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Khaman Maluach is providing the warmth in a cold month for the Suns

PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 11: Khaman Maluach #10 of the Phoenix Suns looks to pass the ball during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on February 11, 2026 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The injury bug that has chewed through the Phoenix Suns can wear you down if you let it. This team has been a pleasant surprise, but then February showed up swinging. The team entered the month 30-19, but following their loss to the Celtics on Tuesday, they are now 3-7 in the month.

You glance at the calendar and realize March is staring back at you. Which means we have lived through nearly a full month, All-Star break and all, of some truly ugly basketball. But of course, context matters. Guys are playing roles they were never meant to live in, carrying usage they were not built for, and trying to hold things together with duct tape and effort. Still, averaging 79 points over the last two games is not exactly a comfort blanket.

You need some warm n’ fuzzies? Okay. I got you.

As I’ve stated plenty of times recently, injuries create opportunity, and that door is finally open. The rookies are getting real minutes and actual run. It’s not the end-of-bench cardio that shows up in a blowout. They are on the floor when the game still has a pulse. The results have not been perfect, but they have been encouraging. There is something there. Enough to squint, nod, and believe that this stretch, as messy as it feels, might actually be giving the Suns information that matters.

One thing worth celebrating in the middle of all this chaos is that Mark Williams has stayed healthy. In a season where the injury bug has been relentless, Williams has logged more games than he ever has in an NBA season. It deserves recognition. It also deserves context. He is in unfamiliar territory, pushing deeper into a season than his body is used to, and that kind of fatigue shows up in new ways. Some nights, you can see it. The legs look heavy. The tank feels closer to empty.

Okay, that might not be warm. Nor fuzzy. But…

That combination, injuries around him, and a visibly tired Mark Williams, has cracked the door open for Khaman Maluach. The Suns’ tenth overall pick in the 2025 draft, and potentially the last lottery swing they get for a long time, has stepped into real minutes. And honestly, I have liked what I have seen. The moment has not swallowed him. There is poise there. There is purpose. In the middle of a month that has felt like survival basketball, Maluach has quietly given the Suns something to lean into and something to watch closely as this season keeps unfolding.

There has been a steady hum of concern around him all season, mostly because the minutes have been sparse. Before the All-Star break, he appeared in 23 of the Suns’ 55 games and averaged 4.6 minutes a night. When you stack his raw numbers next to the top 10 picks from his rookie class, he trails them across the board. He has logged 137 total minutes. The next lowest among that group is Dylan Harper, the second overall pick in San Antonio, sitting at 1,000 minutes. On paper, it looks alarming.

That lack of playing time has nothing to do with a lack of talent. Anyone tossing around the word “bust” at this stage, especially with a 19-year-old big man, needs to slow their role and stop being a jabroni. Big men take time. They always have. The game asks more of them mentally and physically. And in Khaman’s case, he is still early in his basketball life, having picked up the sport only a few years ago.

The Suns have been deliberate with him. Purposeful. They have given him opportunities without rushing the process, choosing development over exposure. He has been grinding in practices, bouncing to the G League, learning the system, and adjusting to the speed of the NBA game. That patience deserves credit, and it is beginning to show.

In a stretch of the season short on bright spots, Maluach has quietly become one. The minutes are still modest, but the impact is there, and when he is on the floor, he looks like he belongs.

Since February 11, Khaman has appeared in four games and logged 42 total minutes. In that small window, he has put up 22 points and 21 rebounds, shooting 61.5% from the field and 40% from deep on 2-of-5. It is an extremely small sample, but the per 36 numbers jump off the page. 18.8 points. 18 rebounds. Warm! Fuzzy!

It is a reminder that development is never a straight line. There are peaks, valleys, and everything in between, and all of it shapes how a player is perceived. Maluach has had rough nights in the G League, especially against the Rip City Remix and fellow first-rounder Yang Hansen, where he got moved off his spots, turned it over, and raised eyebrows. That happened. He absorbed it. He kept working.

Now, with the door opening after the Nick Richards trade to Chicago, he is landing exactly where you want him. Earning minutes. Feeling resistance. Responding to it.

The Suns have lived through the other version too many times. Lottery picks handed roles before they were ready, development rushed, confidence crushed, careers shortened. This path feels different. Slower. More intentional and methodical. And right now, watching Maluach stack good habits on top of hard lessons, it feels like the right one.

The hope is that Khaman does not become another familiar Suns story, and the deliberate way the organization has handled his development suggests they are aware of that history. In the games he has played in February, he has looked long, physical, and more than anything, tenacious. He wants the rebound. He wants to contest shots. He wants to fit into a system built on disruption and effort, and that matters.

That is the takeaway right now in his young career. You cannot teach height. You cannot teach length. You can scream about effort until you are hoarse, but you cannot teach give-a-shit either. Maluach plays like he cares. The three-ball has looked clean, and that alone opens doors. A big who can stretch the floor changes lineups, spacing, and possibilities, especially alongside someone like Oso Ighodaro.

There is something quietly interesting forming with this young group. The scoreboard might feel heavy during this stretch, but underneath it, long-term pieces are being shaped. Maluach sits right at the center of that, and he is the reason I find myself feeling a little warm and fuzzy watching all of this unfold.

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