The clock is bleeding out, each second slipping through your fingers like sand you swore you had a grip on a moment ago. The arena hums with that low, anxious energy that lives somewhere between hope and dread. Under 30 seconds with the score tight, down by three points or less, and every possession suddenly feels like it carries the weight of a season. Maybe more.
You can feel it in your chest now. That tightening, that anticipation. The kind that makes every dribble echo a little louder, every pass hang in the air a fraction too long. This is where everything slows down and speeds up at the same time. Where the noise fades and somehow gets louder, where thousands of eyes lock onto one simple question that refuses to blink.
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Who takes the shot?
Who do you hand the moment to, knowing it might define the night, the week, the narrative that follows this team around like a shadow? Who do you trust to step into that space? Who can absorb all of it — the pressure, the doubt, the expectations — and turn it into something clean, something decisive, something that snaps the net and silences everything for a heartbeat?
This is the currency of greatness. It’s the place where reputations are built possession by possession. It’s where stars start to feel different, heavier, and more permanent. Because anyone can play when the game is loose, and this is where it suffocates. This is where you find out who wants it, who demands it, who takes that final dribble, rises, and doesn’t flinch.
For the Phoenix Suns, it’s Devin Booker. That’s the reality. That’s the investment. That’s the expectation. You are paying him $53.1 million to be the guy in those moments. And for me, despite the noise and the recent misses, he is still the one I trust with the ball in his hands on this roster.
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Because he has been there. Because he has delivered before. Because he understands the weight of those possessions.
When you zoom out and look at the numbers, it tells part of the story. In situations where Phoenix is trailing by three or fewer in the final 30 seconds this season, Booker has taken that shot nine times this season. He is 3-of-9 from the field, 1-of-5 from deep, and has not turned the ball over once.
It is not perfect. It is not dominant. But it is controlled and composed. It’s like Colonel Nathan R. Jessup says, “You want me on that wall. You need me on that wall”. Booker has no issue being on that wall for the Suns. When the game tightens, when the possession matters most, the Suns know exactly where they are going. And Book is willing to take shots that not everyone can or should.
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Yeah, Devin Booker has struggled in the clutch over the past couple of months, and that mirrors what the Phoenix Suns have been as a whole. Devin Booker is the engine that drives everything they do. When it stalls, the whole thing feels it. So you look for answers, you run through the numbers, you try to make sense of what you’re seeing in real time.
And sometimes, you don’t like what you find.
So it got me thinking about something I always come back to. ‘Price for value paid’. What are you paying for, and what are you getting in return when the moments matter most? That led me down a path with Devin Booker and how he stacks up against the top-paid players in the league in these exact situations. Not only this season, but across their careers. Because nobody earns $53.1 million based on one season. You earn it through years of production, through moments, through a body of work that tells you who a player is when the game tightens.
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So I started digging. Looking at the top 15 players by salary this season and asking a simple question: What have they done in the final 30 seconds of games when their team is down three or fewer? Not in a vacuum, not based on a few recent misses, but across the entirety of their careers.
Because perspective matters.
We live inside the Phoenix Suns bubble. I know what it feels like when Booker takes that shot because I have seen it over and over again. But I do not watch every Kawhi Leonard game. I am not tracking every late-game possession for Jimmy Butler. I cannot sit here and tell you off the top of my head how Joel Embiid has performed in that exact scenario throughout his career.
So the question becomes, is what we are feeling in Phoenix unique? Or is it something that exists across the league, something that only feels different because we are living inside it every night?
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That is what this exercise is about. Stepping outside the emotion, stepping outside the moment, and trying to find where Booker actually sits when you stack him up against his peers in the situations that define reputations.
