2025–26 Phoenix Suns season

2025–26 Phoenix Suns season
Head coachJordan Ott
General managerBrian Gregory
Owner(s)Mat Ishbia & Justin Ishbia
ArenaMortgage Matchup Center
Results
Record15–13 (.536)
PlaceDivision: 2nd (Pacific)
Conference: 7th (Western)

Stats at Basketball Reference
Local media
TelevisionArizona's Family Sports[a]
FuboTV[b]
Kiswe (Suns Live)
RadioKTAR

The 2025–26 Phoenix Suns season is the 58th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), as well as their 33rd season at the Mortgage Matchup Center.[1] This for the first time since 2020 that Suns will not played on Christmas Day.

On April 14, 2025, one day after the conclusion of their disappointing season, the fired head coach Mike Budenholzer after only one year with the team, despite his five-year, $50 million contract.[2] On May 1, the Suns promoted Brian Gregory—formerly the vice president of player programming and veteran college basketball coach—to general manager. James Jones transitioned to a senior advisor role before being appointed as the NBA's Executive Vice President and Head of Basketball Operations on July 9, succeeding Joe Dumars.[3][4] On June 6, Phoenix hired Cleveland Cavaliers assistant coach Jordan Ott as head coach, signing him to a four-year contract.[5]

On July 6, the Suns completed a record-breaking seven-team trade that sent Kevin Durant to the Houston Rockets and brought in Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, the 10th overall pick in the 2025 NBA draft, Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, Koby Brea, and future second-round picks in 2026 and 2032 from Houston. On July 16, the Suns and Bradley Beal reached an agreement on a contract buyout, with the team applying the stretch provision to his remaining $90 million guaranteed salary.

Offseason

Coaching staff changes

One day after the conclusion of the Suns' disappointing season, on April 14, head coach Mike Budenholzer was fired despite having four years and approximately $40 million remaining on his contract. His dismissal mirrored that of his predecessor, Frank Vogel, as the organization cited the team’s underperformance as a primary factor, particularly given expectations that the roster was capable of a significantly better record than the 36 wins achieved that season.[6]

The Suns opted for a more deliberate head coaching search with an emphasis on finding a coach who could better connect with players and guide a developing roster. The team reportedly considered up to 20 candidates during the offseason, including former head coach Mike Brown, New Orleans Pelicans head coach Willie Green, and Cleveland Cavaliers assistants Johnnie Bryant and Jordan Ott.[7] The Suns announced on June 6 that Jordan Ott had been named head coach. Ott signed a four-year contract and received endorsements from Suns legends Devin Booker and Steve Nash, the latter of whom previously worked with Ott during their time with the Brooklyn Nets.[8][9]

On June 11, that former NBA player and Cleveland Cavaliers assistant coach DeMarre Carroll would become the first assistant to join Jordan Ott’s new coaching staff. Carroll was later confirmed to coach the Suns’ 2025 NBA Summer League team.[10] On July 8, the Suns announced that Washington Wizards assistant coach Brian Randle would return as an assistant coach after previously serving under Monty Williams from 2020 to 2023, including during the team’s run to the 2021 NBA Finals. The team also confirmed that Chaisson Allen would remain on the staff.[11]

Two days later, assistant coaches Brent Barry and James Posey departed the team. Barry joined Amazon Prime Video’s NBA broadcast team, while Posey became an assistant coach for the Portland Trail Blazers.[12][13] The Suns hired Orlando Magic assistant Jesse Mermuys as offensive coordinator, and former NBA player Mateen Cleaves—Ishbia’s former Michigan State teammate and United Wholesale Mortgage employee—as player development coach. On July 19, Valley Suns head coach John Little was added to Ott’s staff as an assistant coach.[14] On August 9, former NBA player Mike Muscala joined the Suns’ coaching staff as an assistant coach.[15] On August 13, the Suns announced that former Charlotte Hornets head coach and front office advisor Steve Clifford had been hired as a coaching advisor.[16]

