After winning 49 games and making a first-round playoff exit in 2023/24, the Suns were confident that their second year with the big three of Devin Booker, Kevin Durant, and Bradley Beal would yield better results.
Having not operated with a traditional point guard for much of the 2023/24 season, the Suns added Tyus Jones and Monte Morris in free agency during the summer of 2024 while also replacing head coach Frank Vogel with Mike Budenholzer.
Those changes, combined with a full season from 2024 deadline addition Royce O’Neale and the prospect of better health luck for Booker, Durant, and Beal – who suited up together for just 41 games in ’23/24 – were reasons for optimism in Phoenix.
And through nine games, it looked like that optimism was warranted. The Suns raced out to an 8-1 start and sat tied with Oklahoma City atop the Western Conference standings on November 10.
However, things quickly turned south, as newcomers like Jones, Morris, and Budenholzer didn’t make the sort of impact the Suns had anticipated, while Durant and Beal once again battled health issues that sidelined them for 20 and 29 games, respectively.
Most damning of all was the fact that Phoenix’s so-called “big three” wasn’t even effective when healthy — in the 667 minutes that Booker, Durant, and Beal shared the court, the team was outscored by 4.1 points per 100 possessions.
The Suns finished the season with a 36-46 record, earning the ignominious honor of becoming the only NBA team that didn’t clinch a top-six playoff spot, didn’t claim at least a play-in berth, and didn’t control a lottery pick — each of the league’s other 29 clubs fell into at least one of those categories. To make matters worse, the Suns finished the season with the NBA’s highest payroll and don’t control any of their own draft picks through 2031.
Put simply, running it back wasn’t an option in Phoenix this offseason. The team has already fired Budenholzer and made front office changes, promoting vice president of player programming Brian Gregory to general manager while former GM James Jones transitioned into a senior advisor position. Next up? Making major changes to this underachieving roster.