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Phoenix Suns make it official: Jordan Ott is the new head coach

2025 NBA Playoffs - Cleveland Cavaliers v Indiana Pacers - Game Three

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The Phoenix Suns are betting on connection over clout with their latest coaching hire.

The Phoenix Suns are preparing to enter their 58th season as a franchise. Fifty-eight seasons of ‘almost’. Fifty-eight seasons of ‘what if’. A history steeped in heartbreak, defined by brilliance that always seemed to fall just short of glory.

Now, the team stands at yet another crossroads.

Since Mat Ishbia took the reins, stability on the sidelines has vanished. Monty Williams was shown the door. Frank Vogel followed. Mike Budenholzer didn’t last more than a year either. And so, as the Suns prepare to name their fourth head coach in as many seasons. This isn’t just about a clipboard and a whistle. It’s about vision. Identity. Alignment. The will to steer a franchise aching to matter again.

And into that void steps Jordan Ott, who was announced as the 23rd head coach in Phoenix Suns history on Wednesday.


The Phoenix Suns plan to hire Jordan Ott as their head coach sources confirm.

— John Gambadoro (@Gambo987) June 4, 2025

The organization has made its call, and Jordan Ott is the choice. A decade of NBA experience accompanies him, carved out across multiple franchises and levels within the league.

Like so many coaches before him, Ott began in the dim-lit back rooms as a video coordinator, first at Michigan State (where he earned his master’s), then on to Mike Budenholzer’s staff in Atlanta. His climb was steady, not flashy. From there, Brooklyn came calling in 2016, where he worked alongside Kenny Atkinson and stayed through the opening act of the Steve Nash era, coaching stars like Kevin Durant, James Harden, and Kyrie Irving. In 2022, he shifted to Los Angeles, joining Darvin Ham’s Lakers staff, before reuniting last season with Atkinson in Cleveland.

The wrinkle, the one some fans can’t seem to let go of, is that Michigan State connection. The implication being...what? That a video coordinator gig and a graduate degree from the same university as Mat Ishbia somehow taints his résumé? I don’t buy it. And frankly, it feels like a hollow objection. It’s not a scandal for a team owner to want people in his organization who share his values, his approach, and his trust. That happens in every corner of professional sports.

And this isn’t some rinky-dink college program we’re talking about. This is Michigan State, a top-tier, well-respected basketball institution that churns out coaches and players at the highest level. If the loudest knock on Ott is where he cut his teeth, maybe what we’re really witnessing is generational skepticism. Maybe it’s the unfamiliarity of youth, of a new face, of a name without a championship ring already on his hand.

But for a franchise stuck in the rut of chasing yesterday’s names and yesterday’s narratives, maybe that’s exactly what this team needs.

Ott is a young mind with a well-earned reputation for building real, meaningful connections with players, a quality that’s no longer just a nice-to-have in the modern NBA, but a non-negotiable. In Phoenix, we’ve learned that lesson the hard way. The last two coaches who roamed the Suns’ sidelines reportedly struggled to forge that trust, loyalty, and connection within the locker room. And in today’s league — a players’ league through and through — that’s a death sentence.

The days of old-school, hard-nosed coaching have gone the way of the rotary phone. Direct feedback and tough love aren’t extinct, but they’ve been repackaged. You still have to hold stars accountable, but now it’s about delivery: couching critique in relationships, massaging egos while addressing flaws, and building enough equity with players so when the time comes to push, they don’t push back. Monty Williams once mastered that balance in Phoenix before his own favoritism and rigidity cracked the foundation.


After a comprehensive, four-round search that included over 15 candidates, the Suns' ownership and front office aligned on Ott, who joined Coach of the Year Kenny Atkinson's staff last summer and played a key coaching role on the East-best 64-win Cavaliers this season. https://t.co/p0RMv8lj9b

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) June 4, 2025

Now, Jordan Ott steps in, and while the fanfare may not be deafening, the implications are real. His first order of business will be assembling a staff, a task as political as it is strategic. The irony, of course, is that he’ll likely have little to no say in shaping the roster he’s tasked with leading. The Suns are navigating a labyrinth of trade scenarios, cap constraints, and free agency puzzles that will leave Ott an NPC in the construction of his own team.

