The Phoenix Suns enter the 2025-26 season with more questions than answers about their selection. We all know that Devin Booker is going to run the show, while Dillon Brooks should be a defensive threat next to him. Jalen Green should also help with the offensive end, but the fact that his position overlaps with Booker is a problem.
So much so that talking about Green starts the season when the Point Guard is driven in Phoenix. That tells you how gloomy the depth card stays in that crucial place. While the Suns did everything to remedy the middle rotation – both Rookie Kaman Maluach and trade for Mark Williams – the general position of the floor remains incredibly weak.
Suns should try to steal Devin Carter from Sacramento Kings.
Although the Suns are now among both aprons, they still have to be smart in how they add players through transactions. That is where Devin Carter of the Sacramento Kings enters the conversation. At the moment the Suns are on their way to Booker – although we all know that it is more a rebuilding than something else – and can therefore afford to buy low and take a chance on a more unproven player.
The 23-year-old Carter is certain that with Veania alone Entry about his Game theory podcast Recently that “I was super high on Devin Carter who came in, I am still high on Devin … I am more worried about where the shot is going than whatever.” As Rookie last season he appeared in just 36 games for Sacramento.
Devin Carter is working on his game with Upbasketball pic.twitter.com/wqvoeg746L
– Kingsmuse (@kings_Muse) August 5, 2025
But if you seriously entertain the idea that Green is starting next season, the depth behind him quickly becomes gloomy. Collin Gillespie deserves the back -uprol he currently has, and the suns are right to see what he has. Last season he was one of the few players who truly tried defensively and looked as if he wanted to be in Phoenix, and that will again be half of the battle this year.
However, his real quality in the long term is still debatable, and among him Jordan Goodwin and Jared Butler are fighting for tasks on the third string. The front office that brought goodwin back was a great move, while Butler would compete with him, is also logical. However, look at this long term and it is difficult to see that it is the starting point guard in five years.
Not that Carter is also the answer, but there is a clear advantage there. He can do a little bit of anything – outside his shot that Vecenie was right to emphasize – and he would not cost much either. Nick Richards is a player where the Suns reportedly offered as part of a potential Jonathan Kuminga deal, although we know that it went nowhere.
Kuminga could still end up in Sacramento – although those conversations have become cold – which means that they would even have less need for Carter and perhaps more use for another traditionally large, such as Richards. While things are outstanding, the salaries that are currently working, and a change of environment for Carter would undoubtedly also do him well.
Not every movin around Booker becomes sexy, and the most seismic shifts in this schedule had lost Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal. But with the Suns, the best version of their first round -pick in 2026 is not going to see, it is up to them to recognize opportunities to improve their selection in small ways. Carter would tick that box and would not cost much to acquire.
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