Heading into his third season, with heightened expectations for the Phoenix Suns and Chris Paul alongside him, itās gut-check time for Deandre Ayton.
The Phoenix Sunsā 8-0 run in the NBA bubble gets more and more remarkable with each passing day, not only because it helped make the organization look more attractive to established, talented veterans like Chris Paul and Jae Crowder, but also because of how shorthanded they were.
Kelly Oubre Jr. was sidelined. Aron Baynes was out too. And flying in very low under the radar because of all that excitement, the Suns really didnāt get much out of their second franchise pillar, Deandre Ayton.
Heading into Year 3, with heightened expectations, CP3 joining the fold and a revamped supporting cast providing Phoenix with legitimate depth, Ayton is facing a season where his numbers might decrease, but his impact must shoot up.
The bubble provided a rough (and brief) blueprint of what that might look like, with Devin Booker being flanked by shooters and the bench coming to life in ways it hadnāt all season. Aytonās numbers, post-up opportunities and overall impact decreased in Orlando, yet the team continued to win:
- Pre-bubble: 30 games, 19.0 PPG, 12.0 RPG, 1.9 APG and 1.7 BPG in 33.2 MPG, 54.8 FG%, 76.9 FT%, +1.2 plus/minus
- Bubble: 8 games, 15.0 PPG, 9.5 RPG, 1.9 APG and 0.9 BPG in 30.0 MPG, 53.4 FG%, 63.6 FT%, +7.6 plus/minus
The drastic spike in Aytonās plus/minus is slightly misleading; while the Suns boasted an impressive 11.6 Net Rating in the bubble with the big fella on the court, they were actually even better when he rested, jumping to a Net Rating of 14.3. Ayton wasnātĀ bad, and he even knocked down three of his 10 long-range attempts, showcasing a part of his game Phoenix had been dying to see.
But it wasnāt Ayton at his best, and as much fun as the bubble was, it was slightly disappointing that such an important component of the franchiseās future wasnāt playing a more prominent role in that success ā especially after a 25-game suspension early in the year, which wound up being the difference between Phoenix making the play-in game and just missing the cut.
Even with the small sample size, all of this is a long-winded way of restating the synopsis of Deandre Aytonās career to this point: The guy can put up numbers. Will he be able to focus and put it all together to impact winning next?
What can Deandre Ayton accomplish this season for the Phoenix Suns?
The 2020-21 season will provide the first definitive response in answering that question. Ayton, who said he was so excited about the Chris Paul trade when it became official that he āwanted to do a backflip,ā understands this is gut-check time for him and the rest of the Suns.
āI know heās gonna be on my tail,ā he said on a Zoom call last week. āAnd I need that. Me and Book need that. This team needs that. So Iām a dude whoās very amped up and just wants to destroy everything. Having somebody who can channel all of that, lead us the right way, itās amazing.ā
The first step will be building that chemistry, trust and familiarity between a Hall-of-Fame point guard and his big man. Despite his enthusiasm over what heās added to his game in recent months, Ayton said heās excited to just be able to contribute positively to Paulās legacy.
āI can get the ball wherever and score the way Iāve been working, and I canāt wait to show my talents, but itās all about what this team needs,ā he said. āItās just knowing his terminology and what him and I can communicate on. Heās the leader and heās the vet. If he wants me to jump, you know I got it. Whatever he wants, weāre locked and weāre buying in on it, no questions asked.ā
That may require fewer post-ups this year, which were already down in Monty Williamsā 0.5 offense compared to Aytonās rookie season under Igor Kokoskov. It will almost certainly require fewer mid-range jumpers, especially with Booker and Paul both capable of dominating from that area of the floor. It could call for one or two 3-pointers per night too. But mostly, it will ask Ayton to be aggressive on the interior, where his two All-Star guards will be feeding him, where the shooters will open up his most opportunities and where his prowess as an offensive rebounder will shine through as the Sunsā bevy of long-range gunners look to fire away from deep.
Defensively, Ayton improved leaps and bounds in his second season, showing he could switch onto the perimeter with his lateral quicknessĀ andĀ be a legitimate rim deterrent when he was fully locked in. The mental lapses were fewer and further between, but playing alongside Paul, on a team with playoff expectations, theyāll need to be stamped out.
Paul is known for his fiery competitive nature, which can come off as abrasive for those who arenāt mentally prepared. Everyone remembers how often CP3 would yell at a confused DeAndre Jordan, whom Paul joked ācouldnāt walk and chew gum at the same timeā early in his career. Now the two are great friends, and Jordanās career was ultimately much better off for it.
Ayton seems aware that kind of grating leadership is coming but also that itās good for him in the long run. His workout regimen this summer has reflected that, carrying over the focus and momentum from Phoenixās bubble run.
āIām working so hard right now, on whatās in front of me, that I know these results are gonna make their way,ā he said. āComing out of that bubble, it did something to me, like, working every day, having this professionalism of being the professional I am and just embracing that and actually approaching my craft seriously.ā
Last year, the table was set for Ayton to feast between Booker and Ricky Rubio, but he showed up late to the banquet hall. This year, after James Jones added even more shooting to the roster between CP3, Crowder, EāTwaun Moore, Langston Galloway and even rookie Jalen Smith, Ayton is practically being carried to his seat and spoon-fed an entire three-course meal.
āSeeing all these shooters on the team, itās gonna be a lot of space to dunk on people,ā Ayton said. āSo for me, I can shoot, but Iāve got so many shooters on the team, like, what do you want me to do? Iām gonna get a couple here or there, on trails or pops, but Iāve got dudes on the team thatās really certified snipers. And Iām so blessed to have so much space on that floor.ā
Weāve heard this type of talk from Ayton before, and the 22-year-old very rarely plays with the kind of aggression where heās dunking on people. If anything, his passing awareness on the short roll, kicking out to shooters when met with little resistance inside, has almost become a fault. But this host of shooters can reward him for those passes when his natural gravity sucks in help defenders, and if anyone were to harness that āinner dogā mentality that Suns players have been touting all offseason, CP3 and a fully empowered Booker are as good a bet as anyone.
According to Ayton, he and Booker had a talk early in the bubble about staying the course, staying locked in and continuing to play the way they were, because the results were coming.
āWe were always brothers, but on the court there was still some stuff that we really had to figure out,ā Ayton said. āAnd I think he was waiting for me to figure it out, to be honest. Because heās been waiting.ā
Like Booker, the Suns have been waiting ā waiting for him to justify his status as the No. 1 pick in a draft with Luka Doncic and Trae Young after he posted good rookie numbers; waiting for him to get back on the court after a bone-headed decision cost him 25 games; waiting for him to build on the defensive strides he showed last year in a season that puts all his God-given abilities together for an actual playoff team.
Over the next 1-2 years, alongside a Hall-of-Famer who has neither the time nor the patience to wait much longer, Ayton will get his chance to reward everyoneās faith. It may not result in a career year on the stat sheet, but if he can stay locked in and contribute to winning basketball on both ends of the floor for a playoff squad, itāll have been worth the wait.