2014–15 Phoenix Suns season

The 2014–15 Phoenix Suns season was the 47th season of the franchise in the NBA.[1] It was also the last season that the arena was called the US Airways Center, before it was renamed Talking Stick Resort Arena beginning in October 2015. With Channing Frye and Leandro Barbosa leaving in free agency and Goran Dragić being traded to the Miami Heat near the end of the trade deadline, no other player on the team had made the playoffs with the organization in previous years now. The Suns were in playoff contention for much of the season but suffered in the final weeks, partly due to injuries involving Brandon Knight and later Alex Len, and partly due to the number of players added and taken away during the trade deadline. The Suns capped off the 2014–15 NBA season with five consecutive losses and losing 10 out of 11 games total (the worst season-ending stretch since its inaugural season), finishing third place in Pacific division and tenth place in Western Conference with a 39–43 record. The Suns did not qualify for the playoffs for the fifth straight year, which tied the stretch from the 1970–71 to 1974–75 seasons as the team's longest playoff drought.

2014–15 Phoenix Suns season
Head coachJeff Hornacek
General managerRyan McDonough
OwnersRobert Sarver
ArenaUS Airways Center
Results
Record3943 (.476)
PlaceDivision: 3rd (Pacific)
Conference: 10th (Western)
Playoff finishDid not qualify

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionFox Sports Arizona
RadioKTAR

What marked this season in particular were the trades the Suns made. In the offseason, the Suns traded for point guard Isaiah Thomas for 2013 second round pick Alex Oriakhi. Thomas was later traded in an infamously massive multi-team trade that also resulted in the Dragić brothers, rookie guard Tyler Ennis, and center Miles Plumlee going to some different teams in exchange for guard Brandon Knight from the Milwaukee Bucks, Marcus Thornton from the Boston Celtics, Danny Granger from the Miami Heat, and three different future first round picks (all of which were later used in different trades in future seasons). Before then, the Suns tried to remain competitive with smaller trades like trading Anthony Tolliver to the Detroit Pistons for Tony Mitchell (who was eventually waived), trading a future Minnesota Timberwolves first round pick (that was ultimately conveyed into two second-round selections) to Boston for center Brandan Wright, and being involved in a three-way trade with the Celtics and Los Angeles Clippers that gave them Reggie Bullock for Shavlik Randolph.

Key dates

Offseason

Draft picks

Round Pick Player Position Nationality College / Club
1 14 T. J. Warren Small forward  United States North Carolina State
1 18 Tyler Ennis Point guard  Canada Syracuse
1 27 Bogdan Bogdanović Shooting guard Serbia Serbia Serbia Partizan Belgrade
2 50 Alec Brown Center  United States Wisconsin–Green Bay

The Phoenix Suns had three first round picks and one second round pick this season. Their highest first round pick (the 14th pick) was their own that was also a part of the NBA draft lottery. Both of the extra draft picks the Suns had this season involved trades the Suns made last season. The 18th pick came from the Washington Wizards by the Suns trading Marcin Gortat, Kendall Marshall, Shannon Brown, and Malcolm Lee, with Phoenix also getting the rights of Emeka Okafor out of it. Their 27th pick, however, came from the Indiana Pacers due to the Suns trading power forward Luis Scola, with Phoenix also gaining Gerald Green and Miles Plumlee in the process. The lone second round pick they have is also the pick they had on their own accord due to their 48–34 record being one of the best in the NBA that past season. Before the draft came up, the Suns also had two other second round draft picks they had acquired from trades with the Los Angeles Lakers (Steve Nash for four draft picks and cash) and the Toronto Raptors (Sebastian Telfair for Hamed Haddadi and Toronto's second round pick) in the 2012–13 season (the last season Lance Blanks was the Suns' general manager). However, both of those second rounders went to the Milwaukee Bucks due to the former first being traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves in a three-way trade that had the Suns getting rid of Robin Lopez and Hakim Warrick for the New Orleans Hornets in exchange for taking on a one–year deal with Wesley Johnson and the possibility of having a future Timberwolves first round pick (which was eventually traded anyway) before being involved with Milwaukee in a later three-way trade with the Oklahoma City Thunder and the latter being involved with the Suns' own three-way trade with the Bucks and the Los Angeles Clippers in acquiring Eric Bledsoe (and Caron Butler) in exchange for Jared Dudley.

With the 14th pick, Phoenix selected T. J. Warren, a sophomore from North Carolina State University. Warren averaged 24.9 points and 7.1 rebounds per game, which earned him ACC Player of the Year and consensus second team All–American honors. The Suns also selected Canadian–born Tyler Ennis, a freshman from the Syracuse University with the 18th pick. Ennis averaged 12.9 points, 3.4 rebounds, 5.5 assists, and 2.1 steals in 35.7 minutes per game. Phoenix then selected the Serbian international prospect Bogdan Bogdanović of Partizan Belgrade as their 27th pick. Bogdanović averaged 14.8 points, 3.7 rebounds and assists, and 1.6 steals in 31.4 minutes per game for Partizan Belgrade, which helped him win the Euroleague's Rising Star award and the Basketball League of Serbia's Finals MVP award (as well as multiple international championships beforehand). Finally, with their 50th pick in the second round, the Suns decided to select Alec Brown, a senior from the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay. Brown averaged 15.3 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 3.1 blocks in his final season with the Phoenix, was named All–Horizon League first team, and won the Horizon League's Defensive Player of the Year award. He also co-led the Horizon League in career blocks with 309 total blocks, scored 1,678 points and grabbed 800 rebounds during his time in Green Bay.

Free agency

Veteran players Emeka Okafor and Leandro Barbosa, as well as the newly signed Shavlik Randolph, Ishmael "Ish" Smith, and Dionte Christmas all became unrestricted free agents as of the end of the 2013–14 NBA season. In addition, both co-star point guard Eric Bledsoe and P. J. Tucker ended up being restricted free agents as well. Not only that, but on June 22, 2014, Channing Frye decided to decline his final year of his contract he had earlier on with the team and decided to pursue free agency as well. On July 7, 2014, Frye ended up signing a 4-year, $32 million contract to play for the Orlando Magic. During the July Moratorium (July 10), the Suns re–signed P. J. Tucker to a three–year contract worth $16.5 million. Ish Smith became a free agent on July 15, 2014 during the deadline for teams to decide on whether they want to make Smith's, Randolph's, and Christmas' non-guaranteed contracts become fully guaranteed this season; Smith signed with the Houston Rockets three days later. Meanwhile, Shavlik Randolph's $1.23 million contract became guaranteed on July 17. A week later, Dionte Christmas was waived from the team. Leandro Barbosa left to sign a one-year veteran's minimum contract with the Golden State Warriors on August 28, 2014. On September 10, 2014, Dionte Christmas joined the New Orleans Pelicans. The only player to have not been signed at all was Emeka Okafor due to his injury problems and was originally planning to fully recover sometime around the 2015–16 NBA season. However, Okafor was out for four whole seasons (including the only one he was technically considered a part of the Suns) before signing a new training camp deal to play for a newly reformed Philadelphia 76ers squad on September 23, 2017 (although being waived by them on October 14 the same year before the regular season began, with the intent of playing for the Delaware 87ers that same year soon afterward before signing with the New Orleans Pelicans for the rest of the 2017–18 season, starting on February 3, 2018).

