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Phoenix Suns

The Phoenix Suns are an American professional basketball team based in Phoenix, Arizona. They compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA), as a member of the league's Western Conference Pacific Division. The Suns are the only team in their division not to be based in California, and play their home games at the Footprint Center. The Suns are one of four major league sports teams based in the Phoenix area, but are the only one to bill themselves as representing the city (the other teams - the Cardinals, Coyotes, and Diamondbacks - all bill themselves as representing the state of Arizona).

Phoenix Suns
2022–23 Phoenix Suns season
ConferenceWestern
DivisionPacific
Founded1968
HistoryPhoenix Suns
1968–present[1][2]
ArenaFootprint Center
LocationPhoenix, Arizona
Team colorsPurple, orange, black, gray, yellow[3][4][5]
         
Main sponsorPayPal[6]
PresidentJames Jones[7]
General managerJames Jones[8]
Head coachVacant
OwnershipMat Ishbia
Championships0
Conference titles3 (1976, 1993, 2021)
Division titles8 (1981, 1993, 1995, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2021, 2022)
Retired numbers6 (5, 6, 7, 33, 42, 44)
Websitewww.nba.com/suns
Association
Icon
Statement

The franchise began play in 1968 as an expansion team, and their early years were mired in mediocrity, but their fortunes changed in the 1970s after partnering Dick Van Arsdale and Alvan Adams with Paul Westphal; the team reached the 1976 NBA Finals, in what is considered to be one of the biggest upsets in NBA history. However, after failing to capture a championship, the Suns would rebuild around Walter Davis for a majority of the 1980s, until the acquisition of Kevin Johnson in 1988.

Under Johnson, and after trading for perennial NBA All-Star Charles Barkley, and combined with the output of Tom Chambers and Dan Majerle, the Suns reached the playoffs for a franchise-record thirteen consecutive appearances and remained a regular title contender throughout the 1990s, and reached the 1993 NBA Finals. However, the team would again fail to win a championship, and entered into another period of mediocrity until the early part of the 2000s.

In 2004, the Suns signed free agent Steve Nash (who had blossomed for the Dallas Mavericks after being traded from Phoenix six years earlier), and returned into playoff contention. With Nash, Shawn Marion, and Amar'e Stoudemire, and under head coach Mike D'Antoni, the Suns became renowned worldwide for their quick, dynamic offense, which led them to tie a franchise record in wins in the 2004–05 season. Two more top two Conference placements followed, but the Suns again failed to attain an NBA championship, and were forced into another rebuild. After ten consecutive seasons without a playoff berth, the Suns reached the 2021 NBA Finals after acquiring Chris Paul, forming a quartet with their young core of Devin Booker, Deandre Ayton and Mikal Bridges. Following a disappointing playoff exit in 2022, the Suns acquired 13-time All-Star and two-time NBA champion Kevin Durant.

The Suns own the NBA's fifth-best all-time winning percentage, and have the second highest winning percentage of any team to have never won an NBA championship.[9][10] 11 Hall of Famers have played for Phoenix, while two — Barkley and Nash — won NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP) while playing for the team. Additionally, their Hall of Fame radio announcer Al McCoy is the longest-tenured broadcaster in NBA history.[11]

Franchise history

1968–1976: Team creation and early years

The Suns were one of two franchises to join the NBA at the start of the 1968–69 season, alongside the Milwaukee Bucks from Milwaukee. They were the first major professional sports franchise in the Phoenix market and in the entire state of Arizona, and remained the only one for the better part of 20 years (a Phoenix Roadrunners team played in the World Hockey Association from 1974 to 1977) until the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League relocated from St. Louis in 1988. The Suns played their first 24 seasons at Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum, called the "Madhouse on McDowell", located slightly northwest of downtown Phoenix. The franchise was formed by an ownership group led by Karl Eller, owner of a public enterprise, the investor Donald Pitt, Don Diamond, Bhavik Darji, Marvin Meyer, and Richard L. Bloch. Other owners with a minority stake consisted of entertainers, such as Andy Williams, Bobbie Gentry and Ed Ames.[12] There were many critics, including then-NBA commissioner J. Walter Kennedy, who said that Phoenix was "too hot," "too small," and "too far away" to be considered a successful NBA market.[13] This was despite the fact that the Phoenix metropolitan area was growing rapidly, and the Suns would have built-in geographical foes in places like in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle.

After continual prodding by Bloch (who became president of the Phoenix Suns), in 1968 the NBA Board of Governors granted franchises to Phoenix and Milwaukee on January 22, 1968, with an entry fee of $2 million. The Suns nickname was among 28,000 entries that were formally chosen in a name-the-team contest sponsored by The Arizona Republic, with the winner awarded $1,000 and season tickets for the inaugural season.[14][15] Suns was preferred over Scorpions, Rattlers, Thunderbirds, Wranglers, Mavericks, Tumbleweeds, Mustangs and Cougars. Stan Fabe, who owned a commercial printing plant in Tucson, designed the team's first iconic logo for a mere $200;[13] this was after the team paid $5,000 to a local artist to design the team's logo. However, they were disappointed with the results.[citation needed]

In the 1968 NBA expansion draft, notable Suns' pickups were future Hall of Famer Gail Goodrich and Dick Van Arsdale.

 
In 1968, Jerry Colangelo became the Suns first general manager, at age 28

Jerry Colangelo, then a player scout, came over from the Chicago Bulls,[16] a franchise formed two years earlier, as the Suns' first general manager at the age of 28, along with Johnny "Red" Kerr as head coach. Unlike the first-year success that Colangelo and Kerr had in Chicago, in which the Bulls finished with a first-year expansion record of 33 wins and a playoff berth (plus a Coach of the Year award for Kerr), Phoenix finished its first year at 16–66, and finished 25 games out of the final playoff spot.

Both Goodrich and Van Arsdale were selected to the All-Star Game in their first season with the Suns. Goodrich returned to his former team, the Lakers, after two seasons with the Suns, but Van Arsdale spent the rest of his playing days as a Sun and a one-time head coach for Phoenix.

The Suns' last-place finish that season led to a coin flip for the number-one overall pick for the 1969 NBA draft with the expansion-mate Bucks. Milwaukee won the flip, and the rights to draft UCLA center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then known as Lew Alcindor), while Phoenix settled on drafting center Neal Walk from Florida.[17] The 1969–70 season posted better results for the Suns, finishing 39–43, but losing to the eventual Western Conference champion Los Angeles Lakers in the first round of the playoffs. The next two seasons (1970–71 and 1971–72), the Suns finished with 48- and 49-win seasons, but did not qualify for the playoffs in either year, and did not reach the playoffs again until 1976. The major draw for the franchise in this era was the dramatic play of Connie Hawkins.

This era was also marked by the arrival of longtime Suns play-by-play and Naismith Hall of Fame-awarded announcer Al McCoy, hired by Jerry Colangelo before the start of the 1972–73 NBA season. Soon locally renown as "the Voice of the Suns", his broadcasts were originally simulcast on both television and radio from 1972 onward, until 2003 when he became exclusive to the Suns Radio Network. He is still broadcasting Suns home games on radio as of the current 2022-2023 season, calling all three NBA Finals appearances for the franchise (in 1976, 1993, and 2021, respectively).

Colangelo called Al McCoy "the greatest salesman for the game of basketball in our entire state."[18] "He had as much to do with the success of the Suns as any player, coach or manager."[18]

1975–1976: Trip to the NBA Finals

The 1975–76 season proved to be a pivotal year for the Suns as they made several key moves, including the off-season trade of former All-Star guard Charlie Scott to the Boston Celtics in exchange for guard Paul Westphal, a member of Boston's 1974 championship team. They also drafted center and eventual fan favorite Alvan Adams from the University of Oklahoma and guard Ricky Sobers of UNLV. The Suns and Buffalo Braves made a midseason trade, with Phoenix sending forward/center John Shumate to Buffalo in exchange for forward Garfield Heard.

Phoenix had an inconsistent regular season, starting out at 14–9 (then the best start in team history), then went 4–18 during a stretch where the team sustained several injuries (including Dick Van Arsdale breaking his right arm in a February game). The Suns then went 24–13 in the final 37 games to finish 42–40, clinching their first playoff spot since 1970. The Suns faced the Seattle SuperSonics in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs, winning the series four games to two, and beat the defending NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference Finals, four games to three, to advance to their first NBA Finals.

 
Paul Westphal led the Suns to their first-ever NBA Finals in 1976

The Suns faced an experienced Celtics team, led by eventual Hall of Famers Dave Cowens, John Havlicek and Jo Jo White. Game five of the 1976 NBA Finals took place at Boston Garden, where the Suns came back from a 22-point first-half deficit to force overtime. Havlicek made what was supposed to be a game-winning basket, but due to fans rushing the floor before time officially expired, officials put one second back on the clock with Phoenix having possession of the ball, but under their own basket. Instead of attempting a desperation heave, the Suns' Westphal intentionally called a timeout that they did not have, a technical foul, giving the Celtics a free throw, which Jo Jo White converted to put them up 112–110. However, this advanced the ball to half-court, and once the Suns had possession, Garfield Heard made a buzzer-beating turnaround jump shot to force a third overtime. The Suns' hard-fought battle was short-lived, as Boston's reserve player Glenn McDonald scored six of his eight points in the third overtime to lead the Celtics to a 128–126 win. Boston eventually won the series in six games, clinching the championship at the Coliseum, defeating Phoenix in game six, 87–80.

1976–1988: From success to scandals

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Suns enjoyed several successful seasons including the 1981 Pacific Division title, making the playoffs eight seasons in a row including an appearance at the 1984 Western Conference Finals. Problems arose on and off the court in the mid-1980s. In 1987, the Maricopa County Attorney's Office indicted 13 people on drug-related charges, three of whom were active Suns' players James Edwards, Jay Humphries and Grant Gondrezick. These indictments were partially based on testimony from star player Walter Davis, who was given immunity. No defendants ever went to trial: two of the players went into a prosecution diversion program, while another received probation. Nevertheless, the scandal, although now perceived in many respects to be a witch hunt[19] tarnished the reputation of the franchise both nationally and within the community. The scandal did provide an opening for general manager Jerry Colangelo to lead a group that bought the team from its owners for $44 million at the start of the 1987–88 season, a record at that time. With a drug scandal and the loss of promising young center Nick Vanos, who was killed in the crash of Northwest Airlines Flight 255, the franchise was in turmoil both on and off the court.

 
Kevin Johnson was the Suns' point guard for 11 seasons

1988–1992: The Kevin Johnson/Tom Chambers/Dan Majerle era

The Suns' luck began to turn around in 1988 with the acquisition of Kevin Johnson from the Cleveland Cavaliers, along with Mark West and Tyrone Corbin, for All-Star power forward Larry Nance and Mike Sanders. This was the beginning of a franchise-record 13 consecutive playoff appearances. All-Star Tom Chambers came over from the Seattle SuperSonics (the first unrestricted free agent in NBA history), 1986 second-round draft pick Jeff Hornacek continued to develop, and "Thunder" Dan Majerle was drafted with the 14th pick in the 1988 draft. Kurt Rambis was added from the Charlotte Hornets in 1989, and the team upset the Los Angeles Lakers in five games during the playoffs that season, before falling to the Portland Trail Blazers in the Western Conference Finals. In 1990–91, the Suns went 55–27 but lost in the first round to the Utah Jazz, 3–1. In 1991–92, the Suns went 53–29. Having sent four players to the All-Star Game in the previous two seasons (Chambers, Johnson, Hornacek, and Majerle), the Suns swept the San Antonio Spurs in three games in the first round of the 1992 NBA playoffs. The Suns then were defeated in five games to the Trail Blazers in the Conference Semifinals. The series was punctuated by a game four in which the Suns lost in double overtime 153–151 (the highest-scoring game in NBA playoff history to date). That game was the last Suns game ever played at the Coliseum.

1992–1996: The Charles Barkley era

In 1992, the Suns moved into their new arena in downtown Phoenix, the America West Arena. The arena is occasionally referred to as the "Purple Palace" due to its purple seats, one of the Suns' colors.[20] All-Star power forward Charles Barkley was traded from the Philadelphia 76ers for Jeff Hornacek, Andrew Lang, and Tim Perry. Barkley went on to win the MVP award that 1992–93 season.[21]

In addition to Barkley, the Suns added key players to their roster, including Danny Ainge and draftees Arkansas center Oliver Miller and forward Richard Dumas (who was actually drafted in 1991 but was suspended for his rookie year for violating the NBA drug policy).

Under rookie head coach Paul Westphal, a former Suns assistant and player with the 1976 Suns in the NBA Finals, the Suns won 62 games in 1992–93, setting a franchise record. In the first round of the playoffs, they defeated the eighth-seeded Lakers, coming back from a 0–2 deficit in the five-game series. The Suns then eliminated the Spurs and SuperSonics, advancing to the NBA Finals for the second time in franchise history. They eventually lost to the Chicago Bulls, led by eventual Hall of Famers Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen. The series also included a triple-overtime game in game three, making this and their previous game five in the 1976 series the only triple-overtime games in the history of the NBA Finals.[22][23] Approximately 300,000 fans braved the 105° heat to celebrate the memorable season in the downtown streets of Phoenix after the Finals had ended.[24]

 
Charles Barkley won NBA MVP and led the Suns to the NBA Finals in 1993.

The Suns continued to be successful in the regular season, going 178–68 during the 1992–93, 1993–94, and 1994–95 seasons. They continued to bolster their roster by adding players such as A. C. Green, Danny Manning, Wesley Person, Wayman Tisdale, and Elliot Perry. Despite a Pacific Division title in 1995, the Suns were eliminated in consecutive Western Conference Semifinal rounds by the Houston Rockets, both series going a full seven games. Manning was rarely at full strength with the Suns, injuring his ACL in 1995 just before the All-Star break. In both years, the Suns led the series by two games at one point (2–0 in 1994, 3–1 in 1995) only to see the Rockets come back to win each series.

At the end of the 1994–95 season, Phoenix general manager Bryan Colangelo, the son of Jerry, initiated an eventually costly trade,[citation needed] sending the All-Star Majerle and a first-round draft pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers in exchange for John "Hot Rod" Williams. Majerle was a fan favorite in Phoenix and in the Suns' locker room.[citation needed] The trade was made to address the Suns' need of a shot-blocking center but Majerle's presence was missed and Williams's production never met expectations.[citation needed]

The 1995–96 season was a disappointing year for the Suns, despite drafting NBA All-Rookie First Team member Michael Finley, who became unavailable for the playoffs due to injury. The Suns posted a 41–41 record and were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the San Antonio Spurs. Westphal was fired midway through the season and replaced by Fitzsimmons, his third stint as head coach. A combination of front office unrest, along with the dwindling possibility of winning a championship,[citation needed] led to turmoil in Barkley's relationship with Jerry Colangelo, who both spurned each other publicly. This led to Barkley being traded to Houston for Sam Cassell, Robert Horry, Mark Bryant, and Chucky Brown. Three of the four players were not with the franchise one year later, and two of the most talented players (Horry and Cassell) constantly clashed with the coach and seemed to be a negative influence in the locker room.[citation needed]

1996–2004: Average times

In the 1996 NBA draft, the Suns used their 15th pick for Santa Clara guard Steve Nash. Upon hearing the draft announcement, Suns fans booed in disapproval of the relatively unknown player, because he had not played in one of the major college conferences.[citation needed] During his first two seasons in the NBA, he played a supporting role behind star point guards Jason Kidd and Kevin Johnson.

After the Barkley trade, the Suns began the 1996–97 season 0–13, a franchise record for the worst start. During the 13-game losing streak, Fitzsimmons stepped down as the coach and was replaced by former player Danny Ainge.

After an on-the-court altercation between Ainge and Horry, Horry was traded to the Lakers for former Sun and NBA all-star Cedric Ceballos. Cassell was later traded to Dallas for all-star guard Jason Kidd. With a mostly small lineup, the Suns put together an 11-game win streak that put them in the playoffs as the seventh seed, in a series that almost upset the favored Sonics. Despite the loss in the playoffs, the Suns became one of the few NBA teams to make the playoffs after starting the season 0–10 or worse,[citation needed] and one of the few to make the playoffs after experiencing a 10-plus-game losing streak during the regular season.

With Kidd starting at point guard, Nash was traded to the Mavericks in June 1998 in exchange for Martin Müürsepp, Bubba Wells, the draft rights to Pat Garrity, and a future first-round draft pick (later used to select Shawn Marion).

