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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
 
Suns dominate Spurs in Sunday night showdown

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In one of the more surprising outcomes this NBA season, the Phoenix Suns thoroughly dominated the San Antonio Spurs Sunday night. The final score was 130-118, but that was not indicative of how well the Suns played. It was the most enjoyable game of basketball the Suns have played in years. While it was not the biggest scoring night of Devin Booker’s career, it was one of the best games he has ever played in his 11 seasons.

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Offensively, he controlled the game for Phoenix and made a good defender in Stephon Castle look lost all night long. He scored 28 points on 10-of-15 from the field and had 13 assists. The shotmaking, playmaking, and pace that he played with were perfect the entire game. When the Spurs doubled, he got the ball out of his hands quickly, leading to assists and hockey assists to his teammates.

He was the engine of the Suns’ best offensive performance this season. The Suns assisted on 34 of 46 made field goals, and shot 19-of-32 from the 3-point line. Everyone on the team was involved, as seven players finished in double digits.

But as good as Booker and the Suns were offensively, Ryan Dunn and the Suns were just as impressive defensively. His energy and relentlessness guarding Wembanyama along with Royce O’Neal, were incredible all game long.

Watch Ryan Dunn here

Spurs go slice for Wembanyama, Dunn adjusts positioning to take first hit on the switch & front

Dunn continues to fight with multiple efforts to the catch point, eventually stamping the stop pic.twitter.com/qAIvalU4jo

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) November 3, 2025

He and Grayson Allen were the second-highest scorers for Phoenix with 17 points each.

The Suns lost the rebounding battle, the turnover battle, were outscored 64 to 38 in points in the paint, and shot 19 fewer shots than the Spurs they still controlled the entire game. The offensive execution and ball movement were so exquisite that the Suns did not miss enough to get any offensive rebounds (although Dunn got his handed on plenty of misses).

Regardless of whether it was an off night for the Spurs or a fluke shooting night for the Suns, it was nice to see what this team is supposed to look like at its best, even without Jalen Green and Dillon Brooks, and get back within a game of .500 at 3-4.

This ball movement 😮‍💨 pic.twitter.com/KPKMNOPnOt

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 3, 2025

Game Flow

First Half


The Suns were blazing hot to start the game, knocking down 6 of their first 8 from 3 to open up a 25-14 lead. Devin Booker attacked the paint and kicked the ball out to shooters who did what they are supposed to do, snipe. The hot start continued all half as the Suns were 11-of-15 from 3, and 24-of-38 from the field. Five Phoenix players hit multiple 3s: Grayson Allen, Royce O’Neal, Ryan Dunn, Jordan Goodwin, and Devin Booker.

Scoring against San Antonio in the paint is tough, and the Suns’ game plan to hunt 3s opened up its entire offense. The Spurs were ultra-aggressive in the second quarter, closing out to shooters, opening up driving lanes for Dunn, who flashed his improved handle by getting to the basket with ease. Nick Richards was also the beneficiary of the Spurs’ lack of defense; he scored 10 points as the recipient of drives from his teammates, including drawing a foul on Wembanyama trying to block his shot.

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Defensively, the Suns swarmed Wembanyama, and Mark Williams blocked his shot early to set the tone for the first half. Nothing was going to be easy for the Spurs alien. The Suns limited Wembanyama to zero first-quarter points and just two points the entire half. Anytime he put the ball on the ground, the Suns were quick to the ball, forcing him to pick up the ball and let his teammates attack a scrambling Suns defense, which held up for the most part. If not for Dylan Harper and Keldon Johnson scoring 23 combined points off the bench, this game would have been over at halftime.

Unfortunately for the Spurs, Harper left the game early with a lower leg injury and did not return. He joins a laundry list of other Spurs on the injury list, including De’Aaron Fox and Jeremy Sochan, but despite all of the Spurs’ injuries, they still were undefeated before playing the Suns. Which is why this performance from the Suns was so exciting, it was their best-played first half in years, which they led 70-52 at halftime.

Second Half


The Suns did not take their foot off the gas in the third quarter. After an O’Neal 3, the Suns jumped out to a 77-53 lead out of halftime. Booker knifed through the Spurs’ defense and scored 10 points in classic Booker fashion, from the midrange.

Book is cookin' 🔥

Added 10 points to his total in this third quarter. pic.twitter.com/sPhQeKcapD

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 3, 2025

No matter what the Suns did everything seemed to work out in their favor. They led by as much as 31, up 97-66 after a Gillespie 3-pointer. With the Spurs down 102-78 to begin the fourth quarter the Suns had the chance to end the game but San Antonio came out with more energy and fight. San Antonio got into the penalty and had Phoenix scrambling. A San Antonio 12-0 run cut Phoenix’s lead to 14 at 111-97. Out of a timeout, Jordan Ott and his team responded as Devin Booker drew three fouls in one possession on Castle and knocked down both free throws.

After another Wembanyama miss, Booker secured the rebound, pushed the ball in transition, and found Dunn for a wide-open 3 in the corner, bang. On the next possession Booker came off a screen, got to the left elbow, elevated, and knocked down a midrange pullup push the Suns back up 21, 118-97 with 4:15 left in the fourth quarter.

It was then that Suns fans could exhale as Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson emptied his bench as Phoenix cruised to victory.


Up Next


The Phoenix Suns play at Golden State on Tuesday, Nov. 4, at 8 p.m. MST.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...zzling-three-point-shooting-san-antonio-upset
 
What Ja Morant’s latest suspension could mean for teams like the Suns

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Every time it feels like things are clicking again, every time it feels like the Suns have found their rhythm, someone somewhere finds a way to stir the pot. And this time, the noise is coming from Memphis, where something interesting might be brewing.

If you haven’t been keeping tabs, the situation between the Grizzlies and two-time All-Star Ja Morant has taken a strange turn. After beating the Suns last Wednesday, Memphis lost to the Lakers on Friday, 117–112. Morant’s stat line that night? 3-of-14 from the field, 0-of-6 from deep. And in the fourth quarter, where the Grizzlies entered up 91–89, he went 0-of-2 in 8:25 played.

After the loss, Morant didn’t hold back. When asked if he thought he should have played more in the fourth, he fired back, “Go ask the coaching staff if I should play more or not.” When pressed on what could have gone differently, he added, “According to them, probably don’t play me. Honestly. Basically, that is what the message was.”

Ja Morant when asked questions from the media:

“Go ask the coaching staff.” pic.twitter.com/16x7ScdlWZ

— No Context NBA (@NoContext_NBA_) November 1, 2025

Needless to say, Morant appeared frustrated.

The Grizzlies’ response? A one-game suspension for conduct detrimental to the team.

