Game Recap: Suns get stunned by Sexton and the Bulls, 105-103

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 05: Leonard Miller #11 of the Chicago Bulls and Oso Ighodaro #11 of the Phoenix Suns reach for a loose ball during the first half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on March 05, 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

This might be the worst loss of the season, considering the circumstances. Chicago was down eight players and had lost 12 of their last 13 games entering this contest.

The Phoenix Suns operated with the panicked urgency of a college student starting a midnight term paper at 11:00 PM. Unfortunately for them, they got close to submitting it on time, but procrastination early on is what cost them the game in the final moments.

It was an ugly game until the very end. Collin Sexton took over and dropped 30 points, and the young guys were running wild, which is fitting for a team named the Bulls. Tre Jones had 21 points on 9-15 shooting. Credit to Chicago for playing hard, but it is unacceptable for this type of game to happen in the first of a back-to-back.

Chicago was without a great deal of key players, including Josh Giddey and Matas Buzelis, who were questionable entering the day.

Devin Booker poured in 27 points, and Grayson Allen chipped in 21. Outside of that duo, the offense was just not there. They made a late run, but fell short.

Game Flow

First Half


The Suns got off to a slow start. Chicago jumped ahead to a 9-2 lead in the opening minutes after stagnant offense and easy buckets for the Bulls. That led to a frustrated Jordan Ott timeout with 8:13 remaining in the quarter.

A beautiful (ATO) after-timeout play was drawn up by Ott and executed to perfection to free up Jalen Green for a three-point connection.

We had early Khaman Maluach minutes! He checked about halfway through the quarter. He snatched two rebounds in his first minute on the court.

Cold shooting and lazy defense from the Suns led to a 20-9 Chicago lead and another Suns timeout.

The lineup of Maluach, Fleming, Dunn, Allen, and Gillespie brought some needed life back into the Suns, at least defensively. One of the lone highlights of the quarter was this rookie connection.

That rookie connection.

Rasheer finds Khaman for the slam 💪 pic.twitter.com/hpakKRR94E

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 6, 2026

The offense continued to struggle. It was an ugly quarter. Phoenix trailed 24-20 after one. Scoring 20 points against this Bulls team in any quarter is unacceptable.

Grayson Allen knocked down a pair of threes early in the second quarter to kickstart the offense. The first chunk of the second quarter was just as frustrating as the first quarter was. The offense was stagnant. Iso ball. Turnovers. Lazy defense.

Chicago was in control, 41-32, while dictating the pace of the game at that point.

Devin Booker scored 7 straight points after he was frustrated with a no-call the previous play, but the Suns’ defense was not getting it done, so they didn’t cover any ground during that stretch.

The Bulls were playing loose, they were playing free, and having fun while pushing the ball up the floor nearly every possession.

Phoenix closed out the half strong and was fortunate to only be down by five after being down by as many as 11. Chicago led 55-50 at the break. Devin Booker paced the Suns with 16 points, followed by 14 from Grayson Allen. Collin Sexton led Chicago with 16 of his own.

Second Half


The third quarter looked like more of the same early on. Chicago made it clear they were not going down without a fight.

Oso Ighodaro started to find himself offensively a bit, as teammates were hitting him in stride on the way to the rim a few possessions in a row.

The defensive intensity picked up a bit for Phoenix, but unfortunately, the shots weren’t consistently falling, not to mention the turnover issues. Devin Booker was still getting to his spot, at the very least.

Book getting to his spot.

He's up to 22 points on the night! pic.twitter.com/a7ph5AKIRW

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 6, 2026

Collin Sexton was absolutely cooking Phoenix, pouring in 24 points well before the end of the third quarter.

Outside of Booker and Allen, the rest of the Suns’ shotmakers struggled to put the ball through the hoop. The Bulls had 58 points in the paint through the opening three quarters. They were relentless in attacking the rim all game long.

After three, Phoenix trailed 83-77.

Chicago opened the 4th on a 7-2 run to extend their lead to 11, leading to a Jordan Ott timeout. Chicago was leading by double digits with less than five minutes remaining. A Jalen Green transition slam, followed by a Grasyon Allen triple, made it a seven-point ballgame with 4:22 left in the game.

An Amir Coffey triple injected some caffeine (sorry) into the arena to cut it to four, 98-94. Coffey drilled another one to cut it to three with less than 40 seconds remaining to answer a Yabusele triple the prior possession.

A Devin Booker triple made it a one-point game after Chicago split a pair of free throws on the other end. It was 104-103 with 22.2 seconds left after a 16-4 Phoenix run.

Nick Richards missed a free-throw in a two-point game with just a few seconds left, then Tre Jones made a high IQ play after the rebound bounced his way by throwing it straight up in the air as the time expired.


Up Next


The Suns get the Pelicans at home tomorrow night for the second of a back-to-back.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...s-get-stunned-by-sexton-and-the-bulls-105-103
 
The Phoenix Suns are caught in the middle of the Jalen Green inconsistency loop

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PHOENIX, AZ - MARCH 5: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball during the game against the Chicago Bulls on March 5, 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

Silver linings. You try to find them in every game, especially in a loss. When you look at what the Phoenix Suns put on the floor against the Chicago Bulls on Thursday night, those silver linings are difficult to locate.

It was ugly basketball. The ugliest game of the season? I am not ready to go that far. I do not even know if it cracks the top five. Although when the conversation turns to ugly nights, this one deserves a seat at the table.

The defense was pitiful. If I squinted hard enough, I felt like I was watching the Phoenix Suns from the previous two seasons. You know, the version that could not contain the perimeter and allowed opponents to make a living at the rim? For a second I thought I saw Bradley Beal jogging through the frame. Drive after drive found daylight. Chicago kept attacking the paint, and Phoenix had no answer.

And sometimes that happens. This is the NBA. Strange results live here. The Houston Rockets lost at home last night to the Warriors, a team missing Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler. Nights like that occur across the league.

So you take the game, write it on a piece of paper, crumple it up, and toss it toward the wastebasket. If you shot like the Suns did last night, however, that paper ball probably misses the rim too. Still, we are searching for silver linings. That means digging into the trash, unfolding that wrinkled piece of parchment, and studying what is written on it.

One of those silver linings might be something we did not expect. This game told us something about Jalen Green. More specifically, who he is not.

I know what some of you are thinking. “Good golly, Voita! Another Jalen Green piece?! What is this, the third one this week?!!!”

Yes. Absolutely.

Jalen Green sits at the center of one of the most fascinating storylines surrounding the Phoenix Suns this season. A large piece of the future depends on how the organization navigates his role and his development. He accounts for 21.7% of the salary cap. That is not a small detail.

So while I will continue preaching patience and measured judgment, ignoring what is happening would be irresponsible. The job here is to mark the mile markers along the road. To document the experience as it unfolds. When the season ends, the entire story should be sitting in front of us, not reconstructed from memory, but lived in real time.

As a player, Jalen Green checks plenty of boxes on paper, does he not. Athleticism? Check. Length? Check. Personality, likability, the right attitude? Check, check, chiggity-check. Those are the intangibles, the traits that make you lean forward a little and believe there is something there worth investing in.

Then you get to the deliverables.

Three-point shooting? Finishing at the rim? Rebounding? Defense? Efficiency? Those are the areas that define whether a player turns potential into production, and through much of this season, those areas have left plenty to be desired. Against Chicago, all of it sat under the spotlight.

Green finished the night 5-of-20 from the field and 1-of-8 from deep. Yes, he tied for the team lead in scoring during the late fourth-quarter push, although it took work to get there. He needed 11 shots to score his 9 points in the quarter. Amir Coffey also had 9 points in that stretch. He took 3 shots.

The moment that sticks with you arrived in the final seconds. One of Green’s seven misses in the fourth quarter came on a layup attempt at the rim, a shot that would have given Phoenix a 1-point lead — their first of the night — with 4.5 seconds remaining. Instead, the ball rolled away, and with it went the chance to flip the script.

The Suns just lost to a Bulls team that did not win a game in February. Phoenix never led. Had a look to go ahead for the first time in the final seconds, Jalen Green can’t get it to go. He finished 5-20 from the field. pic.twitter.com/tEnzdDamAJ

— Nick King (@NickKingSports) March 6, 2026

I know the loss against Chicago does not land squarely on Jalen Green’s shoulders. He was one spoke in a wheel that had a flat tire all night long. Nobody truly played well on either end of the floor, outside of Oso Ighodaro showing flashes here and there. Even he struggled at times protecting the rim. The problem was the inefficiency that spread across the entire roster. Phoenix could not slow Chicago down on one end, and they could not buy a basket on the other. That combination sinks a team every time, and it cannot all fall on Green.

Still, the game offered another look at Jalen Green operating as the second option for the Phoenix Suns. Devin Booker is back on the floor, and there will be adjustments. That process takes time. The team is learning it, the organization is learning it, the fan base is learning it. The early returns, though, have not been encouraging.

External factors exist, and they deserve acknowledgment. Injuries disrupt rhythm. Roles shift. Chemistry develops over time. At the same time, the production this season sits in a place that is difficult to ignore. It has been rough. Far rougher than anyone hoped when the season began.

I bring back a chart I initially posted back in November, fresh off the heels of a stellar 29-point Green performance against the Clippers. I charted Jalen Green’s 307 games with the Rockets and reminded the fanbase that, although his debut with Phoenix was electric, inconsistency is the name of his game.

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With Houston, Green scored over 30 points 51 times. That was 16.6% of the time. But he also scored with 15 or fewer points in 107 games. 34.8% of the time. My observation then? “The highs are electric. The lows come more often than you’d expect.”

Now we look at the 14 games he’s played with Phoenix this season. Chart it and…

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Inconsistent much?

Green is shooting 35.5% from the field this year. From three-point range, he sits at 26.3%. His effective field goal percentage is 41.8%. To put that into context, among players who have appeared in at least 14 games (which is where Green currently sits) he ranks 428 out of 448 in effective field goal percentage. That is the statistical neighborhood he occupies right now, and those numbers paint a clear picture of the struggle.