In the off-season prior to the 2000 NBA season, the Suns traded for perennial All-Star Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway, creating the tandem of Kidd and Hardaway called "Backcourt 2000".[25] However, the combination of Hardaway and Kidd was never fully realized as Hardaway missed several games during the middle of the 1999–2000 season and Kidd broke his ankle going into the playoffs just as Hardaway returned to the court. As the Suns entered the 2000 playoffs, they beat the higher-seeded San Antonio Spurs 3–1 in the best-of-five series. The Spurs were without their best player Tim Duncan throughout the whole series. However, even with the return of Kidd in the next round, the Suns fell to the eventual champion Los Angeles Lakers in a 4–1 series.

The Suns continued to make the playoffs until the 2001–02 season when they fell short for the first time in 14 years. That season marked the trade of Jason Kidd, partly due to a publicized domestic violence episode,[citation needed] to the New Jersey Nets for Stephon Marbury. With the resultant high draft pick, the Suns were able to draft Amar'e Stoudemire.

 
The Suns drafted Amare Stoudemire in 2002; he would become a six-time All Star

The 2002–03 campaign saw the emergence of Stoudemire, a graduate of Cypress Creek High School (Orlando, Florida). He became the first high school-drafted player to win the NBA Rookie of the Year for the 2002–03 season, during which the Suns posted a record of 44–38 and returned to the playoffs. Marbury had a successful individual season, making the All-NBA Third Team and being selected for the 2003 NBA All-Star Game. The Suns were eliminated in the first round once again by the San Antonio Spurs; a six-game series with the eventual NBA champions.

In the 2003–04 season, the Suns finished out of the playoffs with a 29–53 record. The Suns made a blockbuster mid-season trade sending Marbury and Hardaway to the New York Knicks for Antonio McDyess and a future first round pick that was later dealt to Denver.

2004–2012: The Steve Nash era

2004–2006: Nash wins back-to-back MVPs

 
After Nash's return to Phoenix in 2004, they won 33 more games than they did the previous season.

The beginning of 2004 saw the departure of the face of Suns management since the team's inception, when Jerry Colangelo announced that the Phoenix Suns were to be sold to an investment group headed by San Diego-based business executive and Tucson native Robert Sarver for $401 million. The 2004–05 season marked the Suns' return to the NBA's elite, finishing with the best record at 62–20, and tying a franchise record set by the 1992–93 team. They set a team record for greatest one-season improvement at 33 games.[citation needed] During the off-season, the Suns signed unrestricted free agent All-Star point guard Steve Nash from Dallas, who had formerly played for the Suns at the beginning of his career. Nash went on to win the MVP award that season. Amar'e Stoudemire and Shawn Marion were named All-Stars and first-year coach Mike D'Antoni was named NBA Coach of the Year.

In the 2005 NBA playoffs, Phoenix was the first seed in the Western Conference. The Suns swept the Memphis Grizzlies, 4–0, and defeated the fourth-seeded Dallas Mavericks in the second round, 4–2, as Nash forced game six into overtime with a three-pointer in the closing seconds. In the Western Conference Finals, the Suns played the San Antonio Spurs, who won the series 4–1, ending Phoenix's season, partly due to Joe Johnson missing the first two games of the series. Johnson went on to start the remaining games where he averaged 40 minutes per game and 18.3 points per game. The Suns lost the first two at home, as well as the following game in San Antonio to fall behind 3–0 in the series, before winning game four at San Antonio 111–106. The team then lost game five at home 101–95 to be eliminated from the playoffs. Stoudemire averaged 37.0 points per game during the series against the Spurs, the highest ever by a player in the Western Conference Finals.[26]

The 2005–06 NBA season began with Stoudemire undergoing microfracture surgery in his knee on October 18, 2005, missing all but three games that season. Shooting guard Joe Johnson also demanded a sign-and-trade deal to the Atlanta Hawks, in which the Suns got Boris Diaw and two future first-round picks. Other acquisitions included Raja Bell and Kurt Thomas. Despite the turnover in players, the Suns again won the Pacific Division, going 54–28 and capturing the second seed in the Western Conference. Nash was awarded a second consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player Award, becoming the second point-guard, after Magic Johnson, to win the award in consecutive seasons. Also, Diaw was named NBA Most Improved Player.

The Suns began the 2006 Western Conference Playoffs as favorites against the Los Angeles Lakers. After winning the first game in Phoenix, they found themselves trailing in the series 3–1 after impressive performances[clarification needed] by Lakers' shooting guard Kobe Bryant. However, the Suns went on to win three straight games. With 7:33 left in the fifth game, Suns guard Raja Bell grabbed Bryant around the neck and threw him down as the Lakers' star drove to the basket. Bell earned a technical foul, his second of the game, and an automatic ejection. The Suns took game six in overtime, their first overtime win all season, despite 50 points from Bryant and Bell out serving a one-game suspension with last-second help from mid-season acquisition Tim Thomas. On their home court, the Suns won game seven 121–90, eliminating the Lakers for the first time since 1993. The Suns are 1 of 9 teams in NBA history to win a playoff series after being behind 3–1.[27]

 
A home game against the Sacramento Kings in the 2006–07 season

In the second round, the Suns faced the Los Angeles Clippers. The series was played closely, with both teams trading games on each other's courts. The series was 2–2 and the Suns were behind in game five before coming back and won in double overtime. After a game six loss, the Suns won the series in the seventh game on their home court at US Airways Center, winning by a margin of 20 with an NBA record fifteen 3-point FGs on May 22, 2006.

They went on to play the Dallas Mavericks in the Western Conference Finals as underdogs. The Suns took game one in Dallas by a single point and their May 30 victory in game four marked the most wins for the franchise in a Conference Finals series since the 1993 season. The Suns lost games five and six by a combined 25 points and were eliminated from the series on June 3.

2006–2008: "Seven seconds or less"

Under coach D'Antoni, the Suns popularized the fast break offense known as 7 seconds or less, which was later published in a book written by Sports Illustrated writer Jack McCallum. Though criticized for a supposed lack of defense, the Suns specialized an efficient offense designed to quickly get off shots that made regrouping on defense difficult for the opposing team.[28]

 
Shawn Marion, considered a key component of the "7 seconds or less" offense, was traded in 2008 after being drafted by the team in 1999

The Suns entered the 2006–07 season aiming to win the first championship in franchise history. From November 20 to December 22, the Suns posted a 15-game win streak, followed almost immediately with a 17-game win streak from December 29 to January 28. On March 14, the 49–14 Suns met the 52–10 Dallas Mavericks in a match-up where both teams were fighting for the top seed in the Western conference and Nash was going for his third consecutive MVP award against Dirk Nowitzki. Though the Suns won the game in double overtime,[29] the Mavericks would finish with the West's top seed at 67–15, and Nowitzki would narrowly win the MVP award ahead of Nash.[30]

While the Mavericks were upset in the first round by the eight-seed Golden State Warriors, the 61–21 Suns defeated Kobe Bryant and the Lakers in five games in the opening round of the playoffs. This set up a rematch of the 2005 Western Conference Finals against the San Antonio Spurs. The series saw the Spurs defeat the Suns in six games, in what many called "the real finals" of the 2006–07 season.[31] The Spurs went on to win the championship that year.

On June 6, former TNT TV analyst and NBA three-point specialist, Steve Kerr, was appointed Suns' general manager and president of basketball operations. Kerr was also a part of the Sarver-led investment group that purchased the franchise from Jerry Colangelo.[32][33] His first off-season signing was former Orlando Magic small forward Grant Hill on a one-year $1.8 million deal with a player option for a second season at $2 million. Hill, who was previously considered injury-prone, played in the majority of games over the next four seasons as a starter.

The Suns finished 55–27 on the season, two games behind the Lakers who won the division. In the opening round of the playoffs, the Suns lost to the Spurs in five games, the first time they did not advance past the first round in the D'Antoni-Nash era. Some have attributed this to the mid-season acquisition of aging former MVP Shaquille O'Neal for four-time All Star Shawn Marion.[34][35] Though O'Neal was brought in as a physical presence to match with the likes of the Spurs' Tim Duncan, the move all but ended their fast-paced offense which had brought them to the cusp of a Finals appearance.[36]

On May 11, 2008, Suns' head coach Mike D'Antoni left the team and signed with the New York Knicks.[37]

2008–2010: Ups and downs

On June 9, 2008, Terry Porter was named head coach of the Phoenix Suns, succeeding Mike D'Antoni. Porter was an assistant coach of the Detroit Pistons when he was let go after the Pistons were eliminated by the Boston Celtics in the 2008 NBA Eastern Conference Finals. During the off-season, the Suns had difficulties signing free agents because of being over the luxury tax. They made attempts to sign a backup point guard, Tyronn Lue; however, he decided to sign with the Bucks for more money. The Suns selected Robin Lopez (15th overall pick out of Stanford) in the 2008 NBA draft and acquired Goran Dragić, who was originally picked by the rival San Antonio Spurs.

 
Alvin Gentry coached the Suns to a Western Conference Finals appearance in 2010.

On February 16, 2009, the Suns fired Porter and he was succeeded by Alvin Gentry. The Suns were expected to make the transition back to the up-tempo style basketball nicknamed the "7 Seconds or Less" or "Run and Gun" style. On February 18, Gentry began his head coaching tenure with a 140–100 blowout over the Clippers at home. Six Suns players scored in double digits, led by Leandro Barbosa's 24 points. The Suns led by as much as 50 points during the game and were without their swingman Jason Richardson who was serving a one-game suspension. However, this offense cost them their defense, allowing over 107 points per game, 27th in the league. The Suns scored 140 in the next two games. On February 20, Amar'e Stoudemire underwent eye surgery and was out for eight weeks. They went 18–13 under Gentry in the last 31 games. At the end of the season, the Suns missed the playoffs with a 46–36 record.

During the 2009–10 season, the Suns played a far more balanced style of basketball and finished with a 54–28 record. The Suns advanced to the NBA's Western Conference Finals, eliminating the Portland Trail Blazers in six games and the San Antonio Spurs in four games, including an explosive performance by Goran Dragić in game three against the Spurs, scoring 23 points in the fourth quarter. The Suns faced the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals but lost in six games.

On June 15, 2010, Kerr resigned as general manager of the Suns and opted to return as an analyst for TNT effective June 30, 2010. In the wake of Kerr's decision to leave the club, senior vice president of basketball operations David Griffin told managing partner Robert Sarver he did not want to be a candidate to replace Kerr and left when his contract expired on June 30. The last moves of both Steve Kerr and David Griffin were drafting players Gani Lawal and Dwayne Collins with the second-round draft picks that they had in the 2010 NBA draft.

2010–2012: Slow decline without Amar'e

The Suns attempted to re-sign Amar'e Stoudemire in the 2010 free agency period with a five-year contract for around $95 million, with $71 million guaranteed, and the rest of his salary coming only if certain conditions were held, such as getting guaranteed 4th and 5th-season money if he remained healthy enough to meet those conditions. Stoudemire instead signed with the New York Knicks for $100 million.

The Suns hired player agent Lon Babby as president of basketball operations. The team then paid over $80 million to acquire Hedo Türkoğlu, Josh Childress, and Hakim Warrick to not only replace Stoudemire but also add bench depth. On August 5, 2010, the Suns hired Lance Blanks as general manager. On December 19, 2010, the Suns acquired Vince Carter, Mickaël Piétrus, and Marcin Gortat from the Orlando Magic, along with a low draft pick and cash considerations.[38] For this acquisition, the Suns traded Jason Richardson, Earl Clark, and the recently acquired Hedo Türkoğlu. On February 24, 2011, the Suns acquired point guard Aaron Brooks, trading first round (lottery-protected) draft pick and point guard Goran Dragić to the Houston Rockets. The Suns ended the 2010–11 season with a losing record and missed the playoffs.

In the 2011 NBA draft, the Suns used their 13th pick on Markieff Morris, a 6' 10" power forward from the Kansas Jayhawks. Markieff is the twin brother of Marcus Morris, who played together for three years in Kansas. In the 2012 NBA draft, the Suns used their 13th pick to select Kendall Marshall, a 6' 4" point guard from the North Carolina Tar Heels. Marshall was a prolific passer in his two seasons at North Carolina; setting the ACC[39] and North Carolina[40] season assist records, along with winning the Bob Cousy Award[41] in his sophomore season with the Tar Heels.

2012–2015: Pre–Booker and struggle years

Suns' Record: 2012-2015
Year Wins Losses Seed #
2012 33 33 10th
2013 25 57 15th
2014 48 34 9th
2015 39 43 10th
 
Steve Nash with the Lakers in 2012

2012: The departure of Steve Nash

During the 2012 free agency period, the Suns traded Steve Nash to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for first-round picks in 2013 and 2015, as well as second-round picks in 2013 and 2014. After the trade, the Suns then re-acquired point guard Goran Dragić from Houston, signed Minnesota Timberwolves forward Michael Beasley, and claimed Houston forward Luis Scola off amnesty waivers while also using the same amnesty clause (as codified in the 2011 collective bargaining agreement) to waive Josh Childress. They also did a three-way trade with the New Orleans Hornets and the Timberwolves by trading Robin Lopez and Hakim Warrick to the Hornets and a 2014 second-rounder to the Timberwolves in exchange for Wesley Johnson, a top 14-protected future first-rounder and the rights to Brad Miller and Jerome Dyson. The latter two players' rights were later waived and the Suns then signed Jermaine O'Neal for one year. The Suns also signed P. J. Tucker based on his performance with the Suns' Summer League team. On September 20, it was announced that Channing Frye had dilated cardiomyopathy and as a result, he missed the entire 2012–13 season, although he sometimes made special appearances to do the pre-game show for local Suns games with Tom Leander and Tom Chambers. On January 12, 2013, the Suns became the fourth-fastest NBA team to win 2,000 games with a 97–81 road victory against the Chicago Bulls, which also marked the last victory for Alvin Gentry as head coach for the Suns. On January 18, 2013, the day after a loss that broke a 24-home-game winning streak against the Milwaukee Bucks, Gentry agreed to leave the Phoenix Suns organization.[42] Two days later, player development coach Lindsey Hunter was named interim head coach role for the remainder of the season. A few days later, assistant head coaches Dan Majerle and Elston Turner had also resigned from their positions. On February 21, 2013, the Suns had traded their 2013 second-round pick to the Houston Rockets in exchange for Marcus Morris, the twin brother of power forward Markieff Morris.[43] A day later, the Suns traded point guard Sebastian Telfair to the Toronto Raptors in exchange for Iranian center Hamed Haddadi and a 2014 second-round pick. The Suns ended their first post-Steve Nash season with a 25–57 win–loss record, their second-worst record in franchise history behind only their inaugural season.

2013: The arrival of Ryan McDonough

On April 22, 2013, it was announced that the Suns had fired general manager Lance Blanks.[44] On May 7, 2013, former Celtics assistant general manager Ryan McDonough was announced as the new general manager of the Suns.[45] On May 26, 2013, the Suns hired Jeff Hornacek as their head coach to replace interim head coach Lindsey Hunter. The team also started the new season with new modified logos, replacing most of the purple on their logos with black, although purple would still be found on their jerseys.

In the 2013 NBA draft on June 27, the Suns selected Ukrainian center Alex Len from Maryland with their 5th pick and power forward Alex Oriakhi from Missouri with their 57th pick. Although the Suns were expected to have a poor season, they began the season with a 19–11 record. Eric Bledsoe then went down against the Los Angeles Clippers with a torn meniscus and missed the following 33 games. The Suns went 17–16 during his absence led by Goran Dragić, keeping Phoenix in the playoff race with the Memphis Grizzlies and Dallas Mavericks. At 47–32, while Dallas and Memphis were both 48–32, Phoenix lost against both teams before they defeated the Sacramento Kings to finish the season 48–34. Dallas finished 49–33 and Memphis finished 50–32, resulting in Memphis finishing with the seventh seed, Dallas with the eighth, and Phoenix out of the playoffs.

