Sources: Hornets trade veteran Miles Bridges to Suns
By Jorge Perez· Founder, V12 DFS

This is context, not an automatic lineup change. It becomes actionable only when it connects to the slate, price, ownership, or confirmed role.
The Hornets-Suns trade reshuffles both rosters in ways that immediately affect lineup construction and late-swap strategy on NBA slates. Miles Bridges heads to Phoenix, where he slots into the wing rotation alongside Kevin Durant and Devin Booker, while Charlotte adds Grayson Allen and Royce O'Neale—two perimeter defenders with lower offensive roles. On the Suns side, Bridges' volume and usage get absorbed into an already-crowded offense; on the Hornets side, Allen and O'Neale are depth pieces that don't radically change LaMelo Ball's workload or the team's pace. The slate-level implication is ownership volatility: Bridges was a known asset in Phoenix lineups before the trade, but his exact role and minutes allocation against the Suns' three-star core remains unclear in early contests.
For Suns daily fantasy construction, Bridges' arrival creates a leverage question around Booker and Durant's ceilings. A three-star ball-handling unit often compresses usage, and Fanduel's nba dfs optimizer will initially price Bridges based on pre-trade comps—potentially underweighting the fit risk or overweighting it depending on early lineup data. Phoenix's pace and game totals shouldn't shift meaningfully, but the distribution of possessions within those games becomes harder to project. Watch the first slate's ownership on Booker and Durant; if sharps view Bridges as a secondary option play, contrarian lineups that fade him and stack one star with Allen or a Suns role player may find traction in GPP contests.
Charlotte's side is steadier but less exciting: Allen and O'Neale are role-dependent, meaning their DFS value hinges entirely on minutes and whether either earns a bench role in crunch-time units. LaMelo and the Hornets' guards remain the core ceiling plays, and neither arrival materially changes that projection. The key for late-swap management is recognizing that Charlotte's depth chart is now clearer—fewer question marks around who plays in tight fourth quarters—which can help refine blowout risk and garbage-time exposure. Verify Bridges' exact role on the Suns within the first 24 hours of availability, since that will set ownership tone and dictate whether he's a pivot target or a chalk fade.
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