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Game Recap: Devin Booker slices up Utah for a season-high, Suns beat Jazz 118-96

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On Halloween night, the Mortgage Matchup Center glowed in shades of orange and black. The court, painted in blazing orange for the NBA Cup debut, gleamed beneath the lights like molten metal. The Suns, draped in their stark black Statement Edition uniforms, clashed with the Utah Jazz in Game 6 of the season. The result? A 118-96 victory for Phoenix.

How’d they pull that off? By leaning into their new identity. They pressed. They clawed. Devin Booker led the charge, cool as ever, slicing up Utah like a pumpkin under a porch light, scoring a season-high 36 points. Oh, and his body language looked good.

The Suns forced 21 turnovers and only coughed it up 12 times, cashing those mistakes in for a 29-13 edge in points off turnovers. Ryan Dunn was a machine again with 13 points and 11 rebounds, flying around like the court belonged to him. And even though Lauri Markkanen dropped 33, it didn’t matter. This one belonged to Phoenix from the opening tip. They trailed for all of 34 seconds, then grabbed a 20-point lead and never let it go.

For one night in Phoenix, the haunted house was theirs. The Suns took home their second win of the season, and yeah, it was a little spooky how good they looked doing it.

Game Flow​

First Half​


The Suns found themselves in rare territory, jumping out to an 8-2 lead fueled by active hands and quick reactions. Three early Jazz turnovers turned into four of those points. Ryan Dunn let it fly from deep three times and came up empty each one. Man, if that shot could fall for him.

One interesting wrinkle from Jordan Ott came early, with a lineup of Collin Gillespie, Jordan Goodwin, Devin Booker, Ryan Dunn, and Oso Ighodaro. Before long, Goodwin forced a turnover, Gillespie buried a pair of threes, and the Suns found themselves riding a smooth 13-0 run.

It was a scorching quarter for Phoenix and a brutal one for Utah. The Suns closed on a 23-2 run, hitting 53.6% from the field despite going 5-for-16 from deep. They turned 9 Utah turnovers into 16 points, and behind Devin Booker’s 12 in the frame, stormed into the second quarter with a 20-point lead, 37-17. Phoenix had just 1 turnover in the quarter.

Book in the first:

📚 12 PTS
📚 4 REB
📚 3 AST pic.twitter.com/DPmmUZKiTS

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 1, 2025

The defensive intensity carried into the second quarter, where the team was flying around and getting production from everyone. Defesnive continued to lead to offense for Phoenix.

DENIED BY GRAYSON. pic.twitter.com/40xdXhdQZ4

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 1, 2025

For the most part, the team stayed disciplined, although Oso Ighodaro found himself in foul trouble again, picking up his fifth with a little over five minutes left in the second.

Phoenix stretched the lead to 24, but a 9-2 run from Utah, mostly fueled by free throws, cut into it.

After dropping 37 in the first, the Suns managed only 17 in the second, shooting 22.7% in the quarter. Luckily, Utah couldn’t hit much either, finishing at 22.2%.

Lauri Markkanen, who lit up the Suns for 51 earlier in the week, was quiet this time around. He had 11 in the half, with 6 coming at the line. Booker led all scorers with 17, while Grayson Allen pulled down six boards to pace Phoenix.

At the break, the Suns were still in control, up 54-40.

Second Half​


The start of the second half felt clunky. Utah leaned into physicality, testing the Suns’ patience and flow. Every whistle chipped away at the rhythm, turning the first five minutes into a foul-soaked grind.

But once the stoppages slowed, Phoenix found its groove again.

The ball started moving, the pace returned, and the lead swelled back to 20. Devin Booker took control, hitting threes, spinning into fadeaways, and torching defenders who had no answers. It was vintage Booker, smooth and relentless. He poured in 12 in the quarter, pushing his total to 29 on the night.

Baseline Book!

Turned 29 yesterday. Up to 29 PTS today. pic.twitter.com/0Kvrf39niT

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 1, 2025

Lauri Markkanen found his rhythm in the third, outpacing his first-half production with 13 points in the period. Utah started to connect more, putting up 27 in the quarter, but Phoenix matched their energy and kept control. The Suns scored 29, maintaining their edge heading into the fourth.

Phoenix 83, Utah 67.

The fourth opened with Oso Ighodaro picking up his sixth foul, sending Lauri Markkanen to the line once again. Markkanen caught fire early, pouring in 9 quick points as Utah opened the quarter on a 12-8 run. Keyonte George and Markkanen had the scouting report down: go right at the Suns rookies. Oso and Dunn kept reaching into the cookie jar, and Utah kept cashing in at the line. With eight minutes left, the lead was trimmed to 10.

Ryan Dunn was everywhere, especially on the glass. After playing only 17 minutes in the first matchup earlier this week, his athleticism made all the difference this time. The team focused on keeping Mark Williams off the boards, and Dunn cleaned up everything that came loose. He finished with 13 points and 11 rebounds, earning every bit of it.