Who takes those shots? How often? And how often do they actually come through?
|
# |
PLAYER |
SALARY |
FG% |
3PT% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Stephen Curry |
$59,606,817 |
34.1% |
26.5% |
|
2 |
Joel Embiid |
$55,224,526 |
23.9% |
16.7% |
|
3 |
Nikola Jokic |
$55,224,526 |
41.6% |
16.7% |
|
4 |
Kevin Durant |
$54,708,609 |
31.3% |
31.6% |
|
5 |
Giannis Antetokounmpo |
$54,126,450 |
38.6% |
20.0% |
|
6 |
Jimmy Butler |
$54,126,450 |
25.9% |
16.7% |
|
7 |
Anthony Davis |
$54,126,450 |
47.8% |
9.1% |
|
8 |
Jayson Tatum |
$54,126,450 |
42.1% |
33.3% |
|
9 |
Devin Booker |
$53,142,264 |
30.4% |
17.9% |
|
10 |
Jaylen Brown |
$53,142,264 |
42.9% |
35.7% |
|
11 |
Karl-Anthony Towns |
$53,142,264 |
27.3% |
21.4% |
|
12 |
LeBron James |
$52,627,153 |
33.4% |
12.3% |
|
13 |
Paul George |
$51,666,090 |
21.9% |
18.8% |
|
14 |
Kawhi Leonard |
$50,000,000 |
32.8% |
11.1% |
|
15 |
Zach LaVine |
$47,499,660 |
30.5% |
32.0% |
A couple of things pop right away. Players like Anthony Davis and Nikola Jokic tend to thrive in these spots, and a lot of that comes down to how they get their looks. They live inside. They operate closer to the rim. Their shots are naturally at a higher percentage because of where they are coming from.
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Davis is a perfect example. He is sitting at 47.8% from the field in these situations, which leads the group, but he is near the bottom in three-point percentage. Why? Because he is not living out there. Over the course of his career, he has taken very few threes in those moments. He’s 1-of-11 from deep, so when he does launch late three-balls, they are often late clock situations, broken plays, or end-of-possession heaves rather than something designed. That is the difference. It is not always about who is clutch and who is not. It is about where the shots come from, how they are created, and what kind of looks each player is able to generate when everything tightens.
But I know where your eyes went. They went straight to Devin Booker, the ninth-highest-paid player in the league, and what he has done in those moments across his career. Let’s expand the Booker numbers through his career, knowing that he did not have any experience in these situations during his rookie season.
|
Year |
Age |
GP |
W |
L |
Min |
PTS |
FGM |
FGA |
FG% |
3PM |
3PA |
3P% |
FTM |
FTA |
FT% |
OREB |
DREB |
REB |
AST |
TOV |
STL |
BLK |
PF |
+/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
2015-16 |
19 |
13 |
3 |
10 |
3.7 |
5 |
2 |
5 |
40 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
50 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
-10 |
|
2016-17 |
20 |
19 |
6 |
13 |
10.4 |
11 |
4 |
12 |
33.3 |
1 |
6 |
16.7 |
2 |
3 |
66.7 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
-1 |
|
2017-18 |
21 |
10 |
2 |
8 |
3.9 |
6 |
1 |
4 |
25 |
1 |
1 |
100 |
3 |
3 |
100 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
-6 |
|
2018-19 |
22 |
16 |
5 |
11 |
8 |
12 |
4 |
10 |
40 |
0 |
5 |
0 |
4 |
5 |
80 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
7 |
|
2019-20 |
23 |
13 |
3 |
10 |
5.3 |
7 |
2 |
6 |
33.3 |
1 |
4 |
25 |
2 |
2 |
100 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
-8 |
|
2020-21 |
24 |
15 |
6 |
9 |
7.4 |
10 |
2 |
11 |
18.2 |
1 |
6 |
16.7 |
5 |
5 |
100 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
-5 |
|
2021-22 |
25 |
5 |
1 |
4 |
2.7 |
5 |
2 |
6 |
33.3 |
1 |
4 |
25 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
-2 |
|
2022-23 |
26 |
9 |
2 |
7 |
4.7 |
2 |
1 |
7 |
14.3 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
-6 |
|
2023-24 |
27 |
14 |
5 |
9 |
5.7 |
7 |
2 |
5 |
40 |
1 |
4 |
25 |
2 |
2 |
100 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
-2 |
|
2024-25 |
28 |
11 |
4 |
7 |
4.6 |
5 |
1 |
4 |
25 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
3 |
4 |
75 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
|
2025-26 |
29 |
15 |
2 |
13 |
7 |
10 |
3 |
9 |
33.3 |
1 |
5 |
20 |
3 |
4 |
75 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
-12 |
|
TOTAL |
140 |
39 |
101 |
63.4 |
80 |
24 |
79 |
0.304 |
7 |
39 |
0.179 |
25 |
31 |
746.7 |
8 |
3 |
11 |
7 |
4 |
2 |
0 |
18 |
-44 |
The numbers are what they are. 30.4% from the field, 19.7% from deep, 24-of-79 overall, 7-of-39 from three. That is not dominant. That is not elite efficiency. But there is context inside those numbers that matters. Over an 11-year career in those exact situations, he has only four turnovers. That tells you something. Despite recent narratives, in these specific situations, there is control and composure. He is getting shots up, not giving possessions away.
