last season, he averaged 15 points and 10 rebounds.

gettyimages-2236953690.jpg

Williams has missed 140 games in his first three seasons of his career, 57% of all possible games, and while he may not have a designated injury, the team appears to be taking a safe approach to ensure he’s healthy when the games count on the standings.

Suns changing approach for oft-injured Mark Williams

The Suns season starts in less than two weeks on October 22nd, hosting the Sacramento Kings at 7PM local time.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-mark-williams-injury-status-opening-day-2025
 
SBN Reacts: Suns fans expect the team to finish low in the division

gettyimages-2240284700.jpg


After a down year and a ton of turnover in both the front office and roster, Phoenix Suns fans are predicting the team will once again finish in the bottom half of the standings in the Pacific Division, but not last again.

Phoenix_1_100725.png

I’m not surprised that fans think that the team will finish fourth. With the dull offseason the Sacramento Kings had and the lack of optimism around the team’s roster construction, while I can’t confirm people put the Valley fourth because they project the Kings to have a down year, I wouldn’t be surprised if that was why. What does surprise me however is that more than a quarter of voters think the team will finish in third, meaning they would finish ahead of one of the Golden State Warriors, Los Angeles Lakers or Los Angeles Clippers.

The three squads beefed up their depth without losing many of their main rotation pieces after all either winning at least 50 games or advancing to the second round last season. While LeBron James is expected to miss the start of the season, Luka Dončić is slated to play his first full season with the purple and gold, Jimmy Butler will have his first full year in the Bay and Kawhi Leonard is expected to be healthy to start the year for the Clips. All three of them have significantly shorter odds to win the division, according to FanDuel Sportsbook.

With more fans voting for the Suns to finish third than fifth, it appears that fans believe the team’s offseason moves will help them win games right away, or that they don’t believe in the rest of the division to have a strong year like they did last season.

For the Suns to surprise people and not finish last in the division, as what they’re projected to do by many outlets, someone alongside Devin Booker will have to step up as a primary scorer, and Mark Williams and the team’s bigs need to be playmakers on both ends of the floor.

While I expect both the Suns and Kings to be battling for the fourth spots in the division, it will interesting to see who will take the top spot in the division. The two LA team’s and the Warriors are expected to all have strong seasons, but to be a tier below the Denver Nuggets, Houston Rockets and the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder as title contenders. With Kevin Durant traded and Bradley Beal gone, the Valley is not considered by many one of the top team’s in their division for the first time in a long time.

Who do you think will win the Pacific Division?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...andings-fan-poll-analysis-2025-season-outlook
 
Back
Top