If you thought there was a chance that Markieff Morris’ animosity towards the Suns would dissipate by training camp, think again. Weeks after going on the record to demand a trade, he reiterated his stance on his own Twitter account on Thursday evening:
There’s no ambiguity there at all. Unfortunately for Markieff, it’s not up to him. And if he really wants out of Phoenix, he’s doing as much as he can to destroy his chances of going to a favorable situation.
Morris has been unhappy since the Suns traded his twin brother Marcus to Detroit in July, claiming that they gave Phoenix a discount on their extensions (which totaled $52 million over four years between them) in the hopes that they’d be able to keep playing together. Does he have a right to be disappointed on a personal level at the way it shook out? Sure. But the Suns were under no obligation to keep the brothers together. GM Ryan McDonough made a trade that he thought gave the Suns a chance to get better — in other words, he was doing his job. This is a rough business, and those that survive it learn not to take trades personally.
Where this situation goes from here will be interesting, and it could get ugly. Morris has painted himself into a corner with his public comments about wanting to be traded. The Suns have no incentive to trade him just because he’s unhappy — he’s their starting power forward and he’s on a great contract, making just $8 million per year. His personal issues with management aside, they need him. They don’t have an in-house replacement who’s ready to step in. If they’re going to move him, they need to get equal value, and good luck getting any team to give up a worthwhile asset for someone who has (deservedly) developed a reputation around the league as a malcontent, to say nothing of the impending felony assault charges he and his brother both face.
If the Suns don’t trade him by training camp, he has to show up and do his job, whether he’s happy about it or not. He could decide to blow off camp, but that would be counterproductive: he could be suspended or fined, which would not only cost him money but further torpedo his trade value, which is already basically nonexistent. His best option, if he wants out, is to be patient, show up to camp, don’t complain, play well, and hope that by the trade deadline he’s rehabilitated his value to the point where the Suns might get an offer they would actually take. In being so public about his desire to be traded and his unwillingness to play in Phoenix, he’s given them all the leverage and damaged his reputation, maybe irreparably.