What this hire does signal is a philosophical shift. A recalibration. Phoenix isn’t chasing pedigree this time. They’re chasing fit, culture, and connectivity. And here’s the truth: it’s going to take time. This won’t be an instant turnaround. The road ahead will have potholes, speed bumps, and nights when the fan base wants to hit reset.

My advice? Resist the impulse. Give Ott a real chance. Not one season, not two. Give him three years to build relationships, implement his vision, and etch his identity into this locker room. It’s what this franchise needs. Patience. And the lack thereof is part of why they’re still chasing ghosts of the past.

Culture isn’t built in a press conference. It’s built over time, in film rooms, in off-day conversations, in moments of tension and triumph. Let’s not repeat the mistakes ownership has made. This hire is a good thing. And if we have the patience to let it breathe, it might just be the foundation this team’s been missing.


The Phoenix Suns plan to hire Jordan Ott as their head coach sources confirm.

— John Gambadoro (@Gambo987) June 4, 2025


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

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-coach-breaking-news-nba-coaching-change-2025
 
The brutal truth about Beal’s future in Phoenix? They don’t want him here

San Antonio Spurs v Phoenix Suns

Photo by Kate Frese/NBAE via Getty Images

Per Gambo: “They do NOT want him back.”

The Phoenix Suns have finally filled the two most visible seats at the table: a general manager and a head coach. But now comes the real reckoning. Their gaze must turn inward, toward a bloated, miscast roster in desperate need of salvation. They are paying for the sins of summers past. The wild, hubristic swings made under the intoxicating glow of potential, and the road to redemption will require many Our Fathers, a rosary or two, and perhaps a few stiff drinks to numb the ache of regret.

Chief among those sins is the acquisition of Bradley Beal, a move that felt reckless in real time and has only curdled further with age. Beal arrived in Phoenix two summers ago, dragging a Titanic-sized contract behind him and armed with the rare, player-empowering no-trade clause. It was a deal so universally derided that even the most optimistic Suns apologists could only squint and hope.

The front office, drunk on the intoxicating label of “All-Star,” convinced themselves that Beal would be the missing relic needed to fill the dusty, vacant space on their championship mantle. He wasn’t.

Two years later, the franchise is still buckling beneath the weight of that decision.

The NBA is a cold, unsentimental business, but this one remains personal. A ghost in the machine. The problem now is what to do next. Beal holds all the cards, the no-trade clause a force field against the franchise’s buyer’s remorse. As local insider John Gambadoro has candidly noted, the Suns would prefer he not return.


They do NOT want him back. But he is untradable and if he does not agree to a buyout they may be stuck with him. One of the questions they asked candidates during the coaching cycle was what you would do with Beal. They 100% don't want him and are looking at how to get out. https://t.co/skFOPh7T1r

— John Gambadoro (@Gambo987) June 5, 2025

Preference means little when the ink on the contract has long since dried, and the player controls his own fate. The path forward is murky, and perhaps, like all flawed quests for redemption, it begins with simply admitting the mistake aloud.

It’s an awkward situation. One that, if we’re being honest, I’ve probably beaten to death on this website in a hundred different ways. Through words, rants, sighs, and the occasional existential crisis masquerading as a blog post, I’ve laid bare how I feel about this entire Bradley Beal saga.

And let’s be clear: I hold no animosity toward the man himself. I’ve met him. He’s a good dude. This isn’t about the person. It’s about the organization that allowed this slow-motion car wreck to happen and keeps trying to drive through the debris like everything’s fine. Ishbia continues to try to absolve himself of handling the acquisition. yEaH. OkAy. wE bEliEvE yOu.

What’s maddening is how a player of Beal’s talent, albeit one with a body made of wishbones and duct tape, has become such a source of disdain. Not because of anything he’s done, but because his contract has financially handcuffed this franchise in a way that feels almost biblical in its stubbornness.

