Bright Side Wonders, Week 18: Navigating the injury bug

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 07: Jalen Green #4 and Dillon Brooks #3 of the Phoenix Suns walk during a timeout in the second half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 07, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Coming out of the All-Star break, the Phoenix Suns had three games in four nights, going 1-2 with a dramatic win over the Orlando Magic and tough losses where the offense struggled against the San Antonio Spurs and Portland Trailblazers. While it was a short week, the team lost multiple key players due to injury.

Here are the main questions for Week 18 that we want your thoughts on:


Getting Through the Injury Bug/Jalen Green’s big shot​


Two questions in one block here. In the Suns’ three games this week, Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks and Jordan Goodwin all went down with injuries and missed the next game. Booker will be re-evaluated later this week, Brooks broke his hand and is out without a timeline, and Goodwin strained his calf and is also without a timeline.

Phoenix has now played 14 games this year without Booker and are en route to play at least two more. On a side note, if Booker misses four more games, he’ll be ineligible for All-NBA awards this year.

With the Suns’ top scorers likely out for an extended period, look for Jalen Green to get more into a rhythm with his new teammates. He played 30 minutes for the first time as a Sun on Saturday in the team’s double-overtime win that ended with him hitting a buzzer-beating three, green has been inefficient so far in his first ten games as a Sun, shooting 38% from the field and 31% from three. His shooting splits are the lowest of any season of his career. Averaging over 20 points per game in his previous three seasons combined, he has the potential to lead the team in scoring amid the injuries.

JALEN GREEN HITS THE GAME-WINNING @TISSOT BUZZER-BEATER TO WIN IT FOR THE SUNS IN 2OT!

🚨⏰ Everyone Gets 24 pic.twitter.com/hhVPjW93xF

— NBA (@NBA) February 22, 2026

Is the answer to the Suns’ injury issues getting Jalen Green more acclimated into the offense? Who else needs to step up for the time being?

Offensive Issues​


The Suns didn’t shoot over 40% from the field once this week. Their win against Orlando was the first time since 2023 a team won while shooting under 35% from the field, and their 77 points against Portland was the least points they’ve scored in a game all year, and is tied for the second-least points a team has scored in a game this season.

To win games, independent of whose in the lineup, the Suns need to hit more shots. While Grayson Allen missed Sunday’s contest due to injury management, he should be back in the lineup Tuesday.

What is wrong with the Phoenix offense? How can it improve?



For more questions on the Suns follow @HoldenSherman1 on X for content after every game.

Jalen Green went 6/26 from the field, but finished the game with a buzzer beater.

What do you make of his performance tonight and his ability to come up clutch when he's most needed?@BrightSideSun

— Holden Sherman (@HoldenSherman1) February 22, 2026

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ide-wonders-week-18-navigating-the-injury-bug
 
Injury Update: Dillon Brooks to miss 4-6 weeks with hand injury

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Feb 22, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; A cast is visible on the hand of Phoenix Suns forward Dillon Brooks against the Portland Trail Blazers at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Dillon Brooks exited the game against Orlando early in the first quarter, and it did not take long to learn it was his left hand. Then the real news dropped. The hand was fractured, and the absence would not be short-term.

The diagnosis was revealed today, scheduled for four to six weeks. It’s a significant stretch of time that removes one of the Suns’ most physical tone setters from the rotation and further thins an already strained roster.

Return timetable for Suns guard Dillon Brooks after suffering a broken left hand: 4 to 6 weeks, sources tell ESPN. https://t.co/X5Tj8cV9Wh

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) February 23, 2026

Four weeks from now would land Dillon Brooks’ return on March 24 against Denver. That would mean roughly 15 games missed, and everyone understands that represents the most optimistic outcome. The six-week timeline feels more realistic, which would push his return to April 7 against Houston. At that point, the Suns would have four games left in the regular season.

That is where the real question lives. If Brooks is out that long, when does it make sense to bring him back? Do you shut him down through the rest of the regular season and save him for the Play-In? Or do you hope the six-week mark holds, give him a handful of games to get his legs back, and let him ramp up heading into postseason play?

It is another frustrating reminder of how little continuity this team has had all season. Jalen Green has missed 48 games. Devin Booker has missed 14 and counting. Grayson Allen has missed 22. All you can do is hope a player in the middle of a career year heals cleanly and comes back ready when it matters most.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ne-suns-roster-impact-playoff-push-stats-2026
 
The Suns’ injury bug forces a critical evaluation window

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There is a lesson life eventually teaches, and some people learn it faster than others. No one feels sorry for you. The victim mentality, especially in sports, does nothing. The opponent does not care about your injury report. Their job is to beat you, and your job is to beat them.

Adversity has returned to the desert, and it has felt constant since the calendar flipped to 2026. Bodies keep dropping, and you could feel sorry for yourself if you like. The standard “we can’t have anything nice” or “typical Arizona sports” comments can be made in jest. But alas, crying in your beer isn’t productive. If you look at this from another angle, you’ll find that the injuries open the door for opportunity. And with it, evaluation. For as much fun this season has been relative to exceeding expectations, we must remember this was never a season built around a championship expectation. It was a retooling year. A year in which the franchise was amidst a pivot with a new direction in mind.

I think back to October, right before the season began, and revisit how I believed this year needed to be approached. The hope was that the team would be competitive. Would the promises Mat Ishbia and Brian Gregory spoke about in press conferences over the offseason show up on the floor? Success was never strictly about wins. It was about effort. That was the missing ingredient in the previous two versions of this team. Staying competitive regardless of the scoreboard mattered.

I also wanted to see real development from the young players. When you look at the Suns’ future draft capital, there is no wave of help coming. That means the back half of Devin Booker’s prime depends heavily on the decisions made in the last two drafts and how those players grow into real rotation pieces.

So the season opened with two sophomores and three rookies, and the assumption was that development would be gradual, sometimes uneven, but ultimately visible. The first third of the year felt like it needed to be about establishing culture, showing what Suns basketball is supposed to look and feel like, and letting that become the baseline for success. That alone would have meant something.

The middle third of the season figured to be the bridge. More minutes for the rookies. A clearer evaluation window for the sophomores. Enough repetition to separate flashes from habits. And then the final third, in my mind, had the Suns hovering around the Play-In bubble. With no first round pick to chase, it felt like the perfect stretch to give young players real floor time, meaningful minutes, and game reps that could accelerate growth without the weight of expectation crushing them.

But the season has not unfolded that way. The Suns surprised people. The culture showed up early, the style translated, and wins followed. That success shifted the original developmental timeline and quietly narrowed opportunities for the youth. Winning has a way of doing that.

Now injuries have taken control in Phoenix, and the team is drifting back toward that developmental path. Not by choice, but by necessity. With bodies disappearing and options shrinking, rotations are tightening and minutes are being redistributed in real time. The plan did not change because the vision failed. It changed because reality intervened.

This is the silver lining. The Suns are snugly positioned in seventh in the West, and the youth are receiving opportunities to play minutes that matter. Truly matter. These aren’t minutes at the back end of a season for a team with no aspirations of success. These minutes could sway seeding, carry tangible pressure, and offer the ideal opportunity to see what you have in terms of talent and how they respond in meaningful moments.

The door of opportunity is starting to open. Against Portland, Ryan Dunn got the start. Rasheer Fleming saw the floor in the first quarter, and Khaman Maluach opened the second. That is how quickly things are shifting. Now the evaluation becomes real. Who steps into the moment? Who recognizes it? Who shows growth relative to their current ability?

Nobody is asking these players to take over games or alter the trajectory of the season. The ask is simpler. Progress. Especially from the sophomores. The Suns do not have many youth options in the pipeline, which makes it critical that these players prove they can function as real rotation pieces.

This season has been unique because, no matter what has unfolded, it still feels like a version of the best-case scenario keeps finding its way to the surface. Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale playing at the peak of their powers has quietly boosted their value heading into the offseason. Because the team has been competitive, there was no pressure to move them by the deadline. Best-case scenario.

At the same time, the roster has been good enough to create an environment where younger players earn minutes. No handing the youth the car keys without consequence. The competitiveness raised the bar. Injuries are never welcome, but they have opened the door for those younger players to actually get real minutes and real evaluation. The Suns can absorb a few losses without damaging their ceiling, and if that stretch accelerates development, it still fits the larger picture. Best-case scenario.

The only thing left to keep this in the best-case-scenario lane is seeing progression happen in real time, and that is where my concern lies. Oso Ighodaro, for all the good he has done, is showing a very real ceiling at the NBA level. That is not a criticism. He was the 40th overall pick, and the return has been reasonable for that slot.

Ryan Dunn is a different conversation.

