The irony of all this is that the Suns best lineups have involved the exact opposite of what you're advocating.
The Suns need much much more of the Oubre, Bridges, Ayton front court. Much less of trying to force things with lesser talented players but who supposedly fit "the role" that you're pushing.
This isn't the 1980s anymore. The two true "big" lineups don't work in the modern league. They cause space problems on offense and are easily exploited on D by smaller, faster lineups.
Well then, damnit, let's see the Suns embrace that and build chemistry.
After the Ayton/Baynes short lived experiment, they went back to Saric today.
I find it frustrating that the Suns are just like the Diamondbacks. Every day is a new beginning.
Chemistry is certainly more crucial in basketball than in baseball. And if what you suggest doesn't
work against the better teams, we're just trying to get back to .500 now anyway. I can accept a
step at a time. But they need to set a plan and give it a chance.