Even with this game being meaningless standings-wise, it was nice to see the Suns come out hungry and take this one away with their depth. They ended up beating the Thunder for the second time this season, winning 135-103. This game was one that many will forget, but it showed a glimpse into the future of this team.
The Suns had some big performances with Ryan Dunn and Jamaree Bouyea leading the way. They both bounced back after a rough outing on Friday against the Lakers, which was a nice sight to see. Dunn had 20 points, while Boiuye had a career-high 27, leading the way. The best part of the night, though, was how everyone was contributing. Seven players had double-digit points, allowing the team to never let the Thunder get back into this one. Even Khaman Maluach got a double-double in his first career game.
With OKC locked into the one seed, it made sense they rested their starters, but some of their depth pieces also shone. Branden Carlson was huge for the team alongside Payton Sandfort. Carlson had 26 points while Sandfort contributed 23 with 5 threes.
Game Flow
First Half
The Suns came out hot to start the game, and their depth shone through. With both teams resting their starters and even key bench players, this one was left for the third stringers to fight for. Well, Jamaree Bouyea realized that and answered the call early, scoring the first five points for Phoenix.
This continued for Bouyea throughout the quarter, where Ryan Dunn also stepped up. After having a team low of -39 in his last game, he wanted revenge and showed it early on. Dunn ripped off two early threes and had a nice block to keep the energy up. This snowballed for the Suns, allowing them to get a 21-0 run this quarter. Something the Suns similarly had against Houston earlier this week when they went on a 24-0 run.
The Thunder, being depleted and locked into the first seed, took this game with no heart from the jump. Defensively, allowing the Suns to find their rhythm and get to the cup with ease. They did bounce back ot make a few threes to make them look alive, but find themselves down 37-19 at the end of one.
To start the second, the Thunder made their first three triples and were quietly crawling back. Then the Suns said, “Hold my beer” and decided to make some of their own, matching the Thunder. Rasheer Fleming was big in this quarter, making a pair of threes for Phoenix.
Dunn was also continuing to show that his aggressiveness was a key to his success. With everyone out, he can play as a creator and ball handler for the offense, and he was doing so during his hot streak. He had a ferocious slam that had the whole bench excited in this one. Then the Thunder found some life halfway through the quarter.
They forced some turnovers and pressured the Suns to cut the lead. Branden Carlson was huge for the Thunder, forcing attempts at the rim and from beyond the arc. That being said, Bouyea had a different finale for the quarter, hitting a nice step back three-point buzzer beater, to put the Suns up 70-52 at half.
Second Half
To start the second half, the Suns kept bringing it down on the Thunder, with the whole team getting involved. Even with Bouyea and Dunn bringing it offensively, guys like Khaman Maluach and Amir Coffey were getting involved too. Even Maluach got an insane block on Carlson that was very motivating for all the fans to see.
The Thunder tried to continue finding shots from Branden Carlson and Payton Sandfort, but the Suns were fighting back. Every time the lead shrank from under 15 points, it seemed to level back out with a nice Phoenix run.
The Suns then went on to dominate the rest of the third with some big performances from the whole team. Koby Brea now had a career-high with 11 points, and the Suns found another buzzer-beater this time from Amir Coffey. Heading to the fourth, the Suns were now up 104-77 and looking to close the season out in good fashion.
With the last quarter of the regular season upon them, the Suns came out ready to take this one under their belt. Maluach fell right into stride, tipping in misses for baskets, while Fleming was lethal from three-point land. Halfway through the quarter, they were up 31, and it was clear this one was done. Regardless of whether OKC tried shrinking the lead, it was not enough. The Suns win their final game of the season 135-103.
Up Next
The Suns gear up for the play-in on Tuesday, taking on the Portland Trail Blazers in the Valley.