Ryan Dunn is the pigeon. Getting posterized by Grant one possession, taken off the dribble by Holiday the next. Portland is targeting him and he is failing the test

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) February 23, 2026

Dunn continues to frustrate me because I am seeing regression in foundational areas. We knew shooting would be a weakness when he entered the league, and that trend has carried into year two. He shot 31.1% from three last season and is at 31.0% this year. That is unfortunate regression for someone whom you hoped would become a rotational, if not impactful, 3-and-D guy.

What is most frustrating is the defensive slippage. Defense and instincts were supposed to be his calling card. Right now, those instincts are betraying him. He is thinking instead of reacting, and it shows. Guards blow by him off the first step. Stronger forwards put a shoulder into him and win. With continued starts likely coming his way, Dunn has the most to prove. Because the more opportunities that stack with poor results, the wider the door opens for Rasheer Fleming to step through.

The pressure the Suns are going to face night after night is only going to increase, and this is where iron has a chance to sharpen iron. The process needs room to breathe. If every evaluation is made off a single game, it will drive everyone insane. Even on nights like Portland, when Ryan Dunn tested every ounce of patience available. Commitment to the process matters, especially when these minutes carry real weight in determining long-term viability.

The hope is that the best-case scenario continues to unfold. If regression from players like Dunn persists, tougher and more layered decisions will follow. This stretch needs to be used to see what is actually there. Growth is rarely linear, but neither is loyalty without progress. It is a delicate balance, and injuries have forced Phoenix into this evaluation window. Take it for what it is, observe carefully, and start shaping decisions based on what shows up on the floor.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...er-rotation-playoffs-western-conference-stats
 
The Suns must distinguish between rust and reality with Jalen Green

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PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 24: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball during the game against the Boston Celtics on February 24, 2026 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

When the Phoenix Suns moved Kevin Durant to Houston last summer, the financial backbone of that deal centered on Jalen Green. The deal could not have happened without his $33.6 million price tag. At the same time, Phoenix brought in a young, explosive, athletic guard, along with Dillon Brooks and future draft capital. Green was the most fascinating piece of the return. He arrived with upside, volatility, and the kind of ceiling that still invites conversation about what he can become.

Green’s time in Houston did not close the way anyone with the Rockets hoped for or envisioned. He spent a season as the primary scoring option, averaging 21.0 points on 42/35/81 shooting splits. The postseason told a different story. Over seven games, he averaged 13.3 points on 37/30/67. Houston supported him the way teams typically do with young talent, and eventually pivoted, sending him to Phoenix as part of their push to acquire Durant and accelerate their timeline.

He is one of the most intriguing players on the Suns roster. Maybe the most. Jalen Green fits cleanly into the “new place, new opportunity, different results” narrative. A change of scenery can matter, and Phoenix represents that chance. At the same time, this opportunity carries real weight. This is not a Ryan Dunn conversation. This is not a late first round pick on a rookie scale deal. Green was the second overall pick in 2021. And he has two years left, totaling $72.3 million.

That reality turns this season into a meaningful evaluation. The Suns need to understand who he is, what he can be, and how he fits into their long-term picture. That was always the plan, even before the season tipped. Injuries disrupted the timeline. A hamstring issue cost him 48 games in what was supposed to be a defining year for both player and organization. Now the questions sharpen. Following this season, do the Suns continue to give him runway, space to grow, room to fail, and the opportunity to respond? Or do they begin gauging his value on the open market and make decisions with the broader future in mind?

Injuries continue to shape the evaluation of Jalen Green, and they are muddying the picture in real time. During his first extended stretch of health this season, he is not playing in the role the Suns actually need to study. With Devin Booker sidelined and without Dillon Brooks enforcing, Green has slid into the primary option role. We already know what that version looks like. Houston gave him plenty of runway in that role, and the results are well documented.

Even in this limited sample, and within a role he is not built to sustain, familiar tendencies are creeping back in. Inefficiency. Inaccuracy. Three-point attempts that stall possessions and tilt momentum the wrong way.

In the last 3 games, Jalen Green is 17-of-60 from the field (29.3%) and 4-of-26 from three-point range (15.4%). pic.twitter.com/ItIFS6jGsp

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) February 25, 2026

If you look at the last three games, the numbers are rough. He is shooting 28.3% from the field on 20.0 attempts per game. From three, he is at 15.4%, with four makes on 26 attempts, one of those being the game-winner against Orlando. You can acknowledge the rust, given how much time he spent in street clothes earlier this season, but it still grabs your attention. Not as a conclusion, more as a note being written in pencil.

This is not the moment to pass judgment. It is part of the evaluation, not the verdict.

There is still a long runway ahead for Jalen Green, and more opportunity for him to settle into a defined role once that role actually exists again. We have seen him operate as a number one in Houston, but this environment is different. With injuries piling up, he is pressing, trying to ignite the offense on his own. At times, that urge turns into forcing the issue, and you can feel it possession to possession.

Jalen Green is the kind of player you want to root for. The personality pops. The athleticism is undeniable. The upside is obvious. If it all ever clicks, the deal looks like a steal for Phoenix. Having someone with that kind of quick twitch, someone who can get to the rim whenever he wants and do it with real explosion, is not something this franchise has had in a long time. Gerald Green is probably the closest comparison, and even he had a ceiling. That is the concern here. Jalen Green likely has one too, and given the contract and the investment, the window to understand what that ceiling is feels smaller.

The hope is that this stretch ends up as a blip. That the rust fades. That efficiency starts to follow. Because when he is right, you can feel how much gravity he carries. He is a microwave scorer who can tilt a game in a hurry and shoulder an offense for stretches. That version exists. It becomes harder to access without Devin Booker on the floor, when defenses can load up and treat Green as the primary every possession. Still, recognizing those coverages and navigating them is part of growth.

Right now, with the roster thinned and the responsibility shifted, Green is being asked to carry real weight. So far, that load has been heavy. The hope is that as health returns and roles settle, things begin to look different.

This is the uncomfortable middle of the evaluation, where inefficiency is loud, and answers are still quiet. The shooting has been rough, the decision-making uneven, and the burden heavier than the role he is ultimately meant to carry. All of that is real, and it deserves to be acknowledged. It is also not a reason to panic.

This stretch is information, not a conclusion. Green is playing through rust, injuries around him have distorted the ecosystem, and the context matters. The Suns are not searching for perfection right now. They are collecting data, watching habits, and learning how he responds when things are hard. That process takes time, and patience is still the most valuable currency they have.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-shooting-splits-houston-rockets-durant-deal
 
Mat Ishbia wants to put “real incentive” back into All-Star Saturday Night

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LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 13: Mat Ishbia #15 of Team Anderson looks on during the game against Team Antetokounmpo during the Ruffles NBA All-Star Celebrity Game as part of NBA All-Star Weekend on Friday, February 13, 2026 at Kia Forum in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

All-Star Weekend has drifted in recent years; it’s no secret. That magical energy just isn’t there anymore.

Now, Mat Ishbia is trying to do something about it. And no, he isn’t planning on suiting up for the three-point contest.

Ishbia appeared on Wednesday’s The Pat McAfee Show and said he would pay $1 million in prize money to the winners of the Slam Dunk and Three-Point Contests (via ESPN’s Brian Windhorst).

While revealing he would give another $1 million to charity in each event, he stated, “Let’s get the best guys in. Let’s make it awesome.”

Suns owner Mat Ishbia wants more star players participating in All-Star Weekend events when Phoenix hosts next year — and is hoping to entice them by offering a $1 million prize to the winners of the slam dunk and 3-point contests. https://t.co/JPs2dMwtJ3

— NBA on ESPN (@ESPNNBA) February 25, 2026

That being said, officials from the NBA league office and players’ union told ESPN such a prize would not conform with the existing bonus structure. But hey, this is a start. Begin the dialogue… that’s how change is formed.

The idea is simple: if pride and legacy are not enough to draw the league’s top stars consistently, maybe meaningful financial incentive will. After seeing how much the recent Saturday night events have fallen, I’m all for it. It is a straightforward solution from an owner who has not been shy about spending since purchasing the franchise.

Phoenix, of course, will be hosting the 2027 All-Star Game almost exactly one year from now.

NBA All-Star 2027 is in Phoenix, Arizona! The 76th annual NBA All-Star game will be played on Sunday, Feb. 21, at Mortgage Matchup Center, home of the Phoenix Suns. pic.twitter.com/ZJb7eRcXX0

— #NBAAllStar (@NBAAllStar) February 16, 2026

The dunk contest, in particular, has struggled to consistently attract marquee names in recent seasons. There have been flashes, sure. There have been viral moments thanks to Mac McClung. What it has lacked is sustained star power.

