Collin Gillespie’s rise in Phoenix has turned into one of the Suns’ clearest success stories, and now it comes with a four-year, $48 million contract to match.
What started as a two-way deal in the 2024-25 season became something much bigger once Gillespie earned more minutes late in the year. Phoenix kept rewarding that growth, first with a standard minimum contract last offseason and now with a long-term commitment after a season that showed exactly what he can do when given real runway.
Gillespie delivered a career-best year, averaging 12.7 points, 4.6 assists, 4.1 rebounds and 1.2 steals while also setting a Suns franchise record with 232 3-pointers made in a single season. His game fit the tone coach Jordan Ott wants from this group: tough, active and relentless.
He also made it clear he wanted to stay put. Phoenix got the deal done more than a week before he would have reached the open market, and Gillespie said the process was straightforward.
"I wanted to be here, had good conversations with the front office and those guys, and I really wasn't too worried, I thought that something would get done pretty easily, and we were able to get it done, and kind of very smooth, so it was good," Gillespie said earlier this week.
For Gillespie, the contract is only the latest step in a path that has demanded patience and resilience. He went undrafted out of Villanova in 2022 after helping the Wildcats win the 2018 national championship, then spent two seasons with the Denver Nuggets on a two-way deal. He also missed his entire rookie season because of a broken leg.
That background made the moment hit harder.
"When I reflect back on (the journey), it's really cool for me. Special moment, obviously.
I believed in myself at a high level," Gillespie said. "There's a lot of other people that did too, behind the scenes, former coaches, obviously family, friends, but from the outside perspective, probably not a lot of people, coming into the league and whatnot, but I always believed it at a high level.
"I think that's the most important thing - if you yourself believe it, then you can kind of do whatever you, you want to. So it was a special moment, obviously reflecting back my journey going through the G League, two major injuries, one at the end of my college career, one as soon as I got into the NBA, so kind of just didn't quit, and now here we are. So I'm grateful for the journey and where I've come from and gotten to this point."
The Suns have spent the last couple of seasons emphasizing player development, and Gillespie has become the example they can point to. When his chance came, he didn’t just hold the spot - he ran with it.
Brian Gregory said Gillespie’s season reflected exactly what Phoenix values.
"He had his best season of his career, saved us many times when we were banged up early, and then throughout the year," Suns general manager Brian Gregory said of Gillespie. "Because he played banged up, he fought through a lot of stuff and just kept going. His toughness, his grit (is) everything that we're all about.
"It's amazing when you put in the work and you grind and you do the stuff that that he does, when you get the opportunity, you got to be ready for it too, and he was ready for it."
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Wembanyama Just Created A Brutal New Problem For The Suns
Victor Wembanyamas new extension in San Antonio does more than lock in a franchise centerpiece, it also gives the Spurs a cleaner path to build around him. The deal, worth $252 million, is the kind of commitment that usually signals both star power and long-term planning, and in this case it arrives with enough built-in flexibility to help the Spurs keep their core intact while still leaving room to chase more help.
For the Suns, that is the uncomfortable part. Phoenix is already operating with salary-cap pressure and a roster weighed down by existing contracts, which makes it harder to match teams that can add talent without boxing themselves in. In a conference where the margins keep getting tighter, the Spurs approach is the sort of advantage that can linger for years, and it only sharpens the questions around how Phoenix can keep pace. [Read more 🡒]
