The Phoenix Suns didn’t wait around to get their offseason moving. They opened by keeping two of their own, and both deals look like the kind of business teams love to make when the numbers line up.
Collin Gillespie is back on a four-year, $48 million fully guaranteed contract after a breakout season that put him squarely on the radar. He played 80 games, started 58 of them, and averaged 12.7 points, 4.6 assists, 4.1 rebounds and 1.2 steals per game while setting the Suns franchise record for 3-point makes in a single season.
Mark Williams is also staying in Phoenix after signing a three-year, $38 million fully guaranteed deal. The restricted free agent logged a career-high 60 games in his first year with the Suns, giving the team a return on a player whose season was still shaped by injuries.
That’s the headline for Phoenix: keep the core pieces, and do it on contracts that could end up looking far better than the price tags.
That view got a boost from Steph Noh, senior NBA writer for SportingNews and a former Athletic writer, who graded this summer’s free-agent deals through his salary model. His system measures expected impact against contract value, and he had plenty of praise for both Suns signings.
Gillespie came out especially strong. Noh pegged the deal at 60.2 million in surplus value, the second-best mark among free agents this offseason behind Boston Celtics breakout big man Neemias Queta.
“Gillespie signed on a four-year, $48 million contract that was surprisingly low given that he was one of the better free agents in this class,” Noh wrote. “That was a steal for the Suns, who will retain the 27-year-old throughout his prime years.”
Noh also pointed to what makes Gillespie such a useful fit: he shoots it well, runs the offense with poise and brings enough effort on defense to help cover for his 6-foot-1 frame.
Before the signing became official, Gillespie had made it clear he wanted to stay in Phoenix, and the two sides found common ground. The result keeps him in what looks like an ideal spot and, based on Noh’s model, gives the Suns a chance to get more production than money spent.
Williams drew a similar read, even if that might surprise some Suns fans. His first season in Phoenix included 22 missed regular-season games, though it still counted as a career high in games and minutes. He also missed time late in the year and in the playoffs because of a stress reaction in his foot.
Health concerns have followed Williams for a while, including the failed physical that derailed a trade to the Los Angeles Lakers. Even so, Noh’s model still liked the contract, assigning it 25 million in added value relative to the actual three-year, $38 million deal.
For Phoenix, the upside is obvious if Williams stays on the floor. At the very least, keeping him in the fold gives the Suns more time and space for 19-year-old Khaman Maluach to develop while their starting center from last season remains part of the picture.
After a latest offseason trade that drew widespread criticism, the Suns can at least point to these free-agent moves as a much better-looking start.
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