Phoenix didnât just âretain depth.â It paid starter money for a specific kind of order: a guard who can keep the Sunsâ offense functional when the stars sit, and who wonât hemorrhage advantages when teams load up on the first action. Collin Gillespieâs four-year, $48 million deal is a bet that connective point-guard playâlow-mistake initiation, second-side reads, and point-of-attack competitivenessâcan be the difference between surviving the non-Booker minutes and losing them by eight every night.
Context
Gillespieâs arc is familiar in outlineâundrafted Villanova guard, multiple two-way seasons, slow climbâbut unusual in endpoint. Phoenix converting him from a fringe roster tool into a four-year, mid-tier contract is an organizational admission about what the Suns have been missing: a trustworthy pilot for the âmiddle of the game.â
For the last two seasons, Phoenixâs rotation logic has often been forced rather than chosen. The Sunsâ offense, built around high-usage stars and spacing, has been elite when it can play simple: force a switch, draw two, spray out. The problem has been the possessions that donât produce a clean first advantageâmissed early entries, poor angle ball screens, sloppy pocket passes, or a guard who canât punish the tagger. Those are the possessions that inflate turnover rate, stall pace, and expose transition defense.
Gillespie is not being paid to replace a star. Heâs being paid to stabilize the segments where the Suns have historically bled: early second and late third quarters, the minutes where you need a guard to run the team, get the ball to the right elbow at the right time, and defend without fouling while the offense resets. Phoenix is effectively treating âcompetent lead guard minutesâ as a premium resource rather than an annual scavenger hunt.
The Tactical Picture
Offensively, Gillespieâs value is less about headline shot-making and more about possession quality. Phoenix has leaned heavily into high ball screens and empty-corner pick-and-rolls to generate rotations. Against switching defenses, that means you need a guard who can quickly flow from the first action into the secondâre-screen, flip the angle, or hit the short roll without telegraphing it. Gillespieâs calling card is that he plays on time: he advances the ball early, gets into the set with pace, and keeps the weak side organized.
Expect Phoenix to use him as a âsecond-side initiatorâ next to Devin Booker: Booker draws the initial tilt, the defense rotates, and Gillespie catches with an advantage to attack a closeout, play a quick pick-and-roll, or enter to the nail and kick. That reduces the burden on Booker to be both the advantage creator and the advantage keeper. It also helps Phoenix manufacture cleaner corner threes because the ball arrives on the second beat, not the fourth.
In bench groups, Gillespie enables more structured two-man games with a rim runner or a pop bigâSpain pick-and-roll looks, â21â action (drag screen into a follow), and angle P&R to force the low man to tag. His job: make the weak-side tag pay with immediate corner or slot passes, and avoid the live-ball turnovers that fuel opponent transition.
Defensively, he fits as a point-of-attack guard who can execute the scheme without shortcuts: contain two dribbles, chase over the screen when asked, and ârear-view contestâ pull-ups to keep the big out of rotation. Phoenixâs biggest defensive issue in guard minutes hasnât always been size; itâs been breakdowns that put the back line in rotation every possession. A steadier POA defender reduces the help burden and keeps the Suns out of scramble mode.
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A Coaching Lens
From a head coachâs perspective, this is a rotation and identity decision. Paying Gillespie signals that Phoenix wants a real, repeatable minute structure: one primary organizer on the floor at all times, fewer all-bench possessions, and fewer âletâs surviveâ lineups where the offense devolves into late-clock isolations.
The practical adjustment is staggering. Gillespieâs minutes can be paired with Booker to create a dual-handler environmentâBooker as the advantage engine, Gillespie as the advantage finisher. That pairing also lets the Suns hide weaker defenders less often because the offense wonât require sacrificing defense for basic ballhandling. In games where opponents trap Booker, Phoenix can keep the ball moving without forcing the release valve to be a non-decision-maker.
For the front office, the contract is also about optionality. A mid-sized, multi-year deal is both a commitment and a tool: it allows Phoenix to plan with certainty at the backup point spot, and it creates a movable salary slot if a bigger consolidation trade becomes available.
Opponents will game-plan accordingly. Teams that previously pressured Phoenixâs secondary ballhandlersâfull-court heat, âtop lockâ denial into traps, aggressive nail helpâwill now have to pick their poison. Gillespieâs presence should punish over-help by hitting the first open man and keeping the Suns out of the high-turnover games that swing playoff series. The counter for defenses will be to go under ball screens and dare him to win with pull-up volume; Phoenixâs response will be to screen higher, flip the angle, or run him into dribble-handoffs that force the defender to re-engage.
What This Means Strategically
Strategically, this is Phoenix acknowledging a league-wide truth: star-heavy rosters donât fail because the stars arenât great; they fail because the connective tissue canât survive playoff pressure. The postseason is a test of repetitionâcan you execute the same actions, at the same tempo, against scouting and physicality? Gillespie is being paid as a âsystem guard,â the kind who raises the floor of every lineup by reducing noise.
It also points to a roster-building trend. The mid-market contract is becoming the new battleground: teams are spending real money on low-usage guards who can defend, organize, and keep the ball moving, because those players are the difference between a 12â2 run for you or against you.
What to watch next: (1) Phoenixâs lineup data with Gillespie next to Bookerâdoes it create a sustainable two-guard ecosystem? (2) His three-point volume and willingness to shoot versus âunderâ coverage; if he punishes it, the Sunsâ half-court ceiling rises. (3) Phoenixâs turnover rate and transition defense in non-star minutesâthe clearest indicator that this investment is paying off.
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