
After a sluggish start in the first half for the Phoenix Suns, they now have an uphill battle against the Orlando Magic, as they are now down another star, as Dillon Brooks left the locker room with a hand injury.
The Phoenix Suns opened Saturday against the Orlando Magic, not in sync, disconnected, and visibly frustrated. They trailed by double digits in the first quarter, their offensive spacing compressed and their defensive rotations a step slow. Early whistles, several viewed as questionable by the home crowd, only amplified the tension. The body language told the story as rushed possessions and conversations with officials lingered too long.
Dillon Brooks heads to the locker room with a left thumb injury. #NBA #Suns #Magic
— Ben Bliklen (@benbliklen) February 21, 2026
Dillon Brooks is heading to the locker room after appearing to grab his hand or wrist over the last few possessions.
(via @HaydenCilley) pic.twitter.com/TfBB4STyKf
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) February 21, 2026
Dillon Brooks headed to the locker room with a left thumb injury, and suddenly the noise shifted from frustration to concern. With Devin Booker already out due to a right hip injury and set for reevaluation in a week, Phoenix once again faces the math problem that has defined its season: how many reliable creators can it lose before its identity dissolves? This isn’t just about one half. It’s about structural stress.
Phoenix has already navigated extended absences, reintegrations, and lineup reshuffles. Jalen Green’s recent return offered a glimpse of regained rhythm with improved pace, cleaner weak-side spacing, and a more decisive first step. But Brooks’s exit threatens the connective tissue. He’s not just a scorer; he’s a tone-setter defensively and a stabilizer in chaotic stretches. Nationally, contenders survive on continuity. Locally, Suns fans feel every roster tweak and injury because it alters expectations in real time. Championships aren’t won by ideal rotations; they’re earned by adaptable ones. The second half isn’t just about closing a deficit. It’s about proving Phoenix can steady itself when the script changes again.
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