The 3-Point Contest has generally held up better, but even that event can benefit when elite names treat it as a priority rather than an afterthought. We already had Dame reach out to Steph and Klay to get them to join Book in what could be one of the most entertaining 3-point contests in recent memory.

Ishbia’s approach signals something larger than just a check. It speaks to competitiveness, which he also went on a rant about with the league’s tanking situation. The NBA is in the entertainment industry, and what better way to put on a show than by getting the biggest names involved in the contests we all used to love so much?

This move also fits Ishbia’s broader philosophy since taking over in Phoenix. He has shown a willingness to invest aggressively, whether in player salaries, infrastructure, or organizational resources. Offering prize money is not a publicity stunt. It aligns with his pattern of putting financial weight behind competitive outcomes.

From a Suns perspective, it also places Phoenix at the center of league dialogue in a constructive way. He is offering an incentive and letting players decide.

The NBA thrives when its showcase events feel competitive rather than ceremonial. All-Star Weekend has a history. It has the platform. What it needs is urgency. And some dolla dolla bills, ya’ll.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...l-incentive-back-into-all-star-saturday-night
 
Running Dry: Inside the Suns’ offensive slump

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PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 24: Grayson Allen #8 of the Phoenix Suns shoots a free throw during the game against the Boston Celtics on February 24, 2026 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kate Frese/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The numbers since the All-Star break are difficult to ignore.

Phoenix has not scored more than 100 points in regulation in four straight games: 94 against San Antonio, 96 against Orlando, 77 against Portland, and 81 tonight against Boston. In a league built on pace, space, and scoring, that stretch stands out for all the wrong reasons.

The Suns have lost 6 of their last 8 games. Devin Booker and Dillon Brooks aren’t returning anytime soon. And don’t forget Jordan Goodwin, who is also out and without a timetable. They have won games while being down a key piece or two all season long, but this time it feels different.

As Grayson Allen stated: “There is work to be done on that end of the floor.”

Grayson Allen spoke to a handful of things he noticed were lacking from the Suns offensively tonight.

Work to be done on that end of the floor. pic.twitter.com/NdM6JOBlDK

— PHNX Suns (@PHNX_Suns) February 25, 2026

Shorthanded Suns


Injuries are part of the story, so no, we will not ignore that.

Booker and Brooks have been sidelined through essentially all of this stretch, and their absence reshapes the entire offensive ecosystem. Booker’s presence bends a defense before he even attacks. Help defenders shade in his direction. Weakside shooters gain airspace. Driving lanes feel wider. Brooks brings that force and edge that defenses can’t ignore. When both are unavailable, roles shift, and responsibility becomes more evenly distributed across the roster.

That context matters. It also exists alongside other issues that have surfaced over the past several games. It’s no coincidence that the Suns’ offense has fallen off a cliff without their top two scorers.

The overall shot quality has gradually eroded. Against Boston, possessions frequently stalled into late-clock attempts over length. The Celtics dictated tempo and forced Phoenix into contested jumpers after actions failed to generate an advantage. The 11-point third quarter was damning. This graphic below is damning.

Suns over the last 4 games:

91.3 PPG (30th)
36.0 FG% (30th)
29.2 3P% (29th)
77.6 FT% (15th) pic.twitter.com/9KW39q4yQd

— Booker Muse (@DevinBookerMuse) February 25, 2026

At least they’re league average in free-throw shooting? Right? This is Bright Side of the Sun, afterall.

Portland presented a different challenge, yet the result was similar. The ball stuck and early actions fizzled. Possessions turned into isolation without rhythm. Orlando’s size crowded the paint and disrupted driving angles, and the Suns struggled to counter with purposeful cutting or quick reversals. Are we giving too much credit to the opponents here? Probably.

There is a rhythm component that has slipped. Paint touches have declined. Free-throw attempts have dipped. Assisted field goals have become less frequent, and those elements are often connected. When the ball moves side-to-side and attacks north-south, the defense rotates. When the ball stays on one side and the attack comes late, the defense settles in. This offense has gotten away from all the things that made them work earlier this season.

Slump Solutions?​


The tempo has lived in an uncomfortable middle ground. Phoenix has not consistently pushed off misses to manufacture easier points, and the half-court execution has not been crisp enough to thrive in slower possessions. That gray area can feel manageable when elite shot creation is available. It feels heavy when it is not. Right now, the slowed pace combined with rough, stagnant offensive possessions are stacking.

Rebounding has offered an opportunity, because there have been second chances. The conversion on those extra possessions, however, has not always followed. Resetting into another deliberate set can allow the defense to reorganize. The window for advantage closes quickly in today’s league. If you aren’t pushing in transition and your half-court offense is stalling, you are in deep trouble.

There is also the emotional weight of scoring droughts. Jalen Green’s return has thrown him into the wolves with Phoenix’s top two scoring options out as he gets his legs back under him. The efficiency has… not been there to say the least. Over his last three games, Green is shooting just 29.3% from the field.

In the last 3 games, Jalen Green is 17-of-60 from the field (29.3%) and 4-of-26 from three-point range (15.4%). pic.twitter.com/ItIFS6jGsp

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) February 25, 2026

When shots rim out early, confidence tightens. The extra pass becomes less instinctive. Open looks feel amplified because the team is searching for momentum. Against Boston, once the early attempts failed to drop, the pressure seemed to build possession by possession. It truly is a snowball effect that works against you.

Solutions exist, even within the current constraints. The ball movement HAS TO increase. Weakside activity, early-clock actions, and decisive cuts can create angles without requiring isolation heroball. Transition opportunities must be emphasized to generate easier looks before defenses are set. Making shots can be contagious, especially for role players. Teams go through slumps. It happens. Phoenix needs to find a way to snap out of it quickly, or things can get really ugly.

A clear role definition can stabilize lineups, so players operate with confidence rather than hesitation. Consistent rim pressure can produce free throws, which slow the game and steady an offense searching for footing.

The injuries remain real. Booker’s gravity and Brooks’ force change the geometry of the floor. At the same time, the Suns have defensive tools and connective pieces capable of helping the offense rediscover balance.

This stretch has revealed how delicate rhythm can be. It has also presented an opportunity. The coming games will show whether Phoenix can recalibrate, lean into structure and pace, and turn a difficult run into something instructive rather than defining.

Jordan Ott, it’s your time to shine.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/suns-analysis/99583/running-dry-inside-the-suns-offensive-slump
 
Game Recap: Royce O’Neale hits big game winner, Suns beat Lakers 113-110

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 26: Royce O'Neale #00 of the Phoenix Suns reacts to a three-point shot against the Los Angeles Lakers during the first half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 26, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 113-110 Thursday night, improving their record to 34-26 on the year, and ending their two-game losing streak.

Phoenix hit 22 threes in the contest, led by Collin Gillespie and Grayson Allen hitting six apiece, but the most important three of the night came from Royce O’Neale, who hit the game-winning triple with 0.9 seconds on the clock.


Both teams endured multiple double-digit deficits throughout the contest to set up for a back-and-forth ending. Luka Dončić single handedly was carrying the Lakers late, while the Suns took a more team-oriented approach.

With the win, Phoenix is now just one game back of the Lakers for the last playoff spot and have officially won the season series, something that could prove to be pivotal when it comes to the final standings.

Considering the potential seeding circumstances, Phoenix still down Dillon Brooks, Devin Booker and Jordan Goodwin, and the Lakers playing mostly at full strength, this was arguably the Suns’ most impressive and important win of the year.

Game Flow​

First Half​


After a lackluster few offensive performances, the Suns got off to a strong start offensively, scoring nine points in the first three minutes of the game. The ball movement was strong, and the team was getting to the rim. Phoenix built an early 17-9 lead that forced a Los Angeles timeout. After the breakm the Lakers went on a 12-0 run to take their first lead of the game. Luka Dončić started to get into a rhythm, having himself a 12-point first quarter.

As the Suns continue to battle the injury bug, Suns who don’t typically touch the rotation got a chance to contribute early on, including Rasheer Fleming and Amir Coffey, but weren’t making much of an impact as the Suns ended the quarter allowing a 18-5 run to Los Angeles.

At the end of 12 minutes, the Lakers led the Suns 27-22.

Phoenix retook the lead with an 8-2 run early in the second, Grayson Allen and Collin Gillespie were running the ship. The hot start to the second was a “necessary response,” to the Lakers end to the first quarter, as Suns Broadcaster Kevin Ray put it. Phoenix started the second hitting 7/8 first shots, with the bench scoring 10. They were able to build multiple double-digit leads.


After a hot offensive start, the Suns started to struggle offensively, allowing the Lakers to end the second. Phoenix scored just four points in the final 4:56 of the half.

It was 49-49 going into the second half. Dončić and Allen were the only players for either team in double digits. It was the first time in the last six games the Suns weren’t trailing after two quarters.