During the 2014 NBA draft, the Suns drafted sophomore forward T. J. Warren from NC State, Canadian freshman point guard Tyler Ennis from Syracuse, Serbian shooting guard Bogdan Bogdanović, and senior center-power forward Alec Brown from Wisconsin-Green Bay. After trying to obtain players like LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, and Chris Bosh, and losing Channing Frye to the Orlando Magic, the Suns decided to sign-and-trade for Sacramento Kings point guard Isaiah Thomas under a four-year contract worth $27 million in exchange for Alex Oriakhi, using a $7 million traded-player exception.[46] On September 24, 2014, the Suns and Eric Bledsoe agreed on a five-year contract worth $70 million.[47] A couple of days after, on September 29, 2014, they extended both Markieff and Marcus Morris to four-year deals that combine to $52 million, with Markieff earning $32 million and Marcus getting the remaining $20 million.[48] Right before the trade deadline on February 19, 2015, the Suns made moves to change the roster. After demanding a trade due to lingering frustrations with the front office and direction of the team, Goran Dragić and his brother Zoran were traded by the Suns to the Miami Heat for Danny Granger and Miami's 2017 and 2021 first round picks in a three-team trade with the New Orleans Pelicans.[49] Immediately after the trade, the Suns replaced Dragić by trading for Milwaukee Bucks guard Brandon Knight, sending Tyler Ennis and Miles Plumlee to Milwaukee and the Lakers' 2015 first round pick to the Philadelphia 76ers.[50] Isaiah Thomas was then traded to the Boston Celtics for Marcus Thornton and the Cleveland Cavaliers' 2016 first round pick.[51]

2015–present: The Devin Booker era

2015–2020: The arrival of Devin Booker and further struggle years

 
Devin Booker in 2016

In the 2015 NBA draft, the Suns drafted Kentucky shooting guard Devin Booker with the 13th pick. He was the youngest player drafted at the time by the Suns at 18-years-old[52] and debuted two days before his 19th birthday against the Dallas Mavericks. On July 1, 2015, the Suns retained the rights of Brandon Knight under an offer similar to that of Eric Bledsoe's, and signed Dallas Mavericks center Tyson Chandler to a four-year deal worth $52 million. A day later, the Suns traded Markieff's brother Marcus Morris, Reggie Bullock, and Danny Granger to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for their 2020 second-round selection. However, star player Eric Bledsoe sustained a season-ending injury on December 26, 2015.

On February 1, 2016, the Suns relieved Jeff Hornacek of his duties as head coach.[53] Former NBA player Earl Watson took on interim head coaching duties. The Suns traded the disgruntled Markieff Morris on February 19, 2016, to the Washington Wizards for Kris Humphries, DeJuan Blair, and the Wizards' first-round pick in the 2016 NBA draft. On March 14, 2016, the Suns were eliminated from playoff contention for a sixth straight season making it the longest drought in franchise history surpassing the five straight misses from the 1970–71 NBA season to the 1974–75 NBA season. However, rookie Devin Booker went from being a sixth-man off-the-bench player for Kentucky to future impact player after the injuries to Eric Bledsoe and Brandon Knight. He earned the team's first NBA All-Rookie Team honors since Amar'e Stoudemire back in 2003.[54] Earl Watson officially became the full-time head coach on April 19, 2016, with his new assistant coaches Jay Triano, former Suns player Tyrone Corbin, Marlon Garnett, and Scott Duncan replacing most of the assistant coaches from the previous season. During the 2016 NBA draft, the Suns drafted the 18-year-old Bosnian-born Croatian forward-center Dragan Bender, Washington power forward Marquese Chriss, and Kentucky point guard Tyler Ulis; Chriss was acquired by trading the Suns' 13th and 28th selections, Bogdan Bogdanovic, and the Pistons' 2020 second-round pick to the Sacramento Kings. During the 2016 free agency period, the Suns regained former players and fan-favorites Jared Dudley and Leandro Barbosa under new deals.

While the Suns ended the 2016–17 season with only a slight improvement from their previous record despite the return of Eric Bledsoe, Devin Booker continued to improve in his second season with the team, leading the team in points scored at 22.1 per game. Marquese Chriss was also named to the All-Rookie Second Team that season. In the 2017 NBA draft, the Suns dropped to the 4th pick in the draft and selected Josh Jackson from the University of Kansas. On October 22, 2017, head coach Earl Watson was fired after a 0–3 start that included two losses of 40+ point deficits, which led to Jay Triano being promoted to interim head coach.[55] On November 7, Bledsoe was traded to the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for Greg Monroe and a protected first- and second-round draft pick.[56] The Suns ended the season with the second-worst record in franchise history at 21–61. After the season concluded, the Suns let go of interim head coach Triano and hired Igor Kokoškov as the team's new head coach. The Suns earned their first no. 1 pick in the 2018 NBA draft lottery after ending the season with the league-worst record that year. With the first overall pick in the 2018 NBA draft, Phoenix selected Deandre Ayton.[57][58] They would also trade up into the top 10 that year to take Mikal Bridges with the 10th pick from the Philadelphia 76ers, a draft pick the Suns already had from the Steve Nash trade before trading the pick to the 76ers in the Brandon Knight trade. In the off-season, Devin Booker signed a 5-year $158 million contract extension with the Suns.

Before the start of the regular season and during preseason on October 8, 2018, owner Robert Sarver decided to relieve Ryan McDonough from the general manager position,[59] and named vice president of basketball operations James Jones and assistant general manager Trevor Bukstein as the interim general managers. A highlight of the season was when a planned three-way trade with the Washington Wizards and Memphis Grizzlies fell apart through miscommunication of the players involved and being sent in the planned deal.[60]

The Suns would once again have another losing season as they missed the playoffs for the ninth straight season. At the end of the season, the Suns made James Jones the team's permanent general manager, with co-interim general manager Trevor Bukstein returning to his prior assistant general manager role.[61] When the season came to an end, the coaching staff, including head coach Igor Kokoškov, were fired on April 23, 2019.[62][63] Former New Orleans Hornets/Pelicans head coach and Philadelphia 76ers assistant coach Monty Williams was hired as the team's new head coach on May 3,[64] and completed the rest of the new coaching staff on June 26.[65] Phoenix finished with a 19–63 record, the worst in the Western Conference. Ayton made the All-Rookie First Team. The Suns had the third odds in the lottery but landed the sixth pick.

During the day of the 2019 NBA draft, the Suns agreed to deal T. J. Warren to the Indiana Pacers and their second-round pick (which would become KZ Okpala) to the Miami Heat for cash considerations.[66] During the draft, they agreed to swap their sixth pick (which would become Jarrett Culver), trading down for the Minnesota Timberwolves' 11th pick (which would become Cameron Johnson) and Dario Šarić,[67] and also agreeing to deal the Milwaukee Bucks' future first-round pick to the Boston Celtics for Aron Baynes and the draft rights to point guard Ty Jerome,[68] as well as agree to a deal with undrafted Jalen Lecque.[69] In the off-season they signed veteran point guard Ricky Rubio to a three-year deal, and re-signed Oubre to a two-year deal, signed Frank Kaminsky and Cheick Diallo.

The Suns played the Kings in their season opener on October 23, 2019, and won 124–95. On October 24, Ayton was suspended 25 games for failing a drug test. However, the Suns continued to play well, going 11–12 over their next 23 games.

On January 22, 2020, Larry Fitzgerald purchased a minority stake in the Suns, becoming the second active (at the time) NFL player with an NBA ownership share.[70]

On February 13, 2020, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced that Devin Booker had been named as a reserve in the 2020 NBA All-Star Game,[71] marking the first time since Steve Nash in 2012 that a Phoenix Suns player had been selected to the game.[72] This later selection came as a result of an injury to Portland's Damian Lillard, who was unable to participate. Following the suspension of the 2019–20 NBA season, the Suns were one of the 22 teams invited to the NBA Bubble to participate in the final 8 games of the regular season. They went undefeated in the bubble, finishing 8–0, but failed to qualify for the playoffs for the 10th consecutive season. They finished the season with a record of 34–39.[73]

2020–2022: The arrival of Chris Paul and return to the playoffs

 
 
The acquisition of Chris Paul (left) and second-year head coach Monty Williams (right) helped guide the Suns to the 2021 NBA Finals, their first Finals appearance since 1993.

In the 2020 off-season, the Suns traded Kelly Oubre Jr., Ricky Rubio, Jalen Lecque, Ty Jerome, and a future first-round draft pick for 10-time All-Star, 10-time All-NBA, and nine-time All-Defensive point guard Chris Paul from the Oklahoma City Thunder. Phoenix also received small forward Abdel Nader. Both Devin Booker and Paul were named All-Star reserves for the 2020–21 NBA season. The Suns went on to have a 51–21 record (2nd best in the entire NBA), clinching the second seed in the Western Conference while head coach Monty Williams was named NBCA Coach of the Year. The Suns made the playoffs for the first time since 2010. The Suns faced the defending champions Los Angeles Lakers in the first round, defeating them in six games to win their first playoff series since 2010.[74] The Suns then went on to sweep the Denver Nuggets, advancing the team to the Western Conference Finals.[75] Prior to the Western Conference Finals, Paul entered into the NBA's COVID-19 health and safety protocols and missed the first two games of the series.[76] On June 30, 2021, the Suns won the Conference Finals in six games against the Los Angeles Clippers to advance to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1993 after a 41-point performance by Paul.[77] The Suns won the first two games of the Finals but ultimately lost the series 4–2 to the Milwaukee Bucks, led by two-time regular season MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, who would be eventually named Finals MVP. Despite the loss, Booker set the NBA record for the most points scored by a player in his debut postseason.[78] Paul was awarded All-NBA Second Team honors for his performance that season although he came up short in the finals.[79] He was also the first player to lose all four playoff series in which his team led 2–0.[80]

On July 29, 2021, the day of the 2021 NBA Draft, the Suns traded guard Jevon Carter and the 29th pick to the Brooklyn Nets for guard Landry Shamet. In August, the Suns re-signed free agent center Frank Kaminsky and also signed veteran center JaVale McGee to a one-year deal.[81] Starting point guard Chris Paul was re-signed to a partially guaranteed four year deal.[82]

After beginning the 2021–22 season with a 1–3 record, the Suns rattled off a winning streak that was capped off on December 2 with a 114–103 victory over the Detroit Pistons, which gave the Suns their 18th consecutive win to best the team's previous record of 17 games set in the 2006-07 season.[83] On February 3, 2022, starting guards Devin Booker and Chris Paul were selected to reserve spots for the 2022 NBA All-Star Game.[84] On February 10, the Suns traded second-year big man Jalen Smith and a second-round pick to the Indiana Pacers to reacquire wing Torrey Craig and acquired guard Aaron Holiday from the Washington Wizards for cash considerations at the NBA trade deadline.[85] On March 10, the Suns became the first team that season to clinch a playoff berth after defeating the Miami Heat 111–90 on the road to claim their 53rd win.[86] On March 24, the Suns clinched the NBA's top overall record with a 140–130 victory over the Denver Nuggets.[87] In the 79th game of the season, the Suns set a new franchise record for wins with a 121–110 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers to tally their 63rd win on April 5, eliminating the Lakers from playoff contention in the process.[88] The Suns finished the regular season with a record of 64–18 with Devin Booker finishing 4th in MVP voting.[89] In the first round of the 2022 NBA playoffs, the Suns would defeat the New Orleans Pelicans in six games, before falling to the Dallas Mavericks in seven games in the second round despite holding a 2–0 series lead.[90][91][92][93]

2022–present: Transition of ownership and the arrival of Kevin Durant

 

On September 13, 2022, the NBA fined owner Robert Sarver $10 million and suspended him for one year after an independent investigation determined that he used the "N-word" multiple times in public, as well as conduct that included "unequal treatment of female employees; sex-related statements and conduct; and harsh treatment of employees that on occasion constituted bullying."[94][95] Both current and former NBA players, including LeBron James, Suns player Chris Paul, and Draymond Green, said that the punishment was too lenient, with Green requesting for a league vote to terminate Sarver as a league owner.[96] On September 21, Sarver announced he would begin the process of selling both the Phoenix Suns and the Phoenix Mercury.[97] Sarver eventually accepted the purchase of both teams to United Wholesale Mortgage's CEO Mat Ishbia and his brother Justin for a record-high $4 billion purchasing price on December 20, 2022, with the move being made official on February 7, 2023.[98][99] At 43 years old, Mat Ishbia became the 2nd youngest team owner in league history.[100]

During Ishbia's first few days of ownership, the Suns acquired 13-time All-Star and four-time scoring champion Kevin Durant, along with reacquiring T. J. Warren, from the Brooklyn Nets in exchange for Mikal Bridges, Cameron Johnson, Jae Crowder, four unprotected first-round picks, and a 2028 first-round pick swap.[101] Durant had previously requested a trade during the 2022 offseason, with Phoenix being listed as one of Durant's preferred landing spots.[102] Following the acquisition of Durant, the Suns' odds to win the NBA Finals surged from +1800 to +450 per BetMGM, trailing only the Boston Celtics at +350.[103]

In the first round of the 2023 playoffs, the Suns would defeat the Los Angeles Clippers in five games.[104] In the second round of the 2023 playoffs against the Denver Nuggets, the Suns lost the first two games to Denver, as Chris Paul suffered a groin injury in game 2.[105] The Suns came back to win the next two games at home without Chris Paul, as Devin Booker and Kevin Durant became the first duo in NBA playoff history to each record 35 points, five rebounds, and five assists in consecutive playoff games.[106] However, after dropping game 5 in Denver, Phoenix went on to lose the series to the Nuggets in six games, as they trailed by 30 points at halftime in an elimination game at home for the second straight season.[107]

Season-by-season record

List of the last five seasons completed by the Suns. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Phoenix Suns seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage

Season GP W L W–L% Finish Playoffs
2018–19 82 19 63 .232 5th, Pacific Did not qualify
2019–20 73 34 39 .466 3rd, Pacific Did not qualify
2020–21 72 51 21 .708 1st, Pacific Lost in NBA Finals, 2–4 (Bucks)
2021–22 82 64 18 .780 1st, Pacific Lost in Conference Semifinals, 3–4 (Mavericks)
2022–23 82 45 37 .549 2nd, Pacific Lost in Conference Semifinals, 2–4 (Nuggets)

Home arenas

The Suns played at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum from 1968 until 1992. In 1992, they moved to the Footprint Center, which at the time was called the America West Arena and referred to as "The Purple Palace". Although not without controversy, eventually the Phoenix City Council and the Suns Organization together completed renovation on the arena in 2021.[108]

Uniform history

 
The Phoenix Suns' current wordmark logo.

1968–1973: Original uniforms

After the NBA had awarded a franchise to the Phoenix metropolitan area in 1968, local designers chose purple and orange as the main colors for the Phoenix Suns' uniforms. The original uniforms featured a futuristic "Phoenix" wordmark in front plus block numbers and letters in orange with purple and white trim. An orange sunburst logo was added on the sides of the shorts.[109]

1973–1992: Western look

The Suns tweaked their uniforms for the 1973–74 season. Other than the basic template itself, only the lettering and numbers were changed from the original uniforms. The "Phoenix" wordmark and numbers were modified to a Western-style font, with a few changes to the treatment of the player's name at the back.[109]

1992–2000: Streaking Sun look

In time for the move to the America West Arena for the 1992–93 season, the Suns overhauled their look. The home white and road purple uniforms now feature the "Streaking Sun" logo in the chest with "Suns" on top and the number at the bottom. The shorts feature the word "Phoenix" in orange letters written diagonally on the left leg. Prior to the 1994–95 season, the Suns introduced a black alternate uniform featuring the same template.[109]

2000–2013: Seven Seconds or Less look

Before the 2000–01 season, the Suns changed to a more simplistic uniform style. The home white uniform has the word "Suns" and the numbers in purple with orange trim along with purple side stripes. The road purple uniform has the word "Phoenix" and the numbers in white with orange trim along with grey side stripes. An orange alternate uniform, with the abbreviation "PHX" and the numbers in white with purple trim along with grey side stripes, arrived prior to the 2003–04 season. All three uniforms featured the updated "Streaking Sun" alternate logo on the stripes while the players' numbers were seen on the left leg until the 2005–06 season.[109]

2013–2017: Updated Streaking Sun look

The Suns overhauled their uniforms anew prior to the 2013–14 season. The look was inspired from their previous uniform designs. The home white uniforms featured "Suns" in orange with black trim along with black numbers, orange streaks and grey and orange sunbursts. The purple road uniforms featured "Phoenix" in white with orange trim along with orange numbers, white streaks and black, grey and orange sunbursts. The orange alternate uniforms (sleeved from 2013 to 2015; sleeveless from 2015 to 2017) featured "Suns" in white with black trim along with black numbers, white streaks and black and dark orange sunbursts.[109]

During the 2014–15 season, the Suns added a grey-sleeved alternate uniform. The uniform has "Phoenix" and the numbers in black with orange trim. The "Phoenix" wordmark was a callback to the "Western" look of the 1970s and 1980s.[110] A black alternate uniform was also added prior to the 2015–16 season. The black uniforms featured "PHX" in black with white trim along with white numbers and purple and orange trim.[111]

2017–present: Switch to Nike

When the NBA switched to Nike beginning with the 2017–18 season, the Suns drastically revamped their uniforms. Gone was the modernized "Streaking Sun" and the sunburst of the previous uniforms, and the Suns returned to a more simplified design. Purple also returned as a prominent color. The home-and-away designations were eliminated and in its place were the white "Association" uniform, the primary color "Icon" uniform, the secondary color "Statement" uniform and the annual "City" uniform.

