Once again, a slow start and sieve-like defense were too much for the Nets to overcome Monday, lit up 126-117 by the Suns before 17,344 at Barclays Center.
The Nets put seven scorers in double figures but still spent much of the night teetering on being blown out. That’s how bad their defense was as they fell for the seventh time in their last eight games.
It’s hard to picture the Nets (12-29) snapping that skid unless they start guarding and getting back in transition. They allowed 57.1 percent shooting, and 20-for-39 from 3-point range.
“Oh man, it was a real physical game out there. Credit to them, they punched us in the mouth first. And we just tried to respond, match their physicality,” said Ziaire Williams, who had 15 points in his first game back since Jan. 7. “They’re a good ball club, man. They play really well together, the ball was moving. So it took a lot of second and third efforts out of us.”
Michael Porter Jr. had 23 points to lead seven Nets in double figures despite playing without Egor Dëmin, Cam Thomas and Day’Ron Sharpe. But Brooklyn couldn’t get a stop on the other end.
Brooklyn remains fifth in the lottery race. They’re a game behind idle Sacramento, and kept pace a game ahead of sixth-place Utah, which lost.
The Nets allowed a misprint-like 71.4 percent in a first quarter that saw them fall behind by 15. They conceded 6-for-9 from deep in that opening period, and trailed 28-13.
Dillon Brooks scored 27 points and Devin Booker 24 for the Suns.
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Jordan Ott — who spent six years as a Nets assistant from 2016-22 — came back for the first time as a head coach. His Suns, projected to win just 30 games this season, are on pace for 50. They’re 11-4 over their last 15 games and lit the Nets up.
Brooklyn led 9-7 after Nic Claxton (12 points, eight rebounds, six assists) kicked out to Noah Clowney for a 3-pointer. But they coughed up the next eight unanswered points, in a run that eventually reached 21-4.
Brooklyn spent the rest of the night chasing.
Booker hit a short jumper to put the Nets in a 64-44 hole.
It was still 72-57 with 1:37 left in the half before the Nets closed on an 11-0 run, capped by Terance Mann’s 3-pointer to beat the buzzer.
That got the Nets within four at the break.
Brooklyn fell behind by 18 in the fourth quarter before they mounted a 16-3 run to get back in it. A Porter jumper pulled them within five, and he scored again to make it 114-109 with 5:34 to play.
A Clowney and-one on a driving floater pulled the Nets within 118-114. But Brooks drilled a 3-pointer and the Nets never challenged.
“They’re a great team. When we went over it in scout, they told us they’re No. 1 in 3-point attempts in transition, and we saw that real quick,” said Williams. “So, they gave us the game plan; it just took us too long just to really dial in. And we dug ourself a little hole.”





