Injury Update: Mark Williams being questionable is new territory for Phoenix

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The Phoenix Suns will face the New Orleans Pelicans for the second straight night this evening, marking their fifth back-to-back of the season. In every previous back-to-back, the team has chosen to sit center Mark Williams. He has a long injury history, and the Suns are doing everything they can to limit fatigue that could turn into something lingering.

Mark Williams is listed as QUESTIONABLE tonight against the Pelicans

The Suns are 1-3 on the second night of back-to-backs, all of which are games in which they have opted to rest Williams

W vs IND
L vs HOU, DEN (x2) pic.twitter.com/KY7nnnFWgW

— Bright Side of the Sun (@BrightSideSun) December 27, 2025

After putting up 24 points and 13 rebounds last night and serving as a primary force in the win over the Pelicans, the team has not committed to playing Mark Williams tonight. But they haven’t ruled him out either.

Williams had several family members in attendance for last night’s game, and according to him, they will be back in the building again this evening.

“It’s cool for them to be here,” Williams said after last night’s game. “They’ll be at the game (Saturday) too.”

If he plays, it will mark his first back-to-back appearance of the year. This is the first time all season the team has listed him as questionable on the second night of a back-to-back, as the team typically lists him as ‘out’ with an injury management designation.

Williams was a key piece in last night’s win, and the Pelicans had no answer for him on the interior. He scored 24 points and had 11 rebounds in the Suns’ 115-108 victory. For all the hype around Dereck Queen, he could not handle the aggression, the motor, or the approach Williams brought to the floor.

This feels like a signal. It suggests the Suns are growing more comfortable with where he is physically, balancing stamina and fatigue as it relates to his injury history. Or this is good usage of the injury report, forcing the Pelicans to prepare for Williams’ presence, even if he doesn’t play.

We will ultimately see whether he plays or if he plays in a limited capacity tonight. Phoenix runs it back against New Orleans tonight at 5 PM Arizona time.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ack-to-back-rest-pelicans-workload-management
 
Game Recap: Suns show they can beat you more than one way in 123-114 win over Pelicans

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Playing the same team on consecutive nights is never simple. Tendencies surface. Adjustments follow. As the Phoenix Suns faced the New Orleans Pelicans on the road for the second straight night, they showed an important trait. They can win the same matchup in different ways. Friday night was about rebounding and paint pressure. Saturday belonged to the three-ball.

The Suns fly out of the Big Easy with two wins in two nights after their 123-114 victory.

Mark Williams played his first second night of a back-to-back this season and made his presence felt. He finished with 10 points and eight rebounds off the bench before his night ended early after an altercation with Jose Alvarado. Both players were ejected for fighting in the third quarter.

Phoenix buried 20 three-pointers, tying its season high, and used that shooting to put the Pelicans away. It was a true committee effort. Seven players scored in double figures, led by 20 points from Devin Booker.

The Suns now sit at 18-13 on the season, still comfortably seventh in the Western Conference. They move to 2-4 on the second night of back-to-backs.

Game Flow

First Half


Ryan Dunn was ruled out for the game, but Mark Williams was available. He did not start, but for the first time this season, he was active on the second night of a back-to-back and able to play.

Mark Williams in IN tonight against the Pelicans, playing in his first back to back with the Suns

Ryan Dunn will be OUT pic.twitter.com/FxutwyS40j

— Bright Side of the Sun (@BrightSideSun) December 27, 2025

It was a rough shooting start for the Suns, opening the night 4-of-12 from the field. Still, they grabbed an early 11–9 lead by creating extra chances, scoring seven second-chance points off three offensive rebounds.

Trey Murphy came out hot for New Orleans, knocking down his first three triples and scoring 9 of the Pelicans’ first 18 points. Isaiah Livers returned after missing 11 games, and his first involvement was a rough one: an inbound steal by Jose Alvarado followed by a foul that sent Murphy to the line. He hit both free throws to tie it at 25-25 with 3:07 left in the first.

Zion Williamson came off the bench again and provided instant offense, scoring eight quick points, all at the rim. Murphy led all scorers with 11 in the quarter. Dillon Brooks was the tip of the spear for Phoenix, going 4-of-7 from the field for 10 points. The Suns shot 36% from the floor, the Pelicans shot 52%, and ten offensive rebounds led to 16 second-chance points that kept Phoenix close.

Second-chance production has been the Suns’ lifeline early: 16 points generated off 10 offensive rebounds in the first

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) December 28, 2025

After one, Pelicans 33, Suns 32.

It was nice to see Rasheer Fleming knock down a three to open the second quarter. With Ryan Dunn out, he picked up extra minutes, and after going cold last night, seeing one drop felt good. That shot helped spark an 8–3 run to start the quarter for Phoenix.

Collin Gillespie had the shooter’s touch early. He buried his first four three point attempts, with three of them coming in the opening four minutes of the second. The confidence was obvious, and it gave the Suns some much-needed juice.

COLLIN FROM THE PARKING LOT 👌

Up to 15 PTS in the first half! pic.twitter.com/eMZjXWE4TW

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) December 28, 2025

The shooting came alive for Phoenix in the second quarter, and the defensive pressure picked up with it. Pelicans head coach James Borrego picked up a technical after a play where Dillon Brooks bumped Trey Murphy on the way to a shot. Murphy did not get the call, and Borrego made sure the officials heard about it. Devin Booker missed the technical free throw for those keeping notes at home.

The whistle that hurt Phoenix last night, especially in the third quarter, but it tilted their way a bit in the second. New Orleans was called for five personal fouls. Phoenix had four. For the half, the Suns attempted 9 free throws. The Pelicans attempted 10. Even when it feels like you are getting help, the margin is thin.

Saddiq Bey drove baseline with Booker defending and Book was whistled for a foul. Jordan Ott challenged the call with 2:18 left in the second and Phoenix trailing 45 to 41. The challenge was unsuccessful.

Phoenix outscored New Orleans 33-22 in the quarter, shooting 54% from the field and 6-of-10 from three. The Pelicans shot 32% overall and 1-of-6 from deep. Collin Gillespie led the way, knocking down four threes in the quarter and scoring 12 points in the period. He led all scorers at halftime with 15.

Mark Williams gave Phoenix a huge lift off the bench, finishing the half with 10 points and 7 rebounds, all of them on the offensive glass.

At the break, the Suns held a 65–55 lead.

Mark Williams has 7 rebounds in 10 minutes.

ALL of them are offensive rebounds. pic.twitter.com/KafNOmF1bz

— Espo  (@Espo) December 28, 2025

Second Half


The second half opened with exactly what you want to see. Oso Ighodaro jumped a passing lane, stripped Derik Queen, kicked it ahead to Devin Booker, and Book buried a transition three above the break. More of that. Please.

