Last season was the nightmare scenario for the Phoenix Suns. You know it, I know it, the organization knows it. If someone were asked to draw the worst-case outcome for a team overflowing with talent and carrying the largest payroll in NBA history, last season would be the model. As the team looks ahead, the […]
Last season was the nightmare scenario for the Phoenix Suns. You know it, I know it, the organization knows it. If someone were asked to draw the worst-case outcome for a team overflowing with talent and carrying the largest payroll in NBA history, last season would be the model.
As the team looks ahead, the past may be left behind, yet it still offers a window into understanding what went wrong and why.
The corporate lines have been delivered in spades, but meaningful, thoughtful analysis has been scarce. That is, until Devin Booker spoke with Arizona Sports’ John Gambadoro. In that conversation, he offered a candid perspective on why last season failed to come together, and it’s worth paying attention to.
“I don’t think there was any hatred in our last group amongst the guys. I just think when you are all on a different plan and don’t have the same common goal or same objective than that’s what it turns into,” Booker informed Gambo, adding, “The last two years were the toughest of my career.”
There’s a lot you could read into Devin Booker’s comments.
It begins with something that became clear as the season unfolded: everyone was operating in their own silo. Individual objectives took priority over team goals, and it showed in the way the Suns played. There was no connectivity, no accountability, no collective aggression or focus. That’s what happens when a team functions in isolation, when the mindset is “me” instead of “we.”
Before the 2024-25 season, many questioned the roster construction. The team looked top-heavy, unbalanced, and for those skeptical voices, the results only confirmed their doubts. But it wasn’t the basketball logic alone that failed the Suns. It was the internal breakdown, the lack of communication, and the siloed approach that became the undoing of a team built to contend. And it was a spectacular undoing.
Booker’s final reflection was perhaps the most telling. He said the last two years were the toughest of his career. Think about that.
The super team he had been waiting for arrived, and instead of triumph, he experienced frustration and disappointment. Talent and payroll, even at Hall of Fame levels, do not guarantee satisfaction or success. The lesson is brutal but simple: the grass is rarely greener, and winning isn’t automatic, no matter the names on the roster.
What awaits this season for Booker and the Suns remains uncertain. Expectations are modest, and perhaps rightly so. Yet there is potential in the reset. There is space for a more team-focused approach, one that could produce victories that currently seem improbable. Perhaps a player or two will take the next step in their career.
Realistically, the Western Conference remains a formidable gauntlet. Success will not be measured in wins and losses alone but in competitiveness, cohesion, and the trajectory of the franchise. And the hope is clear: the Suns will no longer be a collection of silos, but a team united.
Category: General Sports