In Phoenix, we’ve seen bad body language before. We know what it looks like when a player’s frustration starts bleeding into everything else. Morant’s demeanor during those late-game timeouts said plenty, even before he opened his mouth. Add in his postgame comments, and you can feel the tension rising in Memphis. There’s a growing sense that this could be the early stage of a breakup between Ja Morant and the Grizzlies.

Here’s a breakdown of everything that happened from last night pic.twitter.com/iY7jjSCq1W

— MD (@mike_daddino) November 1, 2025

Cool. That’s not a Phoenix Suns problem. That’s a Grizzlies problem. Still, it does make you wonder what a trade for Morant might look like.

According to Bleacher Report, five teams could make a run at him. The second team on that list? The Phoenix Suns.

Eric Pincus floated the idea of the Suns sending out Jalen Green, their 2027 first-round pick, and the $5.9 million trade exception in exchange for Ja Morant. He added the following:

This one hinges on what the Grizzlies think of Green, an increasingly polarizing player.

The 23-year-old is an athletic, high-level NBA scorer who struggled in his first postseason appearance last year with the Houston Rockets, outside of one monster performance in Game 2 vs. the Golden State Warriors.

Green is also less expensive than Morant with $105.8 million left on his deal, though he can opt out before the 2027-28 season.

The Suns could fill the greater positional need with Morant, giving up the only first they can send (the lowest selection between the Cleveland Cavaliers, Minnesota Timberwolves and Utah Jazz).

Phoenix could profit from the Grizzlies’ drama, on the premise that the Morant situation needs to be resolved before it poisons the rest of the season.

Ah, so we’ve found ourselves here again. Seven games into the season, and the Suns are already being linked to another disgruntled star looking for a new home. But it does spark an interesting conversation for a team that still hasn’t seen the full picture of what Jalen Green can be, and one that could use some stability at point guard given the overlap in skill sets on the roster.

We just saw Ja Morant last week, in a game where he dropped 28 points with 8 rebounds and 7 assists. More importantly, he hit the game-winner that put Memphis ahead 114-113. My takeaway from that night? Morant doesn’t look nearly as explosive. Years of injuries have dulled what once made him electric.

The question now is whether patience can continue to hold, both in the front office and among the fan base. Because yes, Morant is talented. Yes, he fills a positional need. But if you look at his contract, he’s owed $39.4 million this year, $42.2 million next year, and $44.9 million in 2027–28.

So right as this team has started to find some financial footing, we’re being tempted again. With another high-priced star and another round of “what ifs.”

I’m sure plenty of fans have strong opinions on this one, and it’s fair to wonder if those opinions have shifted after what we’ve seen from the Suns over the past few games. Drop your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...en-green-trade-proposal-contract-analysis-nba
 
Suns Reacts Survey: The most surprising Sun so far has been?

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



We are close to 10% of the way into the season. The Suns have played seven of their 82 games so far and with players in and out of the lineup and new additions, the team is not fully whole yet. That being said, members of the squad have had the chance to show how their game has improved from the offseason and into the Valley’s new look team. Here are some players who are off to some interesting starts.

Devin Booker​


While the franchise cornerstone’s stats are somewhat similar to his stats from previous seasons to start the year, his efficiency is off the charts, shooting over 50% from the field and 40% from three. Coming into the season definitively running point guard for the first time in his career, Booker has taken complete responsibility in running the offense, handling doubling teams and taking the game over when he feel he needs to like he did Sunday night to close out the Valley’s upset win over the the undefeated San Antonio Spurs.

Collin Gillespie​


Averaging career highs in nearly every statistical category, Gillespie has asserted himself as the team’s backup point guard. He’s played minutes with the starters during important stretches, knocked down over 40% of his threes on a staggering seven attempts a game and recorded double digits in his last four contests. He’s kept the offense afloat when Booker has been out, and despite being 6’1”, is averaging nearly a block a game.

Royce O’Neale​


It was unclear what his role would be entering the season with the team trading for Dillon Brooks and looking to go in a younger direction, but O’Neale has started in every game since Brooks went down and tied a franchise record for most threes made through the first six games of a season with six. Since moving into the starting lineup, he’s averaging 14.8 points and 4.3 threes made per game, shooting 50% from behind the arc.

Mark Williams​


Still on a minutes restriction, Williams continues to assimilate to his new team. He had two 20-point and 10-rebound games last week, and was a main part of the defensive effort, limiting early MVP candidate Victor Wembanyama to a season-low nine points on 4/14 shooting and six turnovers. Williams’ role will continue to adapt once he starts playing in back-to-backs and isn’t on a minutes restriction, but as the team’s new starting center, he’s showed an ability to defend and be a paint presence for the offense.



Considering the turnover Phoenix had this offseason, have any of these players surprised you the most to start the season? Or is it someone else? Let us know.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...urvey-the-most-surprising-sun-so-far-has-been
 
Bright Side Baller: The fight showed up late, but it showed up

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Remember how it felt watching the Suns take down the Spurs? The energy, the precision, the sheer absurdity of it all. They were lights out from deep, splashing 58% of their threes. It was a night that didn’t make sense in all of the right way for Phoenix, the kind you hang onto for a while because it reminds you what the ceiling looks like.

Then came Tuesday.

The Suns fell back to earth, scoring just 108 points in a loss to Golden State. The Warriors took their turn playing god from beyond the arc. Every kick-out, every broken play, every bench guy who hadn’t scored in weeks found the bottom of the net. Golden State couldn’t miss. They punished every lazy rotation, every late closeout, every ounce of hesitation.

That’s life in the NBA. One night you’re untouchable, the next you’re the punchline. You start to wonder what this loss actually means. Maybe it’s nothing more than math evening the score. Maybe it’s a glimpse of defensive cracks that were always there, hiding behind the hot shooting. Maybe it’s both.

Suns are like the stock market. They’re going to have high surges and low dips through out the season and people will buy and sell the idea of them on a daily basis.

— Espo  (@Espo) November 5, 2025

To their credit, the Suns kept swinging. Maybe it came too late, but the fight was there. You can feel the foundation starting to take shape, the kind that doesn’t crack when things get ugly.

Bright Side Baller Season Standings​


Through seven games, only three players have claimed the Bright Side Baller crown: Mark Williams, Dillon Brooks, and Devin Booker. After Sunday night’s win over the San Antonio Spurs, Booker grabbed his third of the season with ease, dropping 28 points and dishing out 13 assists. He took home 67% of the vote. Pretty convincing.

But part of me wants to call an audible here. Because while Booker was the headliner, it was Jordan Ott’s game plan that really tilted this one. His defensive schemes bottled up one of the most explosive young players in the league. So yeah, I’m doing it. Executive decision. This Bright Side Baller goes to Jordan Ott.