Front office changes

In an interview, Suns owner Mat Ishbia revealed that organizational changes to the front office would take place during the offseason, describing them as the most significant adjustments to be made before addressing the head coaching position.[17] In early April, reports surfaced that the Suns were exploring the possibility of hiring former Golden State Warriors general manager Bob Myers to be their general manager.[18] However, on May 1, the team announced that Brian Gregory—formerly a college basketball head coach and the Suns’ vice president of player programming—had been promoted to general manager. James Jones, who previously served as general manager and team president, transitioned to a senior advisor role for the remainder of his contract, which expired at the start of free agency, before being appointed as the NBA’s Executive Vice President and Head of Basketball Operations on July 9, succeeding Joe Dumars.[19][4] Additionally, the Suns promoted director of scouting Oronde Taliaferro to assistant general manager and expanded chief innovation officer Paul Rivers’ responsibilities to include basketball operations.[20]

Draft picks

Round Pick Player Position Nationality College / Club
1 10 Khaman Maluach Center South Sudan Duke
2 31 Rasheer Fleming Power Forward United States Saint Joseph's
2 41 Koby Brea Shooting Guard United States
Dominican Republic
Kentucky

The Suns entered the draft holding one first-round and one second-round selection, though neither was originally their own.[21][22] The first-round pick, which became the 29th overall pick, was acquired from the Cleveland Cavaliers through a previous trade with the Utah Jazz.[23] The second-round pick, 52nd overall, was also obtained via trade during the previous season. The Suns acquired it, along with Nick Richards, from the Charlotte Hornets in exchange for Josh Okogie and three second-round picks. The selection originally belonged to the Denver Nuggets.[24]

Phoenix’s original first-round pick (No. 10 overall) had been dealt to the Brooklyn Nets as part of the trade for Kevin Durant.[25] The Suns’ own second-round pick (No. 40 overall) was included in the earlier trade with the Washington Wizards for Bradley Beal.[26] However, on June 22, it was announced that following Durant’s impending trade to the Houston Rockets—which became official on July 6 after Jalen Green’s rookie extension and later expanded into a record-breaking seven-team deal—the Suns would regain their first-round pick initially lost in the Durant trade. Phoenix was also slated to acquire the final selection of the draft from the Oklahoma City Thunder, in addition to second-round picks in 2025, 2026, and 2032.[27] The 59th pick, originally held by Houston before being traded to Phoenix, became the final selection of the draft after the New York Knicks forfeited their second-round pick due to a free agency violation.

In the first round of the 2025 NBA draft, the Rockets selected South Sudanese center Khaman Maluach from Duke University on behalf of the Suns. Maluach had been named to the 2025 All-Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Freshman Team after helping Duke reach the Final Four of the 2025 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. Before his collegiate career, he played professionally for multiple teams in the Basketball Africa League, where he led the league in rebounds in his final season in the league.

Phoenix sent the 29th overall pick, a 2029 first-round pick acquired from the Utah Jazz, and Serbian guard Vasilije Micić to the Charlotte Hornets. In return, the Suns received Mark Williams and reacquired their own 2029 second-round pick.[28]

In the second round of the draft, Phoenix executed several additional trades involving their second-round selections. The Suns initially held the rights to the 36th, 52nd, and 59th overall picks. The Suns ultimately acquired the 31st and 41st overall selections. With the 31st pick, the Minnesota Timberwolvess selected forward Rasheer Fleming from Saint Joseph's University for the Suns, while the Golden State Warriors used the 41st pick to select Dominican-American guard Koby Brea from the University of Kentucky for Phoenix. Fleming had been named to the 2025 All-Atlantic 10 First Team, while Brea was a two-time Atlantic 10 Sixth Man of the Year in 2022 and 2024 and led the conference in three-point shooting in his final seasons at Dayton and Kentucky.