If you asked me, in a vacuum, with no strings attached, if I wanted Bradley Beal back next season? You already know the answer. It’s no. His on-court presence is duplicative of Devin Booker’s, and no matter how you try to massage the rotations, you end up with your franchise star playing out of position to accommodate a move that never made sense in the first place.

That contract, one Beal negotiated smartly, mind you, with a poorly run Wizards franchise, is absurd for any team to have taken on. For the Suns to do it, when they were already thin on assets and financial flexibility, was the kind of decision you look back on years later with the same sinking feeling you get when you remember an ex’s name and shudder involuntarily. His presence is the primary blockade to this team’s ability to genuinely retool. It might not be obvious in every possession, but it’s the stick in the spokes of the franchise’s future.

Reports are swirling now that the Suns don’t want him back. No surprise there. But Beal holds all the cards, and the Suns have no leverage.

What they do have is an inflated payroll, a newly minted GM with no experience navigating a quagmire like this, and a gnawing desire to move on from a decision they never should have made. What happens next? Buyout? Buyout and stretch? Pay him and pray? Nobody knows. But one thing is certain: no matter how this ends, the Suns lose. And it’s entirely their own doing.

As they pivot toward whatever this next era is supposed to be, trying to change the culture and identity of a franchise stained by reckless decision-making, it’s going to take years. Not a season. Not a trade deadline. Years. The system needs to be vetted, the waters need to be purified, and the ghosts of poor decisions past need to be exorcised. This is penance now. And the road ahead is long.



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

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...-problems-offseason-plans-devin-booker-future
 
Is ESPN’s No. 25 NBA Draft prospect, French PG Nolan Traore, a good fit for Suns?

Galatasaray v Saint-Quentin - Basketball Champions League

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The lengthy point guard comes with a wealth of pro basketball experience.

French point guard Nolan Traore entered the 2025 NBA Draft cycle firmly in most experts’ top 10s, but some underwhelming production this season saw him tumble down boards and into the Phoenix Suns’ draft range.

If you haven’t heard by now, Phoenix is set to pick 29th in the first round and 52nd in the second.

Given its payroll situation, it’d be smart to maximize both picks and find controllable assets who can contribute, rather than parlaying them for established players as has been the habit at times in recent memory.

The 6-foot-5 Traore could be a perfect example of that, given that if he can be a point guard of the future, suddenly Devin Booker has his backcourt mate under team control for potentially the rest of his NBA career.

Playing for Saint-Quentin in the French LNB Pro A — the same league Victor Wembanyama played in his final year before getting drafted — Traore averaged 11.6 points, 1.7 rebounds, and 5.1 assists in 22.6 minutes per game.


nolan traore did a good job in this game of weathering a rocky start that included some poor shot selection for him and a 15-0 deficit to start for the team.

settled the offense down, competed defensively and turned things around for a 16-point win. pic.twitter.com/Xrfy11b7uG

— Damon Allred (@iamdamonallred) June 6, 2025

The assists were the only stat that didn’t see an uptick from his first season in France’s top division in 2023-24 (5.4 assists per game), but his turnovers did come down from 3.1 to 2.5 turnovers.

His 3-point shooting also jumped to a career-high 30.4% this season, including 43% over his last 10 games. He was below 30% each of his prior four seasons, including three in France’s third division before making the jump.

In total, he’s played 158 games of international or professional basketball, offering a wealth of experience that most others in the class, let alone domestically, just can’t. Most of that time was spent as the engine of his team’s offense, too.

So what kind of initiator is Traore?

You know how annoying it would get when the Suns brought the ball across halfcourt much too close to 16 seconds on the shot clock much too often? That doesn’t happen with Traore, as he’s far more interested in keeping the defense on its heels.

He’s crafty enough to capitalize by utilizing every inch and degree of an angle to his advantage. Sometimes that leads to plays on the weirder side, and other times he’s happy to take the easy opportunity.


think the two biggest things that stand out for me with french point guard nolan traore are his pace of play (usually fast) and his understanding of angles, whether they be of the passing or handling variety pic.twitter.com/Qc9BiEaOZO

— Damon Allred (@iamdamonallred) June 6, 2025

While it’s hard to know exactly what the Jordan Ott offense will look like in Phoenix, there may be indicators in the Cleveland Cavaliers leading the league in offensive rating (121.0) and being top 10 in pace (100.31 possessions per game).