Second Half​


The Suns called a timeout early in the third because the Lakers went on a 7-0 run in the first 2:17. The Phoenix offense stayed anemic after the timeout. Los Angeles took their first double-digit lead of the game, leading to another Suns timeout.

Finally, 4:08 into the second half, a Grayson Allen three broke the seal on the basket for the Suns, but it took some time for the team to get in a groove on offense.

Down 12 midway through the third, the Suns went on a 10-0 run, spearheaded by Grayson Allen. The guard hit two consecutive threes, forcing a Lakers timeout.

Allen continued to stay hot from three; Amir Coffey and Rasheer Fleming joined the party, too. Fleming had a strong quarter, hitting multiple threes.

After being down as much as 12, the Suns and Lakers were tied at 80 heading into the fourth quarter.

Phoenix carried their strong end to the third into the fourth, going on a 15-5 run to start the fourth, and the Mortgage Matchup Center was getting amped up.

OSO IGHODARO TWO-HAND POSTER 😤 pic.twitter.com/HMhlic1fxa

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) February 27, 2026

Just like the Suns stayed resilient when they went down, the Lakers did too. Phoenix was up as much as 12, but Dončić almost single-handedly brought the Lakers back ahead.

With 22 seconds, the game was tied at 110, and Phoenix had the ball. Grayson Allen took charge of the offense, and this happened:

Royce O’Neale. Cold blooded. pic.twitter.com/qmT8jAzWmT

— Dave McMenamin (@mcten) February 27, 2026

It was a fitting ending to what was an extremely hot shooting night for the Suns, who went 22/50 from behind the arc to end their two-game losing streak. Grayson Allen led the team with 28 points and six threes, Gillespie chipped in 21 and six triples, but O’Neale hit the biggest three of them all. O’Neale scored the Suns’ last seven points to end the game.


Up Next​


The Suns will have a five-day break between games. They’ll face the Kings for their first game of March on Tuesday, the third. Sacramento has the worst record in the NBA.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...hits-big-game-winner-suns-beat-lakers-113-110
 
Cracklin’ Rosie and a crackling Suns’ offense

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 26: Royce O'Neale #00 of the Phoenix Suns reacts after hitting a three-point shot during the final second of the NBA game against the Los Angeles Lakers at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 26, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Suns defeated the Lakers 113-110. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns walked into Thursday night battered and bruised, injury report reading like a CVS grocery list that got out of hand. You glance across the floor, and there stand Luka Doncic, LeBron James, and Austin Reaves. It’s a trio that makes you check the clock before tip-off and wonder how long the evening is about to feel.

And it felt long.

There were stretches where the offense stalled into a quiet panic as possessions dissolved into late-clock heaves. Phoenix could not buy a clean look for chunks of the night, and when they did, the rim treated them like strangers.

Being a fan does strange things to your brain. It turns you into a ritualist, a believer in invisible levers. On Thursday, I found mine.

My wife was behind me in the living room, puzzle board out, building a 1000-piece octopus with the calm of a surgeon. The Suns were down 10 in the third quarter, and she asked if she could put on music. Neil Diamond. Holly Holy filled the room.

The Suns started scoring.

Song Sung Blue. Another run. Cracklin Rosie. A three from Grayson Allen that felt pre-ordained. You Don’t Bring Me Flowers. Collin Gillespie rises and buries one from deep like he has been waiting for Neil to give him permission. You can break down the rotations. You can analyze the shot profile. You can talk about the 22 made three pointers, which is usually the recipe when half your firepower is in street clothes. All of that is fair.

I am giving Neil Diamond credit.

The rhythm shifted the moment his voice hit the speakers. The ball moved with purpose. The shots came in flow. The house felt different through a television screen and a living room octopus.

It was a big one for Phoenix. They are staring up at the Lakers in the standings, chasing ground, measuring margin. This win mattered. The fan base needed it. The offense has looked rough lately, heavy and unsure. Last night had those same ugly stretches.

They survived anyway. And it felt…so good, so good, so good!

Bright Side Baller Season Standings​


Collin breaks into double digits, joining Devin Booker as the only two Suns to do so thus far this season.

Bright-Side-Baller-8.png

Bright Side Baller Nominees​


Game 60 against the Lakers. Here are your nominees:

Grayson Allen
28 points (9-of-24, 6-of-16 3PT), 1 rebound, 6 assists, 1 block, 1 turnover, -14 +/-

Collin Gillespie
21 points (7-of-13, 6-of-11 3PT), 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 block, 2 turnovers, 0 +/-

Royce O’Neale
13 points (4-of-7, 3-of-6 3PT), 6 rebounds, 3 assists, 0 blocks, 2 turnovers, -4 +/-

Ryan Dunn
10 points (4-of-7, 2-of-3 3PT), 4 rebounds, 1 assist, 0 blocks, 1 turnover, -20 +/-

Oso Ighodaro
8 points (4-of-5, 0-of-0 3PT), 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 blocks, 1 turnover, 0 +/-

Rasheer Fleming
8 points (3-of-5, 2-of-3 3PT), 6 rebounds, 0 assists, 0 blocks, 0 turnovers, +19 +/-



Who you got?

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...win-play-in-standings-jalen-green-adjustments
 
The Phoenix Suns are officially parting ways with Cole Anthony

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WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 29: Cole Anthony #50 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball during the game against the Washington Wizards on January 29, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Sabina Shysh/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns mildly shook things up at the February trade deadline by sending Nick Richards and Nigel Hayes-Davis away in exchange for Amir Coffey and Cole Anthony. On the surface, it was a deal that made sense. Phoenix needed to get off some money to get under the luxury tax line, and both Richards and NHD were the expendable assets to do so. Both players seemed to fit the Suns’ style: gritty, tough, disruptive.

Reports surfaced immediately that the team had no intention of keeping Anthony long-term, however.

Still sticking with this. I expect at some point the Suns waive Cole Anthony. He will not play for Phoenix. https://t.co/jkPQphwJNt

— John Gambadoro (@Gambo987) February 9, 2026

The reasoning was simple. The Suns already had Jamaree Bouyea on a two-way contract, and the front office views him as the right fit for that specific role. Bouyea has taken advantage of the opportunity allotted to him, and while nothing is official as of yet, I would not be surprised if this were the next roster-related domino to fall.

While he played in 35 games for the Milwaukee Bucks, averaging 6.7 points on 42/30/62 splits, Anthony has consistently appeared on the injury report with a “not with team” designation.

That situation reached its conclusion today. The Suns are officially waiving Cole Anthony.

The Phoenix Suns have waived guard Cole Anthony, sources tell ESPN. Anthony averaged 6.7 points in 35 games for the Bucks before being moved at the NBA trade deadline.

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) February 27, 2026

As Arizona Sports Suns insider John Gambadoro notes, the team was looking to see if a buyout was possible. A buyout would save the team some money if a deal could have been reached. Ultimately, that did not occur, so the organization opted to waive him.

Now that Cole Anthony has been waived (were just waiting to see if a buyout was possible) Suns will turn their attention to converting Jamaree Bouyea to a standard contract by March 4th then adding a player on a two-way contract.

— John Gambadoro (@Gambo987) February 27, 2026

This move allows the organization to convert Bouyea to a guaranteed deal while also freeing up a two-way roster spot. It remains to be seen if the Suns will fill that final opening immediately, but their track record with player development suggests they likely will.

As for Anthony, he now enters the market looking for his next opportunity on either a standard or two-way contract.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...act-conversion-roster-moves-nba-buyout-market
 
Gambo: Devin Booker likely to return next week

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 07: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns dribbles the ball during the second half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 07, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The 76ers defeated the Suns 109-103. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

According to Arizona Sports’ insider John Gambadoro, Phoenix Suns star guard Devin Booker is set to return to the lineup either on Tuesday or Thursday of next week against the Kings or Bulls.

This development arrives at a critical time for a team that’s been searching for offensive rhythm and a semblance of perimeter consistency. They get their engine back!

Devin Booker is progressing well from a hip strain and trending towards being back after this four-day break – Likely either Sacramento on Tuesday or Chicago on Thursday.

— John Gambadoro (@Gambo987) February 27, 2026

Booker’s return should hopefully allow Jalen Green to settle into the role we all envisioned him being in, rather than having to be “the guy”. In the last four games he’s missed, Phoenix has gone 1-3, and their offense has fallen off a cliff outside of last night’s game, which probably says more about the Lakers’ defense than the Suns’ offense.

Booker missed significant time previously this season, but with Brooks, Allen, Gillespie, and Goodwin available (mostly) during that stretch, it was easier to survive. Now, without Brooks, the margin for key guards being absent is razor-thin.