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Bright Side Baller Nominees​


Game 8 against the Warriors. Here are your nominees.

Devin Booker
38 points (13-of-24, 1-of-5 3PT, 11-of-11 FT), 3 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, 5 turnovers, +8 +/-

Mark Williams
16 points (6-of-12, 0-of-0 3PT, 4-of-5 FT), 16 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, 2 turnovers, +1 +/-

Grayson Allen
16 points (6-of-15, 4-of-9 3PT), 4 rebounds, 5 assists, 3 steals, 1 turnover, -20 +/-

Ryan Dunn
10 points (4-of-12, 2-of-7 3PT), 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 3 steals, 1 block, 1 turnover, +2 +/-

Royce O’Neale
8 points (3-of-8, 2-of-6 3PT), 6 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 3 turnovers, -20 +/-

Collin Gillespie
8 points (3-of-8, 2-of-4 3PT), 5 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, 2 turnovers, -11 +/-



Time to cast your vote and tell us why!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...nts-golden-state-bench-dominates-118-107-loss
 
The Suns’ youth movement is colliding with reality, and Oso Ighodaro is at the center

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I find myself in an interesting spot. All season, I’ve been preaching patience, saying the Suns should be careful about tossing their rookies into deep water too soon. Development isn’t about minutes alone, it’s about context, rhythm, and opportunity. Put a player in the wrong spot too early, and you risk bruising confidence before it ever hardens.

I think back to Sunday night against the Spurs, when the Suns had to deal with the 7’5” riddle that is Victor Wembanyama. You could make the case for rolling out 7’2” Khaman Maluach to match size with size, guard length with length. It sounds logical in theory, but it’s the kind of logic that falls apart the moment the ball tips. Wembanyama thrives on that matchup. He’s used to it. He bends size to his will, using it against whoever dares to challenge him.

If the Suns had gone that route, it wouldn’t have helped Maluach’s growth. It would’ve shaken it. Instead of learning through controlled fire, he’d be tossed into a storm he wasn’t ready for. Going small and swarming from within made more sense. It played to the team’s strengths and kept the rookie’s confidence intact for another day.

What the Suns can do now is use the film they’ve built through these first few games as a teaching tool, a blueprint for their rookies to study and replicate in practice. It’s one thing to explain how a defensive rotation should work. It’s another to show it, frame by frame, where it clicked and where it broke down. Let the young guys see it, feel it, learn from it in the film room, instead of being the ones living those mistakes on the floor.

But still, I catch myself hearing the noise and nodding along. I’m trying to do what Toto says.I’m trying to hold the line. But man, it’s getting harder by the game. And it’s because of Oso Ighodaro.

We’ve said it before, and it’s still true: Ighodaro is a thinker. He plays with the kind of vision you want from any big man in the league. He sees the floor, reads the defense, and makes quick decisions that keep the offense flowing. Give him the ball at the top of the key, and you can run dribble handoffs, back cuts, all kinds of motion through him.

But one thing you can’t do is have him spot up from 18 feet and expect the defense to care. There’s no gravity there, no pull.

The more we see Jordan Ott run sets through Oso, the more it feels like we’re learning his limits in real time. It feels detrimental to the team’s success, especially when he’s playing center. The spacing collapses, the paint clogs, and what should be fluid possessions start to feel stuck in mud. It’s not for lack of effort or IQ. It’s that his game doesn’t stretch the floor, and in today’s NBA, that can grind an offense to a halt.

The numbers tell the story.

He’s started 4 of the Suns’ 8 games, averaging 17.8 minutes, 4.8 points, and 3.4 rebounds. His field goal percentage, once a clean 60.4% as a rookie, has dropped to 42.2%. Turnovers have climbed from 0.6 to 1.6. His assist-to-turnover ratio has fallen from a respectable 1.82 to 0.77. For a player whose value lives in facilitation, that’s a problem.

He is a -33 this season, second-worst on the team, only behind the -51 of Nigel Hayes-Davis. His rebounding percentage is 8.9% (for reference, Mark Williams is at 18.9% and Nick Richards is at 16.4%).

Oso Ighodaro’s regression is real:

🥶 FG% down to 42.2% (from 60.4%)
🥶 TOs up to 1.6 (from 0.6)
🥶 AST/TO ratio from .77 to 1.82

For a playmaking big, that’s trouble

🥶 -33 net rating (2nd worst on team)
🥶 8.9 reb% (72nd amoung players who’ve played 17.8+ min and 5 GP) pic.twitter.com/R1xj49EYE1

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) November 5, 2025

Per Basketball Reference, 18% of his minutes have come at power forward, 83% at center. That’s where the conundrum starts. That’s where the frustration brews. Because when you put a player built to connect the offense in a role that demands dominance, the seams start to show.

I feel like Oso is caught in the same strange basketball purgatory that swallowed Bol Bol. Not in skill set, but in spirit. That in-between space where a player doesn’t quite fit anywhere. Bol had otherworldly length, but not enough weight to matter on the block. You could bump him off his spot with a stiff breeze. So he drifted to the perimeter, but he wasn’t quick enough to survive there either. Too big to be a wing, too light to be a big. That’s basketball limbo.

Oso lives there now. He can block shots — he’s 4th on the team with 5 this season — but he doesn’t have the kind of length that terrifies anyone. He’s got the weight to bang down low, yet he still gives up ground. Pull him out to the perimeter, and guards treat him like an open buffet. You could see Steph Curry salivating last night in Golden State, licking his chops at the chance to cook him in isolation.

View Link

And that’s before we even touch offense. His shot chart looks like a coloring book with one crayon. Everything’s clustered around that push shot, and there’s been no sign of expansion. If he had even a hint of range, you could float him as a stretch four and get away with it. But without that, paired with average rebounding, you’re left with a cerebral player who sees the game clearly but struggles to bend it to his will.

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And that’s where it gets tough to keep holding the line this far into the season.

Eight games in, Jordan Ott is starting to show us his tactical fingerprints, and part of that print has way too much Oso Ighodaro for my liking. It’s his second season, and yes, he’s the project on the workbench. The lab experiment. The player the team wants to give runway to, see what sticks, see where he fits, maybe even convince themselves there’s more there than we’ve seen.

But when those minutes fall flat, it’s hard not to glance down the bench. Because sitting there are two rookies who, at least on paper, fill the very gaps Oso leaves behind.

Khaman Maluach has the length and size to protect the paint in a way Oso can’t. He can shoot the three, which opens the floor in ways Oso doesn’t. And then there’s Rasheer Fleming, who has that 7’5.25” wingspan (Oso’s wingspan? 6’11”) and athleticism with a jumper that’s always lurking. Sure, he’s been streaky — 34.9% from deep in college, 39.0% in Summer League, 30.8% in preseason — but he’s a threat. A defender has to respect him.