Trades and Free agency

Ahead of the 2025–26 NBA season, the Phoenix Suns sought to move on from Bradley Beal’s remaining two years under contract and explored trade options involving Kevin Durant as part of a broader effort to restructure the roster following two disappointing seasons from their “superteam” experiment centered around Devin Booker. On June 22, it was announced that a deal involving Durant would become official on July 6. The transaction ultimately materialized as a record-breaking seven-team trade that sent Durant to the Houston Rockets in exchange for Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, the return of the Suns’ own first-round pick , multiple second-round draft selections (including two in the 2025 draft, one in 2026, and a conditional pick in 2032), and Daeqwon Plowden from the Atlanta Hawks, who was later waived following completion of the deal.[27][29]

The Suns reportedly explored offseason trade scenarios involving Grayson Allen and Royce O'Neale, with Nick Richards later mentioned as a possible trade candidate after the 2025 NBA draft, reinforcing speculation that the team was preparing for a major roster overhaul.

The team also faced key contract decisions on Richards, Martin, and Micić, whose 2025–26 season was held as a team option stemming from his 2023–24 deal with the Oklahoma City Thunder. Prior to the draft, Phoenix exercised Micić’s option and subsequently agreed to trade him, along with the 29th overall pick and a 2029 first-round pick acquired from the Jazz to the Hornets in exchange for Mark Williams and the Suns’ own 2029 second-round pick.[28] Richards’ 2025–26 contract was fully guaranteed by his June 29 deadline, while Martin was waived the following day.[30] Additionally, Bol Bol, Tyus Jones, Damion Lee, Monté Morris, and Mason Plumlee became unrestricted free agents, while two-way players Collin Gillespie, Jalen Bridges, and TyTy Washington Jr. entered restricted free agency as of June 30.

At the start of the 2025 free agency, the Suns agreed to sign Collin Gillespie to a one-year veteran’s minimum contract. Phoenix also reached an agreement with Nigel Hayes-Davis of Fenerbahçe Beko in Turkey's Basketbol Süper Ligi on a one-year deal for his return to the NBA at age 30. On July 3, undrafted forward C. J. Huntley from Appalachian State University signed a two-year two-way contract with the Suns.[31][32] On July 8, the Suns signed Isaiah Livers to a two-way contract, joining rookies Huntley and Koby Brea.[33]

On July 16, the Suns waived Bradley Beal and used the stretch provision on his contract, which still had two years remaining, offficially ending the 'Big Three' era in Phoenix. The remaining $110.8 million on Beal’s deal was stretched over five years, with Beal forfeiting $13.9 million, resulting in approximately $20 million in dead cap space annually. The move allowed Phoenix to fall below both the new second tax apron and the original tax apron.[34]

On July 23, the Suns reacquired Jordan Goodwin after claiming him off waivers from the Los Angeles Lakers and also signed Jared Butler on a one-year contract, but he was waived after preseason.

Roster

Players Coaches
Pos. No. Player Height Weight DOB From
G 8 Grayson Allen 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 198 lb (90 kg) 1995-10-08 Duke
G 1 Devin Booker  6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 206 lb (93 kg) 1996-10-30 Kentucky
G 14 Koby Brea (TW) 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 2002-11-06 Kentucky
G/F 3 Dillon Brooks 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 225 lb (102 kg) 1996-01-22 Oregon
F 0 Ryan Dunn 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 216 lb (98 kg) 2003-01-07 Virginia
F 20 Rasheer Fleming 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 2004-07-10 Saint Joseph's
G 12 Collin Gillespie 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 1999-06-25 Villanova
G 23 Jordan Goodwin 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1998-10-23 Saint Louis
G 4 Jalen Green  6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 186 lb (84 kg) 2002-02-09 Prolific Prep (CA)
F 21 Nigel Hayes-Davis 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 254 lb (115 kg) 1994-12-16 Wisconsin
F 11 Oso Ighodaro 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 2002-07-14 Marquette
F 18 Isaiah Livers  (TW) 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 232 lb (105 kg) 1998-07-28 Michigan
C 10 Khaman Maluach 7 ft 1 in (2.16 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 2006-09-14 Duke
F 00 Royce O'Neale 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 226 lb (103 kg) 1993-06-05 Baylor
C 2 Nick Richards 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 245 lb (111 kg) 1997-11-29 Kentucky
C 15 Mark Williams 7 ft 1 in (2.16 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 2001-12-16 Duke
Head coach
Assistant(s)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) On assignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  • Injured