You can make the argument that he has not had enough time with this team in this role to truly settle into it. You can point to the fact that he missed 48 games this season and is still working to get his legs underneath him. I hear those arguments, and I acknowledge them. At the same time, I am watching what is happening on the court.

His legs did not look heavy late in the game when he took Isaac Okoro off the dribble and accelerated toward the rim. That moment had burst. That moment had lift. Fatigue was not the issue on that play. The problem was the finish.

That sequence tells a story we have seen repeatedly. Throughout this game, and honestly over the past nine games since returning from injury, Jalen Green has looked athletic. Springy. Explosive. A player who can turn the corner and get downhill. The challenge appears when the play reaches the rim.

Finishing has continued to be an issue for him, and that is not something unique to this season. It has followed him through his career. Green possesses elite athleticism, although his ability to convert around the basket has never matched the level of explosion he brings to the drive. During his four seasons with the Houston Rockets, Green took 57% of his shots at the rim and converted 53.8% of them. This season, the profile has shifted. Only 31.1% of his attempts come at the rim, and he is finishing those at 44.6%. The athleticism still shows up on the drive. The result at the end of that drive continues to be the hurdle.

Here is his career shooting chart.

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That’s alotta blue…

When a player is integrating into a new system, the mistakes that show up are usually schematic. You see a missed offensive screen. A defensive rotation that arrives a step late. Those are the fingerprints of someone learning a structure, learning timing, learning where the next read lives.

What I have learned over time is that system integration rarely affects the shot itself.

The shot is the familiar part. It is the one thing that travels with a player from gym to gym, team to team, system to system. It is the comfort zone. The muscle memory. The skill that exists outside of the playbook. So yes, there will be a learning curve when it comes to role and responsibility within the offense. That part is expected. The shooting production, though, should be the steady ground underneath all of it. Throughout this season, that ground has not been steady.

Right now, it is a concern. In his 9 games since returning from injury, albeit some of those out of position and scheme, Green is shooting 20.3% from deep and 43.5% overall.

I assume some regression toward the mean will occur over time. Numbers tend to move in that direction if you give them enough attempts. The issue is that the mean itself still sits a distance away. When you look at Green’s career arc as a shooter, it becomes difficult to imagine a sudden leap arriving this late in the season.

He entered this year as a 34.2% three-point shooter during his time in Houston. With 19 games remaining, the math does not offer much room for a dramatic transformation. To get to 38% from three, which would be defined as “progression”, he would need to hit his next 18 attempts in a row. To reach his own career average, he would still need to knock down his next 12 consecutive threes.

Jalen Green would need to go 12-of-12 from beyond the arc to climb back to his 34.2% career average from three point range, the mark he posted during his time in Houston.

Right now, he is shooting 26.3% from deep with Phoenix. pic.twitter.com/jpDuvq4jyF

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 6, 2026

That is the kind of arithmetic that tells you where things currently stand. And therein lies the concern.

For all the positive intangibles Jalen Green brings, the deliverables have lagged behind through this stretch of the season. In a strange way, that becomes the silver lining from nights like this. Not because he struggled, but because a longer timeline reveals something clearer. You start to see the contours of the player. You start to see where the limitations live. And those observations matter when you are talking about a player who will earn $72 million over the next two seasons.

Yes, the sample is small. Anyone can argue that there is not enough runway to identify a trend, and I would not push back too hard on that point. I tend to lean on the twenty-game rule when evaluating stretches like this. I need twenty games to truly understand who a player is within the context of a system. And if your push back is along the lines of, “Well, the situation hasn’t been ideal for Green”, I respond with “Welcome to life. It never is.” The cream rises to the top, regardless of the situation. Champions adjust.

This is not a new story emerging out of nowhere. It is more of a reinforcement of something we already understood. Jalen Green, for all of the upside that exists in his athleticism and scoring potential, has long carried the label of an inefficient player. What the Phoenix Suns are seeing right now is a closer look at that reality. They are gathering information in real time while asking a very important question.

Can he be the number two option next to Devin Booker as Booker moves deeper into the prime years of his career? Is that worth $36 million per season?

There are still 19 games left for Green to answer some of those questions. Nineteen games to settle into the offense, find rhythm, and alter the narrative. If he does not, the offseason conversation becomes far more complicated for the Phoenix Suns.

Then again, there is another layer to consider.

Injuries, recovery, and adjusting to a new system all create noise in the evaluation process. It is possible the organization decides this sample does not provide enough evidence to make a firm decision this summer. That possibility exists.

There is another uncomfortable reality attached to that scenario as well. If Green continues to shoot and perform at this level, his value on the open market shrinks quickly. The Suns could once again find themselves holding a large contract that does not align with the production on the floor. Phoenix fans have seen that movie before. Bradley Beal. Deandre Ayton. The hope inside the building is that Jalen Green does not become the next chapter in that story.

That is the silver lining from Thursday night’s loss to the Chicago Bulls. The game offered another opportunity to understand who and what Jalen Green is as a number two option. Evaluation is the name of the game this season. Whether the results are good or bad, the process has to occur. The organization needs clarity on who they are and what direction they should take moving forward.

Thankfully, this evaluation period is happening at a moment when the Suns are not hurting themselves too badly in the standings. Phoenix remains firmly planted in the seventh spot in the Western Conference. Even after the Warriors defeated the Houston Rockets last night, the Suns still sit three games ahead of Golden State in that position. That means, as things currently stand, Phoenix would host a Play-In game against them. Try not to look too closely at the fact that the Suns are 1-3 against the Warriors this season.

Sure, a win against Chicago would have been ideal. It would have helped Phoenix gain ground on both the Los Angeles Lakers and the Houston Rockets. That opportunity slipped away. Instead, the focus shifts to what the game revealed. Several performances fell below the standard. One of them carried far more weight than the others. When a player commands that level of financial investment, the spotlight naturally follows.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-devin-booker-analysis-roster-evaluation-2026
 
Game Recap: Devin Booker catches fire as Phoenix survives a late Pelicans push, 118-116

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PHOENIX, AZ - MARCH 6: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns looks to pass the ball during the game against the New Orleans Pelicans on March 6, 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 Phoenix Suns needed a response after an abysmal performance against the Chicago Bulls on Thursday night. They delivered one, defeating the New Orleans Pelicans 118-116. It was a little more uncomfortable than it needed to be, as Phoenix allowed 35 points in the fourth quarter while scoring only 26. Still, the result is what matters. The Suns secured their 36th win of the season, matching their total from a year ago.

The Phoenix Suns have matched their win total from last season, doing so in 63 games played pic.twitter.com/CjeDAPGBwC

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 7, 2026

Devin Booker led the charge with 32 points, shooting 10-of-21 from the field and 5-of-12 from beyond the arc. Collin Gillespie added 12 points, 6 assists, and 6 rebounds. Jalen Green looked far more comfortable, scoring 25 points on 8-of-17 shooting and 3-of-9 from deep. Grayson Allen chipped in 12 points and 8 assists, and the Suns received positive minutes from rookies Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming.

New Orleans pushed throughout the night, especially in the closing minutes. All five Pelicans starters finished in double figures. They scored 54 points in the paint, which was 20 more than Phoenix managed. The difference came from the perimeter. The Suns knocked down 23 three pointers, a number that ultimately carried them to the win.

The two point victory completed a season sweep of the Pelicans and moved Phoenix to within one and a half games of the Los Angeles Lakers for the sixth seed in the Western Conference.

Game Flow​

First Half​


The Suns’ offense opened the Chicago game looking completely inert. Possessions stalled, shots did not fall, and the rhythm never appeared. Against New Orleans, the opening stretch felt different.

Phoenix looked organized. The ball moved with purpose. Shots started dropping. They opened the game on a 7-0 run, a quick burst that set the tone early. New Orleans answered with a 7-0 run of its own, although the Suns still looked far more fluid than they did the night before.

Jalen Green set that tone early by applying pressure at the rim. He attacked downhill, forced the defense to react, and turned those drives into trips to the free throw line.

Good job by Green drawing fouls on back-to-back drives. Went for the poster with a clear runway and then held his guy on his hip there to get the bump.

— Kellan Olson (@KellanOlson) March 7, 2026

Green ended the first quarter with 8 points on 3-of-7 shooting.

We once again saw first quarter minutes for Khaman Maluach. That continues to be part of his development curve. One thing he clearly needs to clean up is his movement on screens. He was called for an offensive foul when he shifted during a pick, and that marks the second time in two games where it has happened. That is the kind of detail young bigs learn over time, understanding when to hold position and when to release.

The offense began to wane as the quarter drew to a close. The team shot 4-of-13 (30.8%) from beyond the arc and the bench unit certainly didn’t help as they came in and went 1-of-6. Thankfully, New Orleans shot under 40% as a team.

After one, the Suns trailed 29-26.

Phoenix put together a 10-2 run early in the second quarter, and Oso Ighodaro played a big role in that stretch on the offensive end. That element is key. Having someone who can attack the interior adds another dimension to the offense. It gives the Suns a pressure point near the rim instead of becoming a team that stands around the arc firing three pointers all night.

Love this empty corner action between Grayson Allen and Oso Ighodaro.

If Oso sets a good screen, at the right angle, it allows for a roll like this. From there, just attack with aggression: pic.twitter.com/VRpkBkX6Px

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) March 7, 2026

Phoenix pushed the lead to five early in the quarter, although New Orleans answered midway through the period with a 7-0 run. That stretch arrived when the ball began sticking in Jalen Green’s hands, and the rhythm of the offense slowed down.

Green still produced in the quarter. He scored 10 points in the quarter, putting him at 18 for the half. He finished the period 2-of-6 from the field, both makes coming from beyond the arc, and he went 4-of-4 from the line.

