Hereโs a 2025โ26 season review (mid-season/early take) for the Phoenix Suns, based on whatโs gone on so far โ and what looks likely for where things are headed.
Big Picture Context & Background
- New Chapter After a Disappointing 2024โ25
- The Suns came off a very underwhelming 2024โ25 season (36โ46), missing even the Play-In Tournament. (Reuters)
- Owner Mat Ishbia called the season a โfailureโ and expressed frustration with a lack of identity, passion, and effort. (Reuters)
- Head coach Mike Budenholzer was fired after just one season. (New York Post)
- Roster Overhaul
- The Suns traded Kevin Durant, and let Bradley Beal go, signaling a significant reset. (NBA Analysis)
- Key additions:
- Jalen Green (from Houston) โ brings youth, scoring potential. (NBA Analysis)
- Dillon Brooks โ known for his defensive intensity. (NBA Analysis)
- Mark Williams โ to add size in the frontcourt. (NBA Analysis)
- Other moves: signing Jordan Goodwin, Nigel Hayes-Davis; re-signing Collin Gillespie. (NBA Analysis)
- But, question mark at point guard: after Tyus Jones left, the Suns donโt have a proven traditional PG. Analysts see this as a major roster hole. (SI)
- Leadership & Stability Around Devin Booker
- Devin Booker remains the anchor. He re-signed (extension) and is clearly the face of the rebuild. (NBA)
- Heโs expected to lean more into leadership, especially as the roster resets. (NBA)
- Notably, in NBA 2K26, Booker is rated 91 overall, the only Suns player rated really high; Jalen Green is next (83). (SI)
- Coaching Change / New Voice
- The Suns hired Jordan Ott as their head coach. (Wikipedia)
- Early signs, at least from other coaches, are positive: for example, Steve Kerr praised the Sunsโ style under Ott, noting more organization and purpose, especially defensively. (Bright Side Of The Sun)
Early Season Performance (as of Now)
Since the season is still in its early stages, the โreviewโ is necessarily provisional, but some trends are emerging:
- Slow Start โ Then Some Momentum
- After a tough start (losing 4 of their first 5), the Suns have rebounded, winning 5 of their last 6 per Axios. (Axios)
- Their record (currently) is 8โ5, per Basketball-Reference. (Basketball Reference)
- Their offensive rating is strong; theyโre scoring at a good clip. According to Basketball-Reference: Off Rtg ~119.0 (top-10) so far. (Basketball Reference)
- Their defensive rating is also respectable (Def Rtg ~114.1). (Basketball Reference)
- Net rating is +4.9, which suggests theyโre not just playing โ theyโre competitive. (Basketball Reference)
- Notable Games
- Big comeback: In their opener (or early in the season), the Suns erased a large deficit vs. Sacramento โ down 64โ44 in 2nd quarter, but came back to win 120โ116. (The Sporting Base)
- Jalen Greenโs impact is muted early: Green, a key offseason acquisition, has been hampered by injury. According to Axios, he re-aggravated a hamstring issue and will miss several weeks. (Axios)
- Defense & Identity
- There’s some positive buzz: people are noting โscrappy,โ high-effort defense. In fan circles, it’s being argued the Suns are doing well limiting ISO scoring. > โTeams Who Have Given Up The Fewest Points Per Possession Guarding ISOs โฆ Phoenix Suns โ 0.67โ โ per Reddit. (Reddit)
- But skepticism remains: as one analysis piece argues, the roster is top-heavy with shooting guards (Booker, Green, Allen), and the lack of a true PG could be a structural problem. (Bright Side Of The Sun)
Risks, Challenges & Key Questions
- Roster Construction Risk: With so many shooting guards, the Suns might be too narrow. Their lack of positional diversity could make them exploitable. (Bright Side Of The Sun)
- Point Guard Uncertainty: Without a defined playmaking guard, who runs the offense when Booker isnโt putting up individual numbers? (SI)
- Greenโs Availability: If Green continues to be injured, that undermines a big piece of their retooling plan.
- Long-Term Direction: Is this a full rebuild, or a โretool and make occasional pushโ situation? The personnel choices suggest more of a rebuild, but cap and asset structure will matter.
- Talent Development: Can young pieces like Green, Mark Williams, and maybe future draft picks grow into core contributors?
- Playoff Viability: With a tough Western Conference, even a solid recovery might not be enough to contend โ but perhaps thatโs not the goal this season.
Early-Season Verdict: Mixed but Optimistic
- Pros:
- The Suns look more coherent under a new coach.
- Offensive firepower is real, and they seem capable of explosive scoring.
- Leadership from Booker is strong; heโs clearly invested in building this team his way.
- The defensive tone has improved in some facets; not a smoke show, there’s actual effort.
- Cons:
- Injuries (especially to Green) could derail momentum.
- Structural issues (roster imbalance) may limit upside.
- Theyโre likely not a serious playoff threat yet; this feels like a foundation year.
Looking Ahead: What to Watch
- Greenโs Return: How he comes back (health, aggressiveness) will be a barometer for the Suns’ true ceiling.
- Young Bigs: How Mark Williams and any other young frontcourt players develop.
- Point Guard Solution: Will they lean on Gillespie or find other ways to facilitate?
- Roster Moves: Midseason trades or signings could reshape this teamโs trajectory.
- Playoff Push or Rebuild: Depending on how they start to gel, management may have to decide โ do they try to make a run or fully commit to a long rebuild?
Bottom Line
The 2025โ26 Suns are no longer a โwin-now with short-term starsโ team โ theyโre in a transitional phase. Itโs early, but there are encouraging signs: competitive performances, a clearer identity under a new coach, and glimpses of what could be a youthful core centered on Booker.
This season likely wonโt be about contending for a title. Instead, itโs about laying the groundwork โ building culture, developing young talent, and figuring out what the next era of Suns basketball looks like.