Gambadoro also noted that Jordan Goodwin is roughly a week behind Booker in his own recovery timeline.

As for Goodwin, his projected return being about a week behind offers another layer of reinforcement. His defensive edge and point-of-attack pressure have also been missed, particularly in matchups where Phoenix has struggled to contain dribble penetration.

The Next 6 Games

  • March 3 @ Sacramento Kings
  • March 5 vs Chicago Bulls
  • March 6 vs New Orleans Pelicans
  • March 8 vs Charlotte Hornets
  • March 10 @ Milwaukee Bucks
  • March 12 @ Indiana Pacers
The Suns' next 6 games. Presents a great opportunity to make up some ground, especially with Devin Booker returning. pic.twitter.com/HVikU2e4Ry

— Zona (@AZSportsZone) February 27, 2026

They have an unusual number of days off as their next game isn’t until Tuesday, giving them time to reset and recover. The schedule lightens up, and they get their star back. It’s time to make up some ground!

Help is on the way, Suns fans.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/suns-news/99743/gambo-devin-booker-likely-to-return-next-week
 
The Suns may need to rethink Jalen Green’s role before it costs them

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PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 26: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns looks to pass the ball during the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 26, 2026 at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The evaluation period for Jalen Green continues, and the early returns are not what you hoped for. Patience is part of this, especially when a player is operating outside of the role he was brought to the Valley to do. But through this stretch, as the fifth-year guard rebounds from injury, it has not felt promising.

He has elite athleticism, the kind that jumps off the screen. He has the potential to be a game breaker, someone who adds a much-needed layer to a Suns’ offense that is 29th in the NBA in shots at the rim.

But since arriving in Phoenix, it has been a strange season for Green. A player who has always been available found himself dealing with health issues. Watching from the sidelines, not contributing on the court. He was a vocal cheerleader, sure, and that adds to the team camaraderie. But it is an area foreign to a player who played in 307 of a possible 328 games to start his career.

Now he is back, trying to fold himself into what this team has been building all year, and it looks like he has run into cerebral quicksand. You can see it. There are possessions where he feels the need to force the action. There are shots early in the clock that do not need to be taken. There are drives into traffic where the read was asking for a kick out. It feels like a player trying to prove something in real time. It feels like a player carrying more than he should.

That is the reality right now. You want him to succeed. You want the talent to translate. Instead, it feels heavy, like every possession is an audition. For a young electric guard, that can drain you quickly.

There is still time. Devin Booker could return next week, and his presence changes the geometry of everything. When the offense flows through Booker, when the gravitational pull bends the defense toward him, roles settle. Decisions become cleaner. The reads arrive a half-second sooner.

Through this stretch, running the offense through Jalen Green has not produced the desired result. The efficiency has dipped. The rhythm has wavered. With Booker back, Green can slide into a space that fits him better, attack tilted floors, operate against scrambling defenses, and rediscover the ease that has been missing.

There still are some concerns, are there not? Yes, he is playing in a role that does not suit him. The defenses can tilt their attack towards him with a greater frequency than when Booker returns. It’s the inefficiencies that worry me. And for those who are screaming from the back of the room, “He’s seeing more complex defenses! He’s the point-of-attack, so of course it’s going to effect his overall percentages! You don’t know ball!”, I point this out. Since returning on February 7, Jalen Green is shooting 21.7% on field goal attempts that are deemed “wide open”, with no defender within six feet of him. And he’s 2-of-17 from deep on those attempts. That’s 11.8%.

Jalen Green is 2-of-17 on wide open three-pointers since his return on February 7 pic.twitter.com/C81TUDLYXV

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) February 28, 2026

You go back to the Lakers game, and the pattern was hard to ignore. When Jalen Green was on the floor, the ball stuck. The initiation slowed. Possessions stretched deep into the clock with him dribbling, probing, searching for a crack that never fully opened. Too often it ended in an empty trip.

Then he sat. Grayson Allen checked in. The air changed.

The ball popped from side to side. The weak side lifted. The extra pass found open shooters. The Suns went on runs that felt connected, deliberate, and sustainable. Jordan Ott saw it too. The adjustment came. Green logged eight minutes in the second half.

Note that this entire run is happening without the ball in Green’s hands. Just sayin…

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) February 27, 2026

“There’s a conditioning piece to this,” Ott recently said of green. “I think we all have to have a little grace with Jalen. He’s out there. He plays really hard. He’s trying to get the conditioning piece in-season against a really good defense.”

He finished with 9 points in 23 minutes, 4-of-15 from the field, 1-of-7 from deep. Another inefficient night. The box score tells part of the story. The eye test fills in the rest.

You dig into the numbers, and you can layer in context. Role change. Health. Timing. Chemistry. All of it matters. The metrics still sit there.

He is averaging 8.4 drives per game across 12 games played, shooting 36% on those drives. For a guard whose superpower is getting downhill, that is a tough number to swallow. Since his return on February 7, the team owns a 91.3 offensive rating with him on the court. That is second-worst on the roster, ahead of only Mark Williams at 89.4. In 172.1 minutes during February, the team carries a -18.4 net rating with Green out there.

Individually, he is at 33.1% from the field in that stretch, taking more shots than anyone else on the team. He is 20.8% from three. He sits at a -60.

shotmap.png

Some of that can be circumstance. Some of it can be role. Some of it can be timing. What it looks like right now is a player pressing, trying to bend the game to his will, when the game is asking him to blend into it.

One harsh reality sits in the middle of all of this. This team was functioning while he was on the bench rehabbing his hamstring. The ball moved. The roles were defined. The offense had an identity. Since his reinsertion, knowing that injuries have complicated the picture, Jalen Green has not shifted the needle in a positive direction. The inefficiency has drained possessions. It looks like a player trying to make up for lost time, trying to fast-forward chemistry that only comes with reps.

That brings the real question back into focus, the one we were already debating when it felt like his second hamstring strain might be a short detour.

Who starts when Devin Booker returns?

At one point, it felt like an open discussion. Right now, it feels clearer. Collin Gillespie next to Booker, with Green coming off the bench. Gillespie has shown he can organize, keep the ball humming, and knock down the open three. Booker bends the floor. Gillespie keeps it spaced. Green then slides into a role that may actually serve him better.

Picture him as an off-ball guard with the second unit, attacking second-team defenses in bursts, putting pressure on the rim in shorter windows instead of carrying 16.9 shots a night. Let him hunt advantages rather than manufacture them. Let him play fast without having to orchestrate every action.

It is an extremely narrow sample size, with more variables than a polynomial equation, so you have to tread lightly. That said, there is at least something worth noting when you break down the splits. In 7 games as a starter, Jalen Green is shooting 36% from the field, 27% from three, and 54% from the line. That is not a sustainable offense for someone handling that level of usage, which is 348% as a starter.

In 5 games coming off the bench, the numbers tick up slightly. He is at 37% from the field, 30% from deep, and 100% from the line. His usage rate is 26.8%. The jump is not dramatic, and the volume matters, but the efficiency is marginally better in a reserve role.

Again, we are talking about 12 total games. Context matters. Opponent quality matters. Lineup pairings matter. Conditioning matters. Still, if the early data suggests he is a touch more comfortable attacking second units and playing in shorter bursts, that is something the coaching staff has to weigh. It does not close the case. It does not prove the theory. It adds another data point to a conversation that is already layered.

Inefficiency has followed him throughout his career. The hope was that a new environment would smooth some of that out. Early returns suggest it has traveled with him. That does not mean the book is written. It means the work remains. Some people will say it is too early to draw firm conclusions, that he deserves more runway post-injury before any rotational decisions are locked in. They are not wrong. Basketball gives you time to test theories.

The schedule ahead softens. Sacramento. Chicago. New Orleans. In theory, there is space there to experiment, to refine, to see what this version of Jalen Green can become within this ecosystem. The answers do not have to come tonight. But they do have to start showing up soon.

At some point, you have to acknowledge what is in front of you. I do not expect his percentages to remain this low. History says there will be some correction. The question is how much. If his career averages are the baseline, how far does the needle actually move from there? How much growth are you truly projecting versus hoping for?

Right now, Green feels like the new kid who transferred in the middle of the school year. New hallways. New rhythms. Trying to read the room while also trying to prove he belongs in it. That takes time. It also takes comfort. Until that comfort shows up on the floor, the Suns have to be intentional about how they handle his minutes.

There is a difference between giving someone minutes and having them earn minutes. This season has been built on competition. Nobody has been handed anything. Roles have shifted based on impact. If the lineup clicks, it stays. If it stalls, it changes. That standard cannot bend because of a contract number. Yes, he makes $33.6 million. That does not guarantee a starting spot. It does not guarantee 30 minutes. It guarantees opportunity. What you do with it determines everything else.