Devin Booker eventually took more control of the offense, and the game began to settle for Phoenix. The Suns responded with an 8-0 run, and the lead continued to grow. It reached 10 with under two minutes remaining in the half. Booker closed the first half with 7 points and 4 assists.

Zion Williamson added four points during the final minute of the half, part of his 15 first-half points, which trimmed the margin. Phoenix headed into the locker room with a six-point advantage. Oso Ighodaro had 10 points, and Royce O’Neale, who was questionable to play, had 6 rebounds.

The Suns outscored New Orleans 32-23 in the second quarter and carried a 58-52 lead into halftime.

OSO FIRST-HALF DUNK SHOW 🎬

10 PTS from the big man! pic.twitter.com/PRcCWBlROB

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 7, 2026

Second Half​


Royce O’Neale opened the third quarter with a quick five points in the first couple of minutes. The burst forced Pelicans head coach James Borrego to call an early timeout as the Suns pushed their lead to nine.

The timeout helped settle New Orleans. They responded with a 10-2 run of their own and quickly chipped into the margin.

The Pelicans began attacking the rim with even more aggression during that stretch, and it created problems for Oso Ighodaro. With 5:52 left in the third quarter he picked up his fifth foul, which meant the Suns would lean on rookie Khaman Maluach for extended minutes.

Devin Booker steadied the group with a lineup that featured Grayson Allen alongside the young trio of Maluach, Ryan Dunn, and Rasheer Fleming. That unit started to find rhythm. Phoenix strung together an 11-0 run, capped by a Devin Booker three. Fleming knocked down a three during the run as well, giving the offense another spark.

Devin, Grayson, and the kids (Fleming, Dunn, and Maluach) with an 8-0 run

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 7, 2026

Rasheer Fleming knocked down another three. Khaman Maluach rejected an Yves Missi attempt at the rim. I was sitting there smiling like an idiot watching it unfold.

The third turned into the Devin Booker show. He poured in 18 points and caught absolute fire. Booker went 6-of-9 from the field in the period and 3-of-6 from beyond the arc. Every possession started to bend in Phoenix’s direction once he found that rhythm.

The Suns scored 34 points in the quarter, shooting 45.8% from the field and 6-of-17 from deep.

After three quarters, Phoenix held an 11 point lead, 92-81.

TOUGH FINISH

Book with 15 PTS so far in the third 😤 pic.twitter.com/iQePvD4r2C

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 7, 2026

The fourth quarter opened with the teams trading buckets, and Jalen Green carrying much of the scoring load for Phoenix early in the period. He had five of the Suns’ first 10 points in the quarter.

He also delivered a nice pass to Khaman Maluach inside, which is something this team still needs to get more comfortable with. The Suns are not used to having a true interior presence. There were multiple possessions where Maluach had position near the rim and the entry pass never arrived, or the pass came late and off target.

Coverage lapse from New Orleans leads to Jalen Green seeing 3(!) to the ball.

Khaman Maluach with the dunk off the roll. Really good tempo re-established in this recent stretch of minutes. pic.twitter.com/Nogdaewh6E

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) March 7, 2026

Dejounte Murray, who is working his way back after the Achilles injury that ended his season last year, kept probing the Suns defense throughout the fourth quarter. He stayed patient with the ball, poking and prodding until he found a seam. He kept New Orleans within striking distance as the clock passed four minutes left. Suns were up by 9.

The Pelicans had their chances. Shots were not falling, although they continued to extend possessions by grabbing offensive rebounds. As the quarter moved toward the final moments, the game tightened.

Dejounte Murray kept applying pressure, probing the defense and keeping New Orleans within striking distance. With 11.7 seconds left, Saddiq Bey stepped to the line and hit a pair of free throws, trimming the Suns lead to 114-113.

Grayson Allen answered on the other end. He calmly sank two free throws of his own with 9.8 seconds remaining, pushing the lead back to three. Phoenix then chose to foul Zion Williamson. Only 1.2 seconds came off the clock in the process. Williamson missed the first free throw, then knocked down the second.

The Pelicans then fouled Devin Booker. The foul game is always a thrill, right. One minute on the clock somehow turns into twenty.

Booker stepped to the line and knocked down both free throws, pushing the lead to four with 7.8 seconds remaining. Herb Jones answered quickly with a bucket to keep the pressure on. New Orleans nearly stole the ensuing inbound pass, although Phoenix managed to secure it and close the door.

The Suns held on and secured their 36th win of the season.


Up Next​


The next opponent for Phoenix is one of the best stories in the NBA this season, the Charlotte Hornets. Charlotte has been on an absolute heater lately. They may have dropped a game tonight against the Miami Heat, although that loss came after a six game winning streak that had people around the league starting to pay attention. That team is playing with confidence right now, and they are going to arrive in Phoenix believing they can keep that momentum rolling.

See you Sunday.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...g-jalen-green-collin-gillespie-west-standings
 
Khaman Maluach is learning the NBA game while waiting for the entry pass

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PHOENIX, AZ - MARCH 6: Khaman Maluach #10 of the Phoenix Suns dunks the ball during the game against the New Orleans Pelicans on March 6, 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 Mark Williams injury that was announced this past Thursday was not news anyone wanted to hear. He has been healthy all season, so learning he will miss two to three weeks with a left foot injury lands with a bit of frustration. Timing does add an interesting wrinkle, however. His production had begun to taper off recently, so this stretch arrives at a moment where the team can allow him to recover while also expanding the role of rookie Khaman Maluach.

If that is part of the plan, the calendar cooperates. The Suns sit in a position where the Play-In tournament feels highly likely, and the postseason still sits within reach. Basketball Reference currently gives Phoenix a 34.9% chance to finish sixth or higher. That kind of positioning means meaningful games are coming, and those games provide invaluable experience for the young core.

With Williams sidelined, Maluach has begun to see the floor more often. He’s played 32 minutes over two games since the announcement that Williams will miss some time, slotting in as the backup to sophomore big Oso Ighodaro. The minutes are real, and the situations matter. These are not empty possessions in a blowout. These are reps in games that carry weight in the standings, which makes them the next step in his development.

The process has looked a little clunky at times. He’s had 6 turnovers and fumbled a couple of opportunities in the paint. That is part of the experience for a 19-year-old center learning the speed and physicality of the NBA. Players at that position rarely step into meaningful minutes and immediately dominate. Growth takes time, repetition, and film study. Because of that, this stretch cannot be measured cleanly with a simple stat line.

There were encouraging signs against the Pelicans. Knowing this might be the roughest version of Maluach we will ever see, he still finished the night with five blocks. The timing was impressive, especially against a New Orleans team that thrives on attacking the paint.

Khaman Malauch's 5 blocks vs the Pelicans pic.twitter.com/6F9wHSdKPl

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 7, 2026

That defensive presence is the reason Phoenix selected him with the 10th pick in the 2025 NBA draft. His length is striking, and his size stands out the moment he steps on the floor. The scouting report labeled him as raw, although the physical tools are undeniable. When he runs the court, when he stretches those arms toward the rim or across a passing lane, you begin to understand the scale of the defender he can become.

The point total sat at four against New Orleans in 20 minutes played, coming on 2-of-3 shooting. Nothing alarming, although it is something worth noting. Why? Because of the old saying that a “center cannot pass the ball to himself”.

It has been quite a while since Phoenix has had a true interior presence with this kind of size. Mark Williams brings plenty to the table, and his length is impressive. But I would not describe him as overwhelming physically. Oso Ighodaro brings strength and physicality, although he does not possess the same reach. Khaman Maluach arrives with both traits. At 7’1”, 250 pounds, with a 7’8” foot 8 wingspan, he carries a frame Phoenix has not featured since the departure of Deandre Ayton.

There is another difference that stands out immediately when watching Maluach move across the floor. The motor. That is the first thing that jumps off the screen. Over the past few games, he has played with energy that never seems to fade. He sprints the floor on fast breaks. He runs from rim to rim. There is no lingering frustration after a missed rebound. No slow jog back on defense. The play ends on one end, and he is already moving toward the other.

That kind of effort changes the feel of the floor.

The next challenge becomes figuring out how he fits within the offense. Phoenix does not run an inside-out attack. The Suns currently rank sixth in the NBA in three-point rate. 45.4% of their attempts come from beyond the arc. Guards penetrate, kick the ball out, and the offense spreads the floor looking for space. Interior touches are rare.

Think about it. When was the last time you saw a big man receive a post-entry pass in this system? When was the last time the offense flowed through a consistent pick-and-roll that finished with a big catching the ball at the rim? That reality creates the next step in Maluach’s development.

If he is going to grow as an interior scorer, he has to touch the ball. And the passes need to arrive on time and in the right spot. Over the past few games, there were multiple possessions where Maluach had an open position near the rim. Other times, he was sprinting into open space in transition. The ball never reached him.

Part of that might be familiarity. This roster has not played with a center who occupies that type of space within the offense. Players fall back into what feels natural. The ball swings around the perimeter. The open shooter receives the pass. The shot goes up. Maluach drifts into position to rebound the miss. There is nothing wrong with that approach. A 7’1” center roaming the paint is a very good safety net when the ball does not fall.

But development requires opportunity. Maluach needs chances to catch the ball inside. He needs possessions where he can feel contact, hold position, and finish through traffic. He needs to learn not to bring the ball down once he receives it. He needs to feel defenders leaning on his shoulders and still find a way to score. Those lessons only arrive when the ball reaches his hands. If every possession ends with him sealing a defender and boxing out, the growth on the offensive side slows down.

The other element is the entry pass. That has been an ongoing issue for Phoenix for quite some time, going back to the Deandre Ayton era. Over the years, it felt like Ayton lost some trust from teammates when it came to those passes. There were possessions where he caught the ball and immediately kicked it back out. Other times, he drifted away from contact rather than attacking the rim. Still, the larger point remains. Entry passes to big men from Devin Booker have been inconsistent for a long time. Friday night provided another reminder.