Roster
Updated: December 5, 2025

Standings

Division

Pacific DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
Los Angeles Lakers198.7047‍–‍412‍–‍43–327
Phoenix Suns1513.5364.59‍–‍56‍–‍86–428
Golden State Warriors1415.4836.08‍–‍46‍–‍114–229
Los Angeles Clippers721.25012.54‍–‍83‍–‍132–428
Sacramento Kings722.24113.04‍–‍93‍–‍131–329

Conference

Western Conference
#TeamWLPCTGBGP
1Oklahoma City Thunder *253.89328
2San Antonio Spurs *217.7504.028
3Denver Nuggets207.7414.527
4Los Angeles Lakers *198.7045.527
5Minnesota Timberwolves1910.6556.529
6Houston Rockets179.6547.026
7Phoenix Suns1513.53610.028
8Golden State Warriors1415.48311.529
9Memphis Grizzlies1315.46412.028
10Portland Trail Blazers1216.42913.028
11Dallas Mavericks1118.37914.529
12Utah Jazz1017.37014.527
13Los Angeles Clippers721.25018.028
14Sacramento Kings722.24118.529
15New Orleans Pelicans722.24118.529

Game log

Preseason

During the previous season, it was announced that the Suns and Brooklyn Nets would play two of their preseason games at the Venetian Arena in Macau, with the Suns being named the home team in those games.[35] These games would represent a return to the Chinese mainland area for the NBA itself for the first time since the 2019 preseason period back when the Nets played against the Los Angeles Lakers before China boycotted the NBA for a few seasons due to comments that Daryl Morey (the Houston Rockets' general manager at the time) made involving the nation regarding the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests at the time.[36][37] In addition to that, in early June 2025, the Los Angeles Lakers announced that their first preseason game would be at the Acrisure Arena against the Suns on October 3.[38] The Suns' final preseason game, which would also be against the Lakers, though it'd be on October 14 at the Mortgage Matchup Center for three home preseason games to close out the preseason, would officially be announced on July 30, 2025.

2025 preseason game log
Total: 3–1 (Home: 1–1; Road: 2–0)
Preseason: 3–1 (home: 1–1; road: 2–0)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
1 October 3 @ L.A. Lakers W 103–81 Devin Booker (24) Oso Ighodaro (9) Devin Booker (7) Acrisure Arena
9,122
1–0
2 October 10 @ Brooklyn W 132–127 (OT) Jordan Goodwin (19) Collin Gillespie (9) Royce O'Neale (6) Venetian Arena
11,317
2–0
3 October 12 Brooklyn L 109–111 Devin Booker (18) Booker, Dunn, Ighodaro, Richards (5) Devin Booker (5) Venetian Arena
11,729
2–1
4 October 14 L.A. Lakers W 113–104 Jared Butler (35) Khaman Maluach (8) Jared Butler (9) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
3–1
2025–26 preseason schedule

Regular season

Before the NBA announced the regular season schedule for every team in the league, it was confirmed on August 13 that the Suns would start out this season at home on October 22 against the Sacramento Kings.[39]

