News Suns Team Notes

Bright Side Predicts: The biggest questions this roster has yet to answer

gettyimages-2240212269.jpg


Yesterday on Bright Side Predicts, our writing crew took their shot at optimism. There are silver linings out there if you know where to look, and we found them. Today, as the season creeps closer, the tone shifts. We’re looking at what keeps us up at night. Is it the roster? The coaching staff? The construction of it all, the finances, the culture?

For a team projected to win 31.5 games, sitting dead last on FanDuel at +7000 to take the Pacific Division, those numbers tell a story. There’s doubt in the system, and some of it feels earned.

So we asked our team what concerns them most heading into the season. Here’s what they had to say.

What is your biggest concern about this roster or coaching staff?​


Brandon: The biggest concern I have at this point is the lack of a true point guard or table setter, especially in the first unit. We’ll see how this current iteration goes as Book and Green look to make playmaking leaps. On the coaching side, how this staff handles the rotations will be super interesting to monitor, especially for a first-time head coach leading the way.

Holden: Inexperience and lack of wing scoring. Jordan Ott is a first-year head coach with no incentive for his team to be bad this season. While Booker and Green look to carry a lot of the scoring load, not that you can replace Kevin Durant, but there is no replacement for his wing scoring.

Bruce: My biggest concern is that the Suns do not have enough offensive firepower compared to the Wild Wild Western Conference. The Suns lack any star offensive threats besides Devin Booker, which is a significant shift compared to last year. They do have some role players who can get hot, but they will need them to be consistently on fire to keep them afloat offensively.

The Suns also have young players, and investing time in their development is something Suns fans can have hope in.

Kevin: My biggest concern is how minutes are distributed between veterans and young players. Obviously, Grayson Allen, Royce O’Neal, Nick Richards, and Nigel Hayes-Davis are established veteran players who deserve to play quality minutes on most NBA teams.

The Suns also have Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, Oso Ighodaro, Ryan Dunn, and Koby Brea, who require playing NBA minutes to develop. How does Jordan Ott and the front office balance trying to win now and develop its young players? It is a small hole to thread the needle through, which is easier said than done.

Luke: My biggest concern is that ownership/FO will feel the need for another knock-down-rebuild, before we give this a real chance.

2224346014.jpg

Pano: The depth, the lack of experience, and the uncertainties. I think we are one or two injuries away from being in real trouble. Our entire team lacks experience, whether it’s the players or the staff. From my point of view, we only have Booker, Brooks, O’Neal, and Hayes-Davis with some leadership experience. Is that enough to guide such a young team?

Miah: The roster balance still worries me. Until Green proves he can truly run the point, I’ll keep wondering what might’ve been with a legit veteran PG to quarterback this team. There’s a lot of promise, but that floor general role remains a question mark.

Voita: There’s plenty to keep an eye on. The team lacks a true point guard, though that’s becoming common across the league. The center depth looks solid, but injuries could slow the growth we’re hoping to see.

What concerns me most is the team’s ability to generate offense in the final minutes of close games. That’s when execution tightens, when predictability sets in, and when coaching inexperience can start to show. Those moments will reveal the roster’s strengths, but they’ll also expose its flaws.



The writing team had plenty to worry about with this group, and it’s hard to land on one thing that rises above the rest. Maybe it’s a mix of problems that all bleed together, feeding into the same uneasy feeling. But that’s the point here.

What sits at the top of your list? What’s the thing that makes you hesitate before buying in to this team as the new season begins?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...eam-concerns-roster-coaching-culture-analysis
 
Ott Ball: A defense that attacks instead of absorbs

gettyimages-2240580150.jpg


Defend or explode. This seems to be the motto of these new Phoenix Suns. Under Jordan Ott, Phoenix is betting everything on pressure and speed, even if it means flirting with the limit. This is a high-risk philosophy, but one with high potential.

A defense based on pressure, not caution​


The preseason defensive rating at 102.2 (5th) and the forced turnover rate at 24.2% (1st in the NBA) are indicators of a system based on aggression.

The Suns do not absorb attacks; they provoke them. They push the tempo, cut passing lanes, and use their activity to turn every defensive possession into an offensive opportunity: 31.3 points generated from opponent turnovers, 1st in the league.

Phoenix Suns pre-season transition — 31.3 pts/game pic.twitter.com/heDGwJI4AL

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) October 19, 2025

This is exactly the philosophy announced by Ott during the offseason: an aggressive defense as a catalyst for pace, one that presses, disrupts, creates chaos and uncertainty in the opposing offense.

The 12.5 steals (2nd) and 6.5 blocks (6th) are proof of this, as this vision and these stats perfectly define the spirit of: “okay, you’re going to score, but it will never be easy.”

Phoenix Suns Rim protection pic.twitter.com/EF2jjFM8pf

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) October 19, 2025

But there is a downside: 29.8 fouls per game (2nd). This aggression often tips the scale of sustainability; it is a pace that is even unsustainable during the regular season. How can a defense function properly if its best players are never on the floor together? Everyone knows the answer.

The Suns impose a constant physical duel, even at the risk of putting themselves in danger. It’s a high-risk defense but one that yields high rewards — the franchise and fans have experienced the “Run & Gun,” and they are now poised to experience the “Gun & Run.”

A connected defense, but without continuity​


The statistics on opponents’ shots are telling: 42.4% shooting success and only 39 points scored in the paint (4th in both). This is indicative of a defense that communicates, switches, is aggressive, and functions as a true collective organism, perfectly embodying the vision that Jordan Ott wants to convey. He expressed these sentiments in June during the introductory conference:

Defensively, I want to play aggressive. … And then we’re going to communicate. … Offenses are becoming more conceptual in how we communicate. At the end of the day, defense needs effort. All-out effort all the time. And then we’re going to have to be connected. Through the 48 minutes … there’s going to be some type of adversity. Can we stay connected … and the last piece … is we’re going to do it collaboratively.”
Phoenix Suns defensive action — The art of creating difficult shots : pic.twitter.com/rBZhSpxt1u

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) October 19, 2025

The Suns close off drives, using the mobility of their interiors (Ighodaro, Richards, Maluach, Fleming) to switch without too much suffering. But behind this beautiful facade, the fragility on the boards reveals the cost of the system…

When everyone arrives at the second curtain, it’s logical that not many remain for rebounds, and we know it’s difficult to dominate individually in this area of the game (only 28.5 defensive rebounds per game, the lowest score at 30th during this preseason).

Certainly, opponents’ shots are challenging, but the Suns allow far too many second chances: opponents have grabbed an average of 13 offensive rebounds per game (20th), leading to nearly 19 points on second chances (24th).

Rebounding: a real question mark for this season? pic.twitter.com/ykdzE4M8w3

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) October 19, 2025

As repeated for a few weeks, we need to take a step back on these numbers and performances; it’s only the preseason. But even in this small segment of 4 games, these results are really encouraging and promising for what’s to come. The Suns have ranked among the best defenses in the league. Questions remain, particularly regarding rebounding and our defensive cleanliness, but we have reason to be somewhat optimistic as we approach the start of the regular season.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...isk-high-reward-nba-defense-strategy-analysis
 
Back
Top