After trying to woo the likes of LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, and even Chris Bosh to sign with the Suns, they ended up pursuing the likes of different free agents that were going under the radar at the time. For starters, a day after the Suns got P. J. Tucker to agree with a new deal for the Suns, the Sacramento Kings' point guard Isaiah Thomas ended up agreeing to a four-year contract worth $27 million. However, to ensure the Suns got Thomas, they agreed to trade last season's second round pick Alex Oriakhi and a traded player exception worth $7 million in order to make sure the Kings didn't match their offer since Thomas was still a restricted free agent at the time. On July 16, 2014, the Suns signed power forward Anthony Tolliver, who had played for the Charlotte Bobcats back when they were named that before they became the new Charlotte Hornets, a two-year contract worth $6 million, with his second year only having $400,000 guaranteed with his contract. After the 2014 FIBA World Championship ended for Goran Dragić's team in Slovenia, the Suns planned on getting his brother Zoran Dragić on a contract buyout from Unicaja Málaga in Spain on September 12, 2014. The planned buyout involves the Suns paying $600,000 for the $1,100,000 required by the team, while Goran helped pay his brother the rest that was required for his buyout. The transaction was completed on September 24, 2014; he signed a two-year contract worth $4,012,500.[5][6] Finally, after months of inactivity and even a trade rumor relating to the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Suns and Eric Bledsoe met over a new contract on September 23, 2014 finally agreeing to a five-year contract worth $70 million a day later.[7] The new contract was the biggest since 2006 with Boris Diaw's 5-year, $45 million deal. Six days later, the Suns extended the contracts of Markieff and Marcus Morris to 4 year contracts worth $32 million and $20 million respectively.

On August 26, 2014, the Suns decided to sign both former Suns player Earl Barron (who last played for the New York Knicks) and the undrafted Casey Prather from the Florida Gators to non-guaranteed contracts for training camp. After that, the Suns signed the undrafted Joe Jackson from the Memphis Tigers under that same sort of deal. The Suns also signed Jamil Wilson of the Marquette Golden Eagles in September as well. However, the Suns waived Wilson, Jackson, and Prather from the team on October 14, 2014, while Barron was waived on October 25, 2014 after battling Shavlik Randolph (and Anthony Tolliver) for the final roster spot; everyone that was waived after the pre-season played in the affiliate Bakersfield Jam soon afterwards. However, Barron signed with the Suns again on February 20, 2015 well, after both Shavlik and Anthony left the team in different trades. This time, in his second stint with the Suns, they first gave him a 10-day contract. After succeeding in his initial test with limited playing time, the Suns gave him a second 10-day contract on March 3, 2015 before keeping him for the rest of the season on March 13, 2015. Around the time Earl was playing in his second 10-day contract, the Suns signed Stephen Curry's brother Seth Curry to a 10-day contract on March 10, 2015 after an injury Brandon Knight got against the Golden State Warriors a day earlier. After completing his 10-day contract, Seth was waived and replaced with back-up point guard A.J. Price on March 20, 2015 instead. When he failed under his 10-day stint as a player, he was waived on March 31, 2015 and replaced by affiliate Bakersfield Jam player (and eventual D-League Impact Player of the Year winner) Jerel McNeal a day later. Finally, after he finished his own 10-day contract, the Suns decided to sign Jerel into the 2015–16 season (so long as he'd meet team options by July 21, 2015, which was after the team's Summer League stint ended) on April 11, 2015.

Trades

During Christmas Eve, the Suns traded Anthony Tolliver to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for the rights to Tony Mitchell from North Texas University. Mitchell never played for the Suns, though, and on January 9, 2015, the Suns traded the conditional Minnesota Timberwolves first round draft pick to the Boston Celtics in exchange for power forward/center Brandan Wright hours before their road game against the San Antonio Spurs began. That prompted the Suns to waive their rights to Tony Mitchell before they became guaranteed for the Suns. Nearly a week later, the Suns took part in another trade with the Celtics, this time being part of a three-way deal with the Los Angeles Clippers. In that deal, the Suns grabbed Reggie Bullock from the Clippers while the Celtics took on Shavlik Randolph's salary (as well as Chris Douglas–Roberts and a future second round pick) in order for Doc Rivers' son Austin Rivers to play for the Clippers and be reunited in the process. Finally, during the trade deadline on February 19, 2015, after announcements of Goran Dragić displaying his major displeasure with the team as it was and wanting to be traded to a specific list of teams (those teams being either the rival Los Angeles Lakers, the New York Knicks with Carmelo Anthony, or the Miami Heat with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh), the Suns engaged in the equivalent of a seven-way trade that involved the likes of the Boston Celtics (once more), as well as the Miami Heat, the Milwaukee Bucks, the New Orleans Pelicans, the Philadelphia 76ers, and the Detroit Pistons (the only team Phoenix did not directly make a move with that day).

In the first trade the Suns did on the trade deadline, the Suns traded away the Dragić brothers in guards Goran and Zoran Dragić to the Miami Heat, while the Suns received veteran former-All-Star small forward Danny Granger and two different first round picks from the Heat (one that was originally protected in 2017 until the Ted Stepien Rule changed it to 2018, with it still remaining protected until 2019 (the latest that Phoenix can receive their first selection as a completely unprotected first round pick instead of having a top-7 protection at hand) and another that is completely unprotected in 2021), as well as veteran swingman John Salmons from the Pelicans, while New Orleans received two-time champion guard Norris Cole, power forward Shawne Williams, center Justin Hamilton, and cash considerations, which all came from the Heat. With their second trade, the Suns received guard Marcus Thornton (on an expiring contract) and a 2016 first round draft pick (that'll be from the eventual NBA Finals champion Cleveland Cavaliers) from the Celtics in exchange for their biggest off-season signing in point guard Isaiah Thomas, with Boston also acquiring power forward Jonas Jerebko and guard Luigi Datome from the Pistons in exchange for the return of champion player Tayshaun Prince. Finally, in what was perceived at the time to be the trade the Suns got the biggest value out of other teams, the Suns traded away both rookie point guard Tyler Ennis and downgraded center Miles Plumlee to the Milwaukee Bucks and the projected 2015 Los Angeles Lakers' top 5 protected first round draft pick that was ultimately conveyed by 2018 to the Philadelphia 76ers (in which Philadelphia gave up Rookie of The Year winning guard Michael Carter-Williams to the Bucks as well) in exchange for point guard Brandon Knight and injured former Suns point guard Kendall Marshall. Phoenix waived both John Salmons and Kendall Marshall later that day. Marshall joined the Philadelphia 76ers after this season ended, while Salmons still had before unofficially announcing his NBA retirement on September 23, 2018.

Roster

2014–15 Phoenix Suns roster
Players Coaches
Pos.No.NameHeightWeightDOBFrom
C 30 Barron, Earl 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 1981–08–14 Memphis
PG 2 Bledsoe, Eric (C) 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 1989–12–09 Kentucky
SG 25 Bullock, Reggie 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1991–03–16 North Carolina
SG 20 Goodwin, Archie 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 198 lb (90 kg) 1994–08–17 Kentucky
SF 22 Granger, Danny 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 222 lb (101 kg) 1983–04–20 New Mexico
SG 14 Green, Gerald 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1986–01–26 Gulf Shores Academy (TX)
PG 3 Knight, Brandon Injured 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 189 lb (86 kg) 1991–12–02 Kentucky
C 21 Len, Alex Injured 7 ft 1 in (2.16 m) 265 lb (120 kg) 1993–06–16 Maryland
PG 8 McNeal, Jerel 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1986–06–01 Marquette
SF 15 Morris, Marcus 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 1989–09–02 Kansas
PF 11 Morris, Markieff 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 245 lb (111 kg) 1989–09–02 Kansas
SG 23 Thornton, Marcus 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1987–06–05 LSU
SF 17 Tucker, P. J. 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 224 lb (102 kg) 1985–05–05 Texas
SF 12 Warren, T. J. (R) 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1993–09–05 NC State
PF 32 Wright, Brandan 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1987–10–05 North Carolina
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (DL) On assignment to D-League affiliate
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Last transaction: {{{access-date}}}