2025–26 game log
Total: 15–13 (Home: 9–5; Road: 6–8)
October: 2–4 (home: 2–1; road: 0–3)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
1 October 22 Sacramento W 120–116 Devin Booker (31) Mark Williams (11) Grayson Allen (7) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
1–0
2 October 24 @ L.A. Clippers L 102–129 Dillon Brooks (21) Ighodaro, Williams (6) Devin Booker (7) Intuit Dome
17,927
1–1
3 October 25 @ Denver L 111–133 Devin Booker (31) Ryan Dunn (7) Devin Booker (7) Ball Arena
20,025
1–2
4 October 27 @ Utah L 134–138 (OT) Devin Booker (34) Royce O'Neale (13) Collin Gillespie (12) Delta Center
18,186
1–3
5 October 29 Memphis L 113–114 Devin Booker (32) Mark Williams (12) Gillespie, O'Neale (5) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
1–4
6 October 31 Utah W 118–96 Devin Booker (36) Ryan Dunn (10) Devin Booker (9) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
2–4
November: 10–5 (home: 6–3; road: 4–2)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
7 November 2 San Antonio W 130–112 Devin Booker (28) Mark Williams (7) Devin Booker (13) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
3–4
8 November 4 @ Golden State L 107–118 Devin Booker (38) Mark Williams (16) Grayson Allen (5) Chase Center
18,064
3–5
9 November 6 L.A. Clippers W 115–102 Jalen Green (29) Mark Williams (10) Booker, Gillespie (7) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
4–5
10 November 8 @ L.A. Clippers W 114–103 Devin Booker (21) Devin Booker (10) Devin Booker (9) Intuit Dome
5–5
11 November 10 New Orleans W 121–98 Grayson Allen (42) Mark Williams (6) Collin Gillespie (5) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
6–5
12 November 12 @ Dallas W 123–114 Devin Booker (26) Nick Richards (7) Devin Booker (9) American Airlines Center
19,501
7–5
13 November 13 Indiana W 133–98 Devin Booker (33) Jordan Goodwin (10) Devin Booker (7) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
8–5
14 November 16 Atlanta L 122–124 Dillon Brooks (34) Collin Gillespie (9) Collin Gillespie (8) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
8–6
15 November 18 @ Portland W 127–110 Booker, Gillespie (19) Booker, Williams (6) Collin Gillespie (6) Moda Center
17,051
9–6
16 November 21 Minnesota W 114–113 Dillon Brooks (22) Mark Williams (8) Devin Booker (10) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
10–6
17 November 23 San Antonio W 111–102 Dillon Brooks (25) Mark Williams (11) Devin Booker (7) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
11–6
18 November 24 Houston L 92–114 Dillon Brooks (29) Nick Richards (11) Devin Booker (5) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
11–7
19 November 26 @ Sacramento W 112–100 Gillespie, Williams (21) Mark Williams (16) Collin Gillespie (9) Golden 1 Center
17,961
12–7
20 November 28 @ Oklahoma City L 119–123 Collin Gillespie (24) Mark Williams (14) Devin Booker (6) Paycom Center
18,203
12–8
21 November 29 Denver L 112–130 Dillon Brooks (27) Oso Ighodaro (8) Devin Booker (7) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
12–9
December: 3–4 (home: 1–1; road: 2–3)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
22 December 1 @ L.A. Lakers W 125–108 Dillon Brooks (33) Ryan Dunn (8) Royce O'Neale (11) Crypto.com Arena
18,997
13–9
23 December 5 @ Houston L 98–117 Dillon Brooks (23) Jordan Goodwin (5) Dillon Brooks (4) Toyota Center
18,055
13–10