Entry passes. Something the Suns will need to do a better job of if they want Malauch to grow and thrive. pic.twitter.com/u9CCbCcYbN

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 7, 2026

Running pick-and-roll actions and entry pass drills in practice is one thing. Doing it at game speed, with ten bodies moving and twenty thousand eyes watching, is something else entirely. Repetition leads to retention, and the players around Maluach need to give him those repetitions.

This is an early observation during his integration into the rotation. Jordan Ott and the coaching staff are certainly breaking down the film and discussing ways to create a few more touches for him each night. The goal is development, although it also adds another dimension to an offense that leans heavily on the three-point shot.

Winning in the NBA requires variety. You cannot rely on launching threes every night and expect consistent results. The Suns have shown throughout the season that they can score in multiple ways. Since February 1, the numbers show an even stronger lean toward the perimeter. Phoenix owns a 49.3% three point rate during that stretch, which ranks third in the league.

This window without Mark Williams creates an opportunity. Maluach is seeing meaningful minutes, and the offense can explore small adjustments that incorporate his presence near the rim. Those possessions help him learn the rhythm of the league. They also give Phoenix another option within its system.

From a personal standpoint, the most encouraging part is seeing the young players on the floor. Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming are gaining experience, and those minutes are arriving during wins. That matters. The future in Phoenix may be bright. It becomes even brighter if the team starts throwing a few more quality entry passes.

Welcome to Phoenix, Khaman Maluach. Step one of the curriculum: surviving without entry passes.

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 7, 2026


Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-mark-williams-injury-rookie-center-nba-draft
 
Suns Planet Podcast: Suns take on “easy” opponents

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Hey there, Planeteers, we had an exciting week as the Suns took part in some wild games, with injuries and drama unfolding. We dissected the three games that took place, going over the good and bad, while also diving into the Suns’ center rotation. Then we discussed the recent injury to Mark WIllimas and talked about the Dillon Brooks news as well. Hope you enjoy it!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ns-planet-podcast-suns-take-on-easy-opponents
 
Amir Coffey is warming up in the Suns rotation

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 26: Amir Coffey #2 of the Phoenix Suns during the second half of the NBA game 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 Suns at the trade deadline had one goal in mind: to avoid the luxury tax line. This was a movement set by many teams in the league, and the Suns were able to do so. Little did everyone know, though, that by making this move, the team would also regain a valuable piece.

Amir Coffey has consistently brought energy and impactful plays for this team since his addition at the deadline

Love his hustle and grind to do the little things for Phoenix, definitely should not go unnoticed

— BruceVeliz (@BruceVeliz) March 7, 2026

As we all know, the Suns traded Nigel Hayes-Davis and Nick Richards to the Milwaukee Bucks for Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey. Anthony never actually came to Phoenix and was then eventually waived for standout two-way player Jamaree Bouyea. Yet, Amir Coffey was said to be a throw-in, someone who had fallen out of the Bucks’ rotation and someone many Suns fans did not think would make an impact.

Well, so far for the Suns, he has suited up in nine games, and even if he is not a hot commodity on the stat sheet post-game, his impact has definitely helped this Suns squad. As we all know, this team has not caught a break against the injury bug this season. Time and time again, we see the squad get fully healthy, only for someone to get hurt in that game.

Right now, for the Suns, Dillon Brooks, Jordan Goodwin, and Mark Williams are out, giving Coffey more of an opportunity to show what he can bring to this team. Just in his small sample size, he has shown to be more valuable in Ott’s system than in River’s over in Milwaukee. As I stated, it’s only been nine games, but in 16 minutes per game, he averages 5.4 points, 2.6 rebounds, 1.2 assists, with 47/38/69 shooting splits.

Compare that to his time in Milwaukee: in just a third of the games, he is getting double or more minutes, points, rebounds, and assists while shooting +10% from three (8, 2.5, 0.9, 0.4). That should tell you multiple things.

One Coffey is still a valuable player in the right system.

Two that the Bucks still (due to Doc’s influence) fail to bring the best out of certain players.

He fits the system Jordan Ott wants, with his ability to shoot the three-point shot, alongside the hustle and dirty work this team envisages.

So far, all of that has been true, and recent performances support it. In the game against the Chicago Bulls, he had his best performance for the Suns. In 17 minutes, he posted a season-high 12 points with 4 rebounds, missing only one shot and making both of his threes. Once again, the stat line does not scream difference maker, but Coffey most certainly was.

In a game where the Suns shot 28% from three and had only two other players make multiple three-pointers (Grayson Allen and Devin Booker), his three-point shot was especially needed, given that he made them.

His first came with the Suns down seven in the fourth with just under three minutes to go. His hitting this three in clutch time when the team needed it most made it a four-point game.

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His second three also came in another key moment, down six with under a minute left. Hitting another big three with just 45 seconds left made it a one-possession game.

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Even if they lost, this game would not have been as close if Coffey had not given his best effort and almost helped them climb back in, his clutch gene kicking in. Once again, this is something many did not factor in when the Suns acquired him: that he would be helping the Suns almost pull out a win.

Not only does he have a good three-point shot, but he also hustles and rebounds effectively. As I mentioned, he had 4 rebounds in this game vs the Bulls, and 3 of them were offensive rebounds. Two of those actually ended up in the same possession, and Coffey was then rewarded a trio to the free-throw line for his hard work.

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This is just another valuable aspect for a team that is in the top four in OREB per game at 13.2.

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Coffey deserves his credit, even if he is not going to be dropping 25 or having a game with 15+ rebounds. His effort and determination to keep pushing through after not working out in Milwaukee are inspiring. I am very excited for his addition to this team, and can’t wait to continue seeing him improve within this system as his playing time increases.

This continues to push the narrative of the shift in culture, identity, and Phoenix that was brought this season. Something many clowned this offseason, but one that has clearly shown to be a core part of this team’s success, top to bottom.



Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-cole-anthony-waiver-jamaree-bouyea-nba-trade
 
Game Recap: Suns shut down Charlotte’s high powered offense, 111-99

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 08: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns drives the ball past LaMelo Ball #1 of the Charlotte Hornets during the first half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on March 08, 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 Charlotte Hornets entered Sunday night as one of the hottest teams in the NBA. They had won six of their last seven games and arrived in Phoenix riding a 10-game road winning streak. That run ended in the desert as the Phoenix Suns secured a 111–99 victory.

One of the league’s most explosive offenses was quieted. Phoenix held Charlotte under 100 points for only the fifth time this season, using active defense and controlled possessions to slow the pace of the game.

Devin Booker led the way with 30 points and 10 assists, converting a season high 15 free throws in the process. Rasheer Fleming continued his strong stretch, scoring a career high 16 points on 6-of-8 shooting and 4-of-6 from beyond the arc. Ten of those points arrived in the fourth quarter as Phoenix pulled away late.

Jalen Green looked far more comfortable offensively, scoring 20 points in the first half and finishing with 24 for the night. Collin Gillespie added 24 points of his own, knocking down 5-of-10 from deep and providing steady offense throughout the game.

Phoenix also controlled the possession battle. The Suns turned 13 Charlotte turnovers into 14 points while committing only one turnover themselves, which resulted in four points for the Hornets.

The win moves Phoenix to 37 victories on the season, already surpassing last year’s total.

Game Flow​

First Half​


First matter of business was the pregame announcements that the Suns would be without the services of Grayson Allen, who popped up late on the injury report and ultimately was ruled out an hour prior to tipoff.

Both offenses came out humming early, trading blows back and forth. LaMelo Ball knocked down a pair of threes, while Jalen Green and Collin Gillespie answered with one apiece from deep. As the quarter wore on, Charlotte could not miss. They opened the game 9-of-11 from the field while the Suns sat at 5-of-10, which helped the Hornets build an eight-point lead midway through the first quarter.

With Grayson Allen out, the Suns turned to Haywood Highsmith early, giving him first quarter minutes as part of the first wave of substitutions alongside Khaman Maluach. It marked his second appearance of the season and the first time he has seen meaningful minutes since arriving via the buyout market.

Maluach made his presence felt right away. He converted after receiving a clean interior pass from Devin Booker and later added an early block on fellow rookie Ryan Kalkbrenner. He followed up with an impressive block on Josh Green.

Man Man with the huge rejection! pic.twitter.com/z9YRLSF4Yg

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) March 9, 2026

Charlotte’s offense cooled off after their initial burst, as they went more than four minutes without a field goal. The Suns answered with an 8–0 run of their own, pulling even as the momentum shifted. The drought ended when Ryan Dunn fouled Kon Knueppel on a three-point attempt, sending the rookie to the line. The Rookie of the Year favorite finished the quarter with 10 points tolead all scorers.

Phoenix closed the period with a lineup of Collin Gillespie, Haywood Highsmith, Ryan Dunn, Rasheer Fleming, and Khaman Maluach. That group finished the quarter at +1, helped by a logo buzzer beater from Gillespie.

After one quarter, the Suns trailed 30-28.

Collin Gillespie beats the Q1 buzzer.

What I like about this, sneakily, is that Collin rushes to *be* the inbounder then can have even more momentum off the handoff from Maluach.

Little thing but important in that situation, for a longer distance shot attempt. pic.twitter.com/RJbO1mIwzh

— Stephen PridGeon-Garner 🏁 (@StephenPG3) March 9, 2026

Charlotte opened the second quarter with a 9–5 run. They went 3-of-6 from the field and knocked down a pair from deep, which prompted Jordan Ott to call a timeout and settle things down.

The break did not immediately fix the rhythm. The next two Suns possessions ended with a short-armed paint shot from Oso Ighodaro and a turnover. Meanwhile, Charlotte was flying around the rim, throwing lobs and hammering them home. The run stretched to 10–0, and the Hornets suddenly held an eight-point lead.

Jalen Green helped shift the energy. He went into attack mode, driving downhill possession after possession, finishing at the rim or drawing trips to the free throw line. His finishing in the first half looked sharper than it had during his previous 14 games.

