PHOENIX โ The emcee of the Sunsโ NBA Draft watch party greeted 8,000 or so fans on Thursday with a question.
With a show of applause, he wondered, who should Phoenix draft?
Phoenix native Marvin Bagley III? A few claps, a couple of boos.
How about European star Luka Doncic? A slew of boos. He was the last player Suns fans watching from Talking Stick Resort Arena wanted.
When the emcee asked about former Arizona Wildcats big man Deandre Ayton, however, he was overwhelmed by claps and passionate cheers. It was a collective โIโm fed upโ from fans of an organization that has won just 68 total games the past three years.
Fansโ hopeful cheers turned to pandemonium shortly after 4:30 p.m., when NBA commissioner Adam Silver announced that Phoenix was selecting Ayton.
One fan sporting an orange Devin Booker jersey kept jumping up and down and proudly shouted โPhoenix is rising! Phoenix is rising! Weโre back, baby!โ
Phoenix landed its chosen one, its native Sun.
Former Tucson native and Phoenix resident Michael Velasco wore a UA shirt as he sat with his family in the front row. His Phoenix fandom was on the line.
โIf they didnโt pick Ayton,โ he said, โI was getting ready to walk out.โ
Marc Beilin has lived in Phoenix for 24 years, adopting the Suns as his team when he moved from New York. He reveled in the teamโs glory days, when Charles Barkley was named MVP and led the Suns to the NBA Finals in 1993. Beilin misses the days when the Suns were competitive.
โThe Suns havenโt been relevant since Barkley. Weโve had Steve Nash and Amare Stoudamire, yeah, but nobody has really cared about them for the last 15 years,โ Beilin said.
Beilin is the father of two UA students, and so he watched Ayton from afar. He determined that Bagley and Doncic werenโt the answer, and warmed to the Bahamian big man. Beilin compares Ayton to generational players like Shaquille OโNeal and Tim Duncan.
โHeโs going to average 27 (points) and 15 (rebounds) all day long. Heโs the next Tim Duncan, heโs the next Shaq,โ he said.
โThe kid is a beast. Heโs absolutely a beast.โ
Ayton joins a Suns team that includes a dynamic scorer in Devin Booker and a rising core of young players.
Aytonโs presence in Phoenix could change the complexion of the league โ or at least the Western Conference. Watching Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson going toe-to-toe with LeBron James may get television ratings, but isnโt much fun for fans in most other markets.
โTo watch LeBron and Curry play in the finals again and again and again, itโs boring. It gets old,โ Beilin said. โThe NBA needs parity again.โ
That part remains to be seen, but the 7-foot-1-inch, 260-pound Ayton provides hope.
Itโs not just Aytonโs skills on the court that make him a home run draft pick. His easygoing personality and goofiness off the court should endear him to many Suns fans.
During the Pac-12 Tournament in March, Ayton showed off his personality in the locker room talking about playing video games and his competitiveness playing video games.
โHeโs so open, relatable and funny,โ said Tucsonโs Ryan Maese, a UA and Suns fan who drove to Phoenix from Tucson on Thursday. โWatching basketball, you invest so much emotion into these guys as fans and heโs just relatable. Heโs funny, heโs goofy, he plays video games and is always talking about Fortnite.โ
The combination of personality and an out-of-this-world skillset makes Ayton โ and, by extension, the Suns โ the talk of the town.
โThey matter now,โ Beilin said. โWe havenโt had a guy like that since ever.โ