There is a fine line Dillon Brooks has been walking all season, and it is not an easy one for him to stay on. He is an emotional player. He feeds off that edge as it pushes him into a zone. It is how he impacts
games. It is also how he has stayed in the league for nine years.
But emotion cuts both ways. Actions carry consequences, and eventually, the bill comes due.
Wednesday night against Oklahoma City, the Suns were already in a hole. Down 19 in the second quarter, fighting uphill, searching for any kind of rhythm. Then the whistle came from official James Williams. Technical foul on Dillon Brooks.
You knew it. I knew it. He definitely knew it. That was technical foul number 16 on the season, and with it came the inevitable result. A suspension was no longer a possibility. It was a certainty.
This is the cost of living on that edge. Sometimes it fuels you. Sometimes it burns you. And on Wednesday night, the line finally snapped. The 16th tech on Brooks is the most in the league, three ahead of Luka Doncic and double teammate Devin Booker, who has 8, which is sixth most in the NBA.
In reality, it has been even louder than that. This was the 19th time Dillon Brooks has been hit with a technical foul this season. Three of those were rescinded, but the damage still counts. 19 free throws were handed to the other team because emotion spilled over the line.
Now do the math. Brooks has played 49 games. That puts him at roughly one technical every 2.5 games. That is not an edge anymore, that is a pattern. For reference, the honor for the most technical fouls in one season goes to Rasheed Wallace in 2000-01. He had 41 technical fouls, playing in 79 games (clearly the suspension rules weren’t in place back then) for an average of one tech every 1.9 games.
And today, it became official. This one is not getting wiped away. There will be no quiet reversal. This one sticks.
Which means the bill is real. And it is finally due.
Brooks spoke about the situation after the game last night.
“The ref said I play the victim, so I’m not talking no more about that. Said I’m playing the victim all of the time, and when I don’t play victim, I’m a bad guy.”
“We haven’t won a game with Gucci reffing,” he added, referencing James Williams, who strikingly resembles rapper Gucci Mane, “that should be on notice…we’ve had him 4-5 times already.”
It’s unfortunate because the suspension will come right out of the All-Star break. First up for the Suns on February 19? The San Antonio Spurs against Victor Wembanyama. Brooks is a vital cog in what the Suns want to do defensively, especially against a player like Wembanyama. And now he will not be there. Not because of injury. Not because of rest. Because of accumulation.
With 27 games left, the margin gets razor-thin. Every two technicals now equal another suspension. He can pick up number 17 and keep playing. Number 18 means he sits. Number 20 means he sits again. Number 22, same deal.
So the challenge for the final third of the season is not only the level of competition on the schedule. It is availability. It is whether a player who rides emotion like a wave can avoid crashing headfirst into the reef. Because the Suns need Dillon Brooks on the floor. And right now, keeping him there is becoming just as difficult as stopping anyone they are about to face.