Green sparked the Suns as they pushed back midway through the quarter. He knocked down a three, slipped in an up-and-under around the rim, and continued to pressure the defense. Phoenix rode that momentum back into the game and took a two-point lead with five minutes remaining in the second quarter.

JALEN GREEN 😮‍💨😮‍💨 pic.twitter.com/bFUeTvpdhY

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 9, 2026

One of the better moments of the first half came from Khaman Maluach, who powered in a putback around the rim, flashing the kind of size and interior presence the Suns rarely get on the offensive glass. A productive Maluach changed the matchup math. Charlotte prefers smaller lineups with Diabate, but Maluach’s size forced them into more Kalkbrenner minutes in the first half.

C’mon Maluach! THIS is a putback! pic.twitter.com/D5Uzzrkamg

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 9, 2026

It was a solid second quarter for the Phoenix Suns, who outscored the Charlotte Hornets 32–28 in the period. Phoenix went 4-of-9 from beyond the arc while Charlotte finished 4-of-12 from deep.

Jalen Green carried much of the scoring load in the quarter. He poured in 12 points and finished the half with 20, doing so on 7-of-11 shooting and 4-of-7 from three. Devin Booker added 14 points and 4 assists in the half, while Khaman Maluach chipped in 4 points and 5 rebounds.

Charlotte had balanced production of its own. Four Hornets reached double figures in the first half, with Brandon Miller leading the way with 11 points. Kon Knueppel, Miles Bridges, and LaMelo Ball each added 10.

At halftime, the Suns held a narrow 60–58 lead.

Second Half​


Phoenix opened the second half with aggression on both ends of the floor, jumping out on an 8–0 run to set the tone, opening up a 10-point lead.

During that stretch, Devin Booker was fouled by LaMelo Ball on a drive, and it appeared that Ball stepped on Booker’s ankle during the play. Scott Foster ruled it a common foul almost immediately. Booker stepped to the line for his 12th free throw of the night and converted both, moving to 12-of-12 from the stripe at that point in the game.

The Hornets began 0-of-5 from the field, turning the ball over 4 times as Phoenix was jumping passing lanes, leading to 4 Suns’ points.

This is the best the Suns have looked since January pic.twitter.com/IvbfPp9Ocg

— John Voita, III (@DarthVoita) March 9, 2026

The Suns came out active in the third quarter, playing with a bit of spunk that has not consistently appeared over the past few weeks. Their energy translated into a lead that hovered between nine points and six points for much of the period.

As the quarter wore on, Charlotte’s defense began to assert itself. The Hornets have been one of the stronger defensive teams since January 1, and that pressure started to show. Phoenix went more than three minutes without a field goal as the offense stalled. Moussa Diabate made his presence known in the paint, recording three blocks in the quarter alone. That defensive stretch helped spark an 8–0 run for Charlotte, trimming the Suns’ lead down to one.

Collin Gillespie provided a late lift. In the closing seconds of the quarter, he launched another logo three and was fouled by Coby White on the attempt. Gillespie knocked down all three free throws, giving Phoenix a small cushion heading into the fourth.

It was not a clean offensive quarter for the Suns. They finished 6-of-21 from the field, good for 28.6% shooting in the period. Still, they managed to carry an 81–77 lead into the final quarter.

Both offenses stumbled a bit to open the fourth quarter, with possessions feeling clunky and rhythm hard to find. Rasheer Fleming had no such issue. He scored 7 of the Suns’ first 9 points, then punctuated the stretch with a fast break dunk that pushed him to 13 points on the night, setting a new career high after previously reaching 8 on four separate occasions earlier in his young career.


The Suns’ offense began to find its rhythm, and a pair of three-pointers from Collin Gillespie pushed the Phoenix lead to 13 points with six minutes remaining in the fourth quarter.

Buzz City kept pushing. Charlotte is one of the better three-point shooting teams in the league, so the game never feels safe when they are within striking distance.

Devin Booker continued to look sharp through the middle stretch of the fourth quarter. He found open shooters, knocked down his own looks, and kept the offense moving with control. Charlotte applied pressure, Phoenix answered each time.

The biggest moment came late in the quarter when Collin Gillespie buried a buzzer-beating three. It was his fifth make from deep and pushed his total to 24 points on the night. The shot arrived with under three minutes remaining and stretched the Suns’ lead to 16.

With 1:39 left, Charlotte head coach Charles Lee waved the white flag and pulled his starters. Rasheer Fleming finished with a game-high 10 points in the fourth quarter as Phoenix closed strong.

The Suns outscored the Hornets 30-22 in the final period. The final score, Phoenix 111, Charlotte 99.


Up Next​


A long and winding road begins for Phoenix as they set out on a six-game, 10-day road trip. Their first stop is in Milwaukee on Tuesday. Early Arizona start. 5pm. We shall see you then!

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...green-collin-gillespie-hornets-road-streak-en
 
Seven Days of Sun, Week 20: The Phoenix Suns right the net rating ship

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PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 08: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns reacts after scoring against the Charlotte Hornets during the second half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on March 08, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Suns defeated the Hornets 111-99. 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

Week 20 arrived at the perfect time for the Phoenix Suns.

This is a team that had been searching for traction. The numbers tell the story. Phoenix had not posted a positive net rating in five weeks. The last time it happened was Week 15 when they sat at +2.8. Since then, the stretch looked rough. Week 16 at -0.1. Week 17 at -28.7. Week 18 at -14.4. Week 19 at -9.1.

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Injuries played a large role in that slide. The roster has taken hits across the rotation, forcing Phoenix to lean heavily on younger players and redistribute minutes to guys now operating outside their usual roles.

So yes, Week 20 was needed.

This was a stretch where the Suns realistically could have finished 4–0. Had it not been for a lethargic performance against the Chicago Bulls, Phoenix would have walked away undefeated. That is basketball. Some nights, you steal a game that had no business landing in the win column. Other nights, you drop one that felt secure. Over the long arc of a season, the truth usually reveals itself. Good teams rise. Bad teams fade.

And even with the injuries piling up and the rotations shifting almost nightly, the Suns continue to show that they belong in the group of teams capable of rising.

The Suns sit at 37–27 following their Week 20 performance. They remain two games back of the sixth seed in the Western Conference, although they are only three games away from the third seed. With 18 games remaining on the schedule, the standings can shift quickly. All it takes is one team catching fire and another team cooling off for the picture to change.

That creates an interesting opportunity for Phoenix. The conversation can begin drifting away from the Play-In discussion and toward the postseason itself. That is where the real intrigue begins, when you start looking up the standings rather than over your shoulder. The Suns are positioned well enough to think that way. The teams currently sitting in eighth through tenth place are clustered tightly together. The Golden State Warriors hold a one-game lead on the Los Angeles Clippers, while the Clippers sit one game ahead of the Portland Trail Blazers.

Phoenix, meanwhile, stands 4.5 games clear of that group. That cushion provides breathing room, although the real opportunity lies ahead of them. With a strong final stretch, the Suns can shift the focus away from Play-In scenarios and toward the question that matters far more in the long run. Who might they face when the postseason begins?

Standings aside, this was a refreshing week for Phoenix. The best-case scenario continues to quietly unfold. Injuries are never something a team hopes for, although they have opened the door for something valuable. Opportunity. Opportunity to evaluate the youth movement that Phoenix has been slowly trying to cultivate. And this past week, the young players responded.

Khaman Maluach averaged 17.4 minutes across his three appearances. In that time, he scored 3.3 points on 62.5% shooting, grabbed 5.7 rebounds, and averaged 2.3 blocks per game. The stat line is modest offensively, although the defensive impact and the activity around the rim continue to stand out.

Then there is Rasheer Fleming.

In four games this week, he averaged 8.8 points on 65% shooting, including 60% from beyond the arc. That number carries weight when you realize he attempted 15 three-pointers during that stretch. He also added four rebounds per game while playing 15.8 minutes a night.

So Week 20 became a productive one for Phoenix. The Suns finished 3–1, the rookies received real run, and they rewarded the opportunity with strong play. Phoenix still has work to do. The climb out of the Play-In conversation will require continued effort over the final stretch of the season. The hope is that reinforcements begin returning soon. Jordan Goodwin could be back this week. Mark Williams may be another week or two away. Dillon Brooks still appears to be three to four weeks from returning.

March might represent the turning point. The Suns are trying to regain health, stabilize the rotation, and continue developing their young players at the same time. If those paths meet at the right moment, the final stretch of the season could become very interesting for Phoenix.

Week 20 Record: 3-1​

@ Sacramento Kings, W, 114-103​

  • Possession Differential: +1.6
  • Turnover Differential: +5
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +8

The Suns looked like they were trying to jumpstart themselves, and ultimately they had the ability to do so. Phoenix outscored Sacramento 68-45 over the second and third quarters, and that was enough to get the win.

vs. Chicago Bulls, L, 105-103​

  • Possession Differential: +2.6
  • Turnover Differential: +2
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +5

Same script as the game against the Kings, but the Suns couldn’t get jump-started. They had a late run, but it was too little, too late. It wasn’t the worst loss of the season, but it may be the most lethargic.

vs. New Orleans Pelicans, W, 118-116​

  • Possession Differential: +1.2
  • Turnover Differential: -2
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: -1

Phoenix was in control the majority of the game, but the Pelicans made it quite uncomfortable in the end. It took a record number of three-pointers attempted — 58 by the Suns — to beat New Orleans by 2 points. Time will tell whether that is concerning.

vs. Charlotte Hornets, W, 111-99​

  • Possession Differential: -6.2
  • Turnover Differential: -5
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: -3

Well, this was a nice little surprise, wasn’t it? The Suns closed out the week with a win over one of the hottest teams in the NBA. How? 3o points and 10 assists from Devin Booker, 24 points from both Collin Gillespie and Jalen Green, and a 16-point performance from rookie Rasheer Fleming. And same damn good defense.

