The Suns have officially signed all three of their 2025 draft picks, according to NBA.com’s transaction log. That trio consists of No. 10 overall pick Khaman Maluach, No. 31 pick Rasheer Fleming, and No. 41 selection Koby Brea.
That No. 10 pick was one of the primary assets the Suns received from Houston in their blockbuster Kevin Durant deal. While Maluach was widely expected to come off the board in the top eight picks on June 24, he slipped to No. 10, giving Phoenix an opportunity to nab its potential center of the future.
Maluach averaged 8.6 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 1.3 blocks in 21.2 minutes per contest during his first and only college season at Duke. While his box-score numbers don’t jump off the page, the 18-year-old has an impressive frame (a height of 7’1″ and a wingspan of 7’7″), is one of the youngest players in this year’s draft class, and has the potential to excel in the NBA as a defensive anchor and a rim-runner and lob threat on offense.
Maluach’s rookie scale deal is expected to pay him roughly $6MM in his rookie season and a total of $27.4MM across his first four years in the NBA, as our breakdown of this year’s rookie scale shows.
There was a minor bidding war for Fleming ahead of day two of this year’s draft, with teams vying to move up to No. 31 to select the former Saint Joseph’s forward. Phoenix won that bidding war by sending Minnesota the No. 36 pick and a pair of future second-rounders.
Fleming is coming off an impressive junior season in which he averaged 14.7 points, 8.5 rebounds, 1.4 steals and 1.5 blocks per game in 35 appearances (31.1 minutes), with a shooting line of .531/.390/.743. According to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link), he signed a four-year, $8.7MM deal using the second-round pick exception and got three fully guaranteed years, with a fourth-year team option.
As for Brea, Phoenix drafted him after trading up to No. 41 using the 52nd and 59th overall picks in a deal with the Warriors. The 6’7″ wing, who played four seasons at Dayton before spending his fifth and final college season with Kentucky, is an excellent shooter, having made 317-of-730 (43.4%) three-pointers during his NCAA career.
Brea signed a two-way contract.
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!