Salaries

Player 2014–15 Salary
Eric Bledsoe $13,000,000
Marcus Thornton $8,697,500
P. J. Tucker $5,700,000
Brandan Wright $5,000,000
Oleksiy "Alex" Len $3,649,920
Brandon Knight $3,553,917
Gerald Green $3,500,000
Markieff Morris $3,153,860
Marcus Morris $3,105,301
Danny Granger $2,100,000
T. J. Warren $1,953,120
Reggie Bullock $1,200,720
Archie Goodwin $1,112,200
Earl Barron $390,063
Jerel McNeal $59,686
TOTAL $56,176,287

Because of a few past transactions made from Lance Blanks' tenure that didn't pan out so well for the Suns, Josh Childress was still owed $7,317,500 due to them amnestying his contract two seasons ago, while under the Michael Beasley buyout the Suns did on September 3, 2013, they owed Beasley the equivalent of $2,333,333 for the next three seasons as opposed to giving him the guaranteed amount of $3,000,000 he was owed in his original contract. While Josh Childress' salary did not affect the Suns' overall salary cap to their season that year (and was the last time Phoenix owed money to him, especially considering Childress went to the Sydney Kings in Australia this season), Michael Beasley's contract still affected the Suns' salary despite Beasley going to the Shanghai Sharks in China that season as well before returning to the Miami Heat later on in the season, but only for a few thousand dollars (around $777,778) instead of a few million. In addition, the Suns also bought out the short, small contracts of North Texas University power forward Tony Mitchell, former Suns point guard Kendall Marshall, and John Salmons after finishing their respective deals with the Detroit Pistons, Milwaukee Bucks, and New Orleans Pelicans.[8]

Pre-season

2014 pre-season game log
Total: 5–2 (Home: 3–0; Road: 2–2)
Pre-season: 5–2 (home: 3–0; road: 2–2)
2014–15 season schedule

Regular season

Standings

Pacific DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
z-Golden State Warriors6715.81739–228–1313–382
x-Los Angeles Clippers5626.68311.030–1126–1512–482
Phoenix Suns3943.47628.022–1917–246–1082
Sacramento Kings2953.35438.018–2311–307–982
Los Angeles Lakers2161.25646.012–299–322–1482
Western Conference
#TeamWLPCTGBGP
1z-Golden State Warriors *6715.81782
2y-Houston Rockets *5626.68311.082
3x-Los Angeles Clippers5626.68311.082
4y-Portland Trail Blazers *5131.62216.082
5x-Memphis Grizzlies5527.67112.082
6x-San Antonio Spurs5527.67112.082
7x-Dallas Mavericks5032.61017.082
8x-New Orleans Pelicans4537.54922.082
9Oklahoma City Thunder4537.54922.082
10Phoenix Suns3943.47628.082
11Utah Jazz3844.46329.082
12Denver Nuggets3052.36637.082
13Sacramento Kings2953.35438.082
14Los Angeles Lakers2161.25646.082
15Minnesota Timberwolves1666.19551.082