24 December 8 @ Minnesota W 108–105 Mark Williams (22) Dunn, O'Neale (8) Royce O'Neale (5) Target Center
16,046
14–10
25 December 10 @ Oklahoma City L 89–138 Dillon Brooks (16) Ighodaro, Richards, Williams (5) Jamaree Bouyea (5) Paycom Center
18,203
14–11
26 December 14 L.A. Lakers L 114–116 Devin Booker (27) Booker, Williams (6) Allen, Booker (7) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
14–12
27 December 18 Golden State W 99–98 Devin Booker (25) Oso Ighodaro (13) Collin Gillespie (5) Mortgage Matchup Center
17,071
15–12
28 December 20 @ Golden State L 116–119 Devin Booker (38) Oso Ighodaro (8) Devin Booker (5) Chase Center
18,064
15–13
29 December 23 L.A. Lakers Mortgage Matchup Center
30 December 26 @ New Orleans Smoothie King Center
31 December 27 @ New Orleans Smoothie King Center
32 December 29 @ Washington Capital One Arena
33 December 31 @ Cleveland Rocket Arena
January: 0–0 (home: 0–0; road: 0–0)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
34 January 2 Sacramento Mortgage Matchup Center
35 January 4 Oklahoma City Mortgage Matchup Center
36 January 5 @ Houston Toyota Center
37 January 7 @ Memphis FedExForum
38 January 9 New York Mortgage Matchup Center
39 January 11 Washington Mortgage Matchup Center
40 January 13 @ Miami Kaseya Center
41 January 15 @ Detroit Little Caesars Arena
42 January 17 @ New York Madison Square Garden
43 January 19 @ Brooklyn Barclays Center
44 January 20 @ Philadelphia Xfinity Mobile Arena
45 January 23 @ Atlanta State Farm Arena
46 January 25 Miami Mortgage Matchup Center
47 January 27 Brooklyn Mortgage Matchup Center
48 January 29 Detroit Mortgage Matchup Center
49 January 30 Cleveland Mortgage Matchup Center
February: 0–0 (home: 0–0; road: 0–0)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
50 February 1 L.A. Clippers Mortgage Matchup Center
51 February 3 @ Portland Moda Center
52 February 5 Golden State Mortgage Matchup Center
53 February 7 Philadelphia Mortgage Matchup Center
54 February 10 Dallas Mortgage Matchup Center
55 February 11 Oklahoma City Mortgage Matchup Center
All-Star Game
56 February 19 @ San Antonio Moody Center
57 February 21 Orlando Mortgage Matchup Center
58 February 22 Portland Mortgage Matchup Center
59 February 24 Boston Mortgage Matchup Center
60 February 26 L.A. Lakers Mortgage Matchup Center
March: 0–0 (home: 0–0; road: 0–0)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
61 March 3 @ Sacramento Golden 1 Center
62 March 5 Chicago Mortgage Matchup Center
63 March 6 New Orleans Mortgage Matchup Center
64 March 8 Charlotte Mortgage Matchup Center
65 March 10 @ Milwaukee Fiserv Forum
66 March 12 @ Indiana Gainbridge Fieldhouse
67 March 13 @ Toronto Scotiabank Arena
68 March 16 @ Boston TD Garden
69 March 17 @ Minnesota Target Center
70 March 19 @ San Antonio Frost Bank Center
71 March 21 Milwaukee Mortgage Matchup Center
72 March 22 Toronto Mortgage Matchup Center
73 March 24 Denver Mortgage Matchup Center
74 March 28 Utah Mortgage Matchup Center
75 March 30 @ Memphis FedExForum
76 March 31 @ Orlando Kia Center
April: 0–0 (home: 0–0; road: 0–0)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
77 April 2 @ Charlotte Spectrum Center
78 April 5 @ Chicago United Center
79 April 7 Houston Mortgage Matchup Center
80 April 8 Dallas Mortgage Matchup Center
81 April 10 @ L.A. Lakers Crypto.com Arena
82 April 12 @ Oklahoma City Paycom Center
2025–26 season schedule