The Suns' "Association" uniforms featured "Suns" in orange and the numbers in purple. The purple "Icon" uniforms featured "Phoenix" in grey and the numbers in orange. The black "Statement" uniform featured "PHX" in grey and the numbers in orange. All three uniforms have the "Streaking Sun" logo on the beltline.[112]

Starting with the 2019–20 season, the Suns replaced the black uniform with a new orange uniform, featuring the "Streaking Sun" logo in front, the numbers in white, and the "PHX" abbreviation on the beltline.[113] They wore the orange "Statement" uniform until the 2021–22 season, after which the Suns released a black "Statement" uniform with design elements inspired by the popular "City" uniforms worn in the 2020–21 and 2021–22 seasons (see below).[114]

Los Suns special uniforms

The Suns started wearing special "Noche Latina" uniforms in 2007 to commemorate the Latin American fanbase. The 2007 edition used the home white uniform template with the flag of Latin American countries substituting for the orange stripes. Starting in 2008, the Suns began to wear a modified version of their orange alternate uniforms with "Los Suns" in front, which they kept until 2013.[115]

During the 2010 NBA playoffs, the Suns wore their "Los Suns" uniforms on Cinco de Mayo for Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals against the San Antonio Spurs. Sports reporter Dave Zirin called the "Los Suns" action an "unprecedented political statement by a sports team."[116] The move was also widely reported to be a protest of an Arizona illegal-immigration law enacted in April.

After the 2013 rebrand, the Suns wore a black sleeved uniform with "Los Suns" in white with orange trim along with Latin-inspired accents at the back. This lasted only one season, however, as the Suns introduced a modified version of their purple uniforms in 2015, albeit with "Los Suns" in place of "Phoenix". This version lasted until 2017.[117]

For 2018, Nike added a fourth uniform option, the "City" uniform. The Suns used the occasion to unveil a new version of the "Los Suns" uniform, albeit using only purple, grey and white. Unlike in previous years where the "Los Suns" uniform was worn only during the month of March, this uniform was first used during the month of January.[118] For 2019, the "Los Suns" uniform added orange trim on the letters and stylized black piping while moving the front numbers to the left chest. It also featured a recolored Arizona flag in Suns colors on the shorts and "SOMOS PHX" slogan above the uniform tag.[119] The 2020 version kept the same template albeit with black as the base color and purple as the trim color.[120]

City Edition: "The Valley"

The 2020–21 Nike NBA Suns City Edition artwork makes tribute to the Phoenix valley region. The uniform features a black base, and pixelated mountain view sunset with an inspired rainbow of yellow, orange, red and purple. The image is based on Camelback Mountain located in North Phoenix. Camelback Mountain is a geographical identifier of The Valley, which has been the nickname of the Phoenix valley for decades. The front of the uniform reads "The Valley" in custom script lettering across a sunset themed rainbow over Camelback Mountain.[121]

Even though the NBA commemorated the league's 75th anniversary by having teams release mashup designs of previous uniforms for the 2021–22 "City" edition, the Suns elected to keep their "The Valley" uniforms for another season.[122]

City Edition: Salute to Native American Culture

The Suns went with a Native American motif for their 2022–23 "City" uniform, featuring a turquoise base, black letters, red trim, and indigenous art designs on the striping.[123]

Mascot

The Suns Gorilla

Barring a brief, early attempt involving a sunflower costume,[124] the Suns had no official mascot for the first 11 seasons of their existence. This changed when a messenger for Eastern Onion, a singing telegram service, delivered a telegram at Veterans Memorial Coliseum dressed as a gorilla.[125] As he began to leave, Coliseum security suggested he do a few dances underneath the basket during a timeout. The fans loved it, as did the messenger, Henry Rojas, who kept coming to games until he was officially invited to be part of the team. Nicknamed "Go", the Gorilla has a fictional background story consisting of coming from the Banana Republic and earning an education at Furman University.[125]

As Rojas' announced retirement from the role following the 1987-88 NBA season, the Suns held open auditions and try-outs to find a new Gorilla.[126] Former Arizona State University national champion[126] gymnast Bob Woolf[127] immediately stood out with his more acrobatic, aerial take on the character, particularly impressing evaluators when he jumped off a trampoline onto a basketball hoop, pulled himself atop the raised fixture, and danced high above the rim.[126] Woolf took over the role, introducing the Gorilla's signature slam dunk routines, backflips, and slapstick during games, such as running the stadium stairs to the Rocky theme. He became the first NBA mascot to incorporate "Evel Knievel"-inspired daredevil stunts like jumping through a ring of fire or being propelled to the hoop via catapult or grapple wire.[127] He was also the first NBA mascot to ride a Harley-Davidson to courtside and integrate elaborate comedy sketches with costumes and props in his routine.[127] The Gorilla soon became one of the most famous mascots in the NBA,[128] his popularity in the 90's resulting in his inclusion as a hidden character in NBA Jam.

Woolf performed as the Gorilla until the 2005–06 season,[129] with Devin Nelson briefly taking over until end of the 2011–12 season, as Woolf then resumed the role to the present date. Rojas, the original telegram Gorilla, has since been involved in numerous charity projects.[124] Woolf prefers to keep his relative anonymity, saying off-camera in a 2014 feature for SportsCenter, "I don't want to be seen. I don't want to be known. I want the character to take center stage."[126]

"Go" was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2005 and still makes appearances with charities, schools, hospitals and local businesses.[125]

Media

98.7 KMVP-FM serves as flagship station of the Suns Radio Network. Al McCoy has served as the team's play-by-play announcer and "Voice of the Suns" since 1972, making him the longest-tenured broadcaster in NBA history.[130] He was awarded the Curt Gowdy Media Award at the 2007 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremony, and was inducted into the Suns' Ring of Honor in 2016.[11] The 2021–22 season marked McCoy's 50th season with the team.[130]

For 50 consecutive seasons (barring remote broadcasts due to COVID-19), Al McCoy was positioned at courtside, adjacent to the Suns' home bench, as recent as May 2022.[131] He stopped broadcasting road games in 2019 due to difficult vantage points at higher locations in other NBA arenas limiting his preferred style of descriptive play-by-play.[132] On October 2, 2022, his broadcast position was moved higher up in the arena, closer to the skybox-area of the Footprint Center.[133] Tim Kempton serves as analyst, while Jon Bloom handles play-by-play for road games not broadcast by McCoy.[134]

On television, Suns games not broadcast exclusively by one of the league's national television partners are carried exclusively by the regional sports network (RSN) Bally Sports Arizona (formerly Fox Sports Arizona): the network assumed the rights to home games in 2003,[135] and has exclusively carried all games since the 2011–12 season (away games had previously been carried on broadcast television by KUTP).[136] The broadcasts formerly featured a simulcast of McCoy's radio commentary, but this was dropped in 2003 in favor of dedicated commentary teams for radio and television, with studio host Tom Leander initially serving as television play-by-play announcer.[135] As of the 2022–23 season, Kevin Ray and Leander split play-by-play duties, with either former Sun Eddie Johnson or Ann Meyers Drysdale on color.[137] Eddie Johnson has been the Suns TV analyst since 2000, paired initially with Al McCoy until the discontinuation of radio simulcasts.[138]

On April 28, 2023, the team announced that it had signed a five-year agreement with Gray Television to replace Bally Sports Arizona starting with the 2023–24 season. Most Suns games would be carried on broadcast television by Gray's KTVK and KPHE-LD in Phoenix (as well as stations in Tucson and Yuma), while the team would also operate an over-the-top subscription service in partnership with Kiswe. Suns owner Mat Ishbia stated that the agreements would give Suns fans "more options and access than they’ve ever had",[139][140] explaining in an interview that moving from the RSN model to free-to-air television would help combat cord cutting and increase the Suns' potential audience to three million households.[141] After the announcement, Bally Sports owner Diamond Sports Group (which had recently filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection) accused the team of breaching its contract and bankruptcy law, stating that the team was making an "improper effort" to "change their broadcasting partner without permitting Diamond to exercise our contractual rights." In response, Bartlestein stated that "Diamond's position is totally inaccurate.  We are moving forward with this deal and could not be more excited about what it means for our fans and our future."[139][140][142] Diamond sued the team over the Gray agreement, and the contract was ultimately voided by the bankruptcy court in accordance with an automatic stay. Gray revealed that the contract was contingent on a right of first refusal from Bally Sports—a caveat that was not mentioned when the deal was publicly announced.[143]

In October 2008, the Phoenix Suns, along with partnered advertising agencies, were honored with 12 Emmy awards by the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.[144]

Players

Current roster

Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY-MM-DD) From
C 22 Ayton, Deandre 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 1998-07-23 Arizona
F 55 Bazley, Darius 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 216 lb (98 kg) 2000-06-12 Princeton HS (OH)
C 18 Biyombo, Bismack 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 255 lb (116 kg) 1992-08-28 Democratic Republic of the Congo
G 1 Booker, Devin 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 206 lb (93 kg) 1996-10-30 Kentucky
F 0 Craig, Torrey 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 221 lb (100 kg) 1990-12-19 USC Upstate
F 35 Durant, Kevin 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1988-09-29 Texas
C 11 Landale, Jock 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 255 lb (116 kg) 1995-10-25 Saint Mary's
G/F 10 Lee, Damion 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1992-10-21 Louisville
G 38 Lee, Saben (TW) 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 183 lb (83 kg) 1999-06-23 Vanderbilt
G 2 Okogie, Josh 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 213 lb (97 kg) 1998-09-01 Georgia Tech
G 3 Paul, Chris 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1985-05-06 Wake Forest
G 15 Payne, Cameron 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 183 lb (83 kg) 1994-08-08 Murray State
G/F 8 Ross, Terrence 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 206 lb (93 kg) 1991-02-05 Washington
G 14 Shamet, Landry 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1997-03-13 Wichita State
F 12 Wainright, Ish 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 1994-09-12 Baylor
F 21 Warren, T. J. 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1993-09-05 NC State
Head coach
  • Vacant
Assistant coach(es)

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

Roster
Last transaction: May 13, 2023

Retained draft rights

The Suns hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA. A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[145] This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.

Draft Round Pick Player Pos. Nationality Current team Note(s) Ref

Head coaches

Hall of Famers, retired and honored numbers

Ring of Honor and retired numbers

Phoenix Suns Ring of Honor
No. Player Position Career
5* Dick Van Arsdale G 1968–1977 1
6* Walter Davis G 1977–1988
7* Kevin Johnson G 1988–1998, 2000
9 Dan Majerle F 1988–1995, 2001–2002 2
13 Steve Nash G 1996–1998, 2004–2012
24 Tom Chambers F 1988–1993
33* Alvan Adams C 1975–1988 3
34 Charles Barkley 4 F 1992–1996
42* Connie Hawkins F 1969–1973
44* Paul Westphal[146] G 1975–1980, 1983–1984 5
  Al McCoy[147] Broadcaster 1972–present
Jerry Colangelo Owner
Coach
Executive
1968–2004
Cotton Fitzsimmons Coach 1970–1972, 1988–1992, 1996
John MacLeod Coach 1973–1987
Joe Proski Trainer 1968–2000

Notes:

  • * Retired number[148][149]
  • 1 Also served as interim head coach in 1987.
  • 2 Also served as assistant head coach (2008–2013).
  • 3 Number was temporarily unretired for Grant Hill (2008–2012).
  • 4 Was named one of the NBA's 50 Greatest Players in 1996.
  • 5 Also served as assistant head coach (1988–1992) and head coach (1992–1996).
  • The NBA retired Bill Russell's No. 6 for all its member teams on August 11, 2022.[150][151]

Phoenix Suns' All-Century Team

The Suns' All-Century Team was voted on by the fans:

Phoenix Suns All-Century Team
First Team
No. Name Position Tenure
7 Kevin Johnson G 1988–1998, 2000
32 Jason Kidd G 1996–2001
34 Charles Barkley F 1992–1996
24 Tom Chambers F 1988–1993
33 Alvan Adams C 1975–1988
Paul Westphal Coach 1992–1996
Second Team
No. Name Position Tenure
44 Paul Westphal G 1975–1980
1983–1984
9 Dan Majerle G 1988–1995
2001–2002
42 Connie Hawkins F 1969–1973
6 Walter Davis F 1977–1988
41 Mark West C 1987–1994
1999–2000
Cotton Fitzsimmons Coach 1970–1972
1988–1992, 1996

40th Anniversary Team

The 40th Anniversary Suns Team, selected by fans through an Internet vote, was unveiled on January 3, 2008. The same night the Suns defeated the Seattle SuperSonics, 104–96, to celebrate the team's 40th season. The Suns' inaugural game in 1968 was against the Sonics.

Phoenix Suns 40th Anniversary Team
No. Player Position Career
5 Dick Van Arsdale G 1968–1977
7 Kevin Johnson G 1988–1998, 2000
13 Steve Nash G 1996–1998
2004–2012
6 Walter Davis F 1977–1988
44 Paul Westphal G 1975–1980
1983–1984
9 Dan Majerle G/F 1988–1995
2001–2002
42 Connie Hawkins F/C 1969–1973
24 Tom Chambers F 1988–1993
34 Charles Barkley F 1992–1996
31 Shawn Marion F 1999–2008
1
32
Amar'e Stoudemire F/C 2002–2010
33 Alvan Adams C 1975–1988

Basketball Hall of Famers

Phoenix Suns Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
42 Connie Hawkins F/C 1969–1973 1992
25 Gail Goodrich G 1968–1970 1996
34 Charles Barkley 1 F 1992–1996 2006
13 Gus Johnson 2 F/C 1972 2010
24 Dennis Johnson 2 G 1980–1983 2010
32 Shaquille O'Neal C 2008–2009 2016
33 Charlie Scott G 1972–1975 2018
13 Steve Nash G 1996–1998
2004–2012
2018
32 Jason Kidd G 1996–2001 2018
33 Grant Hill G/F 2007–2012 2018
44 Paul Westphal 3 G 1975–1980
1983–1984
2019
Contributors
Name Position Tenure Inducted
Jerry Colangelo 4 General manager 1968–1995 2004
Rick Welts President 2002–2011 2018
Cotton Fitzsimmons 2 Head coach 1970–1972
1988–1992
1996
2021

Notes:

  • 1 In total, Barkley was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice – as player and as a member of the 1992 Olympic team.
  • 2 Inducted posthumously.
  • 3 He also served as assistant head coach in 1988–1992, and head coach in 1992–1996.
  • 4 He also coached the team in 1970 and 1972–1973, and was the owner of the team in 1987–2004.

FIBA Hall of Famers

Phoenix Suns Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
32 Shaquille O'Neal C 2008–2009 2017
13 Steve Nash PG 1996–1998
2004–2012
2020

Executive personnel

Owners

Ownership history
Owner Tenure
Karl Eller, Don Pitt, Don Diamond, Marvin Meyer, and Richard L. Bloch
(also part Andy Williams, Bobbie Gentry and Ed Ames)
1968–1987
Jerry Colangelo 1987–2004
Robert Sarver 2004–2022
Sam Garvin* 2022–2023
Mat Ishbia 2023–present

*Sam Garvin took on the role of interim team governor during the 2022–23 NBA season, effectively taking on most ownership responsibilities for Robert Sarver while he served his season-long suspension in the NBA. Mat Ishbia officially took over the Suns and Phoenix Mercury on February 7, 2023.

General managers

GM history
GM Tenure
Jerry Colangelo 1968–1995
Bryan Colangelo 1995–2006
Mike D'Antoni 2006–2007
Steve Kerr 2007–2010
Lance Blanks 2010–2013
Ryan McDonough 2013–2018
James Jones & Trevor Bukstein* 2018–2019
James Jones 2019–present

*During the 2018–19 NBA season, both James Jones and Trevor Bukstein were given the roles of interim general managers for the entirety of that season after Ryan McDonough was fired before the start of their regular season period at the time. After that season concluded, Jones was given the permanent general manager role while Bukstein was demoted back to his original position of assistant general manager for the Suns.

Ryan Resch came out in 2022 while working as vice president of strategy and evaluation for the Phoenix Suns, making him the first openly gay person in league history to work basketball operations in an NBA front office.[152]

Franchise leaders

NBA Outdoors

The Suns held an annual basketball exhibition game, the NBA Outdoors, every first weekend of October in Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, California, near the city of Palm Springs from 2008 to 2010. However, the club ceased playing the outdoor preseason game prior to the 2011–12 NBA preseason.[153]

As a result of a recommendation by the Coachella Valley Recreation and Park District's Superintendent of Operations, Craig DeWitt, the NBA held its first outdoor exhibition basketball game on October 11, 2008. That stadium facility was built primarily for tennis tournaments and music concerts, and it can hold up to 15,000 fans. The Phoenix Suns lost the game to the Denver Nuggets. A second annual outdoor exhibition game was played on October 10, 2009, this time the Suns lost to the Golden State Warriors. On October 9, 2010, the Suns beat the Dallas Mavericks in the third annual outdoor exhibition.

