Devin Booker and the Phoenix Suns have had a start to the season that’s surprised most — whether the doubters admit that or not.
Finalities should be reserved for much later. Still, it is fair to analyze where the Suns currently are in these foundational days.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAs of Wednesday, Phoenix is 11-7 and sixth in the West with an Offensive Rating of 118.1 (11th), a Defensive Rating of 113.1 (10th), and a non-garbage-time Net of +5.0 (9th) — all per Cleaning the Glass.
Prior to games on Tuesday (which the Suns did not play), only six teams boasted top-10 ranks in both non-garbage-time offensive and defensive rating at the near-quarter mark: Oklahoma City, Houston, Detroit, Toronto, Minnesota, and Phoenix. After Tuesday night’s game, Orlando barely snuck ahead of the Suns in Offensive Rating.
Here are some of the things that have caught my attention over the first few weeks of play.
Torture Twins Lineup
This lineup template is the epitome of what the new era of Phoenix Suns basketball desires to be — brazenly blue-collar and hyper-competitive.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAt the template’s foundation are Jordan Goodwin and Ryan Dunn.
We’ve seen iterations where they’re on with Booker-Allen-Williams – +27.2 non-garbage-time Net Rating. We’ve also seen combinations of Gillespie with Ighodaro, then O’Neale or Brooks, be highly impactful.
Versatility and interchangeability allow the lineups to shape-shift like Voltron – remaining highly effective in any construct.
These lineups can boast an effective pick-and-roll tandem of Gillespie and Ighodaro, which is at 1.17 points per chance – 10th best for pick-and-roll tandems that have 60+ reps together. That’s obviously less used than a tandem of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Isaiah Hartenstein, or Gilgeous-Alexander and Chet Holmgren, or even Jalen Brunson and Mitchell Robinson, but operating in the same realm as those high-level pairings in efficiency-wise, even on lesser volume, provides impact.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThey can also shift to:
Defensive personnel (more wings)
Sprinkle shooting and creation in (Booker, Green, Brooks, or Allen, or O’Neale)
Or vertical spacing (in Williams)
These Dunn and Goodwin-led lineups, in 231 non-garbage-time minutes, have a Net of +32.2 (a 100th percentile mark – 138.6 offensive rating, 104.6 defensive rating).
+ Gillespie, and in a 140-possession sample size, they have a +40.7 Net (100th percentile – 140.0 offensive rating, 99.3 defensive, both of which also rank 100th percentile).
+ Ighodaro to those three, they’ve only seen 83 possessions, so not quite to the 100 possession threshold – but effective on eye test.
Dillon DAGGERS
Dillon Brooks has been a pleasant surprise for the Suns in his offensive production and impact this season.
The career-best and elite catch-and-shoot impact he enjoyed last season, where his 40.0% clip ranked 6th of 16 players north of 400 catch-and-shoot three-point attempts – in the company of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, and Derrick White – has not sustained yet.
If you had told me this was the case before the season started, I would have had questions about how his offensive impact came about.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementHowever, with the belief from Jordan Ott, confidence and appropriate creative freedom have helped make Brooks an efficient play finisher and impactful self-creator.
That’s all come with still playing an impactful role to the group’s defensive ceiling and floor when he’s on, both as an agitator and stopper – not just the former part.
He had six 25+ point games in 75 games last season. This season, in just 12 games played, he’s compiled four.
The spacing process and spacing personnel for the Suns have enabled him many more true 1v1 opportunities to work his bump-fade game in the midrange, as well as use of bully drives (aka Barkley drives into post positioning, a la Sir Charles, Kevin Durant, DeMar DeRozan, Giannis Antetokounmpo) without worry of crowded blocks and elbows, or even at the nail.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementLights Out Switch Flipping
The Phoenix Suns have the third-highest switch rate in the NBA this season, at 34.2%. That’s leaps and bounds ahead of last season’s mark of 26.3%, which was 12th.
Versatility is heavily baked into their defensive process under Jordan Ott, prioritizing keeping their defensive shell intact over matchups.
Mark Williams, in particular, has surprised me with his switching and activity in that.
What’s stood out most is his ability to slide his feet and win to spots in space containing drives, as well as understanding his distance of impact on shot contests – calculating the space he can give, knowing height (7-foot-1), wingspan (7-foot-7), and standing reach (9-foot-9) are his advantages to impact the release of shots uniquely.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementRyan Dunn spoke with me about the impact of the switches he gets into with Mark as well.
Oso Ighodaro continues to be one of the better switch-bigs in the league. He’s switched what ties for the 9th-most picks this season (50), and is conceding just 0.773 points per chance.
Also with the Suns’ guards and wings is the ability to hold up against cross-matches in the post viably, while also layering in scram (an off-ball switch in the post) and kick-out switches (an off-ball switch onto the roller) to their process.
We saw the switching process amongst the perimeter guys, with protections around them, to break Anthony Edwards’ rhythm on Friday.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementOf Note
Phoenix is 5th in catch-and-shoot three-point percentage, at 40.2%
Phoenix is 3rd in stocks (steals + blocks) at 15.1, and 5th in deflections, at 21.3
Phoenix is 4th in offensive rebound rate, at 34.9%