The Suns’ Habits Win Games — Even When They’re Depleted
There’s something satisfying about watching a team make the ordinary look inevitable. Monday’s 125–108 win in Los Angeles wasn’t the most glamorous Suns victory — Devin Booker left early with a groin issue — but it was one of the most revealing. Phoenix didn’t just survive without its star; it imposed a style of play and a set of habits that turned the Lakers’ mistakes into a blowout. The bigger message: the Suns will keep rolling teams that don’t match their energy, regardless of who’s available.
Why this mattered beyond one box score
- The Suns beat the Lakers on December 1, 2025, 125–108, snapping L.A.’s seven-game win streak. Despite Booker exiting late in the first quarter, Phoenix never let the game slip. (espn.com)
- This was more than “next man up” theatrics. It was the result of identity: relentless pressure, transition scoring, and an insistence on competing for every loose ball and turnover. Those aren’t cliches — they’re repeatable habits that win games. (sports.yahoo.com)
The habits that decided the game
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Defensive disruption
The Suns forced 22 turnovers and turned those into fast-break points. When an opponent hands you extra possessions, you don’t need your superstar to capitalize — you need a system that punishes mistakes. Phoenix’s defense did exactly that, converting turnovers into a 28–2 fast-break advantage that swung the game. (sports.yahoo.com) -
Unselfish scoring from role players
Dillon Brooks exploded for 33 points and Collin Gillespie poured in a career night (including an eight-3s barrage reported in game recaps). When bench pieces and role players shoot with confidence and purpose, the team doesn’t miss the absent star as much. That’s depth, and it’s habit-driven: shots are earned within the flow of the offense, not hoarded. (espn.com) -
Pace and physicality
Phoenix attacked in transition and played with urgency on loose balls and on defense. They swamped the Lakers physically — a deliberate choice that strains teams who hope to win with half-measures. When one team wants every 50/50 ball more, it often wins the second-chance battle and the momentum swings. (sports.yahoo.com) -
Readiness even when depleted
Losing Booker two minutes before the end of the first quarter would derail most teams’ game plans. The Suns adapted. That adaptability is a habit cultivated in practice and coaching: role clarity, situational preparation, and the expectation that everyone will step up. (espn.com)
Why the Lakers’ performance amplified the point
Los Angeles had been riding a seven-game streak and looked like a team with rhythm. But Phoenix forced turnovers, rushed the Lakers out of comfort, and turned what may have looked like a tight matchup into a decisive win. Credit to the Suns’ game plan — and a reminder that a team’s baseline effort and habits can neutralize star talent on any given night.
What this suggests about the Suns going forward
- The Suns’ ceiling is no longer just about health; it’s about consistency. When they play with the same tenacity and structure they showed against L.A., they become hard to beat — even for teams with top-level stars.
- Opponents can’t simply game-plan for Devin Booker and dismiss the rest. Phoenix’s depth and the culture to exploit turnovers mean teams must respect every rotation player.
- Short-term bumps (injuries, nights when a starter is off) matter less for Phoenix if the habits stay intact. That’s the kind of repeatable resilience coaches dream about.
A few illustrative numbers
- Forced 22 Lakers turnovers, a key driver of the scoring swing. (espn.com)
- Suns finished with a large fast-break advantage (reported as a 28–2 swing in transition scoring in some recaps). (sports.yahoo.com)
- Dillon Brooks led the Suns with 33 points; Collin Gillespie added a big scoring night off the bench. Devin Booker scored 11 before exiting. (espn.com)
My take
This wasn’t a fluke. It was a demonstration of culture over circumstance. Phoenix has built — or re-found — a set of habits that allow the roster to function when the luxury of having every star available isn’t guaranteed. That’s more valuable than any single highlight reel. If the Suns keep treating fundamentals as non-negotiable, they’ll keep pressuring teams to show up ready to match their energy. When opponents don’t, the result will look a lot like Monday night.
Sources
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Suns 125, Lakers 108 — Game Recap, ESPN.
https://www.espn.com/nba/recap/_/gameId/401810172 -
Suns snap Lakers' 7-game win streak with 125-108 victory — AP (published widely; recap).
https://www.thetelegraph.com/sports/article/suns-snap-lakers-7-game-winning-streak-with-21218018.php -
Game Recap: Suns roll past Lakers despite Booker exiting early — Yahoo Sports.
https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/game-recap-suns-roll-lakers-052522750.html
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.