In 2008 and 2009 pre-seasons, the Suns held training camp in the Auditorium in La Quinta, California, and the College of the Desert Gymnasium in Palm Desert, California, alongside the Portland Trail Blazers. But in 2010, the Suns began their training in San Diego and the Trail Blazers in Tucson, Arizona, as well held exhibition games in Seattle, Washington.

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External links

  • Official website  

phoenix, suns, american, professional, basketball, team, based, phoenix, arizona, they, compete, national, basketball, association, member, league, western, conference, pacific, division, suns, only, team, their, division, based, california, play, their, home,. The Phoenix Suns are an American professional basketball team based in Phoenix Arizona They compete in the National Basketball Association NBA as a member of the league s Western Conference Pacific Division The Suns are the only team in their division not to be based in California and play their home games at the Footprint Center The Suns are one of four major league sports teams based in the Phoenix area but are the only one to bill themselves as representing the city the other teams the Cardinals Coyotes and Diamondbacks all bill themselves as representing the state of Arizona Phoenix Suns2022 23 Phoenix Suns seasonConferenceWesternDivisionPacificFounded1968HistoryPhoenix Suns1968 present 1 2 ArenaFootprint CenterLocationPhoenix ArizonaTeam colorsPurple orange black gray yellow 3 4 5 Main sponsorPayPal 6 PresidentJames Jones 7 General managerJames Jones 8 Head coachVacantOwnershipMat IshbiaChampionships0Conference titles3 1976 1993 2021 Division titles8 1981 1993 1995 2005 2006 2007 2021 2022 Retired numbers6 5 6 7 33 42 44 Websitewww wbr nba wbr com wbr sunsAssociationIconStatementThe franchise began play in 1968 as an expansion team and their early years were mired in mediocrity but their fortunes changed in the 1970s after partnering Dick Van Arsdale and Alvan Adams with Paul Westphal the team reached the 1976 NBA Finals in what is considered to be one of the biggest upsets in NBA history However after failing to capture a championship the Suns would rebuild around Walter Davis for a majority of the 1980s until the acquisition of Kevin Johnson in 1988 Under Johnson and after trading for perennial NBA All Star Charles Barkley and combined with the output of Tom Chambers and Dan Majerle the Suns reached the playoffs for a franchise record thirteen consecutive appearances and remained a regular title contender throughout the 1990s and reached the 1993 NBA Finals However the team would again fail to win a championship and entered into another period of mediocrity until the early part of the 2000s In 2004 the Suns signed free agent Steve Nash who had blossomed for the Dallas Mavericks after being traded from Phoenix six years earlier and returned into playoff contention With Nash Shawn Marion and Amar e Stoudemire and under head coach Mike D Antoni the Suns became renowned worldwide for their quick dynamic offense which led them to tie a franchise record in wins in the 2004 05 season Two more top two Conference placements followed but the Suns again failed to attain an NBA championship and were forced into another rebuild After ten consecutive seasons without a playoff berth the Suns reached the 2021 NBA Finals after acquiring Chris Paul forming a quartet with their young core of Devin Booker Deandre Ayton and Mikal Bridges Following a disappointing playoff exit in 2022 the Suns acquired 13 time All Star and two time NBA champion Kevin Durant The Suns own the NBA s fifth best all time winning percentage and have the second highest winning percentage of any team to have never won an NBA championship 9 10 11 Hall of Famers have played for Phoenix while two Barkley and Nash won NBA Most Valuable Player MVP while playing for the team Additionally their Hall of Fame radio announcer Al McCoy is the longest tenured broadcaster in NBA history 11 Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 1968 1976 Team creation and early years 1 1 1 1975 1976 Trip to the NBA Finals 1 2 1976 1988 From success to scandals 1 3 1988 1992 The Kevin Johnson Tom Chambers Dan Majerle era 1 4 1992 1996 The Charles Barkley era 1 5 1996 2004 Average times 1 6 2004 2012 The Steve Nash era 1 6 1 2004 2006 Nash wins back to back MVPs 1 6 2 2006 2008 Seven seconds or less 1 6 3 2008 2010 Ups and downs 1 6 4 2010 2012 Slow decline without Amar e 1 7 2012 2015 Pre Booker and struggle years 1 7 1 2012 The departure of Steve Nash 1 7 2 2013 The arrival of Ryan McDonough 1 8 2015 present The Devin Booker era 1 8 1 2015 2020 The arrival of Devin Booker and further struggle years 1 8 2 2020 2022 The arrival of Chris Paul and return to the playoffs 1 8 3 2022 present Transition of ownership and the arrival of Kevin Durant 2 Season by season record 3 Home arenas 4 Uniform history 4 1 1968 1973 Original uniforms 4 2 1973 1992 Western look 4 3 1992 2000 Streaking Sun look 4 4 2000 2013 Seven Seconds or Less look 4 5 2013 2017 Updated Streaking Sun look 4 6 2017 present Switch to Nike 4 6 1 Los Suns special uniforms 4 6 2 City Edition The Valley 4 6 3 City Edition Salute to Native American Culture 5 Mascot 5 1 The Suns Gorilla 6 Media 7 Players 7 1 Current roster 7 2 Retained draft rights 8 Head coaches 9 Hall of Famers retired and honored numbers 9 1 Ring of Honor and retired numbers 9 2 Phoenix Suns All Century Team 9 3 40th Anniversary Team 9 4 Basketball Hall of Famers 9 5 FIBA Hall of Famers 10 Executive personnel 10 1 Owners 10 2 General managers 11 Franchise leaders 12 NBA Outdoors 13 References 14 External linksFranchise historyThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Phoenix Suns news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1968 1976 Team creation and early years The Suns were one of two franchises to join the NBA at the start of the 1968 69 season alongside the Milwaukee Bucks from Milwaukee They were the first major professional sports franchise in the Phoenix market and in the entire state of Arizona and remained the only one for the better part of 20 years a Phoenix Roadrunners team played in the World Hockey Association from 1974 to 1977 until the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League relocated from St Louis in 1988 The Suns played their first 24 seasons at Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum called the Madhouse on McDowell located slightly northwest of downtown Phoenix The franchise was formed by an ownership group led by Karl Eller owner of a public enterprise the investor Donald Pitt Don Diamond Bhavik Darji Marvin Meyer and Richard L Bloch Other owners with a minority stake consisted of entertainers such as Andy Williams Bobbie Gentry and Ed Ames 12 There were many critics including then NBA commissioner J Walter Kennedy who said that Phoenix was too hot too small and too far away to be considered a successful NBA market 13 This was despite the fact that the Phoenix metropolitan area was growing rapidly and the Suns would have built in geographical foes in places like in San Diego Los Angeles San Francisco and Seattle After continual prodding by Bloch who became president of the Phoenix Suns in 1968 the NBA Board of Governors granted franchises to Phoenix and Milwaukee on January 22 1968 with an entry fee of 2 million The Suns nickname was among 28 000 entries that were formally chosen in a name the team contest sponsored by The Arizona Republic with the winner awarded 1 000 and season tickets for the inaugural season 14 15 Suns was preferred over Scorpions Rattlers Thunderbirds Wranglers Mavericks Tumbleweeds Mustangs and Cougars Stan Fabe who owned a commercial printing plant in Tucson designed the team s first iconic logo for a mere 200 13 this was after the team paid 5 000 to a local artist to design the team s logo However they were disappointed with the results citation needed In the 1968 NBA expansion draft notable Suns pickups were future Hall of Famer Gail Goodrich and Dick Van Arsdale In 1968 Jerry Colangelo became the Suns first general manager at age 28 Jerry Colangelo then a player scout came over from the Chicago Bulls 16 a franchise formed two years earlier as the Suns first general manager at the age of 28 along with Johnny Red Kerr as head coach Unlike the first year success that Colangelo and Kerr had in Chicago in which the Bulls finished with a first year expansion record of 33 wins and a playoff berth plus a Coach of the Year award for Kerr Phoenix finished its first year at 16 66 and finished 25 games out of the final playoff spot Both Goodrich and Van Arsdale were selected to the All Star Game in their first season with the Suns Goodrich returned to his former team the Lakers after two seasons with the Suns but Van Arsdale spent the rest of his playing days as a Sun and a one time head coach for Phoenix The Suns last place finish that season led to a coin flip for the number one overall pick for the 1969 NBA draft with the expansion mate Bucks Milwaukee won the flip and the rights to draft UCLA center Kareem Abdul Jabbar then known as Lew Alcindor while Phoenix settled on drafting center Neal Walk from Florida 17 The 1969 70 season posted better results for the Suns finishing 39 43 but losing to the eventual Western Conference champion Los Angeles Lakers in the first round of the playoffs The next two seasons 1970 71 and 1971 72 the Suns finished with 48 and 49 win seasons but did not qualify for the playoffs in either year and did not reach the playoffs again until 1976 The major draw for the franchise in this era was the dramatic play of Connie Hawkins This era was also marked by the arrival of longtime Suns play by play and Naismith Hall of Fame awarded announcer Al McCoy hired by Jerry Colangelo before the start of the 1972 73 NBA season Soon locally renown as the Voice of the Suns his broadcasts were originally simulcast on both television and radio from 1972 onward until 2003 when he became exclusive to the Suns Radio Network He is still broadcasting Suns home games on radio as of the current 2022 2023 season calling all three NBA Finals appearances for the franchise in 1976 1993 and 2021 respectively Colangelo called Al McCoy the greatest salesman for the game of basketball in our entire state 18 He had as much to do with the success of the Suns as any player coach or manager 18 1975 1976 Trip to the NBA Finals The 1975 76 season proved to be a pivotal year for the Suns as they made several key moves including the off season trade of former All Star guard Charlie Scott to the Boston Celtics in exchange for guard Paul Westphal a member of Boston s 1974 championship team They also drafted center and eventual fan favorite Alvan Adams from the University of Oklahoma and guard Ricky Sobers of UNLV The Suns and Buffalo Braves made a midseason trade with Phoenix sending forward center John Shumate to Buffalo in exchange for forward Garfield Heard Phoenix had an inconsistent regular season starting out at 14 9 then the best start in team history then went 4 18 during a stretch where the team sustained several injuries including Dick Van Arsdale breaking his right arm in a February game The Suns then went 24 13 in the final 37 games to finish 42 40 clinching their first playoff spot since 1970 The Suns faced the Seattle SuperSonics in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs winning the series four games to two and beat the defending NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference Finals four games to three to advance to their first NBA Finals Paul Westphal led the Suns to their first ever NBA Finals in 1976 The Suns faced an experienced Celtics team led by eventual Hall of Famers Dave Cowens John Havlicek and Jo Jo White Game five of the 1976 NBA Finals took place at Boston Garden where the Suns came back from a 22 point first half deficit to force overtime Havlicek made what was supposed to be a game winning basket but due to fans rushing the floor before time officially expired officials put one second back on the clock with Phoenix having possession of the ball but under their own basket Instead of attempting a desperation heave the Suns Westphal intentionally called a timeout that they did not have a technical foul giving the Celtics a free throw which Jo Jo White converted to put them up 112 110 However this advanced the ball to half court and once the Suns had possession Garfield Heard made a buzzer beating turnaround jump shot to force a third overtime The Suns hard fought battle was short lived as Boston s reserve player Glenn McDonald scored six of his eight points in the third overtime to lead the Celtics to a 128 126 win Boston eventually won the series in six games clinching the championship at the Coliseum defeating Phoenix in game six 87 80 1976 1988 From success to scandals In the late 1970s and early 1980s the Suns enjoyed several successful seasons including the 1981 Pacific Division title making the playoffs eight seasons in a row including an appearance at the 1984 Western Conference Finals Problems arose on and off the court in the mid 1980s In 1987 the Maricopa County Attorney s Office indicted 13 people on drug related charges three of whom were active Suns players James Edwards Jay Humphries and Grant Gondrezick These indictments were partially based on testimony from star player Walter Davis who was given immunity No defendants ever went to trial two of the players went into a prosecution diversion program while another received probation Nevertheless the scandal although now perceived in many respects to be a witch hunt 19 tarnished the reputation of the franchise both nationally and within the community The scandal did provide an opening for general manager Jerry Colangelo to lead a group that bought the team from its owners for 44 million at the start of the 1987 88 season a record at that time With a drug scandal and the loss of promising young center Nick Vanos who was killed in the crash of Northwest Airlines Flight 255 the franchise was in turmoil both on and off the court Kevin Johnson was the Suns point guard for 11 seasons 1988 1992 The Kevin Johnson Tom Chambers Dan Majerle era The Suns luck began to turn around in 1988 with the acquisition of Kevin Johnson from the Cleveland Cavaliers along with Mark West and Tyrone Corbin for All Star power forward Larry Nance and Mike Sanders This was the beginning of a franchise record 13 consecutive playoff appearances All Star Tom Chambers came over from the Seattle SuperSonics the first unrestricted free agent in NBA history 1986 second round draft pick Jeff Hornacek continued to develop and Thunder Dan Majerle was drafted with the 14th pick in the 1988 draft Kurt Rambis was added from the Charlotte Hornets in 1989 and the team upset the Los Angeles Lakers in five games during the playoffs that season before falling to the Portland Trail Blazers in the Western Conference Finals In 1990 91 the Suns went 55 27 but lost in the first round to the Utah Jazz 3 1 In 1991 92 the Suns went 53 29 Having sent four players to the All Star Game in the previous two seasons Chambers Johnson Hornacek and Majerle the Suns swept the San Antonio Spurs in three games in the first round of the 1992 NBA playoffs The Suns then were defeated in five games to the Trail Blazers in the Conference Semifinals The series was punctuated by a game four in which the Suns lost in double overtime 153 151 the highest scoring game in NBA playoff history to date That game was the last Suns game ever played at the Coliseum 1992 1996 The Charles Barkley era In 1992 the Suns moved into their new arena in downtown Phoenix the America West Arena The arena is occasionally referred to as the Purple Palace due to its purple seats one of the Suns colors 20 All Star power forward Charles Barkley was traded from the Philadelphia 76ers for Jeff Hornacek Andrew Lang and Tim Perry Barkley went on to win the MVP award that 1992 93 season 21 In addition to Barkley the Suns added key players to their roster including Danny Ainge and draftees Arkansas center Oliver Miller and forward Richard Dumas who was actually drafted in 1991 but was suspended for his rookie year for violating the NBA drug policy Under rookie head coach Paul Westphal a former Suns assistant and player with the 1976 Suns in the NBA Finals the Suns won 62 games in 1992 93 setting a franchise record In the first round of the playoffs they defeated the eighth seeded Lakers coming back from a 0 2 deficit in the five game series The Suns then eliminated the Spurs and SuperSonics advancing to the NBA Finals for the second time in franchise history They eventually lost to the Chicago Bulls led by eventual Hall of Famers Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen The series also included a triple overtime game in game three making this and their previous game five in the 1976 series the only triple overtime games in the history of the NBA Finals 22 23 Approximately 300 000 fans braved the 105 heat to celebrate the memorable season in the downtown streets of Phoenix after the Finals had ended 24 Charles Barkley won NBA MVP and led the Suns to the NBA Finals in 1993 The Suns continued to be successful in the regular season going 178 68 during the 1992 93 1993 94 and 1994 95 seasons They continued to bolster their roster by adding players such as A C Green Danny Manning Wesley Person Wayman Tisdale and Elliot Perry Despite a Pacific Division title in 1995 the Suns were eliminated in consecutive Western Conference Semifinal rounds by the Houston Rockets both series going a full seven games Manning was rarely at full strength with the Suns injuring his ACL in 1995 just before the All Star break In both years the Suns led the series by two games at one point 2 0 in 1994 3 1 in 1995 only to see the Rockets come back to win each series At the end of the 1994 95 season Phoenix general manager Bryan Colangelo the son of Jerry initiated an eventually costly trade citation needed sending the All Star Majerle and a first round draft pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers in exchange for John Hot Rod Williams Majerle was a fan favorite in Phoenix and in the Suns locker room citation needed The trade was made to address the Suns need of a shot blocking center but Majerle s presence was missed and Williams s production never met expectations citation needed The 1995 96 season was a disappointing year for the Suns despite drafting NBA All Rookie First Team member Michael Finley who became unavailable for the playoffs due to injury The Suns posted a 41 41 record and were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the San Antonio Spurs Westphal was fired midway through the season and replaced by Fitzsimmons his third stint as head coach A combination of front office unrest along with the dwindling possibility of winning a championship citation needed led to turmoil in Barkley s relationship with Jerry Colangelo who both spurned each other publicly This led to Barkley being traded to Houston for Sam Cassell Robert Horry Mark Bryant and Chucky Brown Three of the four players were