3 Phoenix Suns who will fall out of the team’s playoff rotation

The Phoenix Suns are going to start tightening their rotation for the playoffs soon, and these three players are not going to make the cut.

The NBA’s regular season somehow only has five Sundays remaining, and the Phoenix Suns are worryingly still in a race to avoid falling into the play-in tournament. Games like the recent victory over the Denver Nuggets make it look like this team could actually crack the top four in the Western Conference, but those performances have not happened often enough this season.

Instead they have had to deal with injuries – with star Devin Booker still sidelined with an ankle injury and missing for Saturday’s loss to the Boston Celtics – which has forced head coach Frank Vogel to work with a stretched deck for portions of the season. Something he rightly deserves a ton of credit for successfully managing.

But with the playoffs now firmly on the horizon – coach Vogel is going to begin shortening his rotation – and some players are not going to make the cut.

There is still time for these three players to work their way off this list – the first individual we are going to look at certainly has the tools to play their part – but doing so will be tough. Outside of their star trio of Booker, Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal, the foursome of Grayson Allen, Jusuf Nurkic, Royce O’Neale and Eric Gordon are going to see most of the time on the court.

Which leaves spot minutes for guys like Bol Bol to come in and be the eighth man in a postseason rotation, although coach Vogel may push that number out to a ninth player depending on the matchup. With injuries also possibly playing a part the door is not all the way closed on these three yet, but their playoff chances are basically non-existent at this point.

3. Josh Okogie

There’s no doubt Josh Okogie might feel aggrieved to find himself on this list. After all, not only has he played more minutes per game this season (17.1) than the other two guys who will appear here, he’s also eighth in minutes across the entire roster. The exact kind of cutoff point where coach Vogel would drop everybody after Okogie.

He’s still only 25-years-old, can defend multiple positions reasonably well, and has played more and is just a more consistent option than Bol. It’s strange that those two are battling it out for possibly the last remaining playoff spot on this roster – they couldn’t be more different as players – but right now Bol is winning that battle.

Coach Vogel appears to now trust him for about 12 minutes a night, and he has found a home as part of jumbo lineups that also feature Durant and Nurkic. By hiding Bol outside the paint on third and fourth option scorers when on the court, the Suns have been able to survive having him out there on the defensive end, while offensively his upside and intriguing skill set trumps that of Okogie.

There could be a playoff matchup down the road where Okogie is needed. But he’s not as good at scoring as Allen, O’Neale and even Gordon, while defensively he might be better than some of those players in theory, but the reality is all three have settled into roles well on that end of the court. Okogie does some things well, but nothing at the kind of level that will lead to postseason minutes.

2. Saben Lee

There’s no doubt that point guard Saben Lee has tried to seize the opportunity he has been given with the Suns. Although there is still chatter that they’d use their final roster spot on a veteran floor general if they could, Lee has been used by coach Vogel some with Booker out injured.

But the recent loss to the Celtics was exactly why he can’t see the court come the playoffs if the Suns don’t want to win. The Celtics left him open and he chucked up some wild and awful shots, while defensively he was picked on with ease by an elite opponent. Lee does inject some pace and urgency, but is not consistent enough to see the court when it really matters.

In that Celtics game, their own backup Payton Pritchard – who himself has well established limitations – looked leagues better and more composed than Lee. Besides once the playoffs start, it is highly likely one of Booker and Beal will be on the court for the entire game.

They’ll also spend a lot of that time together as well, and really the only way Lee gets a look in here is both if one of those two gets injured (which torpedos their playoff hopes anyway), and that the franchise don’t go out and get somebody else to fill their final roster spot. A lot would have to go Lee’s way for him to see some minutes and if it somehow did, it wasn’t part of the plan anyway.

1. Drew Eubanks

Backup center Drew Eubanks has a similar situation on his hands to Lee, although it is not as dire. There’s no doubt coach Vogel likes Eubanks, even if sometimes it is hard to understand why. But just when it looks like his limitations are going to force him off the court for good, he’ll provide some energy, defensive hustle and a burst of points and rebounds to justify his selection.

In the overtime win against the Nuggets recently there was Eubanks, chipping in with an impressive 10 points and eight boards when the Suns needed him. To follow that up with zero points and a single rebound against the Celtics not even a week later is all part of the Drew Eubanks experience this season.

Once the playoffs begin, even Nurkic is likely to see his minutes slide. This despite being one of the most consistent players the team have had this season, having a game where he set a franchise record for rebounds at 31, and having the kind of reclamation season that few thought was possible last summer.

The reason for this? Durant will slide to the five some, which he’s already done at times this season depending on the matchup. Coach Vogel has done this in anticipation of the playoffs, and it has led to Nurkic sitting for entire fourth-quarters more than once. With that clearly being the direction the Suns are going, Eubanks is going to get left behind.

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