The Suns kept their foot on the gas. Their defensive pressure never let up, and with timely threes dropping, every Utah run got shut down before it could breathe.

As for Devin Booker, the talk around his body language can take a night off. He looked locked in, calm, sharp, and fully in control. He poured in a season-high 36 points and made it look effortless. Suns win, 118-96.

Up to a season-high 36 PTS for Book! pic.twitter.com/4kbF832VOG

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 1, 2025

Up Next​


Wemby comes to town on Sunday night. The Alien. Be warned…

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...son-high-ryan-dunn-defense-turnovers-analysis
 
A look at the Suns schedule for the month of November

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The Phoenix Suns’ start to the season in the month of October mostly went as expected. They literally won every game they were favored to win and lost all they were under dogs in. 2-4 to start the season, the Valley enters its first full month of the 2025-26 campaign not whole with Jalen Green and Dillon Brooks still out with hamstring and core injuries respectively.

Here’s a peek at the Suns’ schedule this month.


Staying mostly in division​

  • Sunday, November 2nd vs San Antonio Spurs
  • Tuesday, November 4th @ Golden State Warriors
  • Thursday, November 6th vs Los Angeles Clippers
  • Saturday, November 8th @ Los Angeles Clippers
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Outside of the Spurs, the Suns will play three-straight games against their Pacific Division foes. As of publishing, the Spurs remain one of only two teams in the Western Conference still undefeated. The Warriors and Clippers, while not undefeated, are looked at as some of the top teams in the conference and both are above .500 and in the top-eight of playoff seeding to start the season.

The Suns will get two shots at revenge against the Clippers after they dominated them in their second game of the season.

Games against struggling teams​

  • Monday, November 10th vs New Orleans Pelicans
  • Wednesday, November 12th @ Dallas Mavericks
  • Thursday, November 13th vs Indiana Pacers
  • Sunday, November 16th vs Atlanta Hawks
  • Tuesday, November 18th @ Portland Trailblazers

The Pelicans remain one of the few winless teams left in the league. Many people are continuing to question their decision to give up full control over their first-round pick in this year’s upcoming draft. Speaking of the draft, the Suns will get their first look at the first overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, when they face the Maverickss. Cooper Flagg is off to a strong to his career, putting up historic numbers for an 18-year-old.

Just like the Mavericks and Pelicans, the Pacers and Hawks and have struggled out the gate due to various injuries and team growing pains. The Suns will get one of their best chances to work their way up the standings with this stretch early in the season. The Trail Blazers have had the strongest start to the year for all these teams, but their head coach Chauncey Billups remains away from the team after a federal investigation opened up with his name involved.

NBA Cup games and KD’s return​

  • Friday, November 21st vs Minnesota Timberwolves*
  • Sunday, November 23rd vs San Antonio Spurs
  • Monday, November 24th vs Houston Rockets
  • Wednesday, November 26th @ Sacramento Kings*
  • Friday, November 28th @ Oklahoma City Thunder*
  • Saturday, November 29th vs Denver Nuggets

(*=NBA Cup Games)

After their first NBA Cup game of the month and another look at the Spurs, the Suns mini home stand will conclude with the much-awaited return of Kevin Durant to Phoenix. Durant played three years in the Valley, and led the team in scoring in two of his three seasons, helped them win a playoff series in 2023 and reach the playoffs in 2023 and 2024. After his return, the Valley will finish up their NBA Cup play with games against the Kings and the defending champion Thunder before ending the month, hosting the Denver Nuggets.



How do you think the Suns will do with their mostly Western Conference schedule in November?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ce-matchups-kevin-durant-return-nba-cup-games
 
Devin Booker’s body language isn’t the problem everyone thinks it is

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The Suns sit at 2-4 to start the season, and what’s defined this stretch more than anything is effort. It hasn’t always shown up in the standings, but you can feel the care, the grind, the want. When you’re sitting at 2-4, you start searching for reasons and ideas to make it better. Hell, even teams that haven’t lost yet are still figuring things out this early in the season.

One of the early narratives this season has been Devin Booker’s body language, with AZ Sports’ Dan Bickley calling it out in his latest “Bickley Blast” after the Suns dropped that one-point heartbreaker to the Grizzlies last week.

“It’s cruelly ironic that the one I’m most worried about is the one I never considered,” Bickley blasted. “Devin Booker, who might have had the most deceiving 32-point I’ve ever seen last night, and his body language isn’t ideal either…A player who cannot find a rhythm or a comfort zone. A player who went straight off the court last night without shaking hands then declined media availability afterwards. Now neither of those things are a big deal to me, but they are windows into our most important player, and it seems Valley sports fans are at peak frustration.”