Traore fits the billing for that kind of offense not only with how he pushes the pace, but also with how he takes care of the ball. He’s carried an assist-to-turnover ratio of roughly 2-1 dating back to his final season in France’s third division, three years ago.

It’s easy to imagine him as a transition running mate for Devin Booker, similar to how transition looked at times with Mikal Bridges.

However, Traore has boxes to check first.

Yes, the deep shot is trending up, but a hot streak to end the campaign is the only reason he’s above 30% for a season for the first time in his career. That career sample is a big reason why he would be in Phoenix’s range at all.

He needs to put on some muscle mass, especially on his upper body. This is, of course, true for any teenager in the draft, but it’s become even more true with where the NBA is trending in recent years. Not to mention how much he loves to attack the paint, so he needs the power to hold up.


Saint-Quentin’s Nolan Traoré’s anthro measurements + athletic testing results from the 2025 NBA Draft Combine activities in Treviso:

6’3" barefoot, 175 lbs, 6’8” wingspan, 8’5 ½" reach, 7 ¾" x 9 ¼" hands

Sprint: 3.26
Pro Lane: 10.75
Shuttle: 2.85
No-Step Vert: 28”
Max Vert: 34” pic.twitter.com/9gTACGO9IS

— Jon Chepkevich (@JonChep) June 5, 2025

Lastly — and this is another one that’s true for 99% of teenage prospects — his processing can get a few steps quicker. He’s already ahead of defenses, but if his reaction time was even quicker, he could prove lethal for years to come.

Bottom line: There won’t be many talents like Traore as far back as the Suns are slated to, and if he’s there, he’s worth the chance.

A rookie campaign with usage similar to, or even higher than, Ryan Dunn could be enough to set him on the right path, should he come in with a similar approach.



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

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ct-french-pg-nolan-traore-a-good-fit-for-suns
 
The rumor mill continues to heat up on Kevin Durant’s next team

Phoenix Suns v San Antonio Spurs

Photos by Olivia Ramirez/NBAE via Getty Images

Raptors and Spurs the latest team to be in the mix for the superstar.

As we get closer to the conclusion of the NBA season and the NBA Draft, rumors on Kevin Durant’s next team continue to heat up with reports of him possibly going to Canada or Texas. The Toronto Raptors have “been painted by numerous NBA figures as a potential trade suitor for Durant,” according to NBA insider Jake Fischer. He adds that the possibility of the Raptors adding Durant is more likely “particularly if [Giannis] Antetokounmpo doesn’t reach the open market,” which he reports teams are starting to doubt the possibility of.

Additionally, on Arizona Sports radio yesterday, Phoenix Suns insider John Gambadoro reported that the slim reaper told someone he trusts that he might end up with Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs.


Kevin Durant was talking to someone he knows and trusts, and they asked “Hey where might you end up?” And KD replied “The Spurs”, per @Gambo987

(Via @AZSports, h/t @FiestaCityHoops) pic.twitter.com/F2GyQAxYoL

— Fullcourtpass (@Fullcourtpass) June 6, 2025

Both with top-10 draft picks and a litany of young players, Phoenix has a lot of options on the type of return they’d want for Durant if they deal him to Toronto or San Antonio. While both teams have players who recently won Rookie of the Year, it seems more likely that if they deal with either team, they’d get some of the team’s other younger players like Gradey Dick or Devin Vassell due to Durant’s age, contract status, and injury history.

Stay locked in with Bright Side of the Sun as we continue to cover every angle of the offseason, from trades, draft scouting, to free agent signings.



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

Please subscribe, rate, and review.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...urs-suns-offseason-nba-draft-2025-free-agency
 
The Valley jersey returns, but does the magic still come with it?