not with the franchise one year later and two of the most talented players Horry and Cassell constantly clashed with the coach and seemed to be a negative influence in the locker room citation needed 1996 2004 Average times In the 1996 NBA draft the Suns used their 15th pick for Santa Clara guard Steve Nash Upon hearing the draft announcement Suns fans booed in disapproval of the relatively unknown player because he had not played in one of the major college conferences citation needed During his first two seasons in the NBA he played a supporting role behind star point guards Jason Kidd and Kevin Johnson After the Barkley trade the Suns began the 1996 97 season 0 13 a franchise record for the worst start During the 13 game losing streak Fitzsimmons stepped down as the coach and was replaced by former player Danny Ainge After an on the court altercation between Ainge and Horry Horry was traded to the Lakers for former Sun and NBA all star Cedric Ceballos Cassell was later traded to Dallas for all star guard Jason Kidd With a mostly small lineup the Suns put together an 11 game win streak that put them in the playoffs as the seventh seed in a series that almost upset the favored Sonics Despite the loss in the playoffs the Suns became one of the few NBA teams to make the playoffs after starting the season 0 10 or worse citation needed and one of the few to make the playoffs after experiencing a 10 plus game losing streak during the regular season With Kidd starting at point guard Nash was traded to the Mavericks in June 1998 in exchange for Martin Muursepp Bubba Wells the draft rights to Pat Garrity and a future first round draft pick later used to select Shawn Marion In the off season prior to the 2000 NBA season the Suns traded for perennial All Star Anfernee Penny Hardaway creating the tandem of Kidd and Hardaway called Backcourt 2000 25 However the combination of Hardaway and Kidd was never fully realized as Hardaway missed several games during the middle of the 1999 2000 season and Kidd broke his ankle going into the playoffs just as Hardaway returned to the court As the Suns entered the 2000 playoffs they beat the higher seeded San Antonio Spurs 3 1 in the best of five series The Spurs were without their best player Tim Duncan throughout the whole series However even with the return of Kidd in the next round the Suns fell to the eventual champion Los Angeles Lakers in a 4 1 series The Suns continued to make the playoffs until the 2001 02 season when they fell short for the first time in 14 years That season marked the trade of Jason Kidd partly due to a publicized domestic violence episode citation needed to the New Jersey Nets for Stephon Marbury With the resultant high draft pick the Suns were able to draft Amar e Stoudemire The Suns drafted Amare Stoudemire in 2002 he would become a six time All Star The 2002 03 campaign saw the emergence of Stoudemire a graduate of Cypress Creek High School Orlando Florida He became the first high school drafted player to win the NBA Rookie of the Year for the 2002 03 season during which the Suns posted a record of 44 38 and returned to the playoffs Marbury had a successful individual season making the All NBA Third Team and being selected for the 2003 NBA All Star Game The Suns were eliminated in the first round once again by the San Antonio Spurs a six game series with the eventual NBA champions In the 2003 04 season the Suns finished out of the playoffs with a 29 53 record The Suns made a blockbuster mid season trade sending Marbury and Hardaway to the New York Knicks for Antonio McDyess and a future first round pick that was later dealt to Denver 2004 2012 The Steve Nash era 2004 2006 Nash wins back to back MVPs After Nash s return to Phoenix in 2004 they won 33 more games than they did the previous season The beginning of 2004 saw the departure of the face of Suns management since the team s inception when Jerry Colangelo announced that the Phoenix Suns were to be sold to an investment group headed by San Diego based business executive and Tucson native Robert Sarver for 401 million The 2004 05 season marked the Suns return to the NBA s elite finishing with the best record at 62 20 and tying a franchise record set by the 1992 93 team They set a team record for greatest one season improvement at 33 games citation needed During the off season the Suns signed unrestricted free agent All Star point guard Steve Nash from Dallas who had formerly played for the Suns at the beginning of his career Nash went on to win the MVP award that season Amar e Stoudemire and Shawn Marion were named All Stars and first year coach Mike D Antoni was named NBA Coach of the Year In the 2005 NBA playoffs Phoenix was the first seed in the Western Conference The Suns swept the Memphis Grizzlies 4 0 and defeated the fourth seeded Dallas Mavericks in the second round 4 2 as Nash forced game six into overtime with a three pointer in the closing seconds In the Western Conference Finals the Suns played the San Antonio Spurs who won the series 4 1 ending Phoenix s season partly due to Joe Johnson missing the first two games of the series Johnson went on to start the remaining games where he averaged 40 minutes per game and 18 3 points per game The Suns lost the first two at home as well as the following game in San Antonio to fall behind 3 0 in the series before winning game four at San Antonio 111 106 The team then lost game five at home 101 95 to be eliminated from the playoffs Stoudemire averaged 37 0 points per game during the series against the Spurs the highest ever by a player in the Western Conference Finals 26 The 2005 06 NBA season began with Stoudemire undergoing microfracture surgery in his knee on October 18 2005 missing all but three games that season Shooting guard Joe Johnson also demanded a sign and trade deal to the Atlanta Hawks in which the Suns got Boris Diaw and two future first round picks Other acquisitions included Raja Bell and Kurt Thomas Despite the turnover in players the Suns again won the Pacific Division going 54 28 and capturing the second seed in the Western Conference Nash was awarded a second consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player Award becoming the second point guard after Magic Johnson to win the award in consecutive seasons Also Diaw was named NBA Most Improved Player The Suns began the 2006 Western Conference Playoffs as favorites against the Los Angeles Lakers After winning the first game in Phoenix they found themselves trailing in the series 3 1 after impressive performances clarification needed by Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant However the Suns went on to win three straight games With 7 33 left in the fifth game Suns guard Raja Bell grabbed Bryant around the neck and threw him down as the Lakers star drove to the basket Bell earned a technical foul his second of the game and an automatic ejection The Suns took game six in overtime their first overtime win all season despite 50 points from Bryant and Bell out serving a one game suspension with last second help from mid season acquisition Tim Thomas On their home court the Suns won game seven 121 90 eliminating the Lakers for the first time since 1993 The Suns are 1 of 9 teams in NBA history to win a playoff series after being behind 3 1 27 A home game against the Sacramento Kings in the 2006 07 season In the second round the Suns faced the Los Angeles Clippers The series was played closely with both teams trading games on each other s courts The series was 2 2 and the Suns were behind in game five before coming back and won in double overtime After a game six loss the Suns won the series in the seventh game on their home court at US Airways Center winning by a margin of 20 with an NBA record fifteen 3 point FGs on May 22 2006 They went on to play the Dallas Mavericks in the Western Conference Finals as underdogs The Suns took game one in Dallas by a single point and their May 30 victory in game four marked the most wins for the franchise in a Conference Finals series since the 1993 season The Suns lost games five and six by a combined 25 points and were eliminated from the series on June 3 2006 2008 Seven seconds or less Under coach D Antoni the Suns popularized the fast break offense known as 7 seconds or less which was later published in a book written by Sports Illustrated writer Jack McCallum Though criticized for a supposed lack of defense the Suns specialized an efficient offense designed to quickly get off shots that made regrouping on defense difficult for the opposing team 28 Shawn Marion considered a key component of the 7 seconds or less offense was traded in 2008 after being drafted by the team in 1999 The Suns entered the 2006 07 season aiming to win the first championship in franchise history From November 20 to December 22 the Suns posted a 15 game win streak followed almost immediately with a 17 game win streak from December 29 to January 28 On March 14 the 49 14 Suns met the 52 10 Dallas Mavericks in a match up where both teams were fighting for the top seed in the Western conference and Nash was going for his third consecutive MVP award against Dirk Nowitzki Though the Suns won the game in double overtime 29 the Mavericks would finish with the West s top seed at 67 15 and Nowitzki would narrowly win the MVP award ahead of Nash 30 While the Mavericks were upset in the first round by the eight seed Golden State Warriors the 61 21 Suns defeated Kobe Bryant and the Lakers in five games in the opening round of the playoffs This set up a rematch of the 2005 Western Conference Finals against the San Antonio Spurs The series saw the Spurs defeat the Suns in six games in what many called the real finals of the 2006 07 season 31 The Spurs went on to win the championship that year On June 6 former TNT TV analyst and NBA three point specialist Steve Kerr was appointed Suns general manager and president of basketball operations Kerr was also a part of the Sarver led investment group that purchased the franchise from Jerry Colangelo 32 33 His first off season signing was former Orlando Magic small forward Grant Hill on a one year 1 8 million deal with a player option for a second season at 2 million Hill who was previously considered injury prone played in the majority of games over the next four seasons as a starter The Suns finished 55 27 on the season two games behind the Lakers who won the division In the opening round of the playoffs the Suns lost to the Spurs in five games the first time they did not advance past the first round in the D Antoni Nash era Some have attributed this to the mid season acquisition of aging former MVP Shaquille O Neal for four time All Star Shawn Marion 34 35 Though O Neal was brought in as a physical presence to match with the likes of the Spurs Tim Duncan the move all but ended their fast paced offense which had brought them to the cusp of a Finals appearance 36 On May 11 2008 Suns head coach Mike D Antoni left the team and signed with the New York Knicks 37 2008 2010 Ups and downs On June 9 2008 Terry Porter was named head coach of the Phoenix Suns succeeding Mike D Antoni Porter was an assistant coach of the Detroit Pistons when he was let go after the Pistons were eliminated by the Boston Celtics in the 2008 NBA Eastern Conference Finals During the off season the Suns had difficulties signing free agents because of being over the luxury tax They made attempts to sign a backup point guard Tyronn Lue however he decided to sign with the Bucks for more money The Suns selected Robin Lopez 15th overall pick out of Stanford in the 2008 NBA draft and acquired Goran Dragic who was originally picked by the rival San Antonio Spurs Alvin Gentry coached the Suns to a Western Conference Finals appearance in 2010 On February 16 2009 the Suns fired Porter and he was succeeded by Alvin Gentry The Suns were expected to make the transition back to the up tempo style basketball nicknamed the 7 Seconds or Less or Run and Gun style On February 18 Gentry began his head coaching tenure with a 140 100 blowout over the Clippers at home Six Suns players scored in double digits led by Leandro Barbosa s 24 points The Suns led by as much as 50 points during the game and were without their swingman Jason Richardson who was serving a one game suspension However this offense cost them their defense allowing over 107 points per game 27th in the league The Suns scored 140 in the next two games On February 20 Amar e Stoudemire underwent eye surgery and was out for eight weeks They went 18 13 under Gentry in the last 31 games At the end of the season the Suns missed the playoffs with a 46 36 record During the 2009 10 season the Suns played a far more balanced style of basketball and finished with a 54 28 record The Suns advanced to the NBA s Western Conference Finals eliminating the Portland Trail Blazers in six games and the San Antonio Spurs in four games including an explosive performance by Goran Dragic in game three against the Spurs scoring 23 points in the fourth quarter The Suns faced the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals but lost in six games On June 15 2010 Kerr resigned as general manager of the Suns and opted to return as an analyst for TNT effective June 30 2010 In the wake of Kerr s decision to leave the club senior vice president of basketball operations David Griffin told managing partner Robert Sarver he did not want to be a candidate to replace Kerr and left when his contract expired on June 30 The last moves of both Steve Kerr and David Griffin were drafting players Gani Lawal and Dwayne Collins with the second round draft picks that they had in the 2010 NBA draft 2010 2012 Slow decline without Amar e The Suns attempted to re sign Amar e Stoudemire in the 2010 free agency period with a five year contract for around 95 million with 71 million guaranteed and the rest of his salary coming only if certain conditions were held such as getting guaranteed 4th and 5th season money if he remained healthy enough to meet those conditions Stoudemire instead signed with the New York Knicks for 100 million The Suns hired player agent Lon Babby as president of basketball operations The team then paid over 80 million to acquire Hedo Turkoglu Josh Childress and Hakim Warrick to not only replace Stoudemire but also add bench depth On August 5 2010 the Suns hired Lance Blanks as general manager On December 19 2010 the Suns acquired Vince Carter Mickael Pietrus and Marcin Gortat from the Orlando Magic along with a low draft pick and cash considerations 38 For this acquisition the Suns traded Jason Richardson Earl Clark and the recently acquired Hedo Turkoglu On February 24 2011 the Suns acquired point guard Aaron Brooks trading first round lottery protected draft pick and point guard Goran Dragic to the Houston Rockets The Suns ended the 2010 11 season with a losing record and missed the playoffs In the 2011 NBA draft the Suns used their 13th pick on Markieff Morris a 6 10 power forward from the Kansas Jayhawks Markieff is the twin brother of Marcus Morris who played together for three years in Kansas In the 2012 NBA draft the Suns used their 13th pick to select Kendall Marshall a 6 4 point guard from the North Carolina Tar Heels Marshall was a prolific passer in his two seasons at North Carolina setting the ACC 39 and North Carolina 40 season assist records along with winning the Bob Cousy Award 41 in his sophomore season with the Tar Heels 2012 2015 Pre Booker and struggle years Suns Record 2012 2015 Year Wins Losses Seed 2012 33 33 10th2013 25 57 15th2014 48 34 9th2015 39 43 10th Steve Nash with the Lakers in 2012 2012 The departure of Steve Nash During the 2012 free agency period the Suns traded Steve Nash to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for first round picks in 2013 and 2015 as well as second round picks in 2013 and 2014 After the trade the Suns then re acquired point guard Goran Dragic from Houston signed Minnesota Timberwolves forward Michael Beasley and claimed Houston forward Luis Scola off amnesty waivers while also using the same amnesty clause as codified in the 2011 collective bargaining agreement to waive Josh Childress They also did a three way trade with the New Orleans Hornets and the Timberwolves by trading Robin Lopez and Hakim Warrick to the Hornets and a 2014 second rounder to the Timberwolves in exchange for Wesley Johnson a top 14 protected future first rounder and the rights to Brad Miller and Jerome Dyson The latter two players rights were later waived and the Suns then signed Jermaine O Neal for one year The Suns also signed P J Tucker based on his performance with the Suns Summer League team On September 20 it was announced that Channing Frye had dilated cardiomyopathy and as a result he missed the entire 2012 13 season although he sometimes made special appearances to do the pre game show for local Suns games with Tom Leander and Tom Chambers On January 12 2013 the Suns became the fourth fastest NBA team to win 2 000 games with a 97 81 road victory against the Chicago Bulls which also marked the last victory for Alvin Gentry as head coach for the Suns On January 18 2013 the day after a loss that broke a 24 home game winning streak against the Milwaukee Bucks Gentry agreed to leave the Phoenix Suns organization 42 Two days later player development coach Lindsey Hunter was named interim head coach role for the remainder of the season A few days later assistant head coaches Dan Majerle and Elston Turner had also resigned from their positions On February 21 2013 the Suns had traded their 2013 second round pick to the Houston Rockets in exchange for Marcus Morris the twin brother of power forward Markieff Morris 43 A day later the Suns traded point guard Sebastian Telfair to the Toronto Raptors in exchange for Iranian center Hamed Haddadi and a 2014 second round pick The Suns ended their first post Steve Nash season with a 25 57 win loss record their second worst record in franchise history behind only their inaugural season 2013 The arrival of Ryan McDonough On April 22 2013 it was announced that the Suns had fired general manager Lance Blanks 44 On May 7 2013 former Celtics assistant general manager Ryan McDonough was announced as the new general manager of the Suns 45 On May 26 2013 the Suns hired Jeff Hornacek as their head coach to replace interim head coach Lindsey Hunter The team also started the new season with new modified logos replacing most of the purple on their logos with black although purple would still be found on their jerseys In the 2013 NBA draft on June 27 the Suns selected Ukrainian center Alex Len from Maryland with their 5th pick and power forward Alex Oriakhi from Missouri with their 57th pick Although the Suns were expected to have a poor season they began the season with a 19 11 record Eric Bledsoe then went down against the Los Angeles Clippers with a torn meniscus and missed the following 33 games The Suns went 17 16 during his absence led by Goran Dragic keeping Phoenix in the playoff race with the Memphis Grizzlies and Dallas Mavericks At 47 32 while Dallas and Memphis were both 48 32 Phoenix lost against both teams before