Oso doesn’t give you that. He’s a connector, not a creator, and that’s fine in spurts. But when the offense bogs down and the defense starts leaking, those rookies start to look a lot more tempting.

I want Oso to make it. You can tell Jordan Ott does too. He’s giving him every chance to show something, to prove he belongs. But that tingling on the back of your neck? Yeah, we’ve all felt it. The same one Haley Joel Osment felt every time Bruce Willis walked into a room. It feels like we’re watching a ghost. Like Oso is slowly playing himself off the floor instead of onto it.

What makes it worse is seeing two rookies sitting there, helmets on, ready to go, collecting DNPs while Oso struggles through another 17-minute stint. Those minutes could be carved into small developmental windows, little test drives for Khaman Maluach or Rasheer Fleming to get their feet wet. It wouldn’t take much. Split those minutes, let them learn.

But then you come back to the developmental plan. If those are high-leverage minutes — moments that could burn confidence instead of build it — maybe this slow roll makes sense. That’s the Catch-22. You either risk damaging the kids, or you keep watching Oso’s tape hoping the picture changes.

We’ve got 74 games to go, and there’s no doubt we’ll see the rookies soon enough. But right now, the Oso experiment feels like it’s producing the kind of fruit you quietly throw away when no one’s looking. He’s fundamentally sound, but the impact isn’t there. When your net rating sits at -33, it’s hard not to wonder if letting the rookies run could really make things any worse.

When you look at the top 10 overall picks in the draft last season, Maluach is easily at the bottom of the list relative to total minutes played.

  • Cooper Flagg – 229 MP
  • Dylan Harper – 140 MP
  • VJ Edgecombe – 271 MP
  • Kon Knueppel – 243 MP
  • Ace Bailey – 122 MP
  • Tre Johnson – 180 MP
  • Jeremiah Fears – 176 MP
  • Egor Demin – 119 MP
  • Collin Murray-Boyles – 128 MP
  • Khaman Maluach – 23 MP

I get it. Bigs take time. They grow slower, move through the game like clay that still needs shaping. And Oso is only 19. But when you need a rebound, when you need the floor stretched and the paint cleared, you’re not calling his name. Not yet.

We’ll see where it goes from here. What makes things interesting is that the G League season tips off November 8, and that changes everything. With this much youth on the roster, it’s the perfect chance to get guys live reps without throwing them into the fire every night. Maybe that means the rookies get their first real run. Maybe Oso gets a stint down in Tempe to polish the edges and rebuild confidence.

It could be that this early stretch was always meant to be a test run, a window to see what your sophomore big really has. Once the G League doors open, the options multiply. You can keep nurturing his development, give the rookies a crack at those bench minutes, and see who starts to separate from the pack.

In the end, this is the part of the season where patience and curiosity wrestle each other every night. You want to see the kids run, to see the future take shape, but you also know growth rarely happens in a straight line.

Maybe this is all part of the process, the slow burn before the spark. Maybe Oso finds his rhythm and becomes the steady hand the team hoped for. Or maybe the door creaks open for Khaman and Rasheer to take their first real steps into the fire. Either way, something’s about to give. You can feel it in the rhythm of these early games, in the long stares down the bench, in the restless hum of potential waiting to break through.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...n-ott-rotation-khaman-maluach-rasheer-fleming
 
Inside the Suns: Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks, offensive and defensive team ratings

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Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team. Each week the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — give their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week​

Q1: After the first 7 games, Devin Booker is leading the Suns in 3-point percentage (45.7%) and is 12th in the NBA in 3-pointers made this season (21). What are your thoughts on this?


Ashton: Still, too many turnovers. But I may be a little harsh. In this regard being that he is taking the majority of the shots while playing two positions.

This question is about Book’s three-point shooting. He needs to shoot fewer of them, not more. It has become a joke on this board that he can make seven of them. That is probably the worst prop bet in the history of prop bets.

I can use recency bias to show he went 1-5 against GSW but put up great numbers as a facilitator while not playing “Hero Book” outside the arc. There are only so many Chefs in the NBA.

OldAz: In many ways, I think we are starting to see (once again) the best version of Booker. He is being more assertive offensivel,y but also playing better than ever with his teammates. One of my main complaints in past years is that Book treats other stars like CP3 or KD like teammates, but younger players like role players that are beneath him.

Now it seems like he is choosing to trust both his teammates and the process more and drive the team’s offensive concepts. This and Jordon Ott’s offense has resulted in a surprising number of open 3s where the ball movement has resulted in Book left wide open for a rhythm catch and shoot 3. Making those helps get Book in rhythm, and we all know how he can get when his shot starts falling. I see him more this yea,r maintaining those hot streaks within the flow of the offense.

This obviously still has room to grow for him, as evidenced by the end of the recent loss, where he closed the game with 2 contested missed threes, where either one being a bucket (of any type) secures a Suns win. I am encouraged by his team play the rest of the gam,e so hopefully he will grow even more to trust the offense and work to get better shots even in crunch time in the future.

Rod: I don’t think Book can maintain that three-point percentage over the season, but I also think that part of it being so high now is that he’s getting shots off screens and set plays rather than having to create his own three-point looks. I credit Ott’s offense as much as Book for it being that high and believe that, while it should drop as the season goes on, it very well could also still stay high enough for this to be one of the best three-point shooting years of his career if everyone sticks to the plan.

Q2: Over the last 5 games (which includes 3 losses), the Suns’ defensive rating was 10th in the NBA, with an offensive rating of 19th and a net rating of 12th. Over the last 2 games, all three ratings were in the top 10. What are your thoughts on this?


Ashton: With Inside the Suns, we are dealing with questions that encompass a timeline that encompasses multiple games. Trust me, this was much easier in the summer when we were all twiddling our thumbs.

The win over the Spurs did the unthinkable. It breathed hope into our fan expectations of what the Sun’s team could be. But it turned out to be a cool wind against GSW on what looked like a Hot Sun’s team on Sunday. Granted, GSW is a pretty damn good team. Spurs should be. And Memphis is a hot mess.

No Ja Morant please.

So Rod is going to make me look up the stats. Ugg, I hate stats. That is why I tried to get AlanS to do them for me (he declined). I will take the cheap way out and let all of you run the charts.

As of today (11/05), the Suns rank 23rd in defensive efficiency. That is not good, no matter what spin you put on it.

OldAz: You can see it coming together, and the stretches of good offense and good defense are extending for longer periods. This includes some stellar stretches of defense against Utah and San Antonio, and it is clear Ott believes in active and aggressive defense. Even in the loss to the Warriors, where their experience allowed them to counter the Suns’ defensive switches, you saw the Suns continue to work hard on the defensive end.

