PHOENIX SUNS

The Phoenix Suns are on the clock, or at least will be soon

Jun 26, 2014, 3:51 PM | Updated: 3:52 pm

Follow @CraigAZSports...

PHOENIX — Unlike much of the basketball universe, okay, all of the basketball universe, the Phoenix Suns do not much care which player is drafted No. 1 or for that matter Nos. 2, 3, 4 or 5 in Thursday’s 2014 NBA Draft.

It’s of no consequence to them.

Rather, the Suns are more interested in who is selected in the bottom half of the lottery, picks in the 8-12 range, and whether or not two of the better shooting prospects in this year’s draft class, Doug McDermott of Creighton and Nik Stauskas of Michigan, should drop past a Charlotte, Philadelphia or Denver.

With the 14th and final pick of the lottery, the Suns are in wait-and-see mode.

“There are a few teams (Philadelphia and Orlando) with multiple picks ahead of us in the top 13. I feel like with those teams, what they do with their second pick, especially what position they draft with their second pick maybe contingent on who do they take with the first one,” Suns GM Ryan McDonough said. “I think clarity ahead of time might be harder this year than in some other years. You might not know until the picks start going off the board who is going to potentially be there and who may be gone.”

Gone, as in not available, which may compel McDonough and his staff to consider trading up, especially if they have their sights set on a particular player.

According to reports, the Suns have twice worked out Duke small forward Rodney Hood and UCLA shooting guard Zach LaVine

“If we wanted to move up a little, we could do that. I’m pretty confident we could do that,” McDonough said. “But we don’t want to do it just for the sake of doing it and give up an asset and say, ‘Oh, shoot that guy that we moved up to get probably would’ve been there at 14 anyways and we could’ve kept the pick or another player.’

“These are last minute decisions. There’s no clear-cut answer at this point. But I’m pretty confident if we wanted to move up some we could. How high we can get, I don’t know and probably won’t know until either right before the draft or when the draft starts and we’re on the clock and you see who starts going off the board.”

This much is certain: Considering they drafted two young players a year ago, the Suns are highly unlikely to keep all three of their first round picks this year, which in addition to No. 14 come up again at No. 18 and No. 27.

“We’d rather get fewer good players or a veteran who can help or spread our picks out, where we have maybe more firsts in the future than drafting three guys to bring to the Suns next year,” McDonough explained.

Of course, regardless of what player or players the Suns do draft -— they also own a second-round pick, the 50th overall selection — McDonough is bullish about the depth of this year’s class.

“There are good players that I like that we think will be there kind of with all of those picks,” he said. “That’s kind of reassuring, especially with the later picks. You don’t want your hopes kind of pinned hoping one or two guys are there and then if not, it’s a disaster.

“I think there will be good players taken in late first, early second, maybe even middle-to-late second round in this draft.”

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Phoenix Suns

Kevin Durant walking off court...

Dan Bickley

Suns find themselves stuck between a rock and a hard place after getting swept

Devin Booker's 49-point game offered little consolation for one of the most unsatisfying seasons and unlikeable teams in franchise history.

23 minutes ago

Bradley Beal #3 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball against Nickeil Alexander-Walker...

Kevin Zimmerman

On a Bradley Beal off night, small-ball Suns can’t avoid T-Wolves sweep

Bradley Beal struggled, and smallball and Devin Booker's big game couldn't save the Phoenix Suns from a sweep by the Minnesota Timberwolves.

1 hour ago

T-Wolves surround Chris Finch...

Damon Allred

Timberwolves coach Chris Finch reportedly feared to have torn patellar tendon after collision

Timberwolves coach Chris Finch left the court late in a Game 4 win after his point guard mistakenly ran into him after a foul.

1 hour ago

Devin Booker of the Phoenix Suns puts up shot over Kyle Anderson in Game 4 of the first round. (Pho...

Damon Allred

Devin Booker passes Charles Barkley on Suns’ all-time postseason scoring list

Devin Booker passed Charles Barkley on the Phoenix Suns' all-time postseason scoring list in Game 4 against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

3 hours ago

Grayson Allen has been ruled out for two straight playoff games with a sprained ankle. (Jeremy Schn...

Arizona Sports

Suns’ Grayson Allen ruled out for Game 4, Timberwolves’ Kyle Anderson available

Suns' Grayson Allen was ruled out for Sunday's Game 4 playoff contest against the Timberwolves. Minnesota's Kyle Anderson is available.

5 hours ago

Suns head coach sits between BYU head coach-to be Kevin Young and assistant David Fizdale during Ga...

Kevin Zimmerman

Suns head coach Frank Vogel confident he won’t be fired, has ‘full support’ from Mat Ishbia

Phoenix Suns head coach Frank Vogel said before Game 4 against the Minnesota Timberwolves that he believes he'll return for 2024-25.

6 hours ago

The Phoenix Suns are on the clock, or at least will be soon