The Phoenix Suns and the Los Angeles Lakers. Rivals, but they have a lot in common. Both have long, heated rivalries with the Spurs, are in the Pacific division, and made the Finals this decade. While Los Angeles has more top-end talent with Luka Donćić and Austin Reaves (who is highly likely to resign, assuming he opts out), both are in a holding pattern when it comes to building out their teams.
Neither is anywhere close to competing with the Western Conference’s best, the San Antonio Spurs and
Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder swept both, but the Lakers were after beating the Houston Rockets in the first round. Doncic missed the whole series.
Phoenix knows they want to build another Finals team with Devin Booker leading the helm, while Los Angeles has signaled they want to raise their 18th banner around a backcourt of Doncic and Reaves. The rest of both teams’ long-term rosters are more uncertain. Sure, don’t be surprised if LeBron James returns to the Lakers for his 24th season, and if Dillon Brooks gets an extension after his career year, but neither is in a position to drastically improve their rosters this summer to the point where they can be considered viable threats to compete with the Spurs and Thunder, so their best strategy may be to stay patient.
With his inconsistent play and energy concerns, Deandre Ayton left many unimpressed in his first year in the purple and gold, which is why there have been so many reports of Los Angeles looking to upgrade at center. With the team having “phantom cap space,” as ESPN Insider Brian Windhorst says, people in the NBA are calling their cap space mainly because of LeBron James and Rui Hachimura’s cap holds. The Lakers are not in a position to upgrade their five spot, meaning it might be best for them to stand pat or sign players to short-term deals in the process.
As their series against the Thunder showed, even if Doncic was healthy, they lacked the defensive presence to compete with West’s best. Los Angeles lost by 18 or more points in three of the four games, and allowed at least 125 points in two of them. To acquire the defensive and center presence needed to compete with Oklahoma City and San Antonio, patience might be what they need to exercise most right now, and the same can be said for the Suns.
Lacking draft assets and a flurry of premium young players, even if management believes Booker can be the same player that led the team to the 2021 Finals, to compete with the likes of Victor Wembanyama and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Phoenix needs to recognize that they are not a lone All-Star away or better injury luck from returning to the top of the West. They already tried that method of teambuilding.
While having the Unanimous Defensive Player of the year and the reigning NBA MVP are the anchors for San Antonio and Oklahoma City’s dominance in their Finals runs, neither were one-man teams like LeBron James carried the Cleveland Cavaliers to the Finals in 2018. When the Thunder won the title in the 2024-2025 season, Jalen Williams had a 40-point Finals game, and Alex Caruso came off the bench and had multiple 20-point ones. On the Spurs way to the Finals, Stephon Castle went for 32 in their closeout game against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round, and Julian Champagnie hit six threes in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals. Both teams created rosters that were not reliant on their best players to be perfect in every game.
As the New York Knicks just showed with their patient and methodical approach to team building, which got them a title nearly four years after signing Jalen Brunson. Along with his iconic game-winner in Game 4 of the Finals, OG Anunoby averaged 20 points in the Knicks’ playoff run, Landry Shamet shot 48% from three, and Karl Anthony-Towns was willing to take a backseat and play more as a distributor for the betterment of the team. The Knicks acquired Anunoby in 2023 and Towns and Shamet in 2024. New York built a team that was balanced and versatile.
Putting flex tape over your team’s biggest issues by adding a superstar and gutting the rest of your team’s assets doesn’t work. Just ask the Suns how it worked when they added Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal in a five-month span.
Whether it’s the Suns resigning Collin Gillespie and Jordan Goodwin to short-term deals or the Lakers getting Austin Reaves to not resign for the max, flexibility needs to be a priority for both teams.
Just because Los Angeles had a better season than the Lakers doesn’t mean they should take a different approach from the Suns. Making rash decisions just to slightly improve for next year can do more long-term damage than staying pat can.