I think the early ratings show the potential if they keep up this emphasis and grow together around this defensive energy. I continue to caution folks, however, that growth is rarely linear and we can expect some regression and stretches of struggle. They are still a young(ish) team and will get even younger as the rookies get their chances to play. As long as the effort and energy are there, we will need to be patient and anticipate good things in the future from a team truly focused on team defense.

Rod: Yeah, it’s a small sample size, but it shows me that this team is capable of playing top-10 defense on any given night if not for the entire season. At the very least, it tells me that the players are getting comfortable with Ott’s schemes, especially those on defense. While these numbers are good to see, they obviously don’t actually prove anythin,g although it is encouraging to see them get better in recent the more games.

Hopefully they can keep improving as the season goes on and prove these early, small sample size stats aren’t just a fluke.

Q3: Dillon Brooks is leading the team in FGAs (19.3) and 3-pt attempts (10.3) per game but 12th in FG percentage (37.3%) and 7th in 3-pt percentage (29.0%). What are your thoughts on this?


Ashton: That he actually plays?

Arizona has something called the “Lemon Law”. It is meant to protect buyers from purchasing bad motor vehicles. There is no cooling-off period, from what I read.

Right now, it seems like Houston sold the Suns a bad receipt of goods on the KD trade. Green is injured, and everybody is lying on his timeline. Brooks is injured, and it seems like everyone is lying on his timeline. Heck, KM needs minutes, and he parked in the back section of the dealership.

I would invoke the Lemon Law to describe this question. Ran great out of the lot but had to be towed back in later.

OldAz: Many are seeing the recent improvement of the team (offensively and defensively) and correlating it to Brooks being out of the lineup. Many go much further and claim there is causation here, but I think that is a mistake. I 100% chalk this up the the lack of time playing together in the early games. That first week or so, you could see the offense stagnate and everyone standing around looking at one another, not knowing what to do. Often the ball would end up in Brooks hands late in the clock, and he was stuck forcing up a shot.

Recently, the offense has flowed much better with all combinations on the floor, and I have no doubt Brooks (and Green) will fit into this just fine as they get back to playing. This is simply a product of familiarity and chemistry developing. Now, if Brooks returns and the recent ball movement starts to regress (on a consistent basis) and the ball sticks again with Brooks chucking up bad shots, then those claiming causation instead of correlation will have a lot more evidence and it will become hard to ignore. I don’t believe this will be the case, as Brooks has been a part of winning basketball before and has shown an ability to play his role well in multiple situations.

Rod: My main problem with it that he’s shot (and missed) way too many threes. Ott’s philosophy is take the shot whenever you’ve got a good look at the basket but I think other teams could possibly bait Brooks into taking threes until he starts making them at a good clip. If Brooks keeps firing them up even though he’s missing way too many, it’s certainly going to hurt the team and I think Ott would have to consider cutting some of Brooks’ minutes and/or bringing him off the bench instead of starting him.

With that said, I don’t think he was shooting so much out of ego or selfishness. In the three games he played in before his injury, the Suns fell way behind in the 1st half, and shooting – and making – threes was the quickest way to cut into that deficit. In the 1st game, he shot poorly from three, but the Suns still won. In the 2nd game, although the Suns lost, he actually made 50% of his threes (5-10), but then shot poorly from three again in the 3rd game. All in all, I think it’s still way too early to do more than maybe keep a cautious eye on his attempts and percentage once he returns.

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


Quotes of the Week​


“I think we’ve been playing really hard. I think we just need to play a little bit smarter sometimes with a lot of our fouls and giving teams free throws.” – Devin Booker

“It’s always a good time when the ball is popping around, everybody’s sharing it. It starts on the defensive end and getting out in transition and keeping the ball moving, keeping them in close outs, and still being aggressive to get up a lot of threes too.” – Devin Booker

“When you get a guy who has done so much in his NBA career to get out there, pick up full court, that shows. He doesn’t have to talk anything. That’s leadership.” – Jordan Ott on Devin Booker

“He’s been doing a great job of just setting the table, picking and choosing his spots when it’s time to score. He’s an elite player in the NBA, man. Doesn’t get much better than that.” – Collin Gillespie on Devin Booker

“The greatest way to enhance your confidence is to prepare and he’s put the work in.” – Jordan Ott on Ryan Dunn


Suns Trivia/History​

Players in NBA history thru their first 8 games of a season with:

30+ PPG
5+ APG
50+ FG%
40+ 3FG%

▪️ Devin Booker (this season)
▪️ Stephen Curry (twice)
▪️ Larry Bird (1984-85)
▪️ Michael Jordan (1992-93) pic.twitter.com/tJXdBs43vC

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 5, 2025

On November 7, 1992, the Suns celebrated their 30th Anniversary season by moving into the America West Arena, where they opened their season with a 111-105 win over the LA Clippers. Charles Barkley (acquired by trade after the end of the previous season) wowed the Phoenix home crowd with a near triple-double (37 points, 21 rebound,s and 8 assists) in his first regular season game as a Sun.

Devin Booker is the first Phoenix Sun to total 200+ points and 50+ assists in the first seven games of the season 👏 https://t.co/xkeLcK0mra pic.twitter.com/AS7eGloUss

— NBA.com/Stats (@nbastats) November 3, 2025

On November 10, 1990, the Suns routed the Denver Nuggets 173-143 to tie a record held by the 1959 Boston Celtics for the most points scored in a non-overtime game (the record still stands). The Suns had 107 points in the first half, breaking the mark of 90 set by the Nuggets three days earlier in a 161-153 loss to San Antonio. Suns Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons also picked up his 700th career coaching victory, becoming, at that time, only the seventh coach in the history of the league to reach that mark. The Suns also set a record for the most assists in a half with 33 and ended the game with 50 total assists. Cedrick Ceballos led the Suns in scoring with 32 points off the bench in just 23 minutes.