Game log

2014–15 game log
Total: 39–43 (Home: 22–19; Road: 17–24)
October: 2–0 (home: 2–0; road: 0–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1 October 29 L.A. Lakers W 119–99 Isaiah Thomas (23) Miles Plumlee, Eric Bledsoe, Anthony Tolliver (6) Eric Bledsoe (9) US Airways Center
17,523
1–0
2 October 31 San Antonio W 94–89 Isaiah Thomas (23) Markieff Morris, Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Isaiah Thomas (4) US Airways Center
15,050
2–0
November : 8–8 (home: 3–3; road: 5–5)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
3 November 1 @ Utah L 91–118 Gerald Green (16) Markieff Morris (7) Eric Bledsoe (8) EnergySolutions Arena
17,721
2–1
4 November 4 @ L.A. Lakers W 112–106 Gerald Green (26) Markieff Morris (10) Isaiah Thomas (9) Staples Center
18,997
3–1
5 November 5 Memphis L 91–102 Eric Bledsoe (23) P. J. Tucker (11) Eric Bledsoe (4) US Airways Center
15,377
3–2
6 November 7 Sacramento L 112–114 (2OT) Eric Bledsoe (23) Miles Plumlee (16) Eric Bledsoe (8) US Airways Center
15,476
3–3
7 November 9 Golden State W 107–95 Isaiah Thomas (22) Marcus Morris (9) Isaiah Thomas (7) US Airways Center
16,046
4–3
8 November 12 Brooklyn W 112–104 Gerald Green (28) Miles Plumlee (10) Goran Dragić (6) US Airways Center
15,184
5–3
9 November 14 Charlotte L 95–103 Eric Bledsoe (22) Eric Bledsoe (11) Eric Bledsoe (5) US Airways Center
16,291
5–4
10 November 15 @ L.A. Clippers L 107–120 Gerald Green (26) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Eric Bledsoe (10) Staples Center
19,060
5–5
11 November 17 @ Boston W 118–114 Markieff Morris (30) Markieff Morris, Oleksiy "Alex" Len (7) Marcus Morris, Goran Dragić, Eric Bledsoe (7) TD Garden
16,726
6–5
12 November 19 @ Detroit W 88–86 Eric Bledsoe (18) Miles Plumlee (10) Eric Bledsoe, Goran Dragić, Gerald Green (4) Palace of Auburn Hills
10,686
7–5
13 November 21 @ Philadelphia W 122–96 Isaiah Thomas (23) P. J. Tucker (8) Isaiah Thomas (8) Wells Fargo Center
16,789
8–5
14 November 22 @ Indiana W 106–83 Gerald Green (23) Eric Bledsoe (9) Eric Bledsoe (5) Bankers Life Fieldhouse
16,870
9–5
15 November 24 @ Toronto L 100–104 Eric Bledsoe (25) Markieff Morris, P. J. Tucker (8) Eric Bledsoe (6) Air Canada Centre
19,800
9–6
16 November 26 Denver W 120–112 Gerald Green (24) Markieff Morris (10) Eric Bledsoe (10) US Airways Center
16,099
10–6
17 November 28 @ Denver L 97–112 Eric Bledsoe (16) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (8) Eric Bledsoe (4) Pepsi Center
15,509
10–7
18 November 30 Orlando L 90–93 Goran Dragić (22) Markieff Morris (7) Markieff Morris (10) US Airways Center
15,558
10–8
December : 8–8 (home: 2–3; road: 6–5)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
19 December 2 Indiana W 116–99 Goran Dragić (34) Miles Plumlee, P. J. Tucker (7) Eric Bledsoe (7) US Airways Center
15,059
11–8
20 December 5 @ Dallas W 118–106 Goran Dragić (28) Markieff Morris (10) Goran Dragić (13) American Airlines Center
20,010
12–8
21 December 6 @ Houston L 95–100 Eric Bledsoe (23) P. J. Tucker (8) Goran Dragić (6) Toyota Center
18,060
12–9
22 December 8 @ L.A. Clippers L 120–121 (OT) Eric Bledsoe (27) Eric Bledsoe (11) Eric Bledsoe (16) Staples Center
19,060
12–10
23 December 9 Miami L 97–103 Marcus Morris (25) Miles Plumlee, Eric Bledsoe, Marcus Morris (5) Eric Bledsoe (8) US Airways Center
14,963
12–11
24 December 12 Detroit L 103–105 Goran Dragić (18) P. J. Tucker (9) Goran Dragić (5) US Airways Center
17,007
12–12
25 December 14 @ Oklahoma City L 88–112 Gerald Green (15) Miles Plumlee, Gerald Green (7) Eric Bledsoe, Isaiah Thomas (4) Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
12–13
26 December 15 Milwaukee L 94–96 Markieff Morris (25) Gerald Green (8) P. J. Tucker, Eric Bledsoe (4) US Airways Center
17,327
12–14
27 December 17 @ Charlotte W 111–106 Isaiah Thomas (23) Markieff Morris (8) Goran Dragić (8) Time Warner Cable Arena
15,459
13–14
28 December 20 @ New York W 99–90 Eric Bledsoe (25) Eric Bledsoe (10) Eric Bledsoe, Isaiah Thomas, Gerald Green, P. J. Tucker (3) Madison Square Garden
19,812
14–14
29 December 21 @ Washington W 104–92 Eric Bledsoe, Markieff Morris (17) Eric Bledsoe (9) Goran Dragić (4) Verizon Center
18,207
15–14
30 December 23 Dallas W 124–115 Goran Dragić (25) Eric Bledsoe (10) Eric Bledsoe (11) US Airways Center
18,055
16–14
31 December 26 @ Sacramento W 115–106 Marcus Morris (20) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Eric Bledsoe, Goran Dragić (6) Sleep Train Arena
17,317
17–14
32 December 28 @ L.A. Lakers W 116–107 Goran Dragić (24) Eric Bledsoe, Oleksiy "Alex" Len (8) Eric Bledsoe (8) Staples Center
18,997
18–14
33 December 30 @ New Orleans L 106–110 Goran Dragić (22) Eric Bledsoe (8) Eric Bledsoe, Goran Dragić, Isaiah Thomas (3) Smoothie King Center
16,364
18–15
34 December 31 @ Oklahoma City L 134–137 (OT) Eric Bledsoe (29) Goran Dragić (8) Eric Bledsoe (8) Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
18–16
January : 10–5 (home: 8–2; road: 2–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
35 January 2 Philadelphia W 112–96 Gerald Green, Markieff Morris (21) Goran Dragić (10) Eric Bledsoe (8) US Airways Center
16,514
19–16
36 January 4 Toronto W 125–109 Eric Bledsoe (20) Miles Plumlee (7) Eric Bledsoe (8) US Airways Center
17,166
20–16
37 January 6 @ Milwaukee W 102–96 Markieff Morris (26) Markieff Morris (10) Eric Bledsoe (10) BMO Harris Bradley Center
12,311
21–16
38 January 7 @ Minnesota W 113–111 Goran Dragić (25) P. J. Tucker (9) Goran Dragić (4) Target Center
10,547
22–16
39 January 9 @ San Antonio L 95–100 Eric Bledsoe, P. J. Tucker (19) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (12) Eric Bledsoe (10) AT&T Center
18,581
22–17
40 January 11 @ Memphis L 110–122 (2OT) Isaiah Thomas (20) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (13) Eric Bledsoe (5) FedExForum
17,212
22–18
41 January 13 Cleveland W 107–100 Markieff Morris (35) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (10) Eric Bledsoe (6) US Airways Center
16,819
23–18
42 January 16 Minnesota W 110–99 Goran Dragić (21) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (12) Goran Dragić (8) US Airways Center
17,441
24–18
43 January 19 L.A. Lakers W 115–100 Goran Dragić, Isaiah Thomas (24) Goran Dragić (9) Eric Bledsoe (7) US Airways Center
17,435
25–18
44 January 21 Portland W 118–113 Eric Bledsoe (33) P. J. Tucker (13) Eric Bledsoe (6) US Airways Center
16,703
26–18
45 January 23 Houston L 111–113 Eric Bledsoe (25) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Eric Bledsoe (9) US Airways Center
16,701
26–19
46 January 25 L.A. Clippers L 100–120 Isaiah Thomas (25) Miles Plumlee (7) Goran Dragić (8) US Airways Center
17,066
26–20
47 January 28 Washington W 106–98 Goran Dragić (20) P. J. Tucker (10) Eric Bledsoe (6) US Airways Center
16,209
27–20
48 January 30 Chicago W 99–93 Eric Bledsoe (23) Markieff Morris (14) Eric Bledsoe (6) US Airways Center
18,055
28–20
49 January 31 @ Golden State L 87–106 Markieff Morris (17) Markieff Morris (11) Isaiah Thomas (5) Oracle Arena
19,596
28–21
February : 3–7 (home: 2–4; road: 1–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
50 February 2 Memphis L 101–102 Isaiah Thomas (24) Oleksiy "Alex" Len, Eric Bledsoe (7) Eric Bledsoe (7) US Airways Center
17,199
28–22
51 February 5 @ Portland L 87–108 Markieff Morris (18) Markieff Morris (8) Goran Dragić (5) Moda Center
19,488
28–23
52 February 6 Utah W 100–93 Marcus Morris (34) Marcus Morris (12) Eric Bledsoe, Goran Dragić (6) US Airways Center
18,055
29–23
53 February 8 @ Sacramento L 83–85 Isaiah Thomas (26) Miles Plumlee (12) Isaiah Thomas, Goran Dragić (5) Sleep Train Arena
17,013
29–24
54 February 10 Houston L 118–127 Eric Bledsoe (32) P. J. Tucker, Miles Plumlee (7) Isaiah Thomas (6) US Airways Center
17,071
29–25
All-Star Break
55 February 20 @ Minnesota L 109–111 Markieff Morris (31) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (10) Eric Bledsoe, Gerald Green (6) Target Center
14,077
29–26
56 February 21 @ Chicago L 107–112 P. J. Tucker (20) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Eric Bledsoe (8) United Center
22,292
29–27
57 February 23 Boston L 110–115 Eric Bledsoe (21) Oleksiy "Alex" Len, P. J. Tucker (12) Eric Bledsoe (10) US Airways Center
17,076
29–28
58 February 25 @ Denver W 110–96 Brandon Knight (19) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (10) Eric Bledsoe, Brandon Knight (6) Pepsi Center
12,813
30–28
59 February 26 Oklahoma City W 117–113 (OT) Markieff Morris (29) Eric Bledsoe (13) Eric Bledsoe (9) US Airways Center
17,514
31–28
60 February 28 San Antonio L 74–101 Marcus Morris (19) P. J. Tucker (11) Markieff Morris, Archie Goodwin (3) US Airways Center
18,055
31–29
March : 7–8 (home: 4–5; road: 3–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
61 March 2 @ Miami L 98–115 Eric Bledsoe, P. J. Tucker (20) P. J. Tucker (14) Brandon Knight (7) American Airlines Arena
19,600
31–30
62 March 4 @ Orlando W 105–100 Brandon Knight (28) Eric Bledsoe (7) Eric Bledsoe (9) Amway Center
15,822
32–30
63 March 6 @ Brooklyn W 108–100 (OT) Eric Bledsoe, Marcus Morris, Markieff Morris (19) Eric Bledsoe (10) Brandon Knight (7) Barclays Center
16,445
33–30
64 March 7 @ Cleveland L 79–89 Markieff Morris (16) P. J. Tucker (9) Eric Bledsoe (9) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
33–31
65 March 9 Golden State L 80–98 Eric Bledsoe (19) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Eric Bledsoe, Markieff Morris (3) US Airways Center
18,055
33–32
66 March 11 Minnesota W 106–97 Markieff Morris (24) Marcus Morris, Brandan Wright (9) Eric Bledsoe (9) US Airways Center
17,367
34–32
67 March 13 Atlanta L 87–96 Markieff Morris (22) P. J. Tucker (9) Eric Bledsoe (6) US Airways Center
17,136
34–33
68 March 15 New York W 102–89 Eric Bledsoe (21) Brandan Wright (11) Eric Bledsoe (11) US Airways Center
17,264
35–33
69 March 19 New Orleans W 74–72 Markieff Morris (17) Marcus Morris (13) Marcus Morris (4) US Airways Center
18,055
36–33
70 March 21 @ Houston W 117–102 Eric Bledsoe (34) Marcus Morris (10) Markieff Morris (6) Toyota Center
18,340
37–33
71 March 22 Dallas W 98–92 Eric Bledsoe (20) Markieff Morris (13) Eric Bledsoe (9) US Airways Center
17,435
38–33
72 March 25 Sacramento L 99–108 Markieff Morris (24) P. J. Tucker (11) Markieff Morris, P. J. Tucker (4) US Airways Center
17,589
38–34
73 March 27 Portland L 81–87 Marcus Morris (19) Marcus Morris (12) Eric Bledsoe (7) US Airways Center
17,219
38–35
74 March 29 Oklahoma City L 97–109 Markieff Morris (24) Oleksiy "Alex" Len (11) Eric Bledsoe (7) US Airways Center
17,538
38–36
75 March 30 @ Portland L 86–109 Gerald Green, T. J. Warren (13) P. J. Tucker (11) Eric Bledsoe (7) Moda Center
19,441
38–37
April : 1–6 (home: 1–1; road: 0–5)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
76 April 2 @ Golden State L 106–107 Eric Bledsoe (18) Markieff Morris, Brandan Wright (12) Eric Bledsoe (11) Oracle Arena
19,596
38–38
77 April 4 Utah W 87–85 Gerald Green (24) P. J. Tucker (9) Eric Bledsoe (5) US Airways Center
18,055
39–38
78 April 7 @ Atlanta L 69–96 Gerald Green (15) Markieff Morris, Brandan Wright (6) Eric Bledsoe, Markieff Morris (5) Philips Arena
18,650
39–39
79 April 8 @ Dallas L 104–107 Gerald Green (30) Marcus Morris (10) Markieff Morris (7) American Airlines Center
20,262
39–40
80 April 10 @ New Orleans L 75–90 Eric Bledsoe (19) Markieff Morris (11) Eric Bledsoe (7) Smoothie King Center
17,954
39–41
81 April 12 @ San Antonio L 91–107 Gerald Green (23) Marcus Morris, P. J. Tucker (8) Eric Bledsoe (10) AT&T Center
18,581
39–42
82 April 14 L.A. Clippers L 101–112 Archie Goodwin (18) Markieff Morris, P. J. Tucker (8) Eric Bledsoe (9) US Airways Center
18,055
39–43
2014–15 season schedule