Booker, who had three fouls in the first half, quickly picked up his fourth foul, and that seemed to flip a switch for Queen. The rookie found some confidence and became more of a focal point for New Orleans on the offensive end. Phoenix also got a little loose with the ball, coughing it up three times in the first three minutes. That sloppiness opened the door. The Pelicans went on a 14-8 run in the opening four minutes and trimmed the Suns’ lead down to four, and Queen had 10 of them.

DQ is THAT guy pic.twitter.com/cjGN14fJ94

— New Orleans Pelicans (@PelicansNBA) December 28, 2025

As the quarter wore on, the Pelicans’ offense settled into its familiar routine. Give the ball to Zion and let him try to bulldoze his way into the paint.

With 2:06 left in the third and the Suns holding an 87-83 lead, things boiled over. Jose Alvarado started pushing and shoving Mark Williams. It escalated quickly. Jersey grabs. Wild swings. Williams threw a couple of defensive swats to get Alvarado off of him. Officials stepped in, and both players were ejected for fighting.

It almost felt intentional on Alvarado’s part. Williams had been a real problem for New Orleans, and suddenly, there was a scuffle that guaranteed a double ejection. Alvarado knew it too. Once it was over, he sprinted straight down the tunnel, fully aware of how that was ending.

Jose Alvarado knew exactly what he was doing. He wasn’t trying to win a fight. He was trying to win an ejection. Took his shot at Mark Williams and hoped the refs did the rest https://t.co/C2WSOzpBbb

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) December 28, 2025

It was a clunky third quarter. The Suns turned it over 6 times, and those mistakes turned into 9 points for New Orleans. If not for the three-point shooting, Phoenix might have let the game slip right there along with the ball. The Suns went 5-of-11 from deep in the quarter, which kept things steady.

New Orleans edged the period 30-28, but Phoenix still walked into the fourth with an eight-point cushion, up 93-85.

The non-Booker minutes were always going to matter to open the fourth, and they ended up being a wash. Both teams went 10 to 10 with Devin Booker on the bench, which kept everything steady.

Rasheer Fleming delivered an absolute gem on the defensive end, skying for a block on fellow rookie Jeremiah Fears. It was clean. All ball. Unfortunately, the officials saw it differently and sent Fears to the line. Still, clip it and save it. Fleming is an outstanding athlete, and moments like that keep showing up.

Rasheer Fleming with the CLEANEST block you've ever seen, and the refs called it a foul 🙄 pic.twitter.com/YPFEXED11x

— PHNX Suns (@PHNX_Suns) December 28, 2025

After the scuffle in the third quarter, the officials were clearly on high alert for anything extra. Nick Richards ended up with a technical foul, and I am still not entirely sure what prompted it. One of those moments where the whistle felt ready before the action even arrived.

Where would the Suns be without Jamaree Bouyea? He poured in 10 points in the fourth quarter. But the Pelicans refused to go quietly, and Trey Murphy kept punishing Phoenix from deep. With 4:30 left in the fourth, he drilled a huge three that trimmed the Suns’ lead down to three and cranked the tension back up.

With under five minutes to go, the margin sat inside five points, which meant we were officially in clutch time. Phoenix came into the night with the third-highest offensive rating in those moments, and it showed. Devin Booker delivered five massive points inside the three-minute mark, and the defense followed suit. The Suns stretched the lead to 7 with two minutes left. Then Dillon Brooks buried a huge 16-footer to make it 9, and at that point, it finally felt like the game was tilting their way for good.

Suns win 123-114.


Up Next


The road trip continues on Monday as the Suns head to the nation’s capital to take on the Wizards.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...hree-point-shooting-adjustments-mark-williams
 
Mark Williams suspended one game for altercation with Jose Alvarado

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The Phoenix Suns will be without their starting center in Monday night’s game against the Washington Wizards.

Center Mark Williams has been suspended one game for the altercation that took place in New Orleans on Saturday night. Jose Alvarado (the initiator) is suspended for two games. They were each ejected from the game following the heated exchange of elbows and fists.

The NBA is suspending New Orleans Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado for two games and Phoenix Suns center Mark Williams for one game after their fight Saturday night, sources tell ESPN.

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) December 29, 2025

Williams was essentially defending himself from Alvarado and didn’t initiate any swings until he was swung at. There was some light shoving back and forth prior, but it was ultimately escalated by Alvarado, which is why he received two games.

It’s no surprise that Jose Alvarado was part of the scuffle, as his history with Phoenix has been filled with some heated moments in plenty of losses.

Looking back at this, it looks more like Williams was trying to block the punches thrown by Alvarado rather than engage in an all-out brawl. What is he supposed to do, just sit there and allow someone to swing at him?

Shams: Jose Alvarado suspended 2 games, Mark Williams suspended 1 game for fighting.pic.twitter.com/F5QPqQhQl9

— Underdog NBA (@UnderdogNBA) December 29, 2025

The Williams suspension feels like the NBA trying to make a statement that they won’t put up with any form of fighting, removing context from the situation at hand. New Orleans did not miss Alvarado after he was ejected, and Phoenix sure did miss Williams. That was likely in part of why he started the whole thing.

Either way, these types of interactions are far more likely to occur when you get the same opponent in back-to-back nights.

Expect Oso Ighodaro to start in place of Mark Williams for the game against Washington.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...d-one-game-for-altercation-with-jose-alvarado
 
Devin Booker finishes 15th in first batch of NBA All-Star fan vote

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The first batch of the NBA’s 2025-26 All-Star fan vote came in today.

Devin Booker is 15th in the first All-Star fan voting returns. He is behind Jamal Murray, Anthony Davis, and James Harden, among others.

Lakers' Luka Doncic and Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo lead the NBA's first 2025-26 All-Star fan voting returns: pic.twitter.com/no0xNHMuXD

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) December 29, 2025

Booker is the only Sun to appear on this top-20 list. He is looking to make his fifth All-Star appearance in his 11th NBA season.

Suns fans who want to make a difference: Tomorrow (Tuesday, Dec. 30) marks a “3-for-1 Day,” where each fan vote will count three times. The next fan voting update will be shared next Tuesday, January 6th.

Fan voting represents 50% of the vote to determine the five players from each conference to be honored as starters for the 2026 NBA All-Star Game, with current NBA players and a media panel accounting for 25% each.

This year, All-Stars are being selected without regard to position.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-15th-in-first-batch-of-nba-all-star-fan-vote
 
Game Recap: Balanced effort propels Suns to 115-101 victory over the Wizards

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WASHINGTON — The Phoenix Suns defeated the Washington Wizards 115-101 to extend their win streak to four and improve their record 19-13 for the season. It was a balanced effort for the Suns, while Dillon Brooks led them in scoring, five players scored in double-digits tonight as the team pulled away from the scrappy Washington team in the third quarter. Brooks, Colin Gillespie and Devin Booker all had at least 20.