Our guys in a zombie apocalypse, who survives? 🧟 pic.twitter.com/4sZHnqULyZ

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 2, 2025

This Week’s Schedule​


Thursday, Nov 6 – Suns vs LA Clippers @ 7:00 PM (NBA TV)
Saturday, Nov 8 – Suns @ LA Clippers @ 8:30 PM (ESPN)
Monday, Nov 10 – Suns vs New Orleans @ 7:00 PM
Wednesday, Nov 12 – Suns @ Dallas @ 6:30 PM


Important Future Dates​


Nov. 7 – NBA G League Tip-Off Tournament begins
Jan. 5 – 10-day contracts may now be signed
Jan. 10 – All NBA contracts are guaranteed for the remainder of the season
Feb. 5 – Trade deadline (3:00 pm ET)
Feb. 13-15 – 2026 NBA All-Star weekend in Los Angeles, CA
March 1 – Playoff eligibility waiver deadline
March 28 – NBA G League Regular Season ends
March 31 – 2026 NBA G League Playoffs begin
April 12 – Regular season ends (All 30 teams play)
April 13 – Rosters set for NBA Playoffs 2026 (3 p.m. ET)
April 14-17 – SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament
April 18 – NBA Playoffs begin

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...n-brooks-offensive-and-defensive-team-ratings
 
Game Recap: Suns wake up in the second half and bury the Clippers, 115 – 102

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The Phoenix Suns continue to look comfortable at home with a victory over the Clippers on Thursday night, winning 115-102 behind a second half in which they outscored Los Angeles 67-51.

It was the debut of Jalen Green that took the Clippers by surprise, forcing them to make adjustments just to find any rhythm on offense heading into the second half. Jalen was electric, scoring 29 points in 23 minutes played and setting the record for most three-pointers made in a Suns’ debut with 6.

The Suns had their hands full with Ivica Zubac, who tallied 16 points and three offensive rebounds in the first half. His size and presence in the paint were too much to handle, keeping the Clippers within striking distance heading into halftime. But he ended with 23 and 11 as he was neutralized in the final two quarters.

The Suns, who trailed 51-48 at the half, woke up and took control of the game behind Jalen Green and Devin Booker, who combined for a total of 53 points on the night. Their energy flipped the tempo, pushing Phoenix back into command with a fast-paced attack and defensive pressure that shut down the Clippers completely.

Phoenix is now 4-5 on the season and have won 3 of their last 4 games.

Game Flow​

First Half​


Making up the first nine of the Suns’ 11 points to start the game, Booker and Green looked like a dynamic duo, hitting shots from both sides of the floor and attacking the rim. In Green’s first appearance as a Sun, the crowd buzzed with excitement, while Bradley Beal’s early touches were met with a chorus of boos.

Jalen Green's first points as a Phoenix Sun 🔥 pic.twitter.com/VzLtVF1y12

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 7, 2025

Without Harden and Leonard, the game remained competitive through the first six minutes, as Ivica Zubac dominated the paint and held a two-point lead over the Suns heading into the first timeout.

Leading the Clippers with 10 points to end the first quarter, Zubac continued to grab offensive boards and pound the Suns inside, specifically, Oso Ighodaro, who again found himself lost multiple times on defense. Trying to set screens and rolling into nonexistence space, Oso made a fun first quarter a little miserable.

The Suns found themselves on top of the Clippers 31-27 heading into the second quarter, behind Green’s eight points and Booker’s 11 points. Nearly a flawless quarter for both players.

Book club is in session 📚

Already 11 PTS in this first quarter for Uno. pic.twitter.com/9B6HkwB7aJ

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 7, 2025

The Suns opened the second quarter with a rough lineup featuring Nick Richards and Oso at the five and four. A string of low-IQ plays, turnovers, and poor shot selection quickly turned a solid start into a shaky 35-33 lead within the first three minutes of the quarter.

A slow, mucky game turned into a Clippers-style slugfest, as the Suns’ stagnant offense and mounting turnovers left them searching for a hot hand.

That was Green. Coming back into the game with about four minutes left till halftime, Green cleaned up real nice and hit some high-rising threes that landed the Suns back in front with a one-point lead with a minute left in the second quarter, until the Clippers snagged the lead back 51-48 at the break.

Second Half​


Opening the second half on fire, the Suns — led by Royce O’Neale — started rattling the rims and taking back control from the Clippers. Their energy around the perimeter, finding the best shooter and the right shot, put Phoenix in a prime position to grab its biggest lead of the game at 61–55.

Exploding to the rim and taking the game into his own hands, Jalen Green helped the Suns attack the free-throw line — something they’ve struggled with this season. Going 3-for-3 from deep, Green’s eight points in the third quarter fueled a 12-point lead as the Suns began turning defense into massive offense.

Jalen Green has done more in 2 minutes than Beal did for the Suns in 2 seasons 😂 pic.twitter.com/2JST5Er4ep

— Gabe Guerrero (@GabeGuerrero03) November 7, 2025

The Suns began to pull away by the end of the third quarter. After taking some time to find their rhythm with Jalen Green in the mix, his impact became undeniable, sparking the rest of the roster to step up and help push Phoenix ahead by 20.

After committing 11 turnovers in the first half, the Suns tightened up and gave the ball away only twice in the third quarter. That shift in control provided the momentum they needed to carry an 88–74 lead into the fourth.

Grayson beat the quarter buzzer with a couple seconds to spare 🚨 pic.twitter.com/WnNcWFhnXB

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) November 7, 2025

Fans were hyped, and the Suns were playing electric, blowing the Clippers out of the building and grabbing their fourth win of the season, 115-102.


Up Next​


It’s these same Clippers on Saturday night, this time at the Intuit Dome in Los Angeles.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ecap-highlights-home-victory-115-102-analysis
 
Bright Side Baller: The first glimpse of Jalen Green was worth the wait

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The anticipation rolling into Thursday night against the Clippers was real. Jalen Green was finally about to suit up, nine games into the season, and everyone wanted to see what it looked like. How would he fit in? How would the offense bend around him? What would it look like for Devin Booker to finally have another scorer who could take pressure off his shoulders?

The Clippers came in short-handed without Harden or Kawhi, which only added to the intrigue. It felt like we were stepping into something new, something worth watching unfold.

We’re still trying to figure out what this team actually is. They haven’t been whole yet, so every new piece gives us a clearer picture. The addition of Green pulled the curtain back a little more, and what we saw Thursday night was a team that feels alive. Fast. Aggressive. Raw in the right ways.

They played with a rhythm that made the crowd at the Mortgage Matchup Center buzz from tip-off. You could feel it. The noise swelled and rolled through the building, feeding the players, feeding the moment.

Green’s athleticism jumped off the screen, and the team fed off it like oxygen. His energy was contagious, his smile beaming like he’d been waiting his whole life for this stage. Ryan Dunn threw down dunks that rattled the floor, Grayson Allen hit corner threes that cracked the air open, and the offense started to hum. Booker didn’t need to put the team on his back and carry them.

All I have to say? Once again? That was a fun game to watch. To absorb. To experience. 4-5? I’ll take it. Because we still have yet to see this team whole. Yet we’re starting to feel complete.

Bright Side Baller Season Standings​


It wasn’t the greatest game for the Phoenix Suns against the Warriors on Tuesday night, but it was a season high for Devin Booker. And with 38 points, Booker solidified his third BSB of the year, tying him with Mark Williams for the team-high.