Oklahoma City Thunder v Phoenix Suns

Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images

The Valley redux is a sequel. And not every sequel is a hit,

Every year, like clockwork, the Phoenix Suns make us wait. The sun beats down, monsoon season rolls in, and we’re still sitting here wondering: What threads are they trotting out next season? It’s become a weird little ritual, one I can’t say I’m fond of. The franchise holds the info hostage until August, maybe September, like it’s some kind of state secret. Why? Who knows. Maybe they think we like the suspense. Spoiler alert: we don’t.

The kicker? Most fans couldn’t care less. Maybe 15% of us obsess over this stuff. The late-night Reddit scrollers, the Photoshop mock-up warriors, the people who know the Pantone code for “The Valley” purple (it’s #5F259F). The rest are just trying to figure out how to stream the games without selling a kidney.

But this year? Something’s shifting. Teams are getting ahead of the curve. Uniform reveals are starting to pop before the confetti even settles from the NBA Finals. And honestly? That’s a win. Let the fans see what’s coming. Let the social team cook. Let the marketing machine rev up while interest is still peaking.

Look at the Orlando Magic. Have you seen their new set? Sleek. Nostalgic. It’s got that vintage soul with a futuristic edge. And the logo? Chef’s kiss. A nod to the past, dressed up for the next generation. The whole thing dropped pre-Finals, when the basketball world’s eyes are still open. Smart. Sharp. Capitalism in its purest, sparkliest form.


Here's a comparison showing the new Orlando Magic jerseys and team logos on the right versus the inspiration for each on the left, from the original team designs from the 1990s.

Full coverage of the new Orlando Magic logos and uniforms right here: https://t.co/ieFbQcQ3fO pic.twitter.com/eExgkkhIA2

— SportsLogos.Net (@sportslogosnet) June 5, 2025

Let’s not kid ourselves. The NBA doesn’t swap jerseys every year for the sake of artistic exploration. It’s a cash grab. And that’s fine! Just be upfront about it. Show us the goods early. Give us time to love them, critique them, meme them, and — ultimately — buy them. I didn’t go to Wharton, but I’m pretty sure that’s how supply and demand works.

Every NBA team gets four looks. It’s like a fashion capsule. Association, Icon, City Edition, and Statement Edition. For the Suns, the Association and Icon sets are already known quantities. The classics. Home whites and road purples. Functional. Familiar.

But then you get to the fun ones.

This past season’s City Edition was a polarizing remix of ‘The Valley’, a throwback purple uniform with a wild western font that looked like it moonlighted on a saloon sign. The Statement Edition? A black beauty trimmed with the iconic Valley gradient, the letters “PHX” standing bold like they had something to prove. That jersey slapped. Full stop. It was loud. It was slick. And it felt like Phoenix: hot, unapologetic, and built for prime time.

But now those Statement beauties are heading into retirement. No fanfare. No funeral. Just gone. So, what’s next? What will the Suns wear when they want to turn heads without saying a word?

Well, here’s the good news for the jersey romantics and nostalgia junkies: ‘The Valley’ is back.

Not the watered-down reboot. Not the western-font bootleg. The Valley. The one that debuted in 2020–21, took us to the Finals, and made everyone on League Pass do a double-take. The one that dripped with energy, identity, and the heat mirage swagger of a team that finally knew who it was.


"I'm back."

-The Valley jersey

https://t.co/8cPIS0JRFQ

— Suns Uniform Tracker (@SunsUniTracker) June 7, 2025

The Valley is back.

Not the place, but the jersey. The one stitched with magic. The one the Suns wore while etching some of the most unforgettable moments in franchise history into our collective basketball brain. The Valley Oop. A run to the NBA Finals. A 64-win campaign that felt like destiny in motion. Those threads weren’t just uniforms, they were armor. Worn by a team that played with fire, flair, and purpose.

So, yeah, there’s some weight behind that fabric. It’s not just polyester. It’s legacy.

And maybe that’s why I’m a little hesitant. A little standoffish about this return.

It’s not because I don’t love these jerseys. I do. They’re top-five in franchise history. No question. But what made them iconic wasn’t just the look. It was the moment. The roster. The runs. The sense that we were building something real, something lasting. Now? That magic feels...compartmentalized. Tucked away in a time capsule somewhere between the bubble and the broadcast booth.