Phoenix remains undefeated on their road trip with one game left on it. After a slow start to the month, the Suns have won five of their last six and are on their longest winning streak since mid-November when they won five straight games.

The team has taken advantage of their easiest opponents this season. For teams currently not in the playoff or the play-in, Phoenix is now 12-2 and haven’t lost to this type of opponent since October.

Washington cut the lead down to double digits for a large part of the fourth, but thanks to strong defense and Dillon Brooks; shooting, Phoenix held on.

Game Flow​

First Half​


The two teams exchanged buckets for the first half of the first quarter. Neither team was able to create any sort of lead. The first lead of more than one possession came with 5:58 left in the first.

With the Suns injuries and suspensions, Rasheer Fleming and Nick Richards entered the game in the first quarter which is when the Wizards started to get it going. Washington went on an 8-0 run to take the largest lead of the game, but thanks to Collin Gillespie and Jamaree Bouya, Phoenix weathered the storm.

At the end of the first quarter, the Suns trailed Washington 23-22. The two teams shot a combined 17/51 from the field.

The start of the second was more back and forth from both teams. Collin Gillespie multi-level scoring matched Wizards rookie Tre Johnson’s hot shooting.

As the Suns were starting to retake the lead, after a strong layup inside, Dillon Brooks picked his 11th technical foul. Brooks is now 5 techs away from from getting a one-game suspension.

At the end of the second Phoenix started to build a but of a lead. Thanks to some triples from Jordan Goodwin and Royce O’Neale.

Second Half​


The Wizards young core really showed themselves at the beginning of the second. Tre Johnson hit a deep three and Alex Sarr was running the offense, but the Suns started to build a lead thanks to Collin Gillespie and Royce O’Neale’s shooting. Phoenix built a 15-point lead with 5:31 left in the third.

The team had a balanced scoring effort, and it was reflected in the box score: four of five starters scored in double figures by the end of the third and Jordan Goodwin had double figures off the bench. Phoenix kept their lead around 8-12 points throughout the rest of the third, leading to a 87-79 lead heading into the fourth.

After the Suns went up 13, Washington stormed back to go on a 7-0 run leading to a Jordan Ott timeout. After the timeout, the Suns took control of the game and eventually got their lead back to double digits to help them close out the game with ease.


Up Next​


Phoenix will head to Cleveland to face the Cavaliers for their final game of 2025 and the last game of their four-game road trip.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...pels-suns-to-115-101-victory-over-the-wizards
 
Suns Schedule Watch: The fight for a playoff spot

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We are 32 games deep in the 2025-26 season. There are just 50 of these things left… where has the time gone?!

Jordan Ott has done wonders with this team, leading them to six games over .500 despite several injuries to key players sprinkled in throughout the year.

Phoenix is currently sitting in the 7th seed out West with a record of 19-13. They are just 1.5 games back of the 6th-seeded Minnesota Timberwolves, and 2.0 games back from the Lakers and Rockets. They’re hanging around.

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And now, with Nikola Jokic set to miss a month, the depleted Nuggets could be a team to watch free-fall over the next 10-15 games. Phoenix is only 3 games back from them.

December was a strange scheduling month, sandwiched between the NBA Cup and the holiday season, which threw things out of whack. The Suns survived a brutal stretch without as much damage as many anticipated, especially without Jalen Green and Devin Booker for part of that stretch.

Next 5 Games:


The next step for the Suns to take is to play themselves out of the play-in bracket and into the top 6 to secure a playoff spot without the stress of a play-in game (or two). It doesn’t get much easier, but the key is to take it one game at a time, as they’ve done all year.

  • @ Cleveland Cavaliers
  • vs. Sacramento Kings
  • vs. Oklahoma City Thunder
  • *@ Houston Rockets
  • @ Memphis Grizzlies

This is a brutal 5-game stretch here. Cleveland is a tough road test to kick things off. Then, you factor in the back-to-back against the Thunder and Rockets, and things could get messy if you drop tomorrow’s game. The Kings and Grizzlies games are ones you have to take if you can’t pull off any upsets. 2-3 is acceptable, though 3-2 would be preferred.

Could we see the Suns rest Mark Williams for the first game against OKC so he’s available for the Houston one?

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The Next 5 Games After That​

  • vs. New York Knicks
  • vs. Washington Wizards
  • @ Miami Heat
  • @ Detroit Pistons
  • @ New York Knicks

A whole bunch of East Coast teams here, and it continues long after, with 12(!) straight games from January 9th to January 30th all coming against teams from the “other” conference. They have some more tough tests here, especially that 3-game road trip against playoff teams in Miami, Detroit, and New York.

If they come out of this 10-game stretch 5-5 or better, that’s a win in my book. Not to say that they can’t do better, but staying afloat despite tough stretches is the name of the game to set themselves up for a big run in February/March.

Jalen Green’s status is something every Suns fan will be monitoring closely as well. If they can get him back halfway through this stretch, that’s a morale boost that could lift them higher. His return will require a bit of a learning curve with how to make him work in their system, as it does for any player returning from an injury for an extended stretch. I’m not overly concerned on that front.

This 10-game stretch won’t make or break the season, but it’s filled with another set of tests for the fun Suns team.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-schedule-watch-the-fight-for-a-playoff-spot
 
Jalen Green’s praising of Collin Gillespie came with a $25,000 fine

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The NBA announced that Jalen Green was fined $25k after using profanity in the team’s on-court live television interview after the Suns’ win over the Washington Wizards Monday.

Injured Phoenix Suns guard Jalen Green fined $25K "for using profanity when interrupting a teammate’s live television interview" after 115-101 win Dec. 29 at Washington. #Suns pic.twitter.com/8Wtn00fMx4

— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) December 30, 2025

Green, out since November 8th with a right hamstring strain, interrupted Collin Gillepsie’s postgame interview with Suns sideline reporter Amanda Pflugrad to show his teammate love after he had his second-highest scoring game of his career and knocked down 25 points to lead Phoenix to a 115-101 win over the Washington Wizards for their fourth-straight win.

Jalen Green fined $25K for using profanity when interrupting a live television interview.pic.twitter.com/bwqLDTkMwA

— Underdog NBA (@UnderdogNBA) December 30, 2025

While his words may have cost Green some change, many people enjoyed the postgame interview and the camaraderie that the team displayed during it. During the interview, Dillon Brooks also interrupted Gillespie’s interview to call him “Mr. Consistent.” Phoenix has won four-straight and their 19-13 start has surprised many fans and pundits.

The vibes have quite literally never been better pic.twitter.com/nAIrWasL7w

— Erik Ruby (@ErikRuby) December 30, 2025
THIS TEAM 😂 pic.twitter.com/InGKXkSYvj

— Cage (@ridiculouscage) December 30, 2025

While Green will remain out for the team’s matchup against the Cleveland Cavaliers, he’s expected to re-evaluated early in January and could make his return to the court in the next month, but he’ll be doing it with $25,000 less in his bank account.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ng-of-collin-gillespie-came-with-a-25000-fine
 
Is Dillon Brooks on his way to the best season of his career?