they defeated the Sacramento Kings to finish the season 48 34 Dallas finished 49 33 and Memphis finished 50 32 resulting in Memphis finishing with the seventh seed Dallas with the eighth and Phoenix out of the playoffs During the 2014 NBA draft the Suns drafted sophomore forward T J Warren from NC State Canadian freshman point guard Tyler Ennis from Syracuse Serbian shooting guard Bogdan Bogdanovic and senior center power forward Alec Brown from Wisconsin Green Bay After trying to obtain players like LeBron James Carmelo Anthony and Chris Bosh and losing Channing Frye to the Orlando Magic the Suns decided to sign and trade for Sacramento Kings point guard Isaiah Thomas under a four year contract worth 27 million in exchange for Alex Oriakhi using a 7 million traded player exception 46 On September 24 2014 the Suns and Eric Bledsoe agreed on a five year contract worth 70 million 47 A couple of days after on September 29 2014 they extended both Markieff and Marcus Morris to four year deals that combine to 52 million with Markieff earning 32 million and Marcus getting the remaining 20 million 48 Right before the trade deadline on February 19 2015 the Suns made moves to change the roster After demanding a trade due to lingering frustrations with the front office and direction of the team Goran Dragic and his brother Zoran were traded by the Suns to the Miami Heat for Danny Granger and Miami s 2017 and 2021 first round picks in a three team trade with the New Orleans Pelicans 49 Immediately after the trade the Suns replaced Dragic by trading for Milwaukee Bucks guard Brandon Knight sending Tyler Ennis and Miles Plumlee to Milwaukee and the Lakers 2015 first round pick to the Philadelphia 76ers 50 Isaiah Thomas was then traded to the Boston Celtics for Marcus Thornton and the Cleveland Cavaliers 2016 first round pick 51 2015 present The Devin Booker era 2015 2020 The arrival of Devin Booker and further struggle years Devin Booker in 2016 In the 2015 NBA draft the Suns drafted Kentucky shooting guard Devin Booker with the 13th pick He was the youngest player drafted at the time by the Suns at 18 years old 52 and debuted two days before his 19th birthday against the Dallas Mavericks On July 1 2015 the Suns retained the rights of Brandon Knight under an offer similar to that of Eric Bledsoe s and signed Dallas Mavericks center Tyson Chandler to a four year deal worth 52 million A day later the Suns traded Markieff s brother Marcus Morris Reggie Bullock and Danny Granger to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for their 2020 second round selection However star player Eric Bledsoe sustained a season ending injury on December 26 2015 On February 1 2016 the Suns relieved Jeff Hornacek of his duties as head coach 53 Former NBA player Earl Watson took on interim head coaching duties The Suns traded the disgruntled Markieff Morris on February 19 2016 to the Washington Wizards for Kris Humphries DeJuan Blair and the Wizards first round pick in the 2016 NBA draft On March 14 2016 the Suns were eliminated from playoff contention for a sixth straight season making it the longest drought in franchise history surpassing the five straight misses from the 1970 71 NBA season to the 1974 75 NBA season However rookie Devin Booker went from being a sixth man off the bench player for Kentucky to future impact player after the injuries to Eric Bledsoe and Brandon Knight He earned the team s first NBA All Rookie Team honors since Amar e Stoudemire back in 2003 54 Earl Watson officially became the full time head coach on April 19 2016 with his new assistant coaches Jay Triano former Suns player Tyrone Corbin Marlon Garnett and Scott Duncan replacing most of the assistant coaches from the previous season During the 2016 NBA draft the Suns drafted the 18 year old Bosnian born Croatian forward center Dragan Bender Washington power forward Marquese Chriss and Kentucky point guard Tyler Ulis Chriss was acquired by trading the Suns 13th and 28th selections Bogdan Bogdanovic and the Pistons 2020 second round pick to the Sacramento Kings During the 2016 free agency period the Suns regained former players and fan favorites Jared Dudley and Leandro Barbosa under new deals While the Suns ended the 2016 17 season with only a slight improvement from their previous record despite the return of Eric Bledsoe Devin Booker continued to improve in his second season with the team leading the team in points scored at 22 1 per game Marquese Chriss was also named to the All Rookie Second Team that season In the 2017 NBA draft the Suns dropped to the 4th pick in the draft and selected Josh Jackson from the University of Kansas On October 22 2017 head coach Earl Watson was fired after a 0 3 start that included two losses of 40 point deficits which led to Jay Triano being promoted to interim head coach 55 On November 7 Bledsoe was traded to the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for Greg Monroe and a protected first and second round draft pick 56 The Suns ended the season with the second worst record in franchise history at 21 61 After the season concluded the Suns let go of interim head coach Triano and hired Igor Kokoskov as the team s new head coach The Suns earned their first no 1 pick in the 2018 NBA draft lottery after ending the season with the league worst record that year With the first overall pick in the 2018 NBA draft Phoenix selected Deandre Ayton 57 58 They would also trade up into the top 10 that year to take Mikal Bridges with the 10th pick from the Philadelphia 76ers a draft pick the Suns already had from the Steve Nash trade before trading the pick to the 76ers in the Brandon Knight trade In the off season Devin Booker signed a 5 year 158 million contract extension with the Suns Before the start of the regular season and during preseason on October 8 2018 owner Robert Sarver decided to relieve Ryan McDonough from the general manager position 59 and named vice president of basketball operations James Jones and assistant general manager Trevor Bukstein as the interim general managers A highlight of the season was when a planned three way trade with the Washington Wizards and Memphis Grizzlies fell apart through miscommunication of the players involved and being sent in the planned deal 60 The Suns would once again have another losing season as they missed the playoffs for the ninth straight season At the end of the season the Suns made James Jones the team s permanent general manager with co interim general manager Trevor Bukstein returning to his prior assistant general manager role 61 When the season came to an end the coaching staff including head coach Igor Kokoskov were fired on April 23 2019 62 63 Former New Orleans Hornets Pelicans head coach and Philadelphia 76ers assistant coach Monty Williams was hired as the team s new head coach on May 3 64 and completed the rest of the new coaching staff on June 26 65 Phoenix finished with a 19 63 record the worst in the Western Conference Ayton made the All Rookie First Team The Suns had the third odds in the lottery but landed the sixth pick During the day of the 2019 NBA draft the Suns agreed to deal T J Warren to the Indiana Pacers and their second round pick which would become KZ Okpala to the Miami Heat for cash considerations 66 During the draft they agreed to swap their sixth pick which would become Jarrett Culver trading down for the Minnesota Timberwolves 11th pick which would become Cameron Johnson and Dario Saric 67 and also agreeing to deal the Milwaukee Bucks future first round pick to the Boston Celtics for Aron Baynes and the draft rights to point guard Ty Jerome 68 as well as agree to a deal with undrafted Jalen Lecque 69 In the off season they signed veteran point guard Ricky Rubio to a three year deal and re signed Oubre to a two year deal signed Frank Kaminsky and Cheick Diallo The Suns played the Kings in their season opener on October 23 2019 and won 124 95 On October 24 Ayton was suspended 25 games for failing a drug test However the Suns continued to play well going 11 12 over their next 23 games On January 22 2020 Larry Fitzgerald purchased a minority stake in the Suns becoming the second active at the time NFL player with an NBA ownership share 70 On February 13 2020 NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced that Devin Booker had been named as a reserve in the 2020 NBA All Star Game 71 marking the first time since Steve Nash in 2012 that a Phoenix Suns player had been selected to the game 72 This later selection came as a result of an injury to Portland s Damian Lillard who was unable to participate Following the suspension of the 2019 20 NBA season the Suns were one of the 22 teams invited to the NBA Bubble to participate in the final 8 games of the regular season They went undefeated in the bubble finishing 8 0 but failed to qualify for the playoffs for the 10th consecutive season They finished the season with a record of 34 39 73 2020 2022 The arrival of Chris Paul and return to the playoffs The acquisition of Chris Paul left and second year head coach Monty Williams right helped guide the Suns to the 2021 NBA Finals their first Finals appearance since 1993 In the 2020 off season the Suns traded Kelly Oubre Jr Ricky Rubio Jalen Lecque Ty Jerome and a future first round draft pick for 10 time All Star 10 time All NBA and nine time All Defensive point guard Chris Paul from the Oklahoma City Thunder Phoenix also received small forward Abdel Nader Both Devin Booker and Paul were named All Star reserves for the 2020 21 NBA season The Suns went on to have a 51 21 record 2nd best in the entire NBA clinching the second seed in the Western Conference while head coach Monty Williams was named NBCA Coach of the Year The Suns made the playoffs for the first time since 2010 The Suns faced the defending champions Los Angeles Lakers in the first round defeating them in six games to win their first playoff series since 2010 74 The Suns then went on to sweep the Denver Nuggets advancing the team to the Western Conference Finals 75 Prior to the Western Conference Finals Paul entered into the NBA s COVID 19 health and safety protocols and missed the first two games of the series 76 On June 30 2021 the Suns won the Conference Finals in six games against the Los Angeles Clippers to advance to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1993 after a 41 point performance by Paul 77 The Suns won the first two games of the Finals but ultimately lost the series 4 2 to the Milwaukee Bucks led by two time regular season MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo who would be eventually named Finals MVP Despite the loss Booker set the NBA record for the most points scored by a player in his debut postseason 78 Paul was awarded All NBA Second Team honors for his performance that season although he came up short in the finals 79 He was also the first player to lose all four playoff series in which his team led 2 0 80 On July 29 2021 the day of the 2021 NBA Draft the Suns traded guard Jevon Carter and the 29th pick to the Brooklyn Nets for guard Landry Shamet In August the Suns re signed free agent center Frank Kaminsky and also signed veteran center JaVale McGee to a one year deal 81 Starting point guard Chris Paul was re signed to a partially guaranteed four year deal 82 After beginning the 2021 22 season with a 1 3 record the Suns rattled off a winning streak that was capped off on December 2 with a 114 103 victory over the Detroit Pistons which gave the Suns their 18th consecutive win to best the team s previous record of 17 games set in the 2006 07 season 83 On February 3 2022 starting guards Devin Booker and Chris Paul were selected to reserve spots for the 2022 NBA All Star Game 84 On February 10 the Suns traded second year big man Jalen Smith and a second round pick to the Indiana Pacers to reacquire wing Torrey Craig and acquired guard Aaron Holiday from the Washington Wizards for cash considerations at the NBA trade deadline 85 On March 10 the Suns became the first team that season to clinch a playoff berth after defeating the Miami Heat 111 90 on the road to claim their 53rd win 86 On March 24 the Suns clinched the NBA s top overall record with a 140 130 victory over the Denver Nuggets 87 In the 79th game of the season the Suns set a new franchise record for wins with a 121 110 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers to tally their 63rd win on April 5 eliminating the Lakers from playoff contention in the process 88 The Suns finished the regular season with a record of 64 18 with Devin Booker finishing 4th in MVP voting 89 In the first round of the 2022 NBA playoffs the Suns would defeat the New Orleans Pelicans in six games before falling to the Dallas Mavericks in seven games in the second round despite holding a 2 0 series lead 90 91 92 93 2022 present Transition of ownership and the arrival of Kevin Durant Kevin Durant is 13th on the NBA s all time scoring list On September 13 2022 the NBA fined owner Robert Sarver 10 million and suspended him for one year after an independent investigation determined that he used the N word multiple times in public as well as conduct that included unequal treatment of female employees sex related statements and conduct and harsh treatment of employees that on occasion constituted bullying 94 95 Both current and former NBA players including LeBron James Suns player Chris Paul and Draymond Green said that the punishment was too lenient with Green requesting for a league vote to terminate Sarver as a league owner 96 On September 21 Sarver announced he would begin the process of selling both the Phoenix Suns and the Phoenix Mercury 97 Sarver eventually accepted the purchase of both teams to United Wholesale Mortgage s CEO Mat Ishbia and his brother Justin for a record high 4 billion purchasing price on December 20 2022 with the move being made official on February 7 2023 98 99 At 43 years old Mat Ishbia became the 2nd youngest team owner in league history 100 During Ishbia s first few days of ownership the Suns acquired 13 time All Star and four time scoring champion Kevin Durant along with reacquiring T J Warren from the Brooklyn Nets in exchange for Mikal Bridges Cameron Johnson Jae Crowder four unprotected first round picks and a 2028 first round pick swap 101 Durant had previously requested a trade during the 2022 offseason with Phoenix being listed as one of Durant s preferred landing spots 102 Following the acquisition of Durant the Suns odds to win the NBA Finals surged from 1800 to 450 per BetMGM trailing only the Boston Celtics at 350 103 In the first round of the 2023 playoffs the Suns would defeat the Los Angeles Clippers in five games 104 In the second round of the 2023 playoffs against the Denver Nuggets the Suns lost the first two games to Denver as Chris Paul suffered a groin injury in game 2 105 The Suns came back to win the next two games at home without Chris Paul as Devin Booker and Kevin Durant became the first duo in NBA playoff history to each record 35 points five rebounds and five assists in consecutive playoff games 106 However after dropping game 5 in Denver Phoenix went on to lose the series to the Nuggets in six games as they trailed by 30 points at halftime in an elimination game at home for the second straight season 107 Season by season recordList of the last five seasons completed by the Suns For the full season by season history see List of Phoenix Suns seasons Note GP Games played W Wins L Losses W L Winning percentage Season GP W L W L Finish Playoffs2018 19 82 19 63 232 5th Pacific Did not qualify2019 20 73 34 39 466 3rd Pacific Did not qualify2020 21 72 51 21 708 1st Pacific Lost in NBA Finals 2 4 Bucks 2021 22 82 64 18 780 1st Pacific Lost in Conference Semifinals 3 4 Mavericks 2022 23 82 45 37 549 2nd Pacific Lost in Conference Semifinals 2 4 Nuggets Home arenasThe Suns played at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum from 1968 until 1992 In 1992 they moved to the Footprint Center which at the time was called the America West Arena and referred to as The Purple Palace Although not without controversy eventually the Phoenix City Council and the Suns Organization together completed renovation on the arena in 2021 108 Uniform history The Phoenix Suns current wordmark logo 1968 1973 Original uniforms After the NBA had awarded a franchise to the Phoenix metropolitan area in 1968 local designers chose purple and orange as the main colors for the Phoenix Suns uniforms The original uniforms featured a futuristic Phoenix wordmark in front plus block numbers and letters in orange with purple and white trim An orange sunburst logo was added on the sides of the shorts 109 1973 1992 Western look The Suns tweaked their uniforms for the 1973 74 season Other than the basic template itself only the lettering and numbers were changed from the original uniforms The Phoenix wordmark and numbers were modified to a Western style font with a few changes to the treatment of the player s name at the back 109 1992 2000 Streaking Sun look In time for the move to the America West Arena for the 1992 93 season the Suns overhauled their look The home white and road purple uniforms now feature the Streaking Sun logo in the chest with Suns on top and the number at the bottom The shorts feature the word Phoenix in orange letters written diagonally on the left leg Prior to the 1994 95 season the Suns introduced a black alternate uniform featuring the same template 109 2000 2013 Seven Seconds or Less look Before the 2000 01 season the Suns changed to a more simplistic uniform style The home white uniform has the word Suns and the numbers in purple with orange trim along with purple side stripes The road purple uniform has the word Phoenix and the numbers in white with orange trim along with grey side stripes An orange alternate uniform with the abbreviation PHX and the numbers in white with purple trim along with grey side stripes arrived prior to the 2003 04 season All three uniforms featured the updated Streaking Sun alternate logo on the stripes while the players numbers were seen on the left leg until the 2005 06 season 109 2013 2017 Updated Streaking Sun look The Suns overhauled their uniforms anew prior to the 2013 14 season The look was inspired from their previous uniform designs The home white uniforms featured Suns in orange with black trim along with black numbers orange streaks and grey and orange sunbursts The purple road uniforms featured Phoenix in white with orange trim along with orange numbers white streaks and black grey and orange sunbursts The orange alternate uniforms sleeved from 2013 to 2015 sleeveless from 2015 to 2017 featured Suns in white with black trim along with black numbers white streaks and black and dark orange sunbursts 109 During the 2014 15 season the Suns added a grey sleeved alternate uniform The uniform has Phoenix and the numbers in black with orange trim The Phoenix wordmark was a callback to the Western look of the 1970s and 1980s 110 A black alternate uniform was also added prior to the 2015 16 season The black uniforms featured PHX in black with white trim along with white