Player statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game
Phoenix Suns statistics
Player GP GS MPG FG% 3FG% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Earl Barron1618.9.308.500.5001.80.3.3.12.0
Eric Bledsoe818134.6.447.324.8005.26.11.6.617.0
Reggie Bullock*1106.8.063.000.5000.90.2.1.20.4
Seth Curry204.0.000.000.1.00.5.0.00.0
Goran Dragić*525233.4.501.355.7463.64.11.0.216.2
Zoran Dragić*602.2.250.000.6670.50.2.0.01.0
Tyler Ennis*807.3.429.3331.0000.91.8.0.32.8
Archie Goodwin41213.0.393.293.7351.81.1.4.25.6
Gerald Green74419.5.416.354.8252.51.2.6.211.9
Brandon Knight*11931.5.357.313.8282.14.5.5.113.4
Alex Len694422.0.507.333.7026.60.5.51.56.3
Jerel McNeal606.0.273.5001.0000.50.3.5.21.5
Marcus Morris813525.2.434.358.6284.81.6.8.210.4
Markieff Morris828231.5.465.318.7636.22.31.2.515.3
Miles Plumlee*542818.6.549..5005.10.5.61.04.3
A.J. Price*508.8.214.000.0.61.2.0.01.2
Shavlik Randolph*1606.3.240.000.5001.60.2.3.11.1
Isaiah Thomas*46125.7.426.391.8722.43.71.0.115.2
Marcus Thornton*909.0.325.105.8001.40.2.7.03.6
Anthony Tolliver*24011.3.351.387.6671.80.4.2.03.3
P. J. Tucker786330.6.438.345.7276.41.61.4.39.1
T. J. Warren40115.4.528.238.7372.10.6.5.26.1
Brandan Wright*40721.5.580.000.6674.90.6.81.27.0

* – Stats with the Suns.

Injuries/Personal games missed

Player Duration Reason for Missed Time Games Missed
Start End
P. J. Tucker August 12, 2014 November 4, 2014 Suspension without $155,455 in pay for super-extreme DUI 3
T. J. Warren October 21, 2014 November 9, 2014 Injured left thumb by being caught in a Lakers jersey 6
Tyler Ennis November 13, 2014 November 17, 2014 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
T. J. Warren November 13, 2014 November 17, 2014 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
P. J. Tucker November 17, 2014 November 19, 2014 Missed team bus for flight from Los Angeles to Boston 1
Isaiah Thomas November 25, 2014 December 12, 2014 Twisted ankle against Toronto at 4th quarter 8
Goran Dragić December 14, 2014 December 18, 2014 Had a strained lower back problem 2
Archie Goodwin December 25, 2014 December 31, 2014 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 3
Tyler Ennis December 25, 2014 December 31, 2014 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 3
T. J. Warren December 25, 2014 December 31, 2014 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 3
Brandan Wright January 9, 2015 January 11, 2015 Wasn't ready to play for the Suns yet due to recent trade 1
Archie Goodwin January 14, 2015 January 21, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Reggie Bullock January 15, 2015 January 21, 2015 Wasn't ready to play for the Suns yet due to recent trade 2
Tyler Ennis January 22, 2015 January 28, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
T. J. Warren January 22, 2015 January 28, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Brandan Wright January 25, 2015 January 28, 2015 Had a sore left heel bone 1
Archie Goodwin January 29, 2015 February 2, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Reggie Bullock January 29, 2015 February 2, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Gerald Green January 30, 2015 January 31, 2015 Rest a tired leg 1
Tyler Ennis February 4, 2015 February 8, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
T. J. Warren February 4, 2015 February 8, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Oleksiy "Alex" Len February 5, 2015 February 20, 2015 Injured right ankle during third quarter against Portland 3
Archie Goodwin February 8, 2015 February 11, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Reggie Bullock February 8, 2015 February 11, 2015 Assigned to the Bakersfield Jam by the Suns 2
Eric Bledsoe February 8, 2015 February 10, 2015 Traveled to Alabama for the birth of his son Ethan 1
Brandon Knight February 20, 2015 February 21, 2015 Wasn't ready to play for the Suns yet due to recent trade 1
Marcus Thornton February 20, 2015 February 23, 2015 Wasn't ready to play for the Suns yet due to recent trade 2
Earl Barron February 21, 2015 February 23, 2015 Wasn't ready to play for the Suns yet due to recent signing 1
Oleksiy "Alex" Len March 7, 2015 March 9, 2015 Injured right ankle during third quarter against Brooklyn 1
Brandon Knight March 11, 2015 March 29, 2015 Injured left ankle during second quarter against Golden State 8
Oleksiy "Alex" Len March 15, 2015 March 21, 2015 Injured right ankle during fourth quarter against Atlanta 2
Marcus Thornton March 19, 2015 April 7, 2015 Injured right big toe during practice 9
Brandon Knight March 30, 2015 October 28, 2015 Left ankle continued to bother him 8
Oleksiy "Alex" Len April 2, 2015 October 28, 2015 Broken nose during road game against Portland 7
Marcus Thornton April 10, 2015 April 14, 2015 Hurt left ankle during practice 3
Brandan Wright April 12, 2015 April 14, 2015 Had a left ankle sprain after the last game against New Orleans 2
Reggie Bullock April 12, 2015 April 14, 2015 Had a concussion after the last game against New Orleans 2
Marcus Morris April 14, 2015 April 14, 2015 Had a stomach virus before the last game of the season 1

Awards and records

Awards

All-Star

  • Isaiah Thomas was announced as one of eight different participants to compete in the Taco Bell Skills Challenge during All-Star Weekend. His first opponent in the revamped competition was John Wall of the Washington Wizards. He'd end up being the shortest player to ever participate in the Taco Bell Skills Challenge. Thomas end up losing to the eventual champion Patrick Beverley (who replaced his initial first round opponent John Wall) in the first round.
    • Eventual Suns player Brandon Knight also lost to Beverley in the competition, only as the final opponent in the championship round.