If the game is flowing better with him in a different role, that is where he should be, at least for the remainder of the season. A healthy off-season with this group, a training camp built around defined roles, and a reset heading into next year could be the cleanest medicine. There are people who will say it is too early to draw firm conclusions, that he deserves more runway post injury before any rotational decisions are locked in. They are not wrong. Basketball gives you time to test theories. If cohesion and chemistry improve when he is staggered with the second unit, that is where the minutes should land until the impact matches the talent. That is not punishment. That is pragmatism.

The hope is that it clicks for him. The hope is that comfort arrives, the efficiency stabilizes, and the athleticism translates into consistent production. Early returns say it has not happened yet. Ignoring that would not serve him. It would not serve the team either.

At the end of the day, you have to view this through a logistical lens. This is not a video game where development sliders and standings can both be maxed out at the same time. There are real stakes attached to every lineup decision.

This team is trying to climb into the playoff picture and stay clear of the Play-In. Every possession matters. Every rotation tweak carries weight. If keeping Jalen Green in the starting lineup is producing 4-of-15 nights, 1-of-7 from deep, and offensive stretches that stall out, that can cost you games. In a crowded Western Conference, that can cost you positioning.

At the same time, you cannot ignore the long view. You invested in him. You need to understand how he fits. You need enough runway to evaluate him honestly, not in theory, not in small bursts, but in meaningful minutes against real competition. You cannot make a long-term decision based on noise.

That is the tension. Push for wins now, or stretch the evaluation window and live with some growing pains. There is no clean answer. There is only the balance between urgency and patience, between chasing the standings and building something sustainable. That is the puzzle in front of the Suns right now.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...n-offensive-rating-net-rating-rotation-debate
 
Seven Days of Sun, Week 19: Fantasia is bruised but the Suns are not broken

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PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 26: Royce O'Neale #00 and Jordan Goodwin #23 of the Phoenix Suns high five after the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 26, 2026 at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Week 19 for the Phoenix Suns is a reminder of the exercise of restraint. Because at times, it’s hard to restrain from the frustration that you feel when you watch a basketball team become inert on offense. Watching the Suns operate and stall without Devin Booker can be frustrating. A team without the edge that Dillon Brooks and Jordan Goodwin inject into every passing lane and loose ball feels like watching The NeverEnding Story. Because it can feel like the Nothing is destroying our world.

There are possessions when the offense is competent. The ball finds a side, swings to the corner, touches the paint, and kicks back out. For a moment, you see Fantasia in full color. We witnessed this on the possession that sunk the Lakers, where Grayson Allen penetrated, kicked it to Collin Gillespie, who found Royce O’Neale for the game-winner.

ROYCE O'NEALE HITS THE GO-AHEAD 3 TO WIN IT FOR THE SUNS 🚨

HE SCORED THE LAST 7 POINTS FOR PHOENIX! pic.twitter.com/jWFOMMXLiq

— NBA (@NBA) February 27, 2026

It’s artistic when the rhythm breathes and the spacing makes sense. You can almost hear Falkor circling overhead, our very own luck dragon energy filling the building.

Then the Nothing creeps in.

You see it in the pump fakes. You see it in the extra dribble that leads nowhere. You see it when a player catches, pauses, scans, and finds no doorway. There is no Childlike Empress whispering a path forward. The shot clock ticks with the same dread as Artax sinking into the Swamp of Sadness. You scream at the screen to keep moving, to keep believing, to refuse to let the mud take another trip.

These are stretches where the offense dissolves into fog. Three, four, five trips in a row where the Suns cannot score, where imagination evaporates, and the floor shrinks. We experienced this plenty this past week.

The Suns were up 41-30 against Boston with 6:41 left in the second quarter. They did not score again until the 2:36 mark, and that was on a trio of free throws by Grayson Allen after being fouled. It wasn’t until 1:06 left in the quarter that they scored another field goal. 5:35 of Nothing. In the same game, they made their 7th three-pointer at that same mark, the 6:41 mark in the second. Their next three-point make came with 1:24 left in the third quarter. In between? Nothing…

Shift the Laker game. Phoenix came out hot, going up 17-9 with 6:50 left in the first. Before you could tweet out your favorite Ayton/Capela joke, the offense stalled, and by the 4:22 mark they were down 21-17. Closing out the third was similar, as Phoenix held a 10-point lead with 4:56 left, up 45-35. They would be outscored 14-4 to end the quarter. A whole lotta Nothing.

It’s like Gmork informing Atreyu, “It’s the emptiness that’s left. It’s like a despair, destroying this world”.

The Rock Biter stands there in your mind, looking down at his massive hands and wondering why they could not hold onto what mattered. The Suns find themselves staring at empty trips that feel heavier than they should, because you know a functional offense – even an average one- swings the outcome.

Thankfully, this is not a never ending story. Reinforcements are coming. Booker will walk back into the lineup with that calm command, bending coverages and restoring order. Goodwin will bring the pressure and the pace. Brooks will eventually return with that restless edge that refuses to let a game drift into apathy.

Fantasia is bruised right now, not gone. The Nothing feels large in the moment, suffocating and relentless, yet it feeds on doubt. When the creators return, when belief returns, the ball will move with purpose again. And these stagnant stretches will shrink back into the shadows where they belong.

And therein lies the paradox of Week 19. Doubt starts creeping in, and like Atreyu at the edge of the Nothing, you have to fight it. You know the circumstances that led to those empty stretches where the offense disappears. You hoped the foundation of the talent would be strong enough to carry it through, but reality keeps tapping you on the shoulder.

The frustration is valid. So is the understanding that this team is nowhere near whole.

That is what you walk away with from Week 19. An understanding that the talent, the rotations, and whatever conclusions you want to draw are largely moot right now. This is a week you log, label, and file away. This is what happens when injuries pile up. You do not extract lessons from it. You put it in the cabinet and move on. And hey, we beat the Lakers. And that is something.

Week 19 Record: 1-1​

vs. Boston Celtics, L, 97-81​

  • Possession Differential: +3.8
  • Turnover Differential: 0
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +8

This is the game where I began writing about the similarities between the Suns and The Nothing. Because being in the building, which sounded like TD Garden, there were prolonged stretches of Nothing.

vs. Los Angeles Lakers, W, 113-110​

  • Possession Differential: -1.2
  • Turnover Differential: 0
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: -13

…and the Suns totally redeem themselves. Any day you beat LA is a good one. And given the recent struggles of the team, this made for a great one.

Inside the Possession Game​

  • Weekly Possession Differential: +0.5
  • Weekly Turnover Differential: 0
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: -8
  • Year-to-Date Over/Under .500: +8

You want a graph? You got it!

2025-26-Possession-Battle.png

As I stated above, there is no deep-seated analysis required for Week 19. When you understand how banged up this team has been, there is only so much you can reasonably extract from it.

You can scan the numbers and walk away recognizing that, even during those inert offensive stretches, some foundational elements held. Because if Week 19 is about anything, it is about foundation. It is about Jordan Ott being tested. It is about seeing how transferable his schemes are when key pieces are missing.

There were positives.

An 11.6 turnover percentage, second best in the league this week. Despite that prolonged stretch in Boston when the rim felt sealed shut, they still shot 39.5% from three on the week, seventh best in the NBA. The process did not completely erode.

Then there is the other side, and it is not pretty.

28th in rebounding. Last in the NBA at 13.5 free throw attempts per game. Last with a 41.1% rebounding percentage. 25th with a 58% assist percentage. 26th in steals at 6.5 per game. Those numbers paint a different picture. One where physicality dips. One where pressure wanes. If there is a concern to file away, it is this. How much of Jordan Ott’s system holds when primary players are unavailable? How much is plug and play, and how much is talent-dependent?

Although even that has to be weighed properly. How realistic is it to expect seamless execution when your core pieces are out? There is only so much a scheme can do when the bodies running it change nightly.


Week 20 Preview​


Week 19 gave you two games. That was it. Now the calendar flips to March and the sprint begins. Week 20 brings four games in six nights.

It starts in Sacramento. Tuesday night. 9:00pm on NBC. Nine. PM. Who signed off on that? I am not sure that game needs the national spotlight. Then again, listen to me sounding high and mighty. How did the Kings land an NBC slot? Sacramento enters Sunday at 14-47. They have won two of their last 19. They score the second fewest points in the NBA and allow the third most. It is the definition of a game you have to win. And yes, I am staying true to character by complaining about a 9:00pm tip. Damn you, 9:00pm start!!!

Phoenix comes home Thursday to face the Chicago Bulls. Chicago reshuffled at the deadline and did not win a single game in February. They were 24-25 after beating Miami on January 31. They are now 24-36. This is also the return of Nick Richards. In eight games off the bench, he is averaging 9 points and 6.9 rebounds.