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Arriving this summer with the heavy task of replacing Kevin Durant, the Canadian — long criticized around the NBA for his style and his loud mouth — is somehow nailing the assignment. Sure, it’s less lethal and less flashy than the Slim Reaper, but his impact on the game, the locker room, and the team’s culture is undeniable. I said it, I hoped for it: that he would take a step forward.

And after 32 games, 26 of which he has played in, we can safely say we’re watching the best version of Dillon Brooks we’ve ever seen.


What do the statistical trends show?


In an offensive role with far more responsibility, Dillon Brooks is posting a career‑high Usage Rate at 27.2%, a +10% jump compared to his last two seasons in Houston. And he’s having his biggest volume season ever: over 17 field‑goal attempts per game, including 7.2 from three.

Typically, when usage increases, efficiency decreases. But for Dillon, that’s…not really the case. Well, not entirely. His overall efficiency has reached a new peak with 57 TS% and 97 TS+. It’s below league average, but for a guy taking 15+ shots a night, that’s honestly not bad.

Dillon Brooks 25‑26 🔥

• 27.2% usage (career high)
• 17 FGA per game
• 7.2 threes attempted
• 57 TS% / 97 TS+ (ch)
• 55% on 2s (ch)
• 50% midrange (90th pct)
• 73% at the rim… but only 15% frequency
• 13 games with +20pts

The best version of himself.

— P🌵☀️| #WorldBFree (@PanoTheCreator) December 29, 2025

Where he’s really exploded is inside the arc: 55% on two‑pointers this season compared to 49% for his career. Free throws and threes follow the classic rule — more shots, less efficiency — but again, nothing catastrophic. The paradox is that he’s actually better on “bad shots”: 46% midrange frequency for 50% accuracy (90th and 78th percentile in the NBA). Meanwhile, he’s finishing at 73% in the restricted area…but only goes there 15% of the time.

So what’s causing these changes?


First, his new role.

He’s no longer a secondary option or a guy waiting in the corner or at 45°. He’s a primary ball‑handler, right next to Devin Booker. I’m not teaching you anything here: Dillon Brooks is our second offensive option this season. You may applaud this analysis: more usage means more shots. Very good Pano.

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Then, there’s the guy who left, the greatest midrange shooter in NBA history. Kevin Durant in Phoenix was taking 55% of his shots from midrange and hitting 52% of them. And on top of that, our offensive style has radically changed: less isolation, less static sets, less star‑system basketball. More ball movement, more motion offense, more good‑quality threes, and a better rim frequency, something we had lost since Ayton left.

Put all of that together, and Dillon ends up inheriting the spots KD left behind. And it’s not just a visual impression or a narrative bias: the Suns’ 2025‑26 season confirms this exact redistribution of responsibilities.

With Durant gone, Phoenix lost its midrange metronome, the guy who could create a clean shot at any moment. And even though the offense has modernized with more movement, more drive‑and‑kick, more spacing, the system still naturally produces possessions where someone has to punish the defense in the in‑between areas. Those shots don’t disappear. They just change hands. And the hand taking them now belongs to Dillon Brooks.

In short, Brooks didn’t replace Durant’s talent, but he replaced his function. And in the Suns’ 25‑26 offensive context, that’s exactly what the team needed.


And defensively, where does Dillon Brooks stand?


If his offense surprises, his defense reassures. And more than that: it structures the team.

Since he arrived, Phoenix has regained something it hadn’t really had since Mikal Bridges: a wing who takes the opponent’s best perimeter player every single night without ever backing down.

His “matchup difficulty” and “defensive positional versatility” scores say it all: 99th and 97th percentile this season. Behind the provocative persona hides one of the most versatile defenders in the league, with a defensive task list as long as a Christmas Eve grocery list.

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Looking at his 25 main matchups this season (based on possessions defended), Dillon Brooks has battled stars like LeBron James, Trey Murphy, Anthony Edwards, James Harden, SGA, and even Amen Thompson; players with wildly different profiles and roles. It highlights his defensive versatility and his reputation as a guy who refuses no challenge, whether it’s a slasher, a creator, or the MVP of the league.

What stands out the most isn’t just his individual level — which is no longer up for debate — but the contagious effect he has on the group. The Suns defend harder, longer, and more collectively. Rotations are sharper, closeouts more aggressive, communication louder. Brooks is a constant reminder that this team wants to win through effort, discipline, and physicality.



Dillon Brooks isn’t just having the best season of his career. He’s having the season that redefines who he is, and who the Suns want to be. At almost 30 years old, players don’t “progress” in the traditional sense anymore. The evolution comes from details, from role changes, from decision‑making. And Dillon Brooks chose to put himself at the service of the collective.

Because what represents him best isn’t his game, his trash‑talk, or even his defense — it’s his ability to change the culture of a team.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ason-kevin-durant-replacement-defense-culture
 
Nice recap on the Wizards game. Good to see the balanced scoring effort paying off - that's been one of the more encouraging aspects of this Suns team compared to previous years. Five guys in double figures is exactly what you need when facing tougher opponents down the stretch.

The Dillon Brooks analysis is interesting. I'll admit I was skeptical when he came over, but the numbers don't lie. That defensive versatility chart is pretty telling - guarding everyone from LeBron to SGA to slashers like Amen Thompson is no small task. The midrange efficiency filling that KD void makes sense too, even if it's not quite the same level of shot creation.

That upcoming schedule is rough though. Cleveland tonight, then OKC and Houston on a back-to-back? That's a gauntlet. The Cavs have been rolling all season and playing them on the road to close out the year is no easy task.

The Jalen Green fine is hilarious honestly. $25k for hyping up your teammate on live TV. The league is so weird about this stuff. At least it shows the chemistry is there - that postgame interview with Brooks calling Gillespie "Mr. Consistent" was genuinely fun to watch. Team seems to actually like each other which hasn't always been the case with Suns rosters.

Hoping they can steal one in Cleveland tonight but I'd be happy if they just keep it competitive. 2-3 through this next five game stretch would be solid given the competition.
 
12 potential power forward trades for the Suns

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The Suns are far enough into the season that we can see how the roster is shaking out, where the team is doing well, and where it is doing poorly.

Now that Collin Gillespie has proven himself to be a starting-caliber point guard, the need at that position has diminished. However, the new position of greatest need is at the power forward position. Journeyman Isaiah Livers is the best option available; everyone else is a small forward playing out of position, and it shows. You can see this in his net plus/minus per 48 differential, where he leads the team among players with more than 2 games played.