It’s like the sunburst uniforms. You see them and immediately think of Barkley, KJ, Thunder Dan, and the 1993 NBA Finals. Iconic, yes. But haunted too, etched in memory because of what almost was. They wore those jerseys for seven more seasons, but let’s be real: everything after ‘93 felt like a cover band playing the same chords with half the soul.

That’s my worry with The Valley redux. These jerseys meant something because of who wore them, when they wore them, and what they accomplished. Slapping them on this version of the team — bloated payroll, undefined identity, no Finals forecast in sight — feels like playing dress-up with ghosts.

Would a variation have softened the sting? A white version, a purple remix, some visual evolution to suggest growth instead of regression? Maybe. But I don’t work in the Suns' marketing department. I just obsess over their decisions like it’s a full-time job. And apparently, across the NBA, the memo has gone out: recycle the glory years. Run it back. Because, frankly, the league seems fresh out of new ideas.

Now look, I get it. Uniform talk probably isn’t high on your priority list. There are bigger conversations to have around this team. Coaching changes. Roster construction. Kevin Durant’s mood. But if you’ve hung around here long enough, you know this kind of stuff matters to me. Design is identity. Identity is culture. And culture? That’s what separates a jersey from a uniform.

So here we are. The Valley returns. Is it going to be better than the original? Absolutely not. This isn’t Terminator 2: Judgment Day. This is Christmas Vacation 2: Cousin Eddie’s Island Adventure. Yes, that movie exists. No, you shouldn’t watch it. But like these new-old uniforms, it’s a sequel nobody really asked for...but we’re getting it anyway.

Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...urn-nba-uniform-reveal-city-statement-edition
 
Inside the Suns - Topics: Hiring Jordan Ott, Trading Kevin Durant, Extending Devin Booker

Phoenix Suns v Oklahoma City Thunder

Photo by Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images

Your weekly Inside the Suns analysis straight from the BSotS community who live and breathe the team.

Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team.​


Each week, the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — gives their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week​


Q1 - What is your opinion of the Suns’ process of selecting a new head coach and of the hiring of Jordan Ott?

Ashton: This question goes straight for the jugular and is currently being panned on national, local, and this site articles and comments (over 100 comments – woot!). I am sure most of you have read all about it, so I will not recap.

Ott has genuine coaching bona fides. I respect that. Anyone who works their way up from the ground floor to HC deserves a chance. Unlike a certain GM who seems like he went from the mailroom delivery boy to GM in some badly written Hollywood script.

Jordan Ott’s real calling card is in “player development”. This is what I have been waiting for in the visionary direction for the future Suns roster. Say bye-bye to the veterans and rebuild around a young, talented roster. Though it would be hilarious if Booker were traded after giving his stamp of approval to the coach.

Let’s get to the real meat (or vegan meat) and potatoes of a two-part question that questions “The Process”. Where have we seen this fail before? Ishbia is biting off more than he can chew. From internal memos stating that he will be more involved, basically makes him the de facto GM, HC, and not a de facto owner, as he is in fact the owner. I appreciate the ambition, but last I checked, Ishbia still has a mortgage company to run. I even read of his interest in acquiring a minority stake in the Minnesota Twins some time back.

This is what needs to be monitored by the fans. Micromanaging will burn you out, and let’s see if Matt can handle it while running what was a successful basketball franchise, while a successful mortgage franchise.

For all of the twists and sub-plots involving how the coaching decision was made, Costco has 1000 ft of aluminum foil for $34.99.

The winner in all of this is Michigan State recruiting.

OldAz: I know I have made a number of negative comments and bought into the innuendo of the problematic “Michigan connection” becoming pervasive in the front office. I am a fan of diversity of opinion driving organizations to the best outcomes and this has the smell of the exact opposite. My fear is that “alignment” will give way to an incestuous inability have an original thought.