Friday night brings New Orleans to town. The Suns beat them on back-to-back nights earlier this season in New Orleans. They also handled them by 23 in early November, so Phoenix holds a 3-0 edge in the season series. The Pelicans sit at 19-42 entering Sunday. They are not tanking, however. Atlanta owns their first round pick, and it is unprotected. There is no incentive to fade. Expect effort.

The week closes against Charlotte. They are quietly one of the more entertaining League Pass teams out there. LaMelo Ball, Kon Knueppel, Brandon Miller. That trio can stress any defense. This is the kind of matchup where you wish Dillon Brooks were available to gum it up. Charlotte enters Sunday at 30-31, riding a four-game winning streak, even if the competition has not been elite. They have the fifth-best offense in the league. They can score in waves.

Four games. Six nights. A mix of must-win, revenge, and trap potential. The sprint has officially begun.



Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...lon-brooks-jordan-goodwin-lakers-win-analysis
 
The G League is telling a different story about Khaman Maluach

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Dec 23, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns center Khaman Maluach (10) against the Los Angeles Lakers at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

There is an old saying my dad used to drop on me all the time. I am sure he borrowed it from someone else, because that is how sayings work, but it always made me laugh. “Patience comes to those who wait.” Yeah. No shit. It is one of those circular little life lessons that sounds profound until you actually sit with it. Of course patience comes to those who wait. Waiting is the whole point. You do not get patience without the time component. You do not get the growth without the uncomfortable middle.

I have typed that word a lot this season. Patience. Over and over again when talking about the Phoenix Suns. Especially when talking about their tenth overall pick, Khaman Maluach.

And still, you scroll. You read the comments. You see the frustration. You see people wondering why he did not walk into the league and start flattening grown men like Shaquille O Neal or floating through the paint like Hakeem Olajuwon. As if that was ever the expectation. As if that was ever realistic. He is neither of those players. He is a nineteen-year-old who started playing basketball five years ago.

Yes, he flashed at Duke. You saw the length, the mobility, and the outlines of something that could be special. That does not mean the finished product was supposed to arrive overnight. Development is not cinematic. It is repetition. It is mistakes. It is heavy legs and blown coverages and moments where the game moves too fast. Then slowly, almost quietly, it begins to slow down.

An understanding has to take root here. A realization that this is a long play. That what you are watching is the foundation being poured, not the banner being raised. And foundations take time to cure.

Patience comes to those who wait.

And in my opinion, the Suns continue to handle the development of Khaman Maluach the correct way.

They have not rushed him. They have not thrown him into the deep end and told him to swim with sharks before he understands where the ladder is. They are teaching him the game. They are installing the system piece by piece. They are giving him film — real film — possessions he can rewind and dissect and learn from.

They are using their G League affiliate the way a serious franchise should. Not as exile or as punishment. But as a laboratory. As a classroom with hardwood floors. A place to stack minutes, to make mistakes, and to feel the rhythm of being a focal point. The hope is always that those reps translate when the call comes from the big club.

Phoenix has done that multiple times in the past couple of years with different players. This is not new. This is infrastructure. Yet for the box score watchers, the ones refreshing their apps at midnight, if Maluach posts a line that does not sparkle, the verdict arrives immediately. Bust. Overdrafted. Missed opportunity.

Bust 🙁

— SOSA (@RealTalkSoltero) February 2, 2026
He so ass Lmao , he gone be forgot about in 3 years 🤣🤣🤣🤣

— Mike Jones (@MikeJon78295775) February 2, 2026
Hopefully he locks in Derek queen should’ve been the choice 😭😭😭😭

— Sadge suns fan (@1ericdominguez) November 26, 2025

Development does not always show up cleanly in a 7-of-9, 12 rebound, 3 block stat line. Sometimes it is a better angle on a pick-and-roll coverage. Sometimes it is recognizing a weak side rotation half a second earlier. Sometimes it is not biting on the first fake. Those things do not trend on social media.

Oh, if only box scores dictated growth. If only it were that simple. If only scouting and development could be reduced to a stat line and a couple of shooting splits.

I love that the Phoenix Suns have sent Khaman Maluach to the G League eleven times this season. Eleven! And every time he steps on that floor, he is still one of the youngest players out there. He looks young. He is young. Yet with each stint, you can see the progression. The reads get quicker, the positioning sharpens, and the confidence grows. Those reps have started to translate into meaningful minutes with the big club.

With a small break in the schedule, the Suns sent him to Austin to face the Texas Legends on Saturday night. And this time, he delivered the kind of box score that even the casual refresh and react crowd cannot shrug at.

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He controlled the game. He controlled the paint. His size was overwhelming. The Legends had no real counter for his length and his timing. This was not a quiet developmental run. This was a statement performance. He imposed himself, he dictated the pace around the rim, and he made the floor feel smaller for anyone daring to venture inside.

This is what the G League is for. It is a proving ground. It is a confidence builder. It is a space where a nineteen-year-old can test the edges of his game against grown professionals and feel what it is like to dominate. And when he does things like that, the growth becomes harder to ignore.

Like, um, this? Can you ignore this?!

MANMAN AT THE RIM 🤩 pic.twitter.com/nBkoOWmf2O

— Valley Suns (@GLeagueSuns) March 1, 2026

Thus far this season, Maluach has made 11 appearances with the Valley Suns, and in those games, he is averaging 16.5 points on 52.6% shooting, including 26.7% from beyond the arc. He is pulling down 12.8 rebounds and blocking 2.5 shots per game. Overall, he sits at a team best +20.

That +/- number, over his 333 minutes, also serves as a quiet reminder that the Valley Suns, as a whole, have not been a dominant team.

What stands out is the steadiness of his growth. It is not explosive. It is incremental and layered. And as we enter the final stretch of the regular season, that growth should translate into more opportunities with the Phoenix Suns when they present themselves. He is not ready to be the starting center of this team. He probably is not ready to be the full-time backup either. That reality might frustrate some people. It might irritate others who want the leap to happen on their timeline.

Although this season has taught us something over and over again. Expectations have to be tempered. Patience has to be practiced. Development does not bend to public demand.

Maluach is going to be a quality center for this franchise for years to come. The flashes are real. The tools are real. The trajectory is real. The fact that it is not happening overnight does not change where this is headed. It’ll come…to those who wait.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...valley-suns-stats-nba-draft-patience-analysis
 
Suns Planet Podcast: Suns navigate injuries and take down Lakers

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Hey there Planeteers, we are back of our personal All-Star Break to tackle the latest revolving in Suns land. With them having a busy week, we dove into all the games that happened, going over the positives and negatives displayed in every contest. We all discussed who has been shining for this team and who could see some improvements as well. Let us know your thoughts down below!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...t-suns-navigate-injuries-and-take-down-lakers
 
SOS Suns: How a short-handed masterclass against the Lakers might have saved the season

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PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 26: Royce O'Neale #00 and Collin Gillespie #12 of the Phoenix Suns celebrate after the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 26, 2026 at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Alright, this won’t be as dramatic as the title, but man… what an important win that was. It’s been 84 years since the last Suns game with this random massive gap in the schedule, so let’s rewind a bit.

With 0.9 seconds on the clock, Royce O’Neale buried a corner three, assisted by Collin Gillespie, but originally created by a sweeping Grayson Allen drive and kick to CG in the corner, who found Royce. That clutch three secured a 113-110 win. It wasn’t just a win. It was a firm reminder that the Suns have no intention of sinking into the Play-In abyss.

ROYCE O'NEALE HITS THE GO-AHEAD 3 TO WIN IT FOR THE SUNS 🚨

HE SCORED THE LAST 7 POINTS FOR PHOENIX! pic.twitter.com/jWFOMMXLiq

— NBA (@NBA) February 27, 2026

If you’ve been watching the Phoenix Suns over the last two weeks, you’ve probably been pulling your hair out. I know I have. Before Thursday night, the vibes were, frankly, in the dumps. We were looking at a team that had dropped six of its last eight, an offense that looked like it was stuck in a mud pit, and a rotation decimated by injuries to Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks, and Jordan Goodwin.

Fast forward to the closing seconds against the Los Angeles Lakers at the Footprint Center. The Suns had blown a 12-point fourth-quarter lead. LeBron James had just tipped in a game-tying bucket with 22 seconds left. The ghosts of “disappointing stretches” were starting to rattle again.

Then, Royce O’Neale happened.

The Tiebreaker + “Win of the Season”


Make no mistake, this was the biggest win of the year. Not because of our hatred for LA (that helps), but because of the math. By taking down the Lakers, the Suns officially secured the season tiebreaker. We are now just one game back from L.A. in the loss column for that coveted No. 6 seed. Despite their recent spiral, the fact that the top-6 is still in play is remarkable, especially with Devin Booker’s return soon.