NBA Cup

On July 9, it was announced that the Suns would return to Group A once again for the 2025 NBA Cup, only this time, they'd be competing against the defending NBA Finals champion Oklahoma City Thunder, Minnesota Timberwolves, Sacramento Kings, and Utah Jazz instead.

West Group A

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Qualification
1 Oklahoma City Thunder 4 4 0 512 437 +75 Advanced to knockout rounds
2 Phoenix Suns 4 3 1 463 432 +31
3 Minnesota Timberwolves 4 2 2 479 434 +45
4 Utah Jazz 4 1 3 433 518 −85
5 Sacramento Kings 4 0 4 430 496 −66
Source: NBA

Awards, honors, and records

  • Entering this season, Devin Booker would become the fourth player in franchise history to stay with the Phoenix Suns for at least eleven years, joining the likes of Walter Davis, Kevin Johnson, and Alvan Adams as the only other Suns players to stay with the team for that same amount of time. Booker would make his regular season debut on October 22, 2025 with 31 points scored in a comeback 120–116 win over the Sacramento Kings season.

Week/Month

All-Star

Records

Team records

  • On November 6, 2025, Jalen Green would have the highest number of three-pointers made in a Suns debut game with six three-pointers made in a 115–102 beatdown against the Los Angeles Clippers at home.[40] Not only that, but the 29 points he scored that night would be the second-most points scored for a Phoenix debut behind Charles Barkley's debut game against the Clippers where he scored 35 points on November 7, 1992 nearly 33 years ago.
  • Four days after Jalen Green's debut, on November 10, Grayson Allen would score a new record-high 10 three-pointers made (breaking a long-standing tie that included Grayson Allen himself and six other now-former Suns players tying an overall NBA season-high for threes made at the time) for a new career-high 42 points scored in a blowout 121–98 win over the New Orleans Pelicans.[41][42]

Milestones

Team milestones

Transactions

Trades

June 30, 2025[43] To Phoenix Suns
Mark Williams
2029 second-round pick (from Phoenix via Charlotte)
To Charlotte Hornets
Vasilije Micić
Draft rights to Liam McNeeley (No. 29)
2029 first-round pick (from Cleveland, Minnesota, or Utah via Phoenix)[I]
July 6, 2025[44][45][46][47] Seven–team trade
To Houston Rockets
Kevin Durant (from Phoenix)
Clint Capela (sign-and-trade deal from Atlanta)
To Atlanta Hawks
David Roddy (from Houston)
Rights to swap 2031 second-round pick with Houston
$85,300 (from Houston)
To Golden State Warriors
Draft rights to Alex Toohey (No. 52) [from Phoenix]
Draft rights to Jahmai Mashack (No. 59) [from Houston]
To Minnesota Timberwolves
Draft rights to Rocco Zikarsky (No. 45) [from L.A. Lakers]
2026 second-round pick (from Denver or Golden State via Phoenix)[II]
Most favorable 2032 second-round pick between Houston and Phoenix[III]
$3,250,000 (from L.A. Lakers)
To Los Angeles Lakers
Draft rights to Adou Thiero (No. 36) [from Brooklyn]
To Brooklyn Nets
2026 second-round pick (from Boston, Indiana, the L.A. Clippers, or Miami via Houston)[IV]
2030 second-round pick (from Boston via Houston)
To Phoenix Suns
Jalen Green (from Houston)
Dillon Brooks (from Houston)
Daeqwon Plowden (two-way contract from Atlanta)
Draft rights to Khaman Maluach (No. 10) [from Houston]
Draft rights to Rasheer Fleming (No. 31) [from Minnesota]
Draft rights to Koby Brea (No. 41) [from Golden State]
2026 second-round pick (from Dallas, Oklahoma City, or Philadelphia via Houson)[V]
Least favorable 2032 second-round pick between Houston and Minnesota[III]