That being said, Ott may very well be a great hire. I simply have trouble getting there right away when he was not even the lead assistant on the same team as another of the finalists. I personally (from a very uninformed seat) would have preferred Quinn only because of his pedigree of working under Spoelstra for the last decade. I don’t think Spoelstra gets enough recognition for how good a coach he is, and that is a model organization if you are leaning into player development going forward. Again, Ott may be a great selection, but I will have to see it on the floor before I can really buy in. If I see organized offense and defense, along with player accountability and hustle I will be loudly singing his praises.

Rod: I know very little of the man other than what I’ve read and mostly what I’ve read was good. He has a nice coaching resume, lots of experience and the only “bad” thing I’ve read was the Michigan State “connection” to Ishbia. That doesn’t really concern me. I wasn’t a supporter of him for the job in the beginning but I really didn’t strongly support any of the candidates so I’m content to just wait and see how well he actually performs his job before passing any sort of judgement. Right now I’m more concerned about what sort of roster the front office assembles for him to work with than anything else.

Q2 - There are rumors that the Suns are specifically seeking a center as part of the return in trade offers for KD. What are your thoughts on this?

Ashton: I feel like I am being baited into the DA arguments all over again. I had thought this was in the rearview mirror, but here we go again. Suns should have never traded DA in the first place. Are we all good?

What this question is specifically referring to is an SI article that brings up Gobert or Naz Reid as potential trade partners with the Minnesota Timberwolves. I am trying to make Rod’s life easier by not embedding links, but you are all smart fellows, you can find it. (Author’s Note: Actually it was in reference to a tweet I read that brought up this subject. I have not seen/read that SI article.)

The trend is to draft Centers. There is more control on rookie contracts and such. And I see a few good ones in the mock drafts in late lottery (8 – 14 picks and some PGs too).

I say pass. I realize that the KAT for KD rumors are out there with a currently dysfunctional Knickerbockers organization (Why fire Thibs? Why?) but I would draft one. Unless OKC wants to part with Isaiah Hartenstein.

OldAz: I said for a long time before DA was finally moved that the Suns would spend a long time (many seasons) searching for exactly what they gave up by moving on from him. Yes, his contract was too much for his production but that contract is way more palatable than the albatross of Beal’s $50M+ and NTC. Many people were down on DA and call him a bust, but I am sure the Suns would be happy to find a walking double-double on high efficiency that could be counted on for 30+ minutes a game, play good defense and couldn’t be played/schemed off the floor by the other team. They certainly need more players who are actually big and long with NBA front-court type bodies. Now they will continue to search for that Center through this offseason and I fear for many offseasons to come.

Rod: Well, I think that it’s fine for them to let other teams know that this is something that they’re looking for as long as it’s not a deal breaker on any trade proposals. I won’t get into specifics, but I did see a trade idea a few days ago that didn’t include a center but did include a pretty good young SG, which the Suns definitely don’t really need if the plan is to hang on to Book. But who says that trade couldn’t be expanded into a 3-team trade with that SG going to another team that sends a center back to the Suns? Or that player could be immediately flipped and traded to another team in a separate trade.

It’s good to let other teams know what you want back but a really good deal that doesn’t give you everything you really want could lead to another deal that does accomplish that thing. As long as the Suns’ FO remains flexible and takes the best deal they can get, I’m good with that, whether it brings back the center they want or not.

Q3 - What are your thoughts on Devin Booker possibly getting a 2-year $150 million contract extension this summer?

Ashton: I think it is pretty much obvious at this point that Book is being asked to be the leader of the team. Why invite him for input on the coaching search if he was not going to be a future foundation of the team’s makeup?

So, you do it. Pay the man his money, or potentially lose ticket sales and fan involvement. It is basically fait accompli at this point. In the worst-case scenario, Book’s value should hold in a trade in the future if he regresses.

OldAz: That’s a lot of money for any single player under the current CBA. We will have to see how the inexperienced GM navigates around that, as we have very few examples this season of teams with those huge salaries making their way deep into the playoffs. The teams that were in the final 4 certainly had more of a balanced team dynamic to their salaries. Of course those players on the Pacers, Knicks, Wolves and Thunder are going to want to get paid too, so there is no telling what the financial landscape of the league will look like in a couple years and if it is possible to build around a couple players dominating that much of the salary cap. It would be great if Booker had the mentality of a Tom Brady and would play for less to make sure there was enough to build the best team around him, but that is rare and way too much to hope for in the current NBA.

