One month into the season, the Phoenix Suns are currently the second seed in the Western Conference and 4th-best overall in the league. There could also be an argument for 1st seed if the referee correctly called the travel on Jerami Grantβs recent game-winner.
So far thereβs nothing to complain about their standing relative to what has already happened. Theyβre missing key players in Chris Paul, Cameron Johnson, and Jae Crowder, and the Suns still boast a 9-5 record. Take note that those three of the most important players for them last season.
Where do the Suns stack up compared to the rest of the league? As of November 17th, they are ranked 3rd in both offensive and defensive ratings at 115.5 and 108.9, respectively. They are the only team in the league thatβs in the top three in both categories. The Suns also boast a net rating of 6.7 (2nd).
A look into the Phoenix Sunsβ rankings
For other team stats, here is where they currently rank:
30.3 OREB% (10th)
Compared to last seasonβs 26.4 OREB% (21st), this has been a big area of need for Phoenix. They are an efficient first-chance offense but not much of a second-chance offense, which was their downfall when shots werenβt falling. Gang rebounding has been key so far this season.
70.9 DREB% (19th)
This is where DeAndre Aytonβs career-low rebounding numbers are felt most. With Torrey Craig in the starting lineup, this should be higher but unexpectedly, Ayton hasnβt carried his fair share.
13.7 TOV% (7th)
This is still an elite number but, as youβd expect, the Suns ranked 4th last season. This drop is expected with Chris Paul out.
54.4 EFG% and 58 TS% (12th)
The Suns ranked 4th and 5th respectively in both categories last season but with basically the same numbers. Some teams just have insane shooting numbers like the Kingsβ 153 points against the Brooklyn Nets. It will even out as the season progresses.
97.63 PACE (26th)
Surprisingly, they are one of the bottom-ranking teams in this stat, which is not expected without Chris Paul. You wouldβve thought they would play faster. This could possibly be seen as a good sign as they are executing their offense better in the half-court.
.233 FTA Rate (26th)
The Suns have improved since last season. Devin Booker has traded some of his mid-range attempts into drives to the rim but Aytonβs already paltry 2.5 Career FTA has gotten lower, as heβs averaging a career-low 1.7 FTA. Truly abysmal for a big man.
An assessment after month one
Devin Booker has been…
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