Bright-Side-Baller.png

Bright Side Baller Nominees​


Game 9 against the Clippers. Here are your nominees.

Jalen Green
29 points (10-of-20, 6-of-13 3PT, 3-of-5 FT), 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 2 turnovers, +30 +/-

Devin Booker
24 points (10-of-22, 3-of-7 3PT, 1-of-1 FT), 6 rebounds, 7 assists, 3 steals, 3 turnovers, +11 +/-

Grayson Allen
18 points (7-of-13, 4-of-9 3PT), 3 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 steals, 2 turnovers, +22 +/-

Royce O’Neale
17 points (6-of-11, 5-of-10 3PT), 4 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 turnover, +8 +/-

Mark Williams
13 points (4-of-8 FG, 5-of-6 FT), 10 rebounds, 2 steals, +18 +/-

Ryan Dunn
10 points (3-of-7, 1-of-3 3PT, 3-of-3 FT), 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 1 block, +12 +/-



Time to cast your vote and tell us why!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...booker-highlights-bright-side-baller-nominees
 
We saw Jalen Green at his best, now the question is how often

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When you’re watching a good basketball game, your heartbeat starts to climb. It’s part of the rush, part of the stress, part of why we watch in the first place. The game pulls you in, and before long, your pulse matches the pace on the floor.

On Thursday night in Phoenix, it raced right along with Jalen Green as he attacked the rim, showing flashes of everything fans hoped he could be. Next to Devin Booker, that vision finally felt real.

Then the game ends. The heart rate settles. Life goes back to normal. The next day, you think about what you saw. Jalen Green putting up 29 points, hitting 6-of-13 from deep, finishing with a +30 in only 23 minutes. It was the kind of performance that makes you believe in what could be.

Still, it’s on us to stay grounded. That’s what being a fan of this team means right now. It’s an exercise in balance, in managing expectations, in understanding growth for what it is. This season will test that patience, but it will also show us who this team can become.

So yeah, I was fired up yesterday, heart pounding through those Jalen Green highlights. I’m still feeling good today. But now comes the reset, the reminder of where we are and where this thing could actually go.

After that kind of performance, I decided to take a little trip through some Houston Rockets boards and social media threads. I wanted to see what their fans thought of it. Green spent four seasons there, 307 games in Rockets red, so their perspective means something.

Most of what I saw wasn’t surprise. It was pride. They were happy to see him shine in his debut here. Over and over, though, one theme kept popping up. It was never about whether Jalen Green had the talent. It was whether he could find consistency. That was always the challenge. That was always the opportunity.

Jalen never sucked. He was just inconsistent. He’ll have many more performances like this, but hopefully he’s more dependable. PHX can start to build something special if he is.

— GOWIE (@DaKidGowie) November 7, 2025
This isn’t surprising. He would have off the wall games with the Rockets, dude looked like an MVP on those nights, but then he’d score 6 on 2/17 shooting. Nobody ever doubted if he was elite, he just has no consistency.

— Hawthorne Hay (@HayHawthorne) November 7, 2025
Solid.. it's gonna be consistency from now on as usual for him

— ranoa (@zhaol1n) November 7, 2025

I did a little digging, combing through every game Jalen Green played in his four years with Houston. I charted his scoring totals, probably to a level no sane person should, and what I found backed up everything Rockets fans were saying. When you look at his game-by-game points, the pattern jumps out right away. It looks kind of like an EKG of your heartbeat during a Suns’ game.

The highs are electric. The lows come more often than you’d expect.

There are stretches where he’s dialed in, stretches where he fades, and the overall view is one of inconsistency. Sure, there are a million possible reasons behind that. Changing roles, playing through injuries, learning new systems. I get all that. But the numbers still tell a story. He’s scored 30 or more points 51 times in his career, but he’s also finished with 15 or fewer in 107 games. That’s 35% of the time.

J-Green-Career.png

I bring this up not as a critique, but as a reality check.

Jalen Green is wildly talented. He’s explosive, athletic, and he’s going to bring something this team badly needs. But there will be nights when the shot doesn’t fall. Nights when he forces an early look instead of letting the play develop. Nights when he drives into traffic instead of finding an open shooter on the wing. We saw flashes of that in his debut too.

That’s where the challenge lies. With consistency, both in scoring and in feel. How he reads the floor, how he fits within the system, how he balances aggression with patience. The hope is that the peaks start to level out the valleys.

That’s the story of potential, really. It’s never about what you can do once, it’s about what you can do again and again when the lights hit and the defense adjusts. Jalen Green showed us something Thursday night, something real and worth getting excited about. But what comes next will matter more than what came first.

If he can steady those swings, if he can turn flashes into habits, the Suns will have found the spark they’ve been chasing for years. Until then, we’ll ride the highs, brace for the lows, and keep that pulse steady. Because this might be the start of something that’s worth the wait.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...cy-analysis-highlights-vs-clippers-basketball
 
The tweaks and tendencies behind the Suns’ latest win over L.A.

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This November couldn’t have started much better: three wins in four games, team chemistry finally kicking in, a defense growing stronger by the day…and most importantly, a (mostly) healthy roster for this second matchup against the Clippers.

Let’s take a look at a few key plays from the game tonight at the Intuit Dome.


Offensive Breakdown​


The Suns keep finding creative ways to start games, like this after-dead-ball set: Booker and Green cross paths to force the switch, then Devin uses Williams’ screen to get to his sweet spot. Defender on his back, perfect rhythm. The sound of that net was just chef’s kiss.

On aime bien commencer les matchs avec des petits play sympas pic.twitter.com/Rl4rKBhLrK

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025

Booker finished the game 6-for-10 from midrange, but the Clippers did a solid job limiting his overall impact. His usage dropped to 27.9% and 28.8%, his only two games below 30% this season.



Then came a textbook transition. It starts with Booker reading the pass early. Not the toughest steal of his career, but enough to ignite the break. He pushes, slows down just a bit to read the floor, then swings it to Dunn. One extra pass to Green, who attacks and finds himself in a 2-on-1 with Williams against Zubac. Perfect read, perfect timing, easy dunk to finish it off.

Une belle contre attaque pour finir cette première mi-temps pic.twitter.com/8DgZZ5gv8j

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025

Simple basketball, executed with patience and trust, exactly the kind of transition game Phoenix was missing at the start of the season.



Next up, one of my favorite plays: the DHO (dribble hand-off). Same action again between Dunn and Gillespie. Collin moves fast, fakes out two defenders — four of five Clippers end up packed inside the paint — and he still has the clarity to find Allen wide open in the opposite corner. The skip pass? Picture perfect.