Rod: I can understand the objections brought up by this huge salary commitment but so far it’s just a statement of intent by Ishbia. Will Book just take it and not look back? That a question we still have no answer to. I’d love to see Book volunteer to take a lesser amount to insure more future cap flexibility or perhaps even turn it down and wait another year before considering an extension (he would be eligible for pretty much the same money per year then but for 3 years instead of just 2).

I’m not quite as concerned about it as some, though, because when it would begin in 2028-29 season it would still be at most 35% of the cap then, and presently there are no players on the cap sheet for that season. The Suns would still have almost $189 mil to spend on the rest of the roster before reaching the 1st tax apron and almost $205 mil left before reaching the 2nd tax apron. There’s plenty of time between now and then to plan for that if necessary.

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


Suns Trivia/History​


On June 10, 1977, the Suns drafted Walter Davis in the 1st round (5th pick) of the 1977 NBA Draft.

On June 11, 1993, Charles Barkley of the Suns and Michael Jordan of the Bulls each scored 42 points in Chicago’s 111-108 victory in Game 2 of the NBA Finals. It was the first time in NBA history that opposing players each scored 40 or more points in a Finals game.

On June 13, 1993, the Suns were down 0-2 to the Chicago Bulls in the NBA Finals after losing Games 1 and 2 at home in America West Arena. The series moved to Chicago Stadium, where the Suns pulled off a 129-121 triple overtime win behind Dan Majerle’s team high 28 points, a 24-point, 19 rebound game by Charles Barkley, and a 25-point, 9 assist night by Kevin Johnson. Johnson also set a Finals record by playing 62 minutes, and teammate Dan Majerle set a mark that still stands by playing 59 minutes without committing a personal foul. This was only the 2nd time in NBA history that a Finals game went into three overtimes, the first was played in 1976 by the Suns and Celtics in the Suns' first trip to the NBA Finals.

On June 13, 2021, with a 125-118 win, the Suns completed a 4-0 sweep of the Denver Nuggets in their Western Conference Semifinals playoff series. It was their first playoff sweep since they swept the San Antonio Spurs 4-0 in the Western Conference Semis back in 2010. It was also only the third 7-game playoff series sweep in team history. (The Suns also had 4 more first-round series sweeps, but those were back when they were still best-of-five series.)


FYI - New CBA Rules​


This is a new feature here that I thought might be helpful or at least a bit interesting. This week I decided to focus on a few new rules pertaining to trades which may have some significance for the Suns this offseason.

  1. While 2nd tax apron teams cannot normally aggregate salaries in trades, there is one exception. They are allowed to aggregate salaries IF the trade actually results in the team’s cap total being lowered below the 2nd tax apron.
  2. Teams under the 1st tax apron can now take back up to 200% of their outgoing salary in trades where the incoming salary is $7.5 mil or less, as much as $7.5 mil over their outgoing salary for any incoming amount between $7,500,001 and up to $29,000,000, and 125% plus $250,000 of their outgoing salary in trades where the incoming amount is above $29,000,000.
  3. There is now a limit on how many minimum-salary players can be aggregated for salary-matching purposes during offseason trades. From July through December 15, if the number of aggregating players going out is larger than the number coming back, only one minimum contract can be included in that aggregation.

Last Week’s Poll Results​


Last week’s question was “Do you believe that Bradley Beal would agree to a buyout this summer?

51% - Yes.

49% - No.

A total of 221 votes were cast.


Important Future Dates​


June 17, 20 or 23 (after the NBA Finals) - Teams can begin negotiating with their own free agents

June 25-26 - NBA Draft

June 30 - Teams may begin negotiating with all other upcoming free agents (beginning at 6 p.m. ET)

July 6 - Teams may begin signing free agents to contracts (12:01 p.m. ET)

July 10-20 - Las Vegas Summer League



This week’s poll is...



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Source: https://www.brightsideofthesun.com/...ading-kevin-durant-extending-devin-booker-nba
 
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