Records

  • When the Suns traded Shavlik Randolph to the Boston Celtics and got Reggie Bullock from the Los Angeles Clippers, they were the only team in the league to not have any players go over the age of 30. The Suns continued with that line-up for around a month until acquiring 31-year-old Danny Granger in a multi-team trade and later signed the 33-year-old Earl Barron from the affiliate Bakersfield Jam (which was the first time the Suns called someone who initially came from the Jam D-League team to the Suns) to two 10 day contracts before signing back on for the rest of the season.
  • On the Suns' 117–113 overtime victory over Russell Westbrook and the Oklahoma City Thunder, Eric Bledsoe recorded 28 points on 11/16 shooting, 13 rebounds, 9 assists, 4 blocks, and 1 steal. Eric was the 9th player in NBA history to record similar kinds of statistics during the regular season, as well as the first point guard to record 50% shooting for 28 or more points while grabbing 13 or more rebounds, getting 9 or more assists, 4 or more blocks, and at least one steal in a game.[9]
  • The Suns became the first (and so far, only) team in the history of the NBA to host a +43 and a -43 point differential in-between games this season, with them getting a -43 from their 117–113 overtime victory against the Oklahoma City Thunder to their brutal 101–74 loss to the defending champion San Antonio Spurs late in February, and then getting a +43 from going off of a close 74–72 victory over the New Orleans Pelicans at home to having a blowout 117–102 victory over the Houston Rockets on the road in March.

Team records

  • The Suns broke their season-opening record of three-point shots made in their opening game with 16 made three-pointers in their 119–99 victory against the Los Angeles Lakers on October 29, 2014. (Their previous record was 13 on Halloween day in 2006, which coincidentally was also against the Lakers.)[10]
  • Isaiah Thomas' 23 points against the Lakers on October 29 was the most points a Suns player scored off the bench under their debut appearance with the team.[11]
  • Isaiah Thomas' 200 points in 13 games was the most scored by a bench player since Tom Chambers during the 1992–93 season.
  • The two blowout road victories against the Philadelphia 76ers and Indiana Pacers on November 21 & 22, 2014 was the first time the Suns won back-to-back games on the road by 20 or more points since 2004.
  • Gerald Green's 24 games where he'd make at least one three-pointer (starting with that November 21, 2014 victory against the Philadelphia 76ers and ending on their January 6, 2015 victory against the Milwaukee Bucks) tied the Suns' highest mark with his former teammate Channing Frye getting at least one three-pointer going in for 24 straight games in the 2010–11 NBA season.
  • Starting on January 13, 2015 against the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Suns begin an 8-game homestand that was also the longest homestand in franchise history. With their victory over the Washington Wizards on January 28, the Suns were guaranteed to end their homestand with a winning record; they ended it with a 6–2 record.
  • With the Suns getting Seth Curry on March 11, 2015, they have officially had over 10% of their all-time roster representing relatives (fathers, sons, brothers, cousins, nephews, etc.) that had also played in either the NBA and/or the ABA at one point.[12]
  • The 24 points the Suns scored in the first half of their 101–74 loss to the defending champion San Antonio Spurs on February 28, 2015 was the franchise's lowest scoring half ever. That record was broken a year later on January 3, 2016 against the Los Angeles Lakers with 22 points scored in the first half.
  • The Suns' 74–72 victory over the New Orleans Pelicans on March 19, 2015 tied the fewest points scored by the Suns in a victory (tying the record set on January 30, 1998 against the Miami Heat on the road with a 74–71 victory there), as well as set the fewest points scored in a victory for the team at a home game.
  • With the Suns having 23 different players getting playing time with the team at one point or another in the season, it tied the 1996–97 Phoenix Suns season for the most players to play at least one game with the Suns in a single season. That mark was matched once again next season, although for different reasons.

Milestones

  • With the Suns signing Zoran Dragić alongside his brother Goran Dragić, as well as extending both Markieff Morris and his twin brother Marcus Morris on September 29, 2014, this team marked the first time ever that different pairs of siblings/brothers played for the same team. All four players appeared for the first time in the same game under a November loss against the Los Angeles Clippers. Both pairs of brothers later made their first (and only) appearances together at the same time late in the fourth quarter and each produced numbers throughout the game in their January 2, 2015 112–96 victory against the Philadelphia 76ers.
  • When the Suns traded Shavlik Randolph for Reggie Bullock on January 15, 2015, the Suns made sure they had no players that were over the age of 30 on their roster. This marks one of the few, if only times where an NBA team had no one over the age of 30 signed onto their roster. It continued to be the case until the February 19, 2015 when the Suns got Danny Granger in a trade with the Miami Heat and later on got Earl Barron from the affiliate Bakersfield Jam (back) on the team in the process.

Team milestones

  • Goran Dragić surpassed forward Cedric Ceballos as the Suns' 28th best scorer of all time on the team near the start of the third quarter of the October 29, 2014 game against the Los Angeles Lakers. Goran scored 18 points as the Suns blew out the Lakers by the final score of 119–99.
  • Goran surpassed center James Edwards to become the Suns' 27th best all-time scorer near the start of the third quarter by making two free throws in the Halloween game against the defending champion San Antonio Spurs. Goran scored 10 points as the Suns kept it close and won by the score of 94–89.
  • Goran surpassed former Sixth Man of the Year small forward and current Suns broadcaster Eddie Johnson to become the Suns' 26th best all-time scorer near the end of the fourth quarter by scoring a critical layup during the last minute of the game. He scored 22 points in the November 17, 2014 game against the Boston Celtics as the Suns won a close one by the score of 118–114.
  • Goran Dragić surpassed Hall of Fame guard Dennis Johnson to become the Suns' 25th best all-time scorer with 7.6 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter by scoring a quick layup to end the 120–112 victory on the November 26, 2014 home game against the Denver Nuggets.
  • The Suns' 10–6 record was their best start to the season since the 2009–10 NBA season.
  • Goran surpassed point guard Kyle Macy early in the second quarter with a two-point shot as the Suns' 24th best all-time scorer on December 2, 2014 against the Indiana Pacers. He then surpassed point guard Stephon Marbury with less than a minute left in the second quarter with another two-point shot to become the Suns' 23rd best all-time scorer as he scored 22 points in the first half and a then-season high 34 points in a blowout 117–99 victory over Indiana at the US Airways Center.
  • Eric Bledsoe's first ever triple-double against his former team, the Los Angeles Clippers, in overtime on December 8, 2014 was the first time a Suns player recorded a triple-double since Boris Diaw back in April 14, 2006 against the Golden State Warriors.
  • Eric's second triple-double of his career on December 23, 2014 against the Dallas Mavericks was also the first time a Suns player had multiple triple-doubles in a season since Boris Diaw when he had four different triple-doubles in the 2005–06 NBA season.
  • Goran Dragić tied his former teammate Grant Hill with a two-point shot near the middle of the second quarter and then surpass him with a running lay-up in the middle of the second quarter to become the Suns' 22nd best all-time scorer on December 26, 2014 against the Sacramento Kings. He recorded 16 points as the Suns beat the short-handed Kings 115–106.
  • Goran tied point guard and former basketball coach Clem Haskins to become the Suns' 21st best all-time scorer near the end of the fourth quarter by making two free-throws to help the Suns increase their lead over the Los Angeles Lakers. Goran scored 24 points as the Suns decimated the Lakers 116-107 out at the Staples Center on December 28, 2014. He'd then surpass that total on December 30, 2014 with 8 minutes left in the first quarter against the New Orleans Pelicans at the Smoothie King Center in a close loss to them.
  • Goran surpassed future Hall of Famer point guard and current Milwaukee Bucks head coach Jason Kidd to become the Suns' 20th best all-time scorer near the beginning of the third quarter with a fast-break layup after a winning jump-ball in the Thunder's side of the field on New Year's Eve. He'd record 21 points in a close overtime loss against the Thunder.
  • When Eric Bledsoe had over 1,200 points, 400 rebounds, and 400 assists throughout this season, it made Eric the fifth Suns player to record such totals in a single season, with Jason Kidd (back in the 2000–01 NBA season), Jeff Hornacek (back in the 1991–92 NBA season), Alvan Adams (in his rookie season), and Gail Goodrich (back in the team's inaugural season) being the first to do so earlier.