Gillespie my love — DHO + Skip pass pic.twitter.com/djGlSFqy2D

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025


And we wrap up the offensive side with some popcorn — nothing to break down, just a lob between Gillespie and Dunn to cap off their strong performances: 5 rebounds and 7 assists for Gillespie, 5 boards and 10 points for Dunn.

Du popcorn pour finir pic.twitter.com/s7ueScEOhg

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025

Defensive Breakdown​


Jalen Green’s defensive impact will go underrated, but plays like this show how much he brings. Even when he’s late or beaten, he keeps sprinting, keeps chasing, and ends up contesting the shot at the rim.

Green en traqueur pic.twitter.com/j9n07CxgRL

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025

He stays alert on the switch after the ghost screen, fights through traffic, recovers on the drive, and contests the layup. Honestly, what more could you ask for? The team defense as a whole was sharp too.

You can already see a clear improvement compared to the first matchup back in October — that time, the Clippers torched us for 140 points per 100 possessions and a 70% effective FG%. That was brutal, even if they were red-hot.

Last night, Phoenix held them to just 107.5 points per 100 and 50.6 eFG%. Sure, Harden and Kawhi weren’t playing, but it still raises the question: was this just opportunism, or the confirmation of a real positive trend that’s been building over the last 4-5 games?



Jalen’s energy is contagious, and this next clip is the proof. He never stops; stunting on the drive, recovering instantly, navigating screens, then flying out to contest the perimeter shot. That’s his whole identity in one possession: constant motion, loud impact, impossible to ignore.

L'énergie de Green Wow pic.twitter.com/LxAIUMjhOU

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025


Finally, this last defensive sequence sums up Jordan Ott’s defensive philosophy: controlled chaos. Aggressiveness, pressure, double-teams on the ball — the defense moves in perfect sync to force mistakes, and every closeout is timed just right.

Le chaos contrôlé pic.twitter.com/IO7bVeAho6

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) November 7, 2025

Gillespie and Oso blitz the pick-and-roll, Booker abandons his man to rotate and protect the paint, and Goodwin — with his insane defensive volume — covers nearly a third of the floor to contest a long-range shot off a skip pass.



This game perfectly captures the Suns’ identity right now: creative offense, patient transitions, clean execution — paired with a defense that’s intense, coordinated, and still a bit wild around the edges.

The team is starting to generate advantages from any situation. The relentless effort from guys like Jalen Green, Ryan Dunn, and Devin Booker reflects a clear philosophy built on aggressiveness, communication, and overload principles — keys to forcing turnovers and securing the most valuable possessions.



Phoenix finally seems to be finding its rhythm: a solid collective, individuals stepping up, and a defense beginning to leave its mark. We’re only nine games in, but this new identity is starting to take shape. Why not seal this third matchup against the Clippers and get back to .500?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...tch-jalen-green-devin-booker-defense-analysis
 
Jalen Green leaves game with appearant hamstring injury

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The Suns faced the Clippers for the second time in three nights, this time under the bright lights of Los Angeles. It was the first real chance to see the full roster in action, healthy for once. Mark Williams was fighting off an illness, Dillon Brooks was managing a core strain, but both suited up.

For nearly an entire quarter, things looked stable.

Jalen Green: Creating something out of nothing late in the shot clock pic.twitter.com/sRDqqsJZKH

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) November 9, 2025

Then Jalen Green drove hard to his right late in the first, attacking the paint before kicking the ball out to Ryan Dunn, who was wide open in the corner. The shot went up, but all eyes shifted to Green. He came up limping, the same right hamstring that had already cost him the first eight games of the season.

Jalen Green walking off the floor with an apparent reinjury of the hamstring pic.twitter.com/uoWmKQnf0a

— Aaron Bruski (@aaronbruski) November 9, 2025

His return on Thursday had been electric, a 29-point outburst in 23 minutes that reminded everyone of his potential.

But tonight, that spark faded fast. Green grabbed at the back of his leg, pain written all over his face as the trainers rushed in. He was helped off the floor at the Intuit Dome, wincing with every step.

Time will tell how bad the injury is, and when we’ll see him again. For a player who hadn’t missed a game in over two seasons, it looks like he’s headed right back to the sideline in Phoenix. Another sad chapter, written in all-too-familiar Suns fashion.

#%#%% ,,,,,,,,,Tough sight watching Jalen Green limp off.

— Eddie A Johnson (@Jumpshot8) November 9, 2025

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...lippers-full-roster-health-status-intuit-dome
 
SBN Reacts: Fans think the most surprising Sun has been this maestro

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The Phoenix Suns still have not played a full game yet with their full roster healthy, meaning that players have played in roles’ they may not have expected to, or had an uptick in minutes. No one has taken advantage of the Suns’ not being whole more than Collin Gillespie and as a result, Suns fans have been most surprised with him to start the year.

Phoenix_1_110625.png

I’m not surprised by both Gillespie’s strong start to the season, or Suns fans voting him first by a strong margin. After helping the Suns comeback from 19-down in the fourth quarter against the Clippers late last season, he started a few contests down the stretch at point guard, and carried his strong end to last season over to the start of this one. He’s leading the team in bench scoring, averaging the second most assists and shooting 38% from three on 7 attempts a game.

Gillespie’s minutes stayed the same in Jalen Green’s first game back against the Los Angeles Clippers Thursday and in Dillon Brooks’ return on Saturday. With the point guard struggles the Valley has had since Chris Paul left town after the 2022-2023 campaign, it doesn’t shock me Suns fans are surprised to see strong production coming from the position from someone outside of Devin Booker.

Gillespie has spent time playing alongside Booker and the rest of the starters. Late in games, his floor spacing and ball handling have given the rest of the team more space and allow Booker to not have to defend the other team’s top perimeter player.

Looking at the rest of the voting, I wasn’t surprised that both Mark Williams and Royce O’Neale got the second and third most votes. Despite still being on a minutes restriction, Williams has been a strong defensive anchor for the Valley, and is looking more and more comfortable on his new team and system as the games go by.

For O’Neale, he’s averaging career highs in minutes, points and three-point percentage all at the age of 32. To start the year, he came off the bench behind Ryan Dunn, but started over him in the team’s last game and in the second half last night after Green re-injured his hamstring. His shooting has helped space the floor for Booker, which in turn, has helped Williams have more space to operate down low.

O’Neale and Grayson Allen are one of the NBA’s top duo’s in three-pointers made roughly 10% of the way through the season. Expect O’Neale to continue to start alongside Allen, if Green misses time after re-injuring his hamstring.

The Suns’ odds to reach the playoffs remain long according to FanDuel Sports Book, but with all the rotational inconsistency the Suns have had to deal with, the Valley has had some surprising players step up so far.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...the-most-surprising-sun-has-been-this-maestro
 
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