We saw the Suns return to the basics: scrappy defense, transition buckets, and a “death by Royce O’Neale” finish that Lakers fans will be seeing in their nightmares. It was a rollercoaster of a game, but you’d expect nothing less from these relentless Suns.

Related Read: Was Thursday night the Suns’ best win of the season?

Now, let’s talk about the elephant in the room. Jalen Green.

It is okay to hold players accountable, and right now, the accountability is loud. Green finished with 9 points on 4-of-15 shooting. The iso-ball is getting stagnant, and the 10 assists over his last five games are concerning as well. There are red flags there that are tough to ignore.

I will give him a break for now because he’s currently set up to fail in a system missing its top two scorers while he is trying to trust his body again.

JALEN GREEN RISE UP. 🔥

pic.twitter.com/WuhL6jluiB

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) February 23, 2026

This is a guy who has only played 11 games this season and is clearly still trying to get his legs under him after the recurring hamstring injury. He’s being asked to be Batman when he was brought here to be a high-level Robin. The “perfect storm for failure” is currently swirling around him, but if this inefficiency continues once Book returns, the conversation changes from “he needs time” to “he’s messing with the flow of the offense.”

I truly believe this is the worst he’ll ever look as a Sun, and it’s only uphill from here.

Bright Spots​


The brightest spot of last Thursday’s win wasn’t just the final score; it was the continued evolution of Oso Ighodaro. Oso played 34 minutes to Mark Williams’ 13. This season, he has transformed from a tentative rookie we saw a year ago into a decisive attacker who isn’t afraid to mix it up. Jordan Ott is not afraid to close games out with him, and in certain matchups, he prefers it.

This vicious poster on LaRavia was a testament to the player he has slowly become right before our eyes.

OSO IGHODARO TWO-HAND POSTER 😤 pic.twitter.com/HMhlic1fxa

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) February 27, 2026

Pair him with Rasheer Fleming — who gave us some serious “young Kawhi” defensive vibes while checking LeBron and Luka — and you start to see a viable future for the Suns’ frontcourt. Fleming is a disruptor who can switch everything, and if his three-ball becomes consistent, he is the bridge player this team has been begging for since the Brooks injury.

The Suns shot 50 threes last game. They lived by the long ball and nearly died by it, but that is the modern NBA.

With Devin Booker expected to return soon, the goal is simple: survive and advance. Yes, my basketball brain is ready for March Madness, if you couldn’t tell.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...layoff-race-jalen-green-oso-ighodaro-analysis
 
These 2 veterans proved me wrong

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As a writer in the offseason, one of my jobs is to look at this roster and make predictions. That means sometimes we can be right on those and look like geniuses. Other times, you can predict something and look like an utter fool. That is what comes with the job, and looking back at my predictions from this offseason made me realize I was right on two of my main ones but completely wrong on one.

As someone who works in this media space, it is correct to ride that high horse when you predict something correctly, but it is even MORE important to recognize when you are wrong. To take that step back and admit that you can make a mistake evaluating something, and that is what we will do in this piece.

Now you may be wondering what that take may be? Well, it would be one that I have preached since writing here, that being the Suns should have traded Royce O’Neale and Grayson Allen last offseason.

Yeah, I know, fire those boos at me, but this is how I truly felt in the summer months leading up to this year. With the team switching directions and pivoting to this youth movement, I expected them to be in the lottery this year. With this in mind, Royce and Grayson are not getting any younger, so move off them to fully reset into a soft rebuild.

I can confidently say I was one hundred percent wrong. Both of these veterans have been exactly what this team needs in role players. They step up when the team needs them most (especially late with injuries) and have both grown on the court this season, fitting this culture perfectly.

That is the best thing about bringing in Brian Gregory as the GM. From the beginning, with his press conferences, he always pushed the narrative of fit over talent for this new style of Suns team, and it has worked better than we all anticipated.

So, how have these guys truly shone this season and set themselves up to be great leaders for this new regime of Phoenix Suns basketball?

Well, first off, they both fit the culture perfectly. Truly, this team, top to bottom, represents an identity of hardworking effort and giving a damn on both ends of the basketball court, and it shows out there on the court. Regardless of whether it’s a close game, you can never count on this team, and a large part of that comes from these two veterans.

Regardless of whether it’s fighting through hard screens, pushing for aggressive steals, making last-ditch efforts to try and get a hand up to contest the shot, making plays on loose balls, or trying to create a play off one, they have embraced that. I can never count them out of doing the little things that do not get noticed on the stat sheet, but definitely impact games.

For example, take the game the other night against the Los Angeles Lakers. A late-game comeback at home that had every fan on their feet from the Royce O’Neale game-winner, but what about their offensive possession before that?

Well, after Austin Reaves tied the game at 108, the Suns had a minute left and had Grayson Allen trying to drive to the basket. Looking for a play where they could use some of their ball movement to free up a shooter, he continued to try to drive with attempts from Ryan Dunn to set a screen on his man. After Dunn got Jake LaRavia off Allen and switched Luka Doncic onto him, he drove, getting by Luka and forcing LaRavia to help. This allowed Allen to pass to Dunn, who then swung it back to Allen for the three. Yet while all this was going on, Royce O’Neale was at the three-point line, just waiting for a shot or an opportunity to crash the glass. With Allen taking the three and missing, O’Neale recognizes this and immediately runs to the basket with no rim protectors in sight. This gives him the easiest give-me rebound and points to give the Suns the lead once again. These types of plays, of just making smart winning basketball moves and knowing where to be or when to time the crash, are key with his veteran presence this year.

I also mentioned their steals and aggressiveness on that end, too. That comes into play with how they like to disrupt the opponent’s tempo and try to push it to their liking. Multiple times over the last few games, we have seen swings of 7 or 8-0 from the Suns generated from these turnovers created by both of these players. They both are also averaging career highs in steals, with Allen averaging 1.4 and O’Neale tying his best at 1.1 per game.

Then you look at the offensive side of the ball, where they have embraced the great three-point shooting that the team excels in. At the start of the year, both players were in the top 5 in 3pt% across the league. Even though they may not be in there at this moment, both have gotten hot at big times for the team this year and have won games single-handedly because of the big shots hit late. Let’s not all forget the game where Grayson Allen beat the record for most threes made in a game with ten. That game was electric, as he dropped 42 points, his career high, and broke not only a personal but also a team high.

A new Suns franchise record in 3PM ✅
A new career-high ✅

Grayson Allen (42 PTS, 10 3PM) shot LIGHTS OUT from deep in Phoenix's victory tonight! pic.twitter.com/YK9xZiH1W6

— NBA (@NBA) November 11, 2025

Allen’s ability to take command of the offense alongside O’Neale and Collin GIllepsie as of late, with no Dillon Brooks or Devin Booker, is also key to his improvement. One of his struggles heading into this year was his ball handling, but Allen has polished that with more on-ball reps throughout the year. His 3.9 assists per game are his career high, showing that with those reps, he has developed as a playmaker, too. The big key, though, is his driving ability and how much attention he draws on those plays.

One of the Phoenix Suns media members and employees for PHNX, Stephen PridGeon-Garner, has harped on this all offseason and heading into the year. This is where I learned about the impact of Allen’s driving capability and what it brings to this Suns offense. After listening to his takes and watching more and more games, you can see the analysis is spot on. Having these different perspectives and understandings of the game sheds light on areas you might not naturally think about or pay attention to, leading to better basketball discussion. I appreciate Stephen for highlighting this specific part of Allen’s game and breaking it down to raise more awareness of the parts of basketball that are not always mentioned.

I've tapped the sign on the Grayson Allen drives being not just really good but impactful for the Suns, as well as his decisions off them, all season.

Gets the Doncic switch, gets the paint touch & the correct decisions made from there & it +1's to Royce O'Neale for what seals… pic.twitter.com/jTlIqj0Vfm

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) February 27, 2026

So in totality, I was completely wrong about Royce and Grayson heading into the year. I am willing to admit that, and I hope you realize how valuable these two can truly be for the roster this season and heading into the playoffs. I am happy that the Suns kept them post-deadline and did not make a massive switch to pivot this year. Ride this year out with this squad as it surpassed expectations, and evaluate in the offseason when the playing field is open.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...gory-roster-decision-playoff-impact-admission
 
Suns JAM Session Podcast: Suns @ Kings

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The original post-game podcast on Planet Purple!

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Listen to the latest podcast episode of the Suns JAM Session Podcast below. Stay up to date on every episode, subscribe to the pod on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, YouTube Podcasts, Amazon Music, Podbean, Castbox.

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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/suns-jam/99928/suns-jam-session-podcast-suns-kings
 
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