So, where does that place him? Around the middle of the pack relative to his peers. Not at the top, not at the bottom, right in that range where most players live when the pressure is at its highest.
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And that is where the perspective shifts. Because these shots are hard. They are contested, predictable, and heavily scouted. Everyone in the building knows who is taking it. If you are converting around 30% of the time in those spots, you are not failing; you are operating within the reality of what those moments are.
Look at Dillon Brooks this season. Five attempts, one make, 20%, with two turnovers mixed in. That is the other side of it. That is what it can look like when you move away from your primary option.
And even when you expand it to this season across the league, Booker is still right there.
Book is tied for seventh in makes in those situations alongside Kevin Durant. Durant has three makes as well, but on 12 attempts, 25%, with a turnover. Go back to his time in Phoenix, and Durant was 7-of-18, 38.9%, 4-of-10 from three. Booker sat at 3-of-9, right where he is now.
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So what does it all mean? It means the frustration is real, but the expectation might be off. These are not high percentage shots. They are not supposed to be. And when you stack Booker against the rest of the league in these moments, he does not stand out as a problem. He looks like most stars do when the game tightens and everything gets harder.
So what is the takeaway here? For me, it is an exercise in relativity.
Because we live inside the Phoenix Suns experience. We watch Devin Booker every night, we feel every miss, and we react to every outcome. When he does not deliver in those moments, the question immediately becomes whether the price matches the production. Based on what the numbers say, and more importantly, how they compare across the league, the answer is “yes”. He is properly compensated for what he is in this specific scenario. He is the guy you want taking that shot. And he is not alone in the reality that those shots do not always fall.
There are outliers. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown have been exceptional in those moments. Nikola Jokic sits in a different space entirely, a +82 in plus/minus in those situations across his career. That is what a true superstar looks like when the game tightens.
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Booker is not that. He is not a superstar. He is a star. And that distinction matters, even if it is uncomfortable to say out loud. There is a ceiling there, both for him and potentially for what this team can ultimately become with him as the centerpiece. But being a star still places you among the top-tier players in the league. It still makes you the best option your team has when everything is on the line.
The frustration is real, and it likely comes from the belief that he can live in that superstar tier consistently, something he touched in 2022. The reality is that very few players sustain that level year after year. Five, maybe seven across the entire league. That means more than 20 teams are operating without one, and trying to figure it out the same way Phoenix is. That is not a Suns problem. That is an NBA reality.
So you take the data, you take the context, and you understand where things actually sit. Not where emotion tells you they are, but where they truly fall when you stack them against the rest of the league.
Sometimes it is worth diving into the numbers on a Saturday and letting them tell part of the story. That story is that in the moments that tighten everything, you are not chasing perfection. You are choosing who carries the weight. Devin Booker carries it. Not flawlessly, not always successfully, but willingly, repeatedly, and with control. That is the job. That is the value. And that is why the ball still finds him.