numbers and purple and orange trim 111 2017 present Switch to Nike When the NBA switched to Nike beginning with the 2017 18 season the Suns drastically revamped their uniforms Gone was the modernized Streaking Sun and the sunburst of the previous uniforms and the Suns returned to a more simplified design Purple also returned as a prominent color The home and away designations were eliminated and in its place were the white Association uniform the primary color Icon uniform the secondary color Statement uniform and the annual City uniform The Suns Association uniforms featured Suns in orange and the numbers in purple The purple Icon uniforms featured Phoenix in grey and the numbers in orange The black Statement uniform featured PHX in grey and the numbers in orange All three uniforms have the Streaking Sun logo on the beltline 112 Starting with the 2019 20 season the Suns replaced the black uniform with a new orange uniform featuring the Streaking Sun logo in front the numbers in white and the PHX abbreviation on the beltline 113 They wore the orange Statement uniform until the 2021 22 season after which the Suns released a black Statement uniform with design elements inspired by the popular City uniforms worn in the 2020 21 and 2021 22 seasons see below 114 Los Suns special uniforms The Suns started wearing special Noche Latina uniforms in 2007 to commemorate the Latin American fanbase The 2007 edition used the home white uniform template with the flag of Latin American countries substituting for the orange stripes Starting in 2008 the Suns began to wear a modified version of their orange alternate uniforms with Los Suns in front which they kept until 2013 115 During the 2010 NBA playoffs the Suns wore their Los Suns uniforms on Cinco de Mayo for Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals against the San Antonio Spurs Sports reporter Dave Zirin called the Los Suns action an unprecedented political statement by a sports team 116 The move was also widely reported to be a protest of an Arizona illegal immigration law enacted in April After the 2013 rebrand the Suns wore a black sleeved uniform with Los Suns in white with orange trim along with Latin inspired accents at the back This lasted only one season however as the Suns introduced a modified version of their purple uniforms in 2015 albeit with Los Suns in place of Phoenix This version lasted until 2017 117 For 2018 Nike added a fourth uniform option the City uniform The Suns used the occasion to unveil a new version of the Los Suns uniform albeit using only purple grey and white Unlike in previous years where the Los Suns uniform was worn only during the month of March this uniform was first used during the month of January 118 For 2019 the Los Suns uniform added orange trim on the letters and stylized black piping while moving the front numbers to the left chest It also featured a recolored Arizona flag in Suns colors on the shorts and SOMOS PHX slogan above the uniform tag 119 The 2020 version kept the same template albeit with black as the base color and purple as the trim color 120 City Edition The Valley The 2020 21 Nike NBA Suns City Edition artwork makes tribute to the Phoenix valley region The uniform features a black base and pixelated mountain view sunset with an inspired rainbow of yellow orange red and purple The image is based on Camelback Mountain located in North Phoenix Camelback Mountain is a geographical identifier of The Valley which has been the nickname of the Phoenix valley for decades The front of the uniform reads The Valley in custom script lettering across a sunset themed rainbow over Camelback Mountain 121 Even though the NBA commemorated the league s 75th anniversary by having teams release mashup designs of previous uniforms for the 2021 22 City edition the Suns elected to keep their The Valley uniforms for another season 122 City Edition Salute to Native American Culture The Suns went with a Native American motif for their 2022 23 City uniform featuring a turquoise base black letters red trim and indigenous art designs on the striping 123 MascotThe Suns Gorilla Barring a brief early attempt involving a sunflower costume 124 the Suns had no official mascot for the first 11 seasons of their existence This changed when a messenger for Eastern Onion a singing telegram service delivered a telegram at Veterans Memorial Coliseum dressed as a gorilla 125 As he began to leave Coliseum security suggested he do a few dances underneath the basket during a timeout The fans loved it as did the messenger Henry Rojas who kept coming to games until he was officially invited to be part of the team Nicknamed Go the Gorilla has a fictional background story consisting of coming from the Banana Republic and earning an education at Furman University 125 As Rojas announced retirement from the role following the 1987 88 NBA season the Suns held open auditions and try outs to find a new Gorilla 126 Former Arizona State University national champion 126 gymnast Bob Woolf 127 immediately stood out with his more acrobatic aerial take on the character particularly impressing evaluators when he jumped off a trampoline onto a basketball hoop pulled himself atop the raised fixture and danced high above the rim 126 Woolf took over the role introducing the Gorilla s signature slam dunk routines backflips and slapstick during games such as running the stadium stairs to the Rocky theme He became the first NBA mascot to incorporate Evel Knievel inspired daredevil stunts like jumping through a ring of fire or being propelled to the hoop via catapult or grapple wire 127 He was also the first NBA mascot to ride a Harley Davidson to courtside and integrate elaborate comedy sketches with costumes and props in his routine 127 The Gorilla soon became one of the most famous mascots in the NBA 128 his popularity in the 90 s resulting in his inclusion as a hidden character in NBA Jam Woolf performed as the Gorilla until the 2005 06 season 129 with Devin Nelson briefly taking over until end of the 2011 12 season as Woolf then resumed the role to the present date Rojas the original telegram Gorilla has since been involved in numerous charity projects 124 Woolf prefers to keep his relative anonymity saying off camera in a 2014 feature for SportsCenter I don t want to be seen I don t want to be known I want the character to take center stage 126 Go was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2005 and still makes appearances with charities schools hospitals and local businesses 125 Media98 7 KMVP FM serves as flagship station of the Suns Radio Network Al McCoy has served as the team s play by play announcer and Voice of the Suns since 1972 making him the longest tenured broadcaster in NBA history 130 He was awarded the Curt Gowdy Media Award at the 2007 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremony and was inducted into the Suns Ring of Honor in 2016 11 The 2021 22 season marked McCoy s 50th season with the team 130 For 50 consecutive seasons barring remote broadcasts due to COVID 19 Al McCoy was positioned at courtside adjacent to the Suns home bench as recent as May 2022 131 He stopped broadcasting road games in 2019 due to difficult vantage points at higher locations in other NBA arenas limiting his preferred style of descriptive play by play 132 On October 2 2022 his broadcast position was moved higher up in the arena closer to the skybox area of the Footprint Center 133 Tim Kempton serves as analyst while Jon Bloom handles play by play for road games not broadcast by McCoy 134 On television Suns games not broadcast exclusively by one of the league s national television partners are carried exclusively by the regional sports network RSN Bally Sports Arizona formerly Fox Sports Arizona the network assumed the rights to home games in 2003 135 and has exclusively carried all games since the 2011 12 season away games had previously been carried on broadcast television by KUTP 136 The broadcasts formerly featured a simulcast of McCoy s radio commentary but this was dropped in 2003 in favor of dedicated commentary teams for radio and television with studio host Tom Leander initially serving as television play by play announcer 135 As of the 2022 23 season Kevin Ray and Leander split play by play duties with either former Sun Eddie Johnson or Ann Meyers Drysdale on color 137 Eddie Johnson has been the Suns TV analyst since 2000 paired initially with Al McCoy until the discontinuation of radio simulcasts 138 On April 28 2023 the team announced that it had signed a five year agreement with Gray Television to replace Bally Sports Arizona starting with the 2023 24 season Most Suns games would be carried on broadcast television by Gray s KTVK and KPHE LD in Phoenix as well as stations in Tucson and Yuma while the team would also operate an over the top subscription service in partnership with Kiswe Suns owner Mat Ishbia stated that the agreements would give Suns fans more options and access than they ve ever had 139 140 explaining in an interview that moving from the RSN model to free to air television would help combat cord cutting and increase the Suns potential audience to three million households 141 After the announcement Bally Sports owner Diamond Sports Group which had recently filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection accused the team of breaching its contract and bankruptcy law stating that the team was making an improper effort to change their broadcasting partner without permitting Diamond to exercise our contractual rights In response Bartlestein stated that Diamond s position is totally inaccurate We are moving forward with this deal and could not be more excited about what it means for our fans and our future 139 140 142 Diamond sued the team over the Gray agreement and the contract was ultimately voided by the bankruptcy court in accordance with an automatic stay Gray revealed that the contract was contingent on a right of first refusal from Bally Sports a caveat that was not mentioned when the deal was publicly announced 143 In October 2008 the Phoenix Suns along with partnered advertising agencies were honored with 12 Emmy awards by the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences 144 PlayersMain article Phoenix Suns all time roster Current roster Phoenix Suns rostervte Players CoachesPos No Name Height Weight DOB YYYY MM DD FromC 22 Ayton Deandre 7 ft 0 in 2 13 m 250 lb 113 kg 1998 07 23 ArizonaF 55 Bazley Darius 6 ft 9 in 2 06 m 216 lb 98 kg 2000 06 12 Princeton HS OH C 18 Biyombo Bismack 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 255 lb 116 kg 1992 08 28 Democratic Republic of the CongoG 1 Booker Devin 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 206 lb 93 kg 1996 10 30 KentuckyF 0 Craig Torrey 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 221 lb 100 kg 1990 12 19 USC UpstateF 35 Durant Kevin 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 240 lb 109 kg 1988 09 29 TexasC 11 Landale Jock 6 ft 11 in 2 11 m 255 lb 116 kg 1995 10 25 Saint Mary sG F 10 Lee Damion 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 210 lb 95 kg 1992 10 21 LouisvilleG 38 Lee Saben TW 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 183 lb 83 kg 1999 06 23 VanderbiltG 2 Okogie Josh 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 213 lb 97 kg 1998 09 01 Georgia TechG 3 Paul Chris 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 175 lb 79 kg 1985 05 06 Wake ForestG 15 Payne Cameron 6 ft 1 in 1 85 m 183 lb 83 kg 1994 08 08 Murray StateG F 8 Ross Terrence 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 206 lb 93 kg 1991 02 05 WashingtonG 14 Shamet Landry 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 190 lb 86 kg 1997 03 13 Wichita StateF 12 Wainright Ish 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 250 lb 113 kg 1994 09 12 BaylorF 21 Warren T J 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 220 lb 100 kg 1993 09 05 NC State Head coachVacantAssistant coach es Mark Bryant Bryan Gates Jarrett Jack Patrick Mutombo Brian Randle Michael Ruffin Steve Scalzi Kevin Young associate Legend C Team captain DP Unsigned draft pick FA Free agent S Suspended GL On assignment to G League affiliate TW Two way affiliate player Injured Roster Last transaction May 13 2023Retained draft rights The Suns hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA A drafted player either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him is allowed to sign with any non NBA teams In this case the team retains the player s draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player s contract with the non NBA team ends 145 This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams Draft Round Pick Player Pos Nationality Current team Note s RefHead coachesMain article List of Phoenix Suns head coachesHall of Famers retired and honored numbersRing of Honor and retired numbers Main article Phoenix Suns Ring of Honor Phoenix Suns Ring of HonorNo Player Position Career5 Dick Van Arsdale G 1968 1977 16 Walter Davis G 1977 19887 Kevin Johnson G 1988 1998 20009 Dan Majerle F 1988 1995 2001 2002 213 Steve Nash G 1996 1998 2004 201224 Tom Chambers F 1988 199333 Alvan Adams C 1975 1988 334 Charles Barkley 4 F 1992 199642 Connie Hawkins F 1969 197344 Paul Westphal 146 G 1975 1980 1983 1984 5 Al McCoy 147 Broadcaster 1972 present Jerry Colangelo OwnerCoachExecutive 1968 2004 Cotton Fitzsimmons Coach 1970 1972 1988 1992 1996 John MacLeod Coach 1973 1987 Joe Proski Trainer 1968 2000Notes Retired number 148 149 1 Also served as interim head coach in 1987 2 Also served as assistant head coach 2008 2013 3 Number was temporarily unretired for Grant Hill 2008 2012 4 Was named one of the NBA s 50 Greatest Players in 1996 5 Also served as assistant head coach 1988 1992 and head coach 1992 1996 The NBA retired Bill Russell s No 6 for all its member teams on August 11 2022 150 151 Phoenix Suns All Century Team The Suns All Century Team was voted on by the fans Phoenix Suns All Century TeamFirst TeamNo Name Position Tenure7 Kevin Johnson G 1988 1998 200032 Jason Kidd G 1996 200134 Charles Barkley F 1992 199624 Tom Chambers F 1988 199333 Alvan Adams C 1975 1988 Paul Westphal Coach 1992 1996Second TeamNo Name Position Tenure44 Paul Westphal G 1975 19801983 19849 Dan Majerle G 1988 19952001 200242 Connie Hawkins F 1969 19736 Walter Davis F 1977 198841 Mark West C 1987 19941999 2000 Cotton Fitzsimmons Coach 1970 19721988 1992 199640th Anniversary Team The 40th Anniversary Suns Team selected by fans through an Internet vote was unveiled on January 3 2008 The same night the Suns defeated the Seattle SuperSonics 104 96 to celebrate the team s 40th season The Suns inaugural game in 1968 was against the Sonics Phoenix Suns 40th Anniversary TeamNo Player Position Career5 Dick Van Arsdale G 1968 19777 Kevin Johnson G 1988 1998 200013 Steve Nash G 1996 19982004 20126 Walter Davis F 1977 198844 Paul Westphal G 1975 19801983 19849 Dan Majerle G F 1988 19952001 200242 Connie Hawkins F C 1969 197324 Tom Chambers F 1988 199334 Charles Barkley F 1992 199631 Shawn Marion F 1999 2008132 Amar e Stoudemire F C 2002 201033 Alvan Adams C 1975 1988Basketball Hall of Famers Phoenix Suns Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted42 Connie Hawkins F C 1969 1973 199225 Gail Goodrich G 1968 1970 199634 Charles Barkley 1 F 1992 1996 200613 Gus Johnson 2 F C 1972 201024 Dennis Johnson 2 G 1980 1983 201032 Shaquille O Neal C 2008 2009 201633 Charlie Scott G 1972 1975 201813 Steve Nash G 1996 19982004 2012 201832 Jason Kidd G 1996 2001 201833 Grant Hill G F 2007 2012 201844 Paul Westphal 3 G 1975 19801983 1984 2019ContributorsName Position Tenure InductedJerry Colangelo 4 General manager 1968 1995 2004Rick Welts President 2002 2011 2018Cotton Fitzsimmons 2 Head coach 1970 19721988 19921996 2021Notes 1 In total Barkley was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice as player and as a member of the 1992 Olympic team 2 Inducted posthumously 3 He also served as assistant head coach in 1988 1992 and head coach in 1992 1996 4 He also coached the team in 1970 and 1972 1973 and was the owner of the team in 1987 2004 FIBA Hall of Famers Phoenix Suns Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted32 Shaquille O Neal C 2008 2009 201713 Steve Nash PG 1996 19982004 2012 2020Executive personnelOwners Ownership historyOwner TenureKarl Eller Don Pitt Don Diamond Marvin Meyer and Richard L Bloch also part Andy Williams Bobbie Gentry and Ed Ames 1968 1987Jerry Colangelo 1987 2004Robert Sarver 2004 2022Sam Garvin 2022 2023Mat Ishbia 2023 present Sam Garvin took on the role of interim team governor during the 2022 23 NBA season effectively taking on most ownership responsibilities for Robert Sarver while he served his season long suspension in the NBA Mat Ishbia officially took over the Suns and Phoenix Mercury on February 7 2023 General managers GM historyGM TenureJerry Colangelo 1968 1995Bryan Colangelo 1995 2006Mike D Antoni 2006 2007Steve Kerr 2007 2010Lance Blanks 2010 2013Ryan McDonough 2013 2018James Jones amp Trevor Bukstein 2018 2019James Jones 2019 present During the 2018 19 NBA season both James Jones and Trevor Bukstein were given the roles of interim general managers for the entirety of that season after Ryan McDonough was fired before the start of their regular season period at the time After that season concluded Jones was given the permanent general manager role while Bukstein was demoted back to his original position of assistant general manager for the Suns Ryan Resch came out in 2022 while working as vice president of strategy and evaluation for the Phoenix Suns making him the first openly gay person in league history to work basketball operations in an NBA front office 152 Franchise leadersMain article Phoenix Suns accomplishments and recordsNBA OutdoorsThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Phoenix Suns news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Suns held an annual basketball exhibition game the NBA Outdoors every first weekend of October in Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells California near the city of Palm Springs from 2008 to 2010 However the club ceased playing the outdoor preseason game prior to the 2011 12 NBA preseason 153 As a result of a recommendation by the Coachella Valley Recreation and Park District s Superintendent of Operations Craig DeWitt the NBA held its first outdoor exhibition basketball game on October 11 2008 That stadium facility was built primarily for tennis tournaments and music concerts and it can hold up to 15 000 fans The Phoenix Suns lost the game to the Denver Nuggets A second annual outdoor exhibition game was played on October 10 2009 this time the Suns lost to the Golden State Warriors On October 9 2010 the Suns beat the Dallas Mavericks in the third annual outdoor exhibition In 2008 and 2009 pre seasons the Suns held training camp in the Auditorium in La Quinta California and the College of the Desert Gymnasium in Palm Desert California alongside the Portland Trail Blazers But in 2010 the Suns began their training in San 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