Inside the Possession Game​

  • Weekly Possession Differential: -0.8
  • Weekly Turnover Differential: 0
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +6
  • Year-to-Date Over/Under .500: +10

The first thing I notice when looking at this week’s graph is that pink line. The Suns are sitting 10 games over .500 to close out the week. It is only the second time this season we have finished a week that high, with Week 15 being the only other instance.

Take a look at that pink line. It hasn’t dipped below the .500 mark since Week 2. This team has been at .500 or better since November 8. They spent a total of 7 games under the water this entire season. I hope we appreciate that. I really do.

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We are talking about a team that Vegas pegged for 30.5 wins. We are talking about a franchise that spent 37 games looking up at the .500 mark just one season ago. The scars from those years don’t just vanish, but this is how you heal them. We are focused on a postseason push, and that is exactly where our energy should be.

But I want to pause and appreciate the fact that we are even in this position. We have a team that is fighting to win. We have a roster that isn’t finding creative ways to lose anymore. There is hope. There is progression. There is a core.

The Suns finally started cleaning up the glass this week, and the results speak for themselves. A 3-1 stretch is exactly the kind of “get right” week this team needed. While the possession game slipped a bit, you have to look at this Phoenix defense to see the real story.

Even with the roster currently held together by bandages and spare parts, this group posted a 109.9 defensive rating over the last four games. When you couple that grit with the way the ball is moving, it’s clear something is clicking. Their 68.8% assist percentage was 7th 7th-best in the league this week. It is proof that Jordan Ott’s system is cerebral and, more importantly, transferable. It doesn’t matter who is on the floor, the identity remains.

Of course, it didn’t hurt that the schedule-makers tossed the Kings, Bulls, and Pelicans our way. You play who is in front of you, but beating up on the basement dwellers is a requirement for any team with playoff ambitions.


Week 21 Preview​


And so begins the road trip.

The Phoenix Suns hit the road for a 10-day stretch that includes six games and two back-to-backs. Week 21 features the first three stops along that journey, thankfully without the back-to-backs arriving yet. It starts tomorrow night when Phoenix travels to face the Milwaukee Bucks.

Milwaukee is a team floating somewhere in the middle of the Eastern Conference sea. They have not played well for long stretches this season, which explains why they currently sit in 11th place and outside the Play-In picture looking up. Giannis Antetokounmpo is back on the floor for them, which always changes the temperature of a game. How long he continues playing before the organization considers shutting him down is something only time will answer.

The Bucks rank in the bottom third of the league in offensive rating, defensive rating, and net rating. On paper, that suggests an opportunity for Phoenix. Still, Milwaukee carries size across its lineup, and size has a way of bothering the Suns when it begins to crowd the paint.

Next on the schedule are the Indiana Pacers, who currently hold the worst record in the Eastern Conference. Phoenix handled Indiana earlier this season, winning by 35 points back in November. Since the All-Star break, the Pacers have not recorded a win and appear to be navigating a reset year while Tyrese Haliburton works through an Achilles injury.

The third stop sends Phoenix north to face the Toronto Raptors. If you are looking for an Eastern Conference team that resembles the Suns in some ways, Toronto fits that description. The Raptors have exceeded expectations this season and present a roster that values ball movement and care with possessions. They move the ball well, they limit mistakes, and they defend at a high level. Toronto currently sits with the eighth-best defensive rating in the NBA.

In other words, this stretch of the trip offers three very different challenges. Milwaukee brings size. Indiana brings opportunity. Toronto brings discipline.



Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...n-maluach-rasheer-fleming-youth-movement-2026
 
Haywood Highsmith is the perfect connector for the Phoenix Suns rotation

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Mar 8, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Haywood Highsmith (19) drives by Charlotte Hornets guard Sion James (4) during the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

The Phoenix Suns did not make many additions this season, but the ones they did have have been impactful. Both Amir Coffey and Jamaree Bouyea, who were brought in from the Milwaukee Bucks at two different spots in the season, have cracked the rotation already. That just left Haywood Highsmith, the buyout addition the Suns made that shocked everyone, since there was no prior linkage to him.

Well, Highsmith got his first real minutes for the team yesterday in their huge win over the Charlotte Hornets, making an impact on both ends. I say real minutes, as the wing was thrown in for the last seconds of the previous contest against the New Orleans Pelicans, but I am not counting that.

Haywood Highsmith first quarter minutes are very fun to watch

— BruceVeliz (@BruceVeliz) March 9, 2026

Many may ask why it took so long for Highsmith to get in, given that he was cleared last week. I hypothesize that he was acclimating to the team and learning his role, but was also still recovering. Shane Young, who covers the team for the Suns, reported that when Booker was out, it would be one week to be re-evaluated and that Highsmith was going to be re-evaluated in 2-3 weeks.

Injury updates for the Suns:

Devin Booker will be re-evaluated in 1 week after sustaining a right hip strain on Thursday

Haywood Highsmith will continuing rehabbing and be re-evaluated in 2-3 weeks

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) February 21, 2026

Yet we saw both of them come off the injury report at the same time? Highsmith still had some rehabbing to do and just needed to catch up to game speed; that’s why he was out an extra week, not that Ott forgot he was there.

Suns wing Haywood Highsmith is cleared to play, and he’s ecstatic to bring more blue-collar grit to this Phoenix team. Recently wrote about him and his journey, which aligns perfectly with the identity of this group:https://t.co/Jmec5GX5IN

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) March 3, 2026

In this game, Highsmith played 21 minutes and posted 3 points, 4 rebounds, 2 assists, and 1 steal. The impact was evident on the defensive side of the ball for this team, as they held the best offense in 2026 at times. Highsmith was used as a connector for this team, helping out and doing all the dirty work, like the guys in Coffey and Gillespie have been doing all season.

Haywood Highsmith using that elite wingspan 👀 pic.twitter.com/fUQ7FnlwAv

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) March 9, 2026

Just from this first clip of Shane, you can see the presence he brings as he steps onto the screen, coming from Ryan Klakbrenner. This forces Coby White into a bad pass, and with the help of Khaman Malauch to close out on him, they get a steal. Disruptive plays like this will keep Highsmith on the court, and his long wingspan will aid the team’s defensive effort.

The doubling in this game was a big part of their win, with many others helping and forcing turnovers. The Suns forced the Hornets to turn the ball over 11 times, which was more than double their turnovers of 6.

Suns defense locked in on this one against a top offense in Charlotte

Doubles from Oso are helping out huge

— BruceVeliz (@BruceVeliz) March 9, 2026

Then you look at the offense, and yes, he may have shot a bit inconsistently, but that is not what he is here for. One thing I enjoyed seeing was his selflessness on that end, though. Even with it being his debut and wanting to show out, with the struggles, he did not force anything bad. In fact, he created two beautiful plays for the rookie Rasheer Fleming, who has also been soaring as of late.

View Link

In the first clip, you see him cut to the basket and see a wide-open Fleming in the corner when Sion James goes over to help. His finding Fleming for this wide-open bucket is just key to him continuing to get minutes in this system by making the right play.

View Link

In the second clip, he does the same thing, just driving to the basket and trying to draw attention. With the Hornets out of position and Kalkbrenner on Fleming, he attacks the basket, allowing Fleming to be open again. The rookie then rewards the veteran for his pass with some points for the team and to push the lead.

Just these small things go a long way, and with Highsmith already plugging them in immediately, it is such a breath of fresh air to see. With this team having such a deep roster, this is an issue they would rather have than not enough guys as they gear up for a postseason run. One that fans are excited about, with this new change in identity and culture really taking shape under Jordan Ott’s command!



Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...er-fleming-jordan-ott-charlotte-hornets-recap
 
Game Preview: Suns travel to Milwaukee looking for third straight win

gettyimages-1996787014.jpg

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 06: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks guards Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns during the second half of the NBA game at Footprint Center on February 06, 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Suns defeated the Bucks 114-106. 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 Kelsey Grant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Who: Phoenix Suns (37–27) @ Milwaukee Bucks (27-36)

When: 5:00 PM Arizona Time

Where: Fiserv Forum — Milwaukee, Wisconsin

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

Listen: KMVP 98.7



The Phoenix Suns are fresh off a promising home win against the red-hot Charlotte Hornets on Sunday evening.

Despite being short-handed, Phoenix’s guard trio of Devin Booker, Jalen Green, and Collin Gillespie all put on a show. That, plus the strong play from their rookies and an encouraging Haywood Highsmith debut, was enough to push the Suns over the hump.

This will be the first meeting between these clubs, with the two-game season series concluding in Phoenix in a couple of weeks. For the Suns, this is the start of a long, grueling 6-game road trip all over the country with a pair of back-to-backs sprinkled in.

This is a road test that should not go unnoticed by the Suns, despite their poor record in Milwaukee. Giannis is off the injury report, and they will be at (mostly) full strength on their home floor. This game caps off the end of a season-long five-game homestand for the Bucks, who have lost five of their last six contests.

Probable Starters​

Game-Matchup-3.png


Injury Report​

Jordan Goodwin (left calf strain) has been upgraded to questionable for the Suns tomorrow against the Bucks.

Grayson Allen (right knee injury management) is questionable as well.

Dillon Brooks and Mark Williams remain out.

— Kellan Olson (@KellanOlson) March 9, 2026

Suns​

  • Jordan Goodwin — QUESTIONABLE (Left Calf)
  • Grayson Allen — QUESTIONABLE (Knee)
  • Mark Williams — OUT (Left Foot)
  • Dillon Brooks — OUT (Left Hand)

Bucks​

  • Kyle Kuzma — QUESTIONABLE (Back)
  • Kevin Porter Jr. — OUT (Knee)
  • Taurean Prince — OUT (Neck)

What to Watch For​


The Suns are going to be a bit undersized compared to a large Bucks team across the board. Between centers Myles Turner and Jericho Sims, along with Giannis, of course, and Bobby Portis, plus 6’9” forward Osumane Dieng stepping into a larger role of late.

Expect the trio of young guys in Oso Ighodaro, Khaman Maluach, and Rasheer Fleming to get significant minutes in this one.