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One thing to note is that, right now, Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale are about as valuable as they’re going to get, with both putting up career-year level numbers. The time to sell is now, while looking for guys to “buy low”.

I’ll separate the trades into categories from minor to major upgrade, analyze the pros and cons for each team, describe what the Suns would likely have to give up, and how plausible the trade is overall. Keep in mind that, given how bad the situation at power forward is, every one of these would likely be an upgrade. At the very least, they’d provide depth if Livers gets hurt again. I took into consideration team needs: defense, size, age, and three-point shooting in particular (i.e., are they “aligned” with the current team vision).

Rummaging the Bargain Bin

Kyle Anderson (UTA, 6’8”, 230 lbs, 32 YO)


Anderson was never fast, but at 32, he’s not getting any faster. That said, he’s a heady player with a feel for the game who has traditionally played solid defense based on his high basketball IQ and effort, which sounds like a Jordan Ott kind of guy. He’s glued to the end of Utah’s bench, and his $19 million in salary over the next 2 years means his asking price is low. The problem for the Suns is that the only player who matches salary is Royce O’Neale, who at least provides spacing.

Utah would agree to the trade, but it’s less likely the Suns would do so.

Kevon Looney (NOP, 6’9”, 222 lbs, 29 YO)


Looney is something of a PF-C. He plays solid defense, rebounds very well, and doesn’t do much else. He too is stuck collecting DNP-CDs in New Orleans. He would be at least a lateral move from Livers. One big plus is that he was a starter on some very good Golden State teams. He has two years at 8 million with a team option on the last year. Again, Royce O’Neale would be the most likely option, though Nick Richards and Nigel Hayes-Davis would also work. His primary value to New Orleans is as an expiring contract, so I suspect either option is plausible.

Guerschon Yabusele (NYK, 6’7”, 265 lbs, 30 YO)

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Guerschon Yabusele had a breakout year with Philadelphia last year (11 ppg, 5.6 rpg, in 27 mpg on 50-38-72 shooting splits). He has a throwback body to the late 90s, reminiscent of Robert “Tractor” Traylor. This year, he’s stuck to the end of the Knicks bench and reportedly hating life while the unforgiving Knicks fans heap abuse on him, as he still tries to be a good teammate.

This looks like a classic “needs a change of scenery” scenario.

The downside to his game is that he’s painfully slow of foot, has little vertical leap, and his defense is lacking as a result; it’s something less than an ideal fit, and these issues are similar to the ones Hayes-Davis has on the team already. Given that he has ~10.5 million on two years remaining on his salary, the Knicks would likely say yes to a deal for Richard’s expiring contract. Still, this might be the best option for a low-risk, high-reward flyer on a player.

Ousmane Dieng (OKC, 6’9”, 185 lbs, 22 YO)


The Thunder are reportedly shopping the former 11th pick in the 2022 draft. He has not shown the development necessary on a stacked championship-caliber team.

However, one area for hope is that his three-point percentage has risen every year in the league, and he’s shown flashes on defense as a skinny power forward who can rotate on the perimeter. He’s due $6.6 million contract this year and has a $9 million qualifying offer for next year. The asking price would be Richards’ expiring contract plus a second-round pick. However, the Suns probably remember the disastrous Darius Bazley (who is out of the league now) trade, which looks an awful lot like this as well.

This looks like a very doable trade, but if Dieng fails to produce, the Suns can move on and renounce his QO.

Mid-Level Guys

Robert Williams III (POR, 6’9”, 249 lbs, 28 YO)


Williams was a crucial piece of the Celtics team that made the NBA Finals in 2022. He’s a power forward/center who played elite defense for the Celtics and can clean the glass at both ends. And…that’s about all he does.

It’s unclear if he would fit with the Suns, given his lack of offense and his focus on being more of a center than a power forward. Still, he would address some of the team’s biggest needs, and his asking price is probably Grayson Allen. Williams is on a $13 million expiring contract, while playing 16 mpg in 21 games (out of 33) for a Portland team that’s going nowhere fast.

In terms of plausibility, I don’t think either team would hang up on the other if a discussion were started.

Jarred Yabusele (LAL, 6’8”, 214 lbs, 26 YO)


Laker’s coach JJ Reddick is unhappy with his team, and he’s saying so publicly. The Lakers’ record is good enough for 5th in the Western Conference, but that’s deceiving. Their -0.4 point differential says they’re far worse than their record suggests, and the eye test says the same.

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They’re looking to potentially shake up the roster, and Vanderbilt is a potential target. He’s a defensive specialist tweener-forward who rebounds well for his size. He’s shooting 39% from three-point range this year, but odds are he’ll regress towards his career average of 30%.

However, he fits the mold of a young, athletic, multi-position player who can defend well in space, while rebounding at a level commensurate with a “true” power forward. He’s an absolute zero on offense, though.

Vanderbilt is due $40 million over the next three years, with $10.7 million this season. The most plausible trade would be Grayson Allen, who would likely fit in well with Reaves, LeBron, and Doncic as an off-ball three-point specialist who can guard spots at the 1-3 and serve as a secondary ball handler.

Thus, I could see potential for mutual interest if Brian Gregory thinks he “aligns” with the team vision.

Brandon Clarke (6’8”, 215 lbs, 29 YO)


Clarke is one of those guys who don’t put up big stats, but whenever you look at the +/- in the box score, his team seems to be winning when he’s on the court. Despite his lack of scoring, offenses continue to flow while he’s on the court, and his defense grades out at about the 85th percentile. He’s behind Santi Aldama and GG Jackson on the Grizzlies bench and ultimately expendable, so even when he gets healthy, he’s not looking at a lot of playing time.

He’s due $25 million over the next two years ($12.5 million this year) and could legally be traded for either Allen or O’Neale. Again, this is one of those trades where I don’t think either team hangs up on the other.

Jonathan Isaac (ORL, 6’10”, 230 lbs, 28 YO)


Isaac has a long history of injuries, some “interesting” personal views, and couldn’t score 20 points if you locked him in an empty gym for 48 minutes. As a rangy, mobile power forward he also rebounds and defends at an elite rate.

And when I say elite defender, I mean it.

Per the dunks and threes website, he had the best actual defensive +/- in the league in 2023-24, while ranking in the 85th percentile in offensive rebounding and the 90th in defensive. He’s currently injured (again) and only averaging 11 mpg this season. His contract is for $59 million over the next 4 seasons and $15 million this year. Some combination of either Royce O’Neale/Richards (together) or Grayson Allen (alone) would likely be enough for Orlando to part ways.

This would be a huge risk for the Suns, but it would also be the end of worrying about rebounding and defense. Scoring is another matter, however.

Obi Toppin (IND, 6’9”, 220 lbs, 27 YO)

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Toppin is currently injured, his rebounding is “meh”, and his defense veers between stiff-hipped and lackadaisical. But he’s a rangy, athletic power forward who shoots the three well enough (career 35.3%) that you can’t leave him completely alone on the perimeter. He plays way above the rim as well and was a dunk contest winner in 2022.