^ I: The 2029 first-round pick originally acquired by the Suns from the Utah Jazz and later traded to the Charlotte Hornets is set to convey as the lesser of the first-round selections held by the Cleveland Cavaliers, Minnesota Timberwolves, and the Jazz, stemming from the 2022 trades involving Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert. Minnesota’s pick is Top-5 protected; if it falls within the Top-5 that year, the protection would defer the obligation to a future draft, resulting in the 2029 selection being determined between Cleveland and Utah instead. [48]
^ II: The 2026 second-round pick, which was originally set to be sent to the Suns before being rerouted to the Minnesota Timberwolves as part of the seven-team trade, will convey as the lesser of the two 2026 NBA draft selections previously held by the Denver Nuggets—acquired by Phoenix in an earlier trade with the Charlotte Hornets—or by the Golden State Warriors through a series of subsequent transactions.
^ III: The 2032 second-round pick conveyed to Minnesota will be the higher selection between Houston and Phoenix. The Suns will retain the lower of the two picks between the Rockets and the Timberwolves. Consequently, if the Suns finish with a worse record than Houston in 2032, the trade would result in Phoenix receiving the lesser pick between Minnesota and Houston, while the Rockets would send the Suns’ second-round pick that year to Minnesota, and the Timberwolves would retain the remaining pick among the three teams. Conversely, if Houston finishes with a better record than Phoenix, the Rockets would send Phoenix’s second-round pick either back to the Suns or to the Timberwolves, depending on which team has the superior record that year, with Minnesota receiving the remaining two picks among the three franchises.
^ IV: As part of a subsequent trade between the Brooklyn Nets and the Memphis Grizzlies, which involved multiple prior transactions (including one with the Suns), the Nets acquired the right to receive either the Los Angeles Clippers’ unprotected 2026 second-round pick or the least favorable of the 2026 second-round selections originally owned by the Boston Celtics, Indiana Pacers, or Miami Heat, depending on the final draft positions of those teams.
^ V: As a result of several trades involving the Houston Rockets prior to the Suns' blockbuster deal, the Rockets will convey to Phoenix the middle-valued first-round pick in the 2026 NBA draft among selections from the Dallas Mavericks, Oklahoma City Thunder, and Philadelphia 76ers. Under related trade conditions, the defending champion Thunder will receive the most valuable of the three picks, while the San Antonio Spurs will receive the least valuable via a separate transaction.

Free agency

Re-signed

Player Signed Date Ref.
Collin Gillespie Signed 1-year deal worth $2,378,870 July 2, 2025 [49]
Devin Booker Signed 2-year contract extension worth $145 Million July 9, 2025 [50]

Additions

Player Signed Former team(s) Ref.
C. J. Huntley Signed 2-year two-way contract worth around $1,272,870[51] Appalachian State Mountaineers [31][32]
Isaiah Livers Signed two-way contract worth $636,435[51] Detroit Pistons / Washington Wizards [33]
Nigel Hayes-Davis Signed 1-year deal worth $2,048,494 Fenerbahçe Beko [52][53]
Jordan Goodwin Signed 1-year partially guaranteed deal worth $2,349,578 Los Angeles Lakers [54]

Subtractions

Player Reason New team(s) Ref.
Vasilije Micić Traded Charlotte Hornets / Milwaukee Bucks / Hapoel Tel Aviv B.C. [28]
Cody Martin Waived Indiana Pacers [55]
Kevin Durant Traded Houston Rockets [27]
Daeqwon Plowden Waived two-way contract Sacramento Kings / Stockton Kings [46]
Tyus Jones Unrestricted free agent Orlando Magic
Mason Plumlee Unrestricted free agent Charlotte Hornets
Bradley Beal Waived / Bought out contract Los Angeles Clippers
TyTy Washington Jr. Restricted free agent Los Angeles Clippers / San Diego Clippers
Jalen Bridges Restricted free agent Boston Celtics / Maine Celtics
Damion Lee Unrestricted free agent Ironi Ness Ziona B.C.
Monté Morris Unrestricted free agent Indiana Pacers
Bol Bol Unrestricted free agent

Notes

References

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