Milwaukee just gave up 130 points to the Orlando Magic in a loss on their home floor this Sunday. The Bucks are the 11th seed out East, and they are a full 4 games back from the Hornets (who Phoenix just beat) for the final play-in spot. The motivation will be there for them to put together one last run, especially with Giannis healthy, even if it looks to be an uphill climb.


Keys to a Suns Win​


Contain the Freak

Giannis is still a freight train and will be a problem for a Suns team that struggles to defend physical, bruising forwards. I’d anticipate Oso Ighodaro, Rasheer Fleming, and Ryan Dunn, or even Khaman Maluach, being bodies they throw at him to disrupt him.

Rasheer Fleming is LOCKING UP this season 🔒

Is it time for him to start? 🤔 pic.twitter.com/R3LLnQDIBw

— PHNX Suns (@PHNX_Suns) March 9, 2026

Beyond slowing Giannis down, the Suns will need to cut off “the others” on Milwaukee’s squad. Ryan Rollins can get buckets. Bobby Portis has killed Phoenix in the past, and you want to avoid an AJ Green, Cam Thomas, Gary Trent Jr., or Kyle Kuzma game. They have sneaky depth, but it’s an odd mix of guys who haven’t been able to stay on the court together much this season.

Contain the Bench

Portis led the Bucks with 18 points, and Cam Thomas chipped in with 17 off the bench in their loss to the Magic on Sunday. Phoenix’s bench is dependent on who actually suits up in this one, because if they get Allen and/or Goodwin, that provides a significant punch in either scoring or defense, depending on who can go.

Defense Wins

The Bucks have been held to under 100 points in four of their last six contests. The Suns will need to do what they do best to take this one, and that is to set the tone defensively.

Team defense will be the key. Pack the paint, help, and recover. Rinse and repeat. Giannis’s presence adds another element to this Bucks team, so the Suns’ depth and size will be tested early and often.


Prediction​


The Suns are looking more connected, and a potential return of one (or both) of Goodwin and Allen could give them the jolt they need to just pull off a tough road win. I’m not holding my breath on this one.

Suns 113, Bucks 109

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...l-to-milwaukee-looking-for-third-straight-win
 
Game Recap: Suns drill 24 threes in win over Bucks, 129-114

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Mar 10, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Jalen Green (4) shoots against Milwaukee Bucks center Myles Turner (3) during the second quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

The Phoenix Suns secured a much-needed win to keep the hope for breaking into the top-6 alive. They are now 38-27 on the season and sit just one game back from Denver for the 6th overall seed.

Jalen Green (25 points) got off to a hot start, Royce O’Neale (21 points) took the torch and went on a wild run of his own, and Devin Booker (27 points) was steady throughout. They survived a Kyle Kuzma flamethrower game with a balanced attack from their guards and role players.

The Suns are now 16-14 on the road and have won three straight. They trailed by as many as 11, but the three-point shooting barrage was too much for Milwaukee to withstand. Phoenix connected on 24 of their 51 attempts from deep, good for a 47.1% clip from distance.

Jordan Goodwin and Grayson Allen both returned tonight and gave the team a needed boost off the bench.

Game Flow​

First Half​


Phoenix jumped out to a 9-2 advantage, led by seven straight points to open the game from Jalen Green, followed by a ferocious Oso Ighodaro poster.

Oso Ighodaro, man. More aggressive drives have led to plenty of slams this year pic.twitter.com/aicxfP2Wps

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) March 11, 2026

Milwaukee stormed back, but Jalen Green snatched some ankles and gave a “point” to the defender on the floor as he drained a step-back jumper. The disrespect. I loved it. Green scored 12 of the Suns’ first 14 points.

Jalen had him in another zip code 🫨 pic.twitter.com/BCK62bEhoo

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 11, 2026

We saw some early Khaman Maluach minutes, as he and Grayson Allen were the first two off the bench. Khaman got a pair of buckets shortly after checking in. Jordan Goodwin was the third sub off the bench to join Booker and O’Neale from the starting unit.

Phoenix pushed the pace early and got quality minutes from the youngsters. They led 36-30 after one. Jalen Green led the way with 14 points. Devin Booker chipped in with 7. They shot 57% from the floor as a team and got 13 points on just 9 shots from their bench unit in the quarter.

The Bucks opened the 2nd quarter on a 6-0 run to tie things up at 36 apiece. The Suns quickly answered back to push the lead back to six and force a Milwaukee timeout after a Haywood Highsmith triple generated by a Collin Gillespie steal and dish.

The teams continued to trade buckets, and the pace was wild. The next timeout came from Jordan Ott with the game tied at 51 after a Giannis leakout/cherrypick in transition.

Devin Booker had a nice stretch where he scored 5 points in consecutive possessions. The

Milwaukee led 65-62 at the break after a Kyle Kuzma buzzer-beating three. Devin Booker led all scorers with 20 points at the half. Jalen Green had 16 of his own.

Second Half​


The third quarter was a bit of an emotional rollercoaster. Milwaukee opened it up strong, building their lead up to as many as 11 in the quarter. Phoenix stormed back, with Devin Booker continuing to build off his strong start in the first half.

Kyle Kuzma unexpectedly transformed into prime Klay Thompson, scoring 16 points in the third quarter to push his total up to 31 in the game. Myles Turner also hit a pair of threes in the high-scoring quarter. Phoenix did have an answer, and his name is Royce O’Neale.

O’Neale had himself a third quarter, pouring in 18 points after entering the quarter with zero points scored.

Steal ➡️ three

Royce O'Neale with 5 triples so far tonight. pic.twitter.com/Le6uV04C5T

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 11, 2026

The Suns won the quarter by six points thanks to a Royce O’Neale buzzer beater from beyond half court to cap off a barrage of threes (6!) from the 9-year veteran. Phoenix led 100-97 entering the final quarter.

Let it fly, Royce!

ROYCE O'NEALE FROM BEYOND THE LOGO🤯🤯 pic.twitter.com/Cymi3O3u3k

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 11, 2026

After the refs missed an egregious “take foul” that should’ve been called on Milwaukee, Collin Gillespie drilled a three, leading to a Bucks timeout. “Ball don’t lie”, one would say.

Phoenix was on a 9-0 run to build their lead up to ten, 107-97, with 9:45 left in the game. Grayson Allen had himself a nasty hesi on a take to the rim for an easy bucket.

Collin Gillespie had himself a quarter, connecting on three triples in the quarter. He also found Jalen Green for a dagger three in the corner to push the Suns out ahead for good.


Up Next​


The Suns will head over to Indiana on Thursday to take on the 15-49 Indiana Pacers.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...uns-drill-24-threes-in-win-over-bucks-129-114
 
Royce O’Neale answered the bell during a critical third quarter in Milwaukee

gettyimages-2265870598.jpg

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 10: Royce O'Neale #00 of the Phoenix Suns makes a half court shot at the buzzer in the third quarter against the Milwaukee Bucks at Fiserv Forum on March 10, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There is one player on the Phoenix Suns who probably does not receive enough credit for what he has meant to the team this season. He’s shooting 47.8% from deep in fourth quarters this season. He’s second on the team in total rebounds in clutch moments. He’s third on the team in total steals. His name is Royce O’Neale.

When people talk about the weaknesses of the roster, the conversation often lands on the power forward position. That is where many believe the opportunity sits. Add more size, add more length, give the lineup another traditional body at that spot. The assumption is that the lack of size could eventually place a ceiling on what Phoenix can accomplish this year. And that may be true. But the work Royce O’Neale has done this season should not go unnoticed.

He is not the prototypical power forward. Everyone understands that. His frame does not match the traditional image of the position. The absence of size does not mean he does not belong in the Suns’ starting lineup. Because what he brings to the floor solves problems elsewhere. O’Neale spaces the floor. He scores when the opportunity presents itself. Most importantly, he bends defenses in a way that creates opportunities for everyone around him.

Look at last night’s game against the Milwaukee Bucks, and Royce O’Neale was vital to the victory.

Steal ➡️ three

Royce O'Neale with 5 triples so far tonight. pic.twitter.com/Le6uV04C5T

— Phoenix Suns (@Suns) March 11, 2026

You can glance at the box score and your eyes go straight to the obvious names. Devin Booker with 27 points. Jalen Green with 25. Those numbers jump off the page. Royce O’Neale quietly delivered 21 points of his own, doing so on 7-of-11 shooting from beyond the arc. More importantly, it was what happened in the third quarter that defined his night.

Kyle Kuzma caught absolute fire for Milwaukee. In an eight-minute stretch, he went 4-of-5 from deep and 6-of-9 from the field, pouring in 16 points while carrying the Bucks offense. Phoenix found itself staring at an 11-point deficit, and the momentum inside the building was beginning to tilt. That is the moment where games can spiral.

But every time Kuzma delivered a punch, Royce O’Neale answered it. Shot for shot.

O’Neale played the entire third quarter and went 6-of-8 from the field, scoring 18 points and accounting for nearly half of the Suns’ 38 points in the period. His shooting kept Phoenix steady during the stretch when Milwaukee was threatening to break the game open. Heck, he even hit a half-court buzzer beater to end the frame.

ROYCE O'NEALE FROM DEEEEEP pic.twitter.com/iFkDyiCMmC

— Shane Young (@YoungNBA) March 11, 2026

That performance was one of many moments this season where Royce has shown exactly why he matters to this team.

He is averaging a career-best 10 points per game, while shooting 40.1% from beyond the arc and launching 6.8 threes a night. Those are meaningful numbers for a player whose primary responsibility is to space the floor and keep defenses honest. And maybe the most valuable stat attached to Royce O’Neale this season is the simplest one.

Availability.

He has appeared in all 65 games for the Phoenix Suns and started 60 of them. On a team that has battled injuries all season long, having a player who shows up every night carries real value.

Too often people focus on what a roster does not have. The conversation drifts toward the hypothetical. If only they had this type of player, if only they had that archetype, everything would fall into place. That is rarely how it works. You solve one issue, and another appears. That is basketball. That is life.