Obi attacks the rim like he wants to murder it.

Indiana lacks small forwards and centers, and a package of Royce O’Neale and Nick Richards might get it done if they offer some cap relief and a couple of players who can step in and potentially start. Toppin won’t be back until February, but he seems like an intriguing fit with a team looking for younger and more athletic players. Not a perfect fit, but it would add some athleticism and height to the position. His contract? $14 million this year with two years left on it.

Swinging for the Fences

Jonathan Kuminga (GSW, 6’7”, 225 lbs, 23 YO)


Yeah, yeah, we’ve all seen this one before. But, Kuminga is in the middle of a miserable season on a miserable Warriors team that Coach Kerr admits is a “fading dynasty”. As a result, his asking price is likely dropping by the second as the team looks to move on.

With Royce O’Neale and Grayson Allen’s stock being relatively high and Kuminga’s at its nadir, perhaps it’s time to revisit this one? I could see Allen and O’Neale plugging seamlessly into a three-point-happy Golden State team that suddenly rediscovers floor spacing around Curry. Kuminga would fit in as someone who can keep in front of his man and rebound a bit better than O’Neale.

The biggest selling point to this trade is that both teams would likely improve on the court. The downside is that it would have longer-term salary cap implications for both. Kuminga will be looking for a payday this summer, and Golden State won’t get the salary relief of his team option.

Cameron Johnson (DEN, 6’8”, 235 lbs, 29 YO)


This may be the Suns’ best chance to bring back one of the beloved “twins” from the CP3 years. He’s injured, along with half of a Denver team desperately trying to avoid the Play-In. Cam has also been having a down year, and the Denver fans have been letting him have it with both barrels as a result: it’s looking like a failed experiment.

He has $44 million left over 2 years left on his contract. If Denver could get two healthy bodies out of a trade right now for a player who’s hurt and not fitting in, I think they’d be inclined to do it to avoid a first-round match-up with OKC. For Phoenix, getting back a fan favorite, three-point shooting, defensively solid wing in exchange for two relatively superfluous players (Allen, plus O’Neale or Richards) would be well worth it.

Bobby Portis (MIL, 6’9”, 250 lbs, 30 YO)


On paper, this looks like the best fit for the Suns. Portis is a defensive-minded, big-bodied, high-motor player whose temperament would fit in perfectly next to Brooks and Gillespie. He plays behind Giannis and Kuzma, and his salary swaps 1 for 1 with Grayson Allen, who would start immediately in a depleted Bucks backcourt. On paper, the Bucks would come out ahead on ppg, apg, and mpg played in the trade.

The problem is, Portis is one of those “heart and soul of the team” glue guys. The Bucks are 14-19 and clearly need to shake things up, and Portis looks like their best trade chip. Keep in mind that Allen was already traded AWAY from Milwaukee. However, Milwaukee fans remember him from better times in years past, and they might be okay with bringing back a known quantity.

Of all the trades here, I like this one the best for the Suns in terms of fit and “alignment”. I also think it is the one that the other team laughs at and hangs up if they make the offer.



Which player would you prefer? Why or why not?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ward-upgrades-gillespie-allen-oneale-deadline
 
New Year, New Suns? What can stay and what can go in 2026

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2025 has treated the Phoenix Suns very well.

Well, at least the second half of it. For the technical people, that clarification is for you.

Phoenix boasts a 19-14 record heading into the New Year, exceeding expectations by all accounts. Especially when you consider some of the adversity they’ve faced early on. The joy of basketball is back in the Valley.

What can we expect in the new year from the Suns? For starters, I hope the level of intensity remains the same in 2026. I created a list of things we’d like to see roll over into 2026, and things we’d like to keep in 2025.

Roll it over into 2026​

  • Collin Gillespie’s nuclear shooting
  • The level of intensity and hustle
  • The extra efforts on the glass
  • Leading the league in steals
  • Dillon Brooks being Dillon Brooks
  • Thrilling comeback wins
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There have been plenty of high highs in the opening 33 games of the season, and a lot of that starts with Collin Gillespie’s emergence. Dillon Brooks deserves credit for being the spark that ignites all the chaos, intensity, and fearless identity this team has proudly adopted.

It’s actually a miracle that my “roll it over into 2026” list is longer than the “leave it in 2025” list. First time since… the 64-win season, probably?

Leave it in 2025​

  • Jalen Green’s hamstring issues
  • Massive foul/free-throw discrepancies
  • Dillon Brooks untimely technicals (doubt it)
  • Devin Booker’s three-point shooting woes

More Jalen Green, please and thank you. We need to see what this team looks like at full strength.

The guard depth has been a pleasant surprise, with both Green and Grayson Allen missing extended time, as well as Devin Booker for a bit. The emergence of Jamaree Bouyea, Jordan Goodwin’s steady play, and Collin Gillespie turning into a legitimate starting-caliber guard have shifted the course of the season for the supposedly shorthanded Suns.

Dillon Brooks’ technicals are what they are. You have to accept the good with the bad when it comes to the Dillon Brooks show, but the untimely technicals late in the game need to end. Even if it was a soft/unwarranted call on a LeFlop, the one on LeBron in that Lakers game ultimately cost them a win.

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Another hot take: I would like for Devin Booker not to shoot 30.1% from three-point range this year. Bold, I know. But this is the lowest of his career, and it has to improve.

The good news is that, as unexpectedly fun as this Suns team has been, there is still plenty of room for them to get better and build off their early success. We haven’t even seen a ton of the rookies yet, and there’s still reason for optimism surrounding Rasheer Fleming and Khaman Maluach. And no, we haven’t forgotten about you, Koby Brea. This guard rotation is just DEEP.

At Bright Side, we’d like to wish you all a Happy New Year. Thank you for making last year fun, and we look forward to what’s to come in 2026.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...4-record-gillespie-brooks-booker-2026-outlook
 
Game Preview: Suns start the New Year against sputtering Kings

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Who: Phoenix Suns (19-14) vs. Sacramento Kings (8-26)

When: 7:00pm Arizona Time

Where: Mortgage Matchup Center — Phoenix, Arizona

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

Listen: KMVP 98.7



The Phoenix Suns are returning home after a successful 4-1 road trip. After getting diced up by a Cleveland team on New Year’s Eve, the Suns will be hungry to get back into the win column against the Sacramento Kings. The Kings are missing multiple star players, Domantas Sabonis and Zach LaVine, and are on the second night of a back-to-back. It is not a must-win game for the Suns, but it is a game on the schedule that the Suns should win, and these are the games the Suns have to win in a competitive Western Conference.