The Suns looked competitive on Wednesday against the Grizzlies, but what do we make of Devin Booker's performance and body language?

Today's Bickley Blast: https://t.co/KnQjNYaLer pic.twitter.com/jMcYO2eB85

— Arizona Sports (@AZSports) October 30, 2025

Peak frustration? Come on. This isn’t that. This is a team with little to no expectations, so how can we be anywhere near peak frustration?

I’ll tell you about “peak frustration”. It was watching the miserable Suns the last two years, when the dream was a championship, and the result was a postseason sweep one season and missing the playoffs entirely the next. That was peak frustration. Night after night of half-assed effort, turnstile defenses, and “chillin’” comments. Collapses breed frustration.

What we’re seeing now is something different. This is a season of adjustment, a time to exercise perspective, because this team is in the middle of a retool, not a collapse.

Yes, Devin Booker hasn’t looked comfortable to start the season. But that hasn’t stopped his production.

His discomfort makes sense when you think about it. He’s out there trying to find his rhythm alongside a revolving door of new teammates. Ryan Dunn is the only consistent returning starter from a season ago, and he started just 44 games last year. The new starting five hasn’t been healthy once, and through six games, Booker’s already played with 56 different lineup combinations. Fifty-six.

So yeah, there’s going to be some unease as he learns who fits where, how they move, and how their presence shifts the geometry of his shot. Yet still, Booker is producing.

Through 6 games this season, Devin Booker has been a part of 56 different lineup combinations.

So yeah, maybe he doesn't look as comfortable as you like. Yet he's still producing. pic.twitter.com/5ClSanANvE

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) November 1, 2025

Despite all that, what we’re seeing from Devin Booker, even if it doesn’t feel like peak Booker, is statistically the best version of him to ever open a season. That’s not opinion, that’s math. I went back through the first six games of every Suns season from the past eleven years, broke down the numbers, and compared them side by side. Here’s what I found.

Across eleven seasons, Devin Booker has opened the year playing in the Suns’ first six games a total of six times. His first full six-game start came in 2017-18, when he averaged 20.5 points per game. Since then, he’s done it five more times: 2019-20, 2020-21, 2022-23, and the past two seasons. Overall, Booker averages 23.9 points, 5.0 assists, and 4.1 rebounds in his first six, doing so on 48/39/82 splits.

When you step back and look at the full context of this season, Devin Booker is averaging 30.3 points per game while shooting 49.2% from the field and 43.2% from deep. Add 6.5 assists and 4.3 rebounds, and you’ve got a stat line that screams efficiency, control, and growth.

Now, you might wonder where that stacks up with his other season starts.

Technically, it’s not his highest scoring average — he opened 2023–24 putting up 31.5 a night — but that came in only two of the first six games. So, if we’re talking full participation, this is the best scoring start Booker’s ever had in a season where he’s played all six. It’s also his second-best shooting start from the field behind 2022–23, when he hit 52.9%. Those 6.5 assists? The highest he’s ever averaged to open a year.

Devin Booker’s start to the 2025-26 season stacked up against his first 6 games from every other year of his career (in which he played all 6 games, which is now 6 times total):

🔥30.3 PPG: 1st
🔥43.2 3PT%: 1st
🔥6.5 APG: 1st
🔥49.2 FG%: 2nd
🔥4.3 RPG: 2nd pic.twitter.com/7x1llebkIp

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) November 1, 2025

Maybe he didn’t shake hands after a game where he missed two shots, one of them the would-be game-winner. That’s not negativity, that’s frustration. The good kind. That’s a player who cares, who’s pissed because he expects better.

You can say his body language looks off, and maybe it does, but that’s not a red flag. It’s a reflection of someone trying to find rhythm in a rotating cast of teammates and lineups. I lean into he doesn’t look as comfortable as we’re accustomed to seeing versus his body language is off. But that’s just me.

The irony? This is statistically the best all-around start Booker’s ever had, yet people are worried about his vibe. His 67.5 eFG% is the second-highest of his career to start a season. He’s the first player in franchise history to score 30+ points in 5 of the team’s first six games. Do we need him to smile the entire time, too?

The only number that actually looks uncomfortable is his plus-minus: -16 through six games. The only time it was worse was 2017–18, when it sat at -42. So yeah, maybe he looks uneasy, maybe he’s searching for flow, but that’s part of the process. This isn’t a symptom of something wrong; it’s the look of a player carrying a team that’s still trying to figure out who it is.

Oh, and as for body language? How’s this for ya?

Devin Booker's postgame interview was interrupted by a special guest… Dillon Brooks 😂

Book pours in 36 as Phoenix moves to 1-0 in @emirates NBA Cup West Group A action! pic.twitter.com/EDSkIpudpJ

— NBA (@NBA) November 1, 2025

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...formance-start-2025-nba-season-stats-analysis
 
Ott Ball: An offensive philosophy already taking shape?