Sure, the Suns could add a 6’9” power forward someday. Maybe that eventually becomes (fingers crossed!) Rasheer Fleming. The dream archetype is easy to describe. Length, athleticism, rim running ability, outside shooting, defensive switchability, and strong instincts. The player who checks every box.

Finding that player is the difficult part. And when you do find someone who checks all those boxes, the price tag rarely sits around $10.1 million a year.

Meanwhile, the Suns already have someone who spaces the floor, knocks down threes, and creates disruption on defense. Royce has done an excellent job playing the passing lanes this season as well. He ranks fourth on the team with 1.2 steals per game, which also happens to be a career high.

I have talked often this season about how a number of best-case scenarios have quietly unfolded for the Phoenix Suns. Royce O’Neale fits squarely into that category. He still has two years remaining on his contract, set to earn $10.9 million next season and $11.6 million in 2027–28. Because of his play and the overall success of the team, Phoenix never felt pressure to move him at the trade deadline for pennies on the dollar.

Imagine the alternative for a moment. If the team had been struggling and Royce was putting together a poor season, the conversation might have looked very different. At that point, he would have had 2.5 years left on his contract, and the value attached to that deal might not have been particularly appealing to other teams.

Instead, the opposite has occurred.

He continues to increase his overall value, if that is what the Suns are looking to do with him this offseason. If teams exit the playoffs early and begin searching for reliable shooting, Royce O’Neale is the type of player who becomes attractive in those conversations. Or Phoenix can simply keep him, allowing the roster to continue developing players behind him on the depth chart like Rasheer Fleming.

That is the best place an organization can live. In a world with options.

Yes, there are nights when teams with size create problems for Phoenix. Royce feels that challenge the same way others on the roster do. The development of players like Rasheer Fleming and Khaman Maluach gives head coach Jordan Ott additional levers to pull when those matchups appear, but the fact does remain that size might be what ultimately sinks the U.S.S. Suns come playoff time. And like teams looking to improve shooting, the Suns might explore options for size. Again, options. They’re nice to have.

It circles back to the same idea. The best-case scenario continues to unfold in front of us.

Royce is not going to shoot 7-of-11 from deep every night. Although the possibility that he might is enough to keep defenses honest. That spacing matters. That threat matters. And it deserves appreciation. Because sometimes the bird in hand is worth far more than the two sitting somewhere in the bush.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...nds-steals-contract-trade-value-milwaukee-win
 
Devin Booker is finding his rhythm at the perfect time for a playoff push

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Mar 6, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker (1) looks on before the first half of the game against the New Orleans Pelicans at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

It has been a solid run lately for the Phoenix Suns as they work through the schedule following the All-Star break and move toward a spot in either the Play-In or the postseason. The team is 4–1 over its last five games. You can certainly point to the level of competition during that stretch, although when you consider the injuries and the increase in minutes for young players, what Phoenix has done deserves some credit.

A month ago this team was not rolling out lineups featuring Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, Haywood Highsmith, and Amir Coffey. Those combinations simply did not exist. Head coach Jordan Ott has pulled the right levers with those players, placing them into the rotation in moments where they can succeed, and that has helped fuel this recent stretch. Make no mistake, though. The biggest driver behind this run is not the flashiest storyline, although it might be the most reliable one.

Devin Booker is back.

His return following the injury has steadied the ship for Phoenix and helped spark this stretch that now includes a three-game winning streak. Booker does not always deliver the loudest highlights. He is not drilling a deep three and signaling for defenders to fall asleep. He is not launching himself toward the rim for poster dunks or pointing toward the floor after breaking an ankle like his teammate Jalen Green might.


Book? He simply attacks the mid-range and puts the ball in the basket. For a team that spent much of February struggling to score consistently, watching Booker operate again has been a welcome sight.

Something else has started to happen since Booker returned to the lineup. His efficiency is slowly climbing back to where you expect it to be. It has been one of the season’s most interesting paradoxes. Devin Booker has experienced a down year relative to scoring, three-point percentage, and overall efficiency. Yet the team has continued to win games.

Why? The biggest reason is the way Booker has leaned into facilitation and his overall gravity as a player. He has used his scoring ability to create opportunities for everyone else. Defenses collapse toward him, the ball swings, and teammates find clean looks. Booker is averaging 6.1 assists per game, and players around him are producing some of the best seasons of their careers. That shift has changed the structure of the offense. Booker does not need to score 30 points every night for the Suns to win.

That was one of the concerns entering the season. There was a belief that Phoenix might rely too heavily on Booker’s scoring burden. If that happened, the wear and tear over the course of the season could break him down and drag the offense with it. Instead, the opposite occurred. Even with the efficiency dip, the team continued to succeed.

And now Booker is starting to look like Booker again.

Over the last five games, he is averaging 26.6 points while shooting 42% from the field, 39% from three, and 94% from the free throw line. He is also averaging 5.8 assists during that stretch. He has four consecutive games scoring 25+ points.

The three-point shot, in particular, is beginning to rebound. Before this five-game run, Booker was sitting at 30.8% from deep. After going 16-of-41 from beyond the arc over the last five games, that number has climbed to 32%. It is slowly inching its way back toward his career average of 35.2%. And if that trend continues, the offense around him becomes even more dangerous.

As the team prepares for whatever the postseason holds, Devin Booker is starting to regain the efficiency that has defined his game. The timing could not be better. For much of the season, the team carried some of the weight created by his inefficiencies. Now the pendulum is swinging the other direction. Booker is returning the favor by looking more like the version of himself that Suns fans have grown accustomed to watching.

The mid-range assassin. The player who can halt a scoring run with a calm pull-up from fifteen feet. The player who slows the game down when things begin to spiral. One possession, one jumper, momentum changes.

It quiets a lot of the noise that has surrounded his season. Even before this recent stretch, he was putting together an All-Star-level campaign. This run only strengthens that case. If he stays healthy and plays every remaining game, there is a real path where he finds himself back in the All-NBA conversation. But more importantly, the level rises on what the Suns could be once the postseason arrives.



Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ll-nba-highlights-mid-range-facilitation-2026
 
Game Preview: Suns must avoid the trap in Indianapolis to keep pace in the West

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Nov 13, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Collin Gillespie (12) looks for a shot against Indiana Pacers guard Aaron Nesmith (23) during the first half of the game at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Arianna Grainey-Imagn Images

Who: Phoenix Suns (38-27) vs. Indiana Pacers (15-50)

When: 4:00pm Arizona Time

Where: Gainbridge Fieldhouse — Indianapolis, Indiana

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

Listen: KMVP 98.7



The Suns torched the Milwaukee Bucks with 24 threes on Monday to begin their six-game road trip. The Indiana Pacers are the second game on this road trip and the last team below .500. This is a game the Suns should win, and cannot afford to lose if they want to catch the spiraling Denver Nuggets or the up-and-down Minnesota Timberwolves in the standings.

Right now, the Suns are oozing with storylines: Devin Booker is starting to turn up his play, Jalen Green is continuing to acclimate himself to the lineup with jaw dropping plays and egregious turnovers, the rookies Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming are pushing for regular rotation minutes, Haywood Highsmith is playing well, and most importantly, the Suns have taken advantage of one of the weaker portions of their schedule.

Probable Starters

Game-Matchup-4.png

Injury Report

Suns

  • Dillon Brooks — OUT (Broken Left Hand)
  • Mark Williams — OUT (Left Foot Stress Reaction)
  • Grayson Allen — QUESTIONABLE (Right Knee Injury Management)
  • Jordan Goodwin — QUESTIONABLE (Left Calf Injury Management)
  • Haywood Highsmith — QUESTIONABLE (Right Knee Injury Management)

Pacers​

  • Johny Furphy — OUT (Right ACL Tear)
  • Tyrese Haliburton — OUT (Right Achilles Tendon Tear)
  • Quenton Jackson — DOUBTFUL (Right Calf Soreness)
  • T.J. McConnell — QUESTIONABLE (Right Hamstring Soreness)
  • Andrew Nembhard — QUESTIONABLE (Low Back & Neck Soreness)
  • Aaron Nesmith — QUESTIONABLE (Right Ankle Injury Management)
  • Taelon Peter — QUESTIONABLE (G League Two-Way)
  • Pascal Siakam — DOUBTFUL (Right Knee Sprain)
  • Jalen Slawson — QUESTIONABLE (G League Two-Way)
  • Ethan Thompson — QUESTIONABLE (G League Two-Way)
  • Ivica Zubac — QUESTIONABLE (Left Ankle Sprain)

What to Watch For


The Indiana Pacers are the worst offensive team in the NBA with a 108.6 defensive rating. The Pacers are in full tank mode after making the NBA Finals last season, so if the Suns bring their intense pressure and aggressive defense, this game should be a comfortable win for the Suns.

The Suns will likely play almost everyone on the roster, including Ryan Dunn, whose minutes continue to be reduced, and Jamaree Bouyea and Amir Coffey. Offensively, the Suns need to attack the paint because the Pacers are second-to-last in the NBA in points allowed in the paint.

Expect to see Booker and Green on the attack and scoring at the rim or generating wide-open threes from their paint touches. The duo of Green and Booker has found a little bit of a rhythm in the last two games, and this Pacers matchup is another opportunity to build Green’s confidence and continuity with the rest of the team.

Key to a Suns Win


The Pacers will present some challenges for the Suns with their size and length. Rebounding the basketball on the offensive end continues to be a strength for the Suns, and defensive rebounding continues to be a struggle for the Suns. Ighodaro, Maluach (who grabbed zero rebounds against the Bucks), Fleming, and the rest of the Suns need to limit Indiana to one shot and then get out and run. If the Suns can rebound and push the ball, it makes life much easier on the offensive end and will allow the Suns’ young athletes to shine.

Prediction


The Suns race to a 126-112 victory over the Pacers.

Suns 126, Pacers 112

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ndings-rebounding-paint-touches-injury-report
 
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