But if you are expecting an easy win, the Kings are not going to roll over and let the Suns cruise to victory. That is not in the DNA of Sacramento’s guards DeMar DeRozan, Russell Westbrook, Malik Monk, or Dennis Schroder, who all can go off on any given night.

Probable Starters

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Injury Report

Suns

  • Grayson Allen — QUESTIONABLE (Knee Injury Management)
  • Jalen Green — OUT (Right Hamstring Strain)
  • Jordan Goodwin — IN (Jaw sprain)

Sacramento Kings

  • Domantas Sabonis — OUT (Partial Meniscus Tear)
  • Zach LaVine — OUT (Ankle Sprain)
  • Dylan Cardwell — OUT (G-League-Two-Way)
  • Daeqwon Plowden OUT (G-League-Two-Way)

What to Watch For


Mark Williams has been a dominant physical presence against the Sacramento Kings this season. In two games against Sacramento, the Phoenix Suns’ big man is averaging 13.5 points and 13.5 rebounds. Williams can feast on Sacramento’s front line of Precious Achiuwa, rookie center Maxime Reynaud, and Drew Eubanks because of his physical size and strength. His teammates just have to find him consistently and reward him for his high-effort plays. Williams will ‘bring the boom’ this game.

This season, the Suns are 28th in the NBA in shots attempted within five feet from the basket. However, the Kings have the second-worst defensive field goal percentage within six feet from the basket, at 67.7%. Will the Suns continue to shoot a lot of threes and midrange twos, or will they take advantage of the lack of rim protection and dominate points in the paint?

Defensively, the Kings’ guards present a difficult challenge, even though the Kings have only eight games this season. DeRozan, Monk, Westbrook, Shroder, and Keegan Murray are all players who can and have beaten the Suns in the past. The Suns’ guards have to force DeRozan and Monk to take difficult shots. Jordan Goodwin, Collin Gillespie, and of course every Suns’ fans’ favorite villain, Dillon Brooks defending Sacramento’s guard-heavy rotation, which will be exciting to watch. Expect to see some fireworks between Brooks and DeRozan, who have already gone at it multiple times already this season.

Two Keys to a Suns Win + a bonus prediction​


The Suns in their last five games have rebounded a staggering 40.7% of their missed shots, and Williams will the way in that regard. If the Suns continue to attack the glass with that same level of success, the Kings do not have the horses to compete for a full 48 minutes if the Suns are rebounding at that clip.

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This season, the Phoenix Suns have managed to not just survive minutes with Devin Booker off the floor but thrive in them. Jordan Goodwin, Ryan Dunn, and Jamaree Bouyea have played well on both ends of the floor, and the Suns will need them to play well against Monk and Schroder, the Kings’ two key bench rotation players. If the Suns’ bench can keep pace with the Kings’ microwave scorers, the Suns will win convincingly. If Schroder or Monk go on a heater, the Suns will be in another dog fight, and the clutch play of Booker and Brooks will be needed again.

The bonus prediction is about Devin Booker, who has yet to score 40 or more points in a game this season.

Typically, Booker has at least a month every season where he goes on a lethal scoring barrage. The Suns do not need a vintage 40-point game from Booker to beat the Kings, but the Kings’ lackluster defense and personnel are the perfect opportunity for Booker. My prediction is that Booker will score 40 for the first time this year and that this game could potentially be the starting point for one of his ballistic scoring stretches.

Prediction


The Suns improve to 3-0 vs the Kings this season.

Suns 125, Kings 109

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ings-preview-booker-mark-williams-home-return
 
Phoenix keeps its edge as the calendar flips

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New year, same Suns. Phoenix came back to the Valley on Friday night, saw the Sacramento Kings on the schedule, and handled business the way a serious team is supposed to. Aggressive. Focused. No messing around. That has been the theme of calendar year 2025, and it carried right over.

I know this is the Bright Side Baller space, the quick recap, a few thoughts, then you make the call. But this one is not complicated. It belongs to Devin Booker.

This is the 12th time in Devin Booker's career in which he's scored 27+ points in the first half.

Only 4 other Suns have ever done that:

🏀Penny Hardaway
🏀Brandon Knight
🏀Clifford Robinson
🏀Amare Stoudemire (x3) pic.twitter.com/ifLW13NmYL

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) January 3, 2026

Booker had 27 points in the first half and finally looked like the tip of the spear this offense needs him to be. When he sets the scoring tone, everything else falls into place. The pressure shifts. The floor opens. Roles make sense. That is how this team operates at its best.

We saw it in real time. Booker cooked early, the group followed his lead, and the fourth quarter became optional for him. Yes, it was the Kings. Yes, they are a mess. But that is exactly the point. Nights like this are about doing what you are supposed to do. And Phoenix did.

Bright Side Baller Season Standings​


Booker opened the night in Cleveland, stuck in the mud with 6 points at halftime. Then the switch flipped. He closed with 32, found his rhythm, found his voice, and reminded everyone how these things usually end when he gets rolling. By the final horn, there was no debate left to have. Booker cruised to his 9th Bright Side Baller of the season.

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Bright Side Baller Nominees​


Game 34 against the Kings. Here are your nominees:

Devin Booker

33 points (13-of-21, 1-of-6 3PT), 2 rebounds, 5 assists, 5 turnovers, +11 +/-

Dillon Brooks

18 points (8-of-14, 2-of-4 3PT), 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, +9 +/-

Mark Williams

15 points (3-of-4), 9 rebounds, 0 assists, 1 block, 7-of-11 FT, +7 +/-

Oso Ighodaro

15 points (5-of-7), 6 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals, 2 blocks, +14 +/-

Collin Gillespie

15 points (6-of-14, 3-of-9 3PT), 2 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 steals, +20 +/-

Jamaree Bouyea

12 points (6-of-9, 0-of-2 3PT), 6 rebounds, 1 assist, 4 steals, +20 +/-



First Bright Side Baller votes of 2026!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...n-booker-brightside-baller-kings-win-new-year
 
Where the Suns fit in the NBA food chain

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34 games in, the Suns, and the league at large, are starting to show their cards. Shapes are forming. Tendencies are sticking. You can feel the identities hardening night by night. There is still a long road ahead, of course. A lot of basketball is left. A lot of transactions are waiting in the weeds. Plenty of growth is still to come across the Association. But this is the point of the season where the fog begins to lift, and who you are stops being a theory and starts becoming a habit.

There is plenty left to untangle with this Suns team, but what we saw last we’ve seen in the Suns’ last 6 games fits the pattern we have been watching all season. They handle the teams they are supposed to handle. They show up and compete against the good ones, then struggle to land the final punch.

The Phoenix Suns are 5-1 over the last 6 games. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/3XNsRzHtMp

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) January 3, 2026

The record tells the story.

Phoenix sits at 20-14. Against teams under .500, they thrive, 13-4. Against teams over .500, it flips, 7-10. So as they settle into that familiar seventh seed territory, the real question becomes this: What are they, exactly?