Transactions

Trades

July 11, 2014
To Phoenix Suns

United States Isaiah Thomas (sign and trade)

To Sacramento Kings
United States Alex Oriakhi
$7 Million Traded Player Exception
December 24, 2014
To Phoenix Suns

United States Tony Mitchell

To Detroit Pistons

United States Anthony Tolliver

January 9, 2015
To Phoenix Suns

United States Brandan Wright

To Boston Celtics
2016 second round pick (from Minnesota)[I]
2017 second round pick (from Minnesota)[I]
Traded Player Exception
January 15, 2015 Three–team trade
To Los Angeles Clippers

United States Austin Rivers (from Boston)

To Boston Celtics
United States Shavlik Randolph (from Phoenix)
United States Chris Douglas–Roberts (from L.A. Clippers)
2017 second round pick (from L.A. Clippers)
$2.4 Million Traded Player Exception (from L.A. Clippers)
To Phoenix Suns

United States Reggie Bullock (from L.A. Clippers)

February 19, 2015
Seven–team trade
To Phoenix Suns
United States Brandon Knight (from Milwaukee)
United States Marcus Thornton (from Boston)
United States Danny Granger (from Miami)
United States John Salmons (from New Orleans)
United States Kendall Marshall (from Milwaukee)
2016 first round pick (from Cleveland via Boston)
2018 Top 7 protected first round pick (from Miami)[II]
2021 first round pick (from Miami)
$5.5 Million Traded Player Exception (from Miami)
To Miami Heat
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia/Slovenia Goran Dragić (from Phoenix)
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia/Slovenia Zoran Dragić (from Phoenix)
To Milwaukee Bucks
Canada Tyler Ennis (from Phoenix)
United States Miles Plumlee (from Phoenix)
United States Michael Carter–Williams (from Philadelphia)
To Boston Celtics
United States Isaiah Thomas (from Phoenix)
Sweden Jonas Jerebko (from Detroit)
Italy Luigi Datome (from Detroit)
To Philadelphia 76ers
2018 first round pick (from L.A. Lakers via Phoenix)[III]
To Detroit Pistons
United States Tayshaun Prince (from Boston)
To New Orleans Pelicans
United States Norris Cole (from Miami)
United States Shawne Williams (from Miami)
United States/Croatia Justin Hamilton (from Miami)
Cash Considerations (from Miami)

^ I: The Minnesota Timberwolves were initially going to send their own first round pick (top–12 protected from 2015–2016) to Boston moving forward. However, because Minnesota could not go over their threshold they set themselves up for the Celtics by 2016 (even with two #1 draft picks at their disposal and them both being Rookie of the Year winners), the Timberwolves conveyed their 2016 and 2017 second round draft picks to Boston instead.[13]
^ II: Even though the Suns initially had the Miami Heat's 2017 (top–7 protected) pick as consideration for what transpired in the trade with the Dragić brothers, Philadelphia wound up with the Heat's 2016 first round pick due to an earlier trade the Heat made with the 76ers during their brief Big Trio era. As a result of the Ted Stepien Rule, the Suns were forbidden from having the Heat's 2017 protected first round pick in the event it fell outside of protection due to the fact that the Heat would be trading two first round draft picks of their own accord in a row to different teams. Because of this fact, Phoenix had to wait until 2018 (where Miami's pick was at #16 that year) before acquiring the first of Miami's two first round selections in exchange.
^ III: The Los Angeles Lakers initially sent their 2015 first round selection through an earlier trade involving the (at the time) soon-to-be-retired Steve Nash. However, their selection found itself in the top 5 that year and their 2016 and 2017 selections went into the top 3 as the second pick in each draft, so the Lakers sent their own first round pick to Philadelphia completely unprotected in 2018 instead. The selection was ultimately conveyed as a top 10 pick at #10, which resulted in it not being sent down to the Boston Celtics that year via another trade. However, the 76ers traded that selection they acquired from the Suns back to them in exchange for the two Miami Heat selections for 2018 instead of keeping that selection.

Additions

Player Signed Former team
P. J. Tucker Signed 3-year deal worth $16.5 Million Phoenix Suns
Isaiah Thomas Signed 4-year deal worth $27 Million Sacramento Kings
Anthony Tolliver Signed 2-year deal worth $6 Million Charlotte Bobcats / Hornets[a]
Ronald Shavlik Randolph Signed 1-year deal worth $1.23 Million Phoenix Suns
Eric Bledsoe Signed 5-year deal worth $70 Million Phoenix Suns
Zoran Dragić Signed 2-year deal worth $4 Million Spain Club Baloncesto Unicaja Málaga, S.A.D.
Markieff Morris Signed 4-year extension worth $32 Million[b] Phoenix Suns
Marcus Morris Signed 4-year extension worth $20 Million[b] Phoenix Suns
Earl Barron Signed two 10-day contracts / 1-year deal worth $390,063 New York Knicks / Phoenix Suns / China Shanxi Zhongyu Brave Dragons / Bakersfield Jam[c]
Seth Curry Signed a 10-day contract worth $48,028 Orlando Magic / Erie BayHawks[d]
A.J. Price Signed a 10-day contract worth $62,552 Cleveland Cavaliers / Indiana Pacers[e]
Jerel McNeal Signed a 10-day contract / 2-year deal worth $904,745[f] Bakersfield Jam

^ a: When Anthony Tolliver first signed up to play for Charlotte, the professional basketball team was known as the Charlotte Bobcats at the time. However, word also quickly spread that after the 2013–14 NBA season (which was also the Bobcats' 10th season in the NBA), they would be renamed to the Charlotte Hornets in order to continue the original team name's legacy from the 1988–89 NBA season to the 2001–02 NBA season before they moved to New Orleans and eventually became the New Orleans Pelicans. Even though Tolliver was on the team when they renamed the Bobcats to the Hornets, he never played for the Hornets and instead played under the old Bobcats moniker.
^ b: Both Markieff and Marcus Morris noted that they were willing to take discounts on their contracts in order to stay with each other in the future. On September 29, the Morris Twins split the total value among each other in order to sign contracts that allowed themselves to stay in Phoenix together for the long term.
^ c: The last NBA team Earl Barron played for before first trying his hand out with the Suns during pre-season was the New York Knicks late into the 2012–13 NBA season before deciding not to play at all last season for unknown reasons. While Earl did battle hard to steal a spot from either Shavlik Randolph or Anthony Tolliver during his first visit in the season, he ultimately did not make the initial roster. However, he did originally go to the Suns' D-League affiliate in the Bakersfield Jam as an affiliate player after impressing the Suns during the pre-season. Earl continued playing with the Jam until January 27, 2015, when he was bought out of his contract to play with the Shanxi Zhongyu Brave Dragons in China for the rest of their season. Unfortunately for Earl, Shanxi ended their season before he even got a chance to play with that team, so he ended up going back to Bakersfield on February 18, 2015. He played one more game with the Jam before signing his (first) 10-day contract with the Suns on February and later on sign for the rest of the season on March.
^ d: The last NBA team Seth Curry had technically played for before signing a deal with the Suns was the Orlando Magic during the pre-season this season. However, after not making it to their roster officially, Seth had played the rest of the season up until March 11, 2015, with the Magic's D-League affiliate, the Erie BayHawks instead. The last official NBA team Seth played for was the Cleveland Cavaliers, but he also spent time with the Santa Cruz Warriors before the end of the 2013–14 NBA season instead. He also played for the Suns during this season's Summer League squad in Las Vegas.
^ e: A.J. Price had initially started the season playing for the Cleveland Cavaliers around the pre-season, but like Seth Curry with the Orlando Magic, he was waived before the beginning of the season. Price then played for an injury-depleted Indiana Pacers team that was at the time without Paul George and some of their other star players on November 6, 2014 before being waived near the end of the month before returning to Cleveland on November 30, 2014 and remained on their roster until January 7, 2015.
^ f: The Suns decided to initially sign guard Jerel McNeal to a 10-day contract worth $29,843 on April Fool's Day in 2015 after waiving A.J. Price off of his own 10-day contract. After making his professional debut in the league during that time, the Suns decided to sign him for the rest of the season and potentially go into the 2015–16 season on April 11, 2015. For the remainder of this season, Jerel gained an addition $29,843 (thus giving him a total amount of $59,686 for his time with the Suns this season), while he would have maintained an additional $845,059 for the next season in his contract if he remained on the team before July 21, 2015.

