LAS VEGAS - The Suns’ summer has been defined by change, and two of the young pieces arriving in the aftermath of it are getting another chance to show what they can do in Las Vegas.
Rasheer Fleming and Khaman Maluach, both acquired in the deal that sent Kevin Durant to Houston, are back for a second run through NBA Summer League after seeing only limited action as rookies. After Phoenix dropped its second game in three days, an 81-75 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday, both players talked about what this stretch has meant to them in a joint postgame interview.
Maluach has been one of the more eye-catching performers in the event so far. He’s leading Summer League in rebounds per game and is shooting 50% from three on 5.5 attempts a night, but he said the bigger focus is on how he processes the game and keeps adjusting as it unfolds.
“I go back and watch film and just observe the game and just really get better. Continuing while the game is going on, keep on adjusting, keep on getting better throughout the whole game,” Maluach said.
The Duke big man has also made his presence felt defensively, averaging a combined three steals and blocks per game through his first few contests. Even with that production, he knows the next step is cleaning up the mistakes, especially the turnovers. He’s averaging 3.5 of them so far, and he said handling pressure will be a major test once the regular season arrives.
“Being a young big, when the (regular) season gets here I know a lot of people are going to pressure up into me and try to make me turn over the ball, and I just gotta be able to take care of the ball so that my coach can trust me with the ball.”
Fleming’s numbers have been quieter on the offensive end. He’s shooting just 36.8% from the field, but he said he’s leaning into the parts of the game that don’t always show up first on a stat sheet. For him, that means making the next play and helping steady the group.
“Just being able to make the next play for my teammates and knowing they’ll do the same when one of us (him or Maluach) gets in trouble, just being there for each other,” Fleming said.
He also said he and Maluach need to stay locked in together on defense and keep the approach simple.
“I think we all just gotta go out there trying to make the right play. Whether it’s me, whether it’s him (Maluach), we both go out there just looking to make the right play.”
Fleming left the game with his left hand wrapped, but he said he was “fine” and only feeling a bit “sore.”
There’s still a chance both players could suit up again. While Summer League often winds down for players entering their second NBA season, Suns assistant coach Chaisson Allen, who is serving as the team’s head coach in Las Vegas, indicated they may play again Monday against Milwaukee, saying it’s important for young players to get reps.
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What makes the picture more complicated is that the supporting cast around him is still very much in flux. Bridges arrives with off-court baggage that will keep attention on him for reasons the Suns would rather avoid, while the summer offered a glimpse of possible internal help from Khaman Maluach and Koa Peat. If either young player can grow into a real rotation piece, it would ease some pressure, but for now Phoenix is still waiting to see whether the offseason actually solved enough around its star. [Read more 🡒]
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For the Suns, the bigger question is not whether either young player has looked good in a summer setting, but how that translates once the rotation tightens and the competition changes. Fleming and Peat have both put themselves in the conversation for more regular-season minutes, and even if Summer League is an imperfect measuring stick, their play has at least created an uncomfortable kind of pressure on a roster that still has established names ahead of them. [Read more 🡒]
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Peats encouraging start gives the Suns something more interesting than a simple fallback plan. With Dillon Brooks and Bridges helping the club stay competitive now, Phoenix also appears to be layering in younger talent for what comes next, and that is where the Peat storyline gets intriguing. If his early flashes keep building, the Suns may have found a version of the Gordon idea without having to pay the price a trade for the veteran would have demanded. [Read more 🡒]