They are more than an overachieving curiosity. More than a fun surprise. Right now, only a few teams live at the top of the food chain. Oklahoma City. San Antonio. Detroit. That is tier one.

Right below them sit the teams with real championship dreams, the Knicks, Rockets, and Nuggets. After that, the picture gets murky. Boston and Toronto live in that gray space where things would have to break perfectly. The Lakers wear a nice record but feel flimsy, and Minnesota looks sturdier than the math says.

Then there is the tier Phoenix currently occupies. Philadelphia. Miami. Cleveland. Orlando. Golden State. Teams built to matter. Teams capable of noise. Teams that can win a round, maybe two, but still searching for the pieces that turn a season into something louder.

Here is where the optimism creeps in for Phoenix. Teams living in that third and fourth tier still have runway. Plenty of it. There is time to grow, to tighten things up, to climb a tier or even two if the back half of the season breaks right or a transaction falls into their lap (I’m looking at you Lakers. I don’t know how you will get Herb Jones, but somehow, once again, the NBA gods will bless you in a city without lakes). Some luck helps, sure, but a lot of it is self-made. Many of those third and fourth-tier teams will be aggressive buyers at the deadline.

Phoenix sits in a different spot. They don’t need to be aggressive at the trade deadline. Why? They haven’t been whole all season.

The Suns have played almost the entire season without Jalen Green, save for five quarters. Grayson Allen, the fourth-highest-paid player on the roster, has barely been available. For a roster in the middle of a transformational transition year, they are ahead of schedule. A team I would have slotted closer to tier five before opening night now has a realistic path upward.

Phoenix sits at 20–14 despite extreme availability issues: only five total quarters from their second-highest paid player and 18 games (and none recently) from their fourth-highest pic.twitter.com/1MFHil6NO7

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) January 3, 2026

That path is not complicated. First, get healthy. It is hard to compete with teams like Cleveland when $50.2 million of payroll is wearing warmups instead of uniforms. Second, start beating teams with better records. That is how tiers change.

The Suns will not talk about tiers, though. They never do. This season, like this weekly exercise, lives in smaller pieces. One game. One road trip. One month. Handle what is in front of you, stack progress, and let the bigger picture take care of itself. That is how Phoenix should approach it. That is how they will.

In the big picture, we all know this season has been something worth leaning into. Maybe it does not end with confetti and a parade, but the course correction of this franchise has been genuinely enjoyable. Watching a team rediscover purpose, effort, and personality beats wandering the wilderness every time.

I am grateful Phoenix did not sink into that sixth tier this year, the one occupied by the Hornets, Nets, Wizards, Pacers, Kings, and Pelicans. I spend time lurking in opposing team subreddits. Trust me. Those places are bleak. Dark. Spirit draining. Credit to the Kings, who at least meet the misery with gallows humor and self-awareness. Still, I am glad that is not our reality this season.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...king-nba-playoff-picture-2025-season-analysis
 
Last call for Dave King’s Bright Side Night donations!

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Later this month, real core memories are going to be forged. Kids who do not yet know what is coming will walk into their first Phoenix Suns game. They will see the lights. Hear the noise. Feel the buzz. Watch the controlled chaos of basketball unfold in front of them. They will walk out clutching a free T-shirt like it is treasure, designed by yours truly.

That is actually how my connection to Dave King’s Bright Side Night began. When I first started writing for the site, Dave reached out after seeing some of the graphics I had put together, both for my articles and the Suns JAM Session podcast. He slid into my inbox with an idea and a question. Would I design the Bright Side Night T-shirt?

I did not hesitate. I was honored. Genuinely. And it became a tradition I carry forward year after year. So now the natural question becomes this. What does this year’s version look like? What will the kids in attendance, put in those seats by you, receive? I went with the license plate theme this season.

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We are in the homestretch now. Tomorrow is the final day to donate to Dave King’s Bright Side Night. And so far, this community has raised over $11,000. Almost 400 kids will be in attendance, yelling and screaming for the Suns. That number still stops me in my tracks. Dave would be beaming. Proud. Grinning ear to ear, knowing this thing did not fade, but grew.

The window is closing. The Suns need time to handle the logistics and make sure those kids are in their seats on Tuesday, January 27. So this is the last call.

If you have already donated, thank you again. Truly. This is what community looks like. And it is an honor to help carry this forward.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-night-dave-king-community-donation-final-day
 
The Suns delivered a reminder against the NBA’s best

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Signature win? You could call it that. It was game 35 of the season, sure, and the calendar still says there is a lot of road left. We are creeping toward the halfway mark though, and the Suns are playing like a team that belongs in real conversations.

Up to this point, outside of that wild comeback against Minnesota earlier in the year when they erased an 8-point deficit in the final minute, there have not been many moments the casual fan could circle and say, “Yeah, that is the Suns.”

This one qualifies.

Against the best team in the NBA, Phoenix did more than win. Devin Booker delivered a moment. The kind that lives on timelines, gets replayed on phones the next morning, and forces people to ask the right questions. “Phoenix did what?” “Booker did what?”


These moments are not a requirement. Nobody hands out extra wins for style points. Yet they matter inside the larger NBA ecosystem. They shape perception. They stick. For a team plenty of people dismissed early, Phoenix keeps stacking proof.

Owning the glass against Oklahoma City, winning the rebounding battle 49-29. Watching role players turn in career nights against elite competition. All of it counts. This one sits at the top of the list so far. They have beaten good teams. They have competed night after night. Taking down the defending champs carries weight, and for a group that keeps showing exactly who they are, this one felt heavier than the rest.

Every win goes in the same column, sure. Some of them land differently.

Bright Side Baller Season Standings​


Devin Booker poured in 33 points against the Sacramento Kings and walked away with the Bright Side Baller without much debate. That makes it an even 10 on the season for him.

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Bright Side Baller Nominees​


Game 35 against the Thunder. Here are your nominees:

Jordan Goodwin
26 points (9-of-16, 8-of-13 3PT), 4 rebounds, 0 assists, 1 turnover, +8 +/-

Devin Booker
24 points (5-of-11, 1-of-4 3PT), 6 rebounds, 9 assists, 1 turnover, +11 +/-

Dillon Brooks
22 points (8-of-17, 2-of-5 3PT), 4 rebounds, 2 assists, 5 turnovers, -8 +/-

Ryan Dunn
9 points (3-of-8, 3-of-7 3PT), 8 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 turnover, +2 +/-

Oso Ighodaro
5 points (2-of-3), 8 rebounds, 0 assists, 1 turnover, +14 +/-

Collin Gillespie
8 points (3-of-10, 1-of-7 3PT), 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 turnover, +9 +/-



Who gets it?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...er-oklahoma-city-thunder-season-turning-point
 
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