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Six games in, and one question already arises: what does the Suns’ offense under Jordan Ott actually look like? Between a desire for movement, spacing, and ball-sharing, the philosophy announced in preseason still seems to be finding its balance. The intentions are there, but their translation on the floor remains inconsistent — sometimes brilliant, often uneven.


Tempo as the main weapon?​


Jordan Ott was clear from his introductory press conference: “We’re going to play faster. […] Playing earlier in the clock.” The heart of his offense is tempo.

Phoenix doesn’t aim to wear down opposing defenses in the half-court, but to outrun them. The staff is betting on a simple mathematical principle: the earlier a possession is played, the more efficient it is — taking advantage of defensive disorganization before it sets.

This approach demands conditioning, quick reads, and a clear hierarchy of responsibilities. The goal isn’t recklessness, but clarity at high speed — to provoke imbalance and turn defensive stops or rebounds into easy buckets.

The words are there, but do they show up in the numbers? Of course, the Suns sit near the bottom of the standings for now, but is there alignment between the theory and the stats — or a clear dissonance between the two?

The Suns under Jordan Ott want to accelerate the pace — and the numbers confirm it. Fourth in total shot attempts (85 per game) and in three-point attempts (39.2), they play at one of the fastest rhythms in the league, ranking 10th in pace. The idea is clear: create danger in the first seconds of the possession (via NBA.com).

Around 35% of their shots come between 22 and 16 seconds left on the clock — top 8 in the NBA. This offense aims to be instinctive, fluid, almost instantaneous: 53% of shots come without a single dribble — a league-high — and nearly two-thirds are taken within two seconds of catching the ball, the second-highest mark in the league. Phoenix isn’t looking to “manufacture” the perfect shot, but to strike before the defense has time to breathe (via NBA.com).


A living, fluid, collective offense​


Phoenix’s offensive system relies on two main finishing actions: spot-ups — which account for 31% of their possessions (at 1.11 points per possession) — and cuts (7th-most frequent in the NBA), plus two secondary ones: pick-and-rolls and off-screen actions (around 25% frequency).

In total, nearly 60% of Phoenix’s offense runs through these four actions — numbers that perfectly align with Jordan Ott’s desire to simplify the game and keep it in motion.

To illustrate this philosophy, here are four sequences from the start of the season that best represent the offensive identity Phoenix is building.

We start with a Second-side Action for Royce O’Neal — simple, efficient: all five players are involved to free our forward in the corner.

Second-side Action pour Royce O'Neal pic.twitter.com/udRYLJfgUk

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) October 30, 2025


Then, a beautiful passing sequence to move and stretch the defense, ending with a cut from Oso Ighodaro:

C'est mieux quand ça joue vite… pic.twitter.com/IaI4vDJa60

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 2, 2025


Next, a screen-the-screener action — once again for Royce O’Neal — built from a cross-screen and off-ball movement involving Ryan Dunn and Dillon Brooks:

Screen-the-screener Action pic.twitter.com/Cz7mQGQdKW

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 2, 2025


Finally, a clip showcasing Nigel Hayes-Davis in an offensive hub role — positioning himself at the heart of the defense to create a 3v2 situation:

5v5 to 3v2 pic.twitter.com/U1FXN0swCj

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 2, 2025

Between bright ideas and wasted opportunities​


The Suns’ offense is ambitious, fast, and fluid — but far from perfect. The stats speak for themselves. Phoenix ranks fifth in offensive rebounds per game, yet their second-chance efficiency is poor: just 0.94 points per possession on putbacks, placing them 25th in the NBA. In other words, the team creates plenty of extra possessions — but wastes too many of them.

Transition offense, another supposed strength of this fast-paced system, has also underperformed. At just 46.8% efficiency, it falls well short of the potential expected from a team built to attack early and punish defensive imbalance.

Then comes the paradox of ball movement. The Suns average 23.7 assists per game (8th), but 54.8 potential assists (2nd), meaning many good looks go unrewarded due to poor shooting efficiency. The movement is there, but the finishing isn’t — the ball travels beautifully, the scoreboard less so (via NBA.com).

These numbers reveal the gap between offensive intention and on-court execution. The aggression and rhythm are real, the philosophy is clear, but for the offense to become truly dangerous and sustainable, Phoenix will need to reduce turnovers, capitalize on second chances, and finish plays more efficiently.



The Suns’ offense is moving fast. Sometimes faster than its own execution can handle. Jordan Ott has installed a clear philosophy: rhythm, movement, simplicity. The structure is there, the principles are visible, but consistency is still missing. The “Ott’s Ball” era is in its early foundations: a modern, ambitious idea that must now learn to turn controlled chaos into sustained efficiency.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-an-offensive-philosophy-already-taking-shape
 
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