Subtractions

Player Reason left New team
Bogdan Bogdanović Signed a new contract Turkey Fenerbahçe Ülker[g]
Channing Frye Unrestricted free agent Orlando Magic
Alex Oriakhi Traded under a restricted free agent sign-and-trade Sacramento Kings / Lithuania Pieno Žvaigždės[h]
Ishmael "Ish" Smith Waived / Free Agent Houston Rockets / Oklahoma City Thunder / New Orleans Pelicans / Philadelphia 76ers[i]
Dionte Christmas Waived / Free Agent New Orleans Pelicans / France Paris-Levallois Basket[i]
Leandro Barbosa Unrestricted free agent Golden State Warriors
Alec Brown Signed a new contract Spain Obradoiro Clube de Amigos do Baloncesto / Bakersfield Jam[g]
Chukwuemeka "Emeka" Okafor Free Agent / Waived Philadelphia 76ers / Delaware 87ers / New Orleans Pelicans[j]
Anthony Tolliver Traded Detroit Pistons
Tony Mitchell Waived Puerto Rico Atléticos de San Germán[k]
Ronald Shavlik Randolph
Isaiah Thomas
Traded[l] Boston Celtics[m]
Goran Dragić
Zoran Dragić
Traded Miami Heat[n]
Miles Plumlee
Tyler Ennis
Traded Milwaukee Bucks
Kendall Marshall Waived Philadelphia 76ers[o]
John Salmons Waived — (Retired)[o]
Seth Curry 10 Day Contract Expired Erie BayHawks
A.J. Price 10 Day Contract Expired China Shanghai Dongfang Sharks[p]

^ g: Even though both Bogdan Bogdanović and Alec Brown initially had contracts to play in European teams for multiple seasons, both players still have their rights retained by the Suns. On July 6, 2014, Bogdan Bogdanović signed a contract to allow him to stay with the Fenerbahçe Ülker in Turkey for at least two seasons guaranteed. Alec Brown, however, had signed a contract to play for the Obradoiro Clube de Amigos do Baloncesto in Spain for at least one season guaranteed, but he'd never play for the team during this season due to an earlier injury he received during the Summer League and had instead decided to sign with the Suns' D-League affiliate team, the Bakersfield Jam, for the rest of the season starting on February 11, 2015. However, Brown decided to have a second chance to play for the Obradoiro Clube de Amigos do Baloncesto a year later on July 31, 2015.
^ h: Despite the fact that Alex Oriakhi never played for the Suns, his draft rights were still retained to the point where he even would have played for the Suns' Summer League team this season had he not been traded a day before the Las Vegas Summer League competition began. However, because the Kings had no room to offer him a spot on the team, Oriakhi sign a one-year contract to play with the Pieno Žvaigždės in Lithuania.
^ i: Ishmael "Ish" Smith and Dionte Christmas were waived from the Houston Rockets and the New Orleans Pelicans' rosters respectively before the regular season began. Dionte signed with Paris-Levallois Basket in France on November 12, 2014, while Ishmeal signed with the Oklahoma City Thunder on November 8, 2014 thanks to their roster being depleted with many injuries around that time (especially with both star players Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook) before being traded to the New Orleans Pelicans and waived on February 19, 2015 and signing with the Philadelphia 76ers three days later after they waived Malcolm Thomas from their roster.
^ j: Despite the fact that Chukwuemeka "Emeka" Okafor never played a game for the Suns during the previous season, as well as not play at all since early 2013 back with the Washington Wizards, he'd continue to rehabilitate his body throughout the rest of this season and not play in the process. Okafor was only deemed ready to play NBA basketball again on May 30, 2017, and had finally signed up with a new squad in the Philadelphia 76ers (at least for their training camp) on September 23, 2017. He was cut by Philadelphia on October 14, 2017, before the regular season began that year, but he soon afterwards played for the Delaware 87ers officially that same year in an attempt to get back to an NBA team, which he did on February 3, 2018 with a 10-day contract signed with the New Orleans Pelicans; Okafor signed another 10-day contract on February 13 before signing a one-year deal to remain in New Orleans on February 23, 2018.
^ k: Even though Tony Mitchell was traded to the Suns on Christmas Eve in exchange for Anthony Tolliver leaving for the Detroit Pistons, Mitchell never played a single NBA game with the team. He was waived on January 9, 2015 after the Suns traded their conditional first round draft pick they received from the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2012 from the three-way trade with Minnesota (which eventually turned into two second round draft picks for 2016 and 2017) and the then-New Orleans Hornets to the Boston Celtics for power forward/center Brandan Wright. Mitchell signed with the Atléticos de San Germán in Puerto Rico for the rest of the 2014–15 season.
^ l: While both Shavlik Randolph and Isaiah Thomas were traded to the Celtics, they were traded for different reasons. Shavlik was traded as a part of a three-way deal involving the Los Angeles Clippers for the purpose of getting the Clippers' Reggie Bullock, while Isaiah was traded in a seven-way deal involving the Milwaukee Bucks, Miami Heat, New Orleans Pelicans, Philadelphia 76ers, and Detroit Pistons that also involved trading the Dragić brothers, Miles Plumlee, rookie guard Tyler Ennis, and the Los Angeles Lakers' Top-5 protected draft pick this year (Top-3 protected the next two years later) in exchange for Brandon Knight, Marcus Thornton, Danny Granger, Kendall Marshall, John Salmons, the 2016 first round pick Boston got from the Cleveland Cavaliers earlier (which turned out to be Skal Labissière), and two future first-round draft picks from the Miami Heat (one of which was completely unprotected).
^ m: Initially, both Randolph and Thomas stayed with the team throughout most of the season after their respective trades came up. However, Shavlik Randolph was waived on April 6, 2015, and signed with the Denver Nuggets two days later, but never played any games with them and was waived on April 9, 2015, one day after he signed the contract with Denver.
^ n: While both of the Dragić brothers played out the rest of this season with the Miami Heat, Zoran played some of his games with the Heat's D-League affiliate team, the Sioux Falls Skyforce, instead of with his older brother, Goran, at Miami.
^ o: Even though both Kendall Marshall and John Salmons were traded (back) to the Suns on the February 19, 2015 trade deadline alongside Kendall's former Bucks teammate Brandon Knight, Marcus Thornton from the Boston Celtics, and Danny Granger from the Miami Heat (and three future first round draft picks), Marshall never suited up under his second chance with the Suns in his career (as did Salmons), as they were both waived from the team on the same day, thanks (in part) due to Marshall's anterior cruciate ligament injury he sustained with the Bucks earlier in his career. Marshall signed a multi-year deal for the Philadelphia 76ers on September 13, 2015, while Salmons ultimately retired before the start of the 2018–19 season due to him being of older age than where he was at during this season.
^ p: After being waived from the Suns once completing his 10-day contract with the team, A.J. Price did not find a new team to play under until September 11, 2015, when he signed a one-year deal to play for the Shanghai Dongfang Sharks of the Chinese Basketball Association.

References

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