News Wizards Team Notes

Report: Wizards reach buyout agreements with Smart, Wesley

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The veteran guard intends to sign with the Los Angelos Lakers

The Washington Wizards have reached a buyout agreement with guard Marcus Smart, per ESPN’s Shams Charania.


BREAKING: Marcus Smart has agreed to a contract buyout with the Washington Wizards and intends to sign a two-year, $11 million deal with the Los Angeles Lakers after clearing waivers, sources tell ESPN. A return to a grand stage for the 2022 NBA Defensive Player of the Year. pic.twitter.com/8g9Bxzz11E

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) July 19, 2025

Smart intends to sign a two-year, $11 million deal with the Lakers upon clearing waivers. The move opens up a roster spot for Washington while allowing Smart, 31, to join a contender.

Washington acquired Smart in February — a deal made by the Wizards in large part to acquire Memphis’ 2025 first-round pick in exchange for taking on Smart’s bloated salary.

Wizards General Manager Will Dawkins turned that pick, No. 18, into Will Riley (No. 21), Jamir Watkins (No. 43), and 2031 and 2032 second-round picks.

Smart was on a $20.5 million expiring deal for the 2025-26 season. It’s unclear at this time how much the veteran guard gave back in his buyout agreement.

In a separate move, the Wizards reached a buyout agreement with guard Blake Wesley, who the team acquired from San Antonio in the Kelly Olynyk trade, per Hoops Hype’s Mike Scotto. Wesley now has time to find a new team, and the Wizards continue to trim down their roster.


Update: Blake Wesley agreed to a buyout with the Wizards to allow the former Spurs first-round pick to become a free agent, sources told @hoopshype. Wesley, a strong perimeter defender, shot 37% on threes in the second half last season and expects to land in a new role elsewhere. https://t.co/LmCXVRH9jR

— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) July 19, 2025

Buying out Smart and Wesley opens up backup point guard minutes for either AJ Johnson or Malaki Branham, clearing a log jam at the guard position.

Washington is now at the allowable 15 standard NBA contracts on their roster after buying out Smart and Wesley. Their updated roster is as follows.

Guards: Bub Carrington, CJ McCollum, Tre Johnson, AJ Johnson, Malaki Branham

Wings: Khris Middleton, Bilal Coulibaly, Kyshawn George, Justin Champagnie, Corey Kispert, Will Riley, Cam Whitmore, Dillon Jones

Forwards: Alex Sarr, Marvin Bagley III

Two-way: Tristan Vukcevic, Jamir Watkins, Jaylen Martin

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/2025...ards-reach-buyout-agreement-with-marcus-smart
 
A new look coming for Bullets Forever in August

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Our coverage remains the same but with a new look.

In just a couple of weeks, Bullets Forever is switching to a new platform as part of SB Nation’s network-wide move to a new publishing platform. This will change the look of the site and also make it faster and more reliable on any device you use. This is an upgrade.

When you land on the site, it will look cleaner – less clunky, with more white space, a better ad experience with faster load times – but will still have all the usual articles, analysis, and news by all the folks you know.

Community discussion and content created by you will be more prominent in the new design. The best comment threads will be easy to find, and staff and commenters alike will be able to start conversations whenever they like with a brand new tool.

We’re planning on an early August reveal, so we wanted to give you a heads up. You’ll hear more from us when it’s almost here. The site will look a little different, feel a little faster, and, most importantly, have a bigger role for you, the community.

So, stick around and check it out!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/2025/7/24/24472160/a-new-look-coming-for-bullets-forever-in-august
 
Preview: Mystics host Storm Saturday night

WNBA: Los Angeles Sparks at Washington Mystics

Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images

The Mystics and Storm sent three players each to the All-Star game.

The Washington Mystics take on the Seattle Storm at home tomorrow night. Here is the preview for tomorrow’s action:

Game info


When: 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jul. 26

Where: CareFirst Arena in Washington DC

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries


Mystics — Georgia Amoore and Sika Kone are both listed as OUT.

Storm — Katie Lou Samuelson is listed as OUT.

Game notes and more

  • Saturday’s outing is the Mystics’ second since returning from the All-Star break. During the break, Washington flexed a trio of first time All-Stars in Brittney Sykes as well as rookies Sonia Citron and Kiki Iriafen.
  • The Mystics sit at 11-12, good for the eighth-best record in the WNBA. They’re fighting off the expansion Golden State Valkyries and the Kelsey Plum-led Los Angeles Sparks (on a four game win streak) for the WNBA’s final playoff spot.
  • ESPN’s matchup predictor gives the Storm a 62% chance to win tomorrow night. Seattle sits at 15-10 behind an All-Star trio of their own — Skylar Diggins, Gabby Williams and Nneka Ogwumike.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/2025/7/25/24474444/washington-mystics-seattle-storm-wnba-preview
 
Preview: Mystics cap off back-to-back versus Mercury

WNBA: Los Angeles Sparks at Washington Mystics

Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images

The Mystics finish off a tough back-to-back against Phoenix Sunday night.

The Washington Mystics are playing the Phoenix Mercury in the second night of a back-to-back at home. I’ve got you covered with the preview for the game:

Game info


When: 6 p.m. EST on Sunday, Jul. 27

Where: CareFirst Arena in Washington DC

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries


Mystics — Sika Kone (suspension due to Women’s AfroBasket) and Georgia Amoore (knee) are both listed as OUT. Aaliyah Edwards is listed as DAY-TO-DAY with a wrist injury.

Mercury — The Mercury have a clean injury report coming into Sunday’s game.

Game notes and more

  • The Mystics have been hovering around .500 all season behind the newly-minted All-Star trio of Kiki Iriafen, Sonia Citron and Brittney Sykes. The Mercury, meanwhile, are making the most of their first season without arguably the greatest WNBA player of all time, Diana Taurasi — Phoenix is third in the league standings behind the newly-acquired Alyssa Thomas and Satou Sabally.
  • The Mystics are neck-and-neck with the expansion Golden State Valkyries for the WNBA’s final playoff spot halfway through the season. Unfortunately for Golden State, first-time All-Star Kayla Thornton, who they plucked from the New York Liberty in the expansion draft, has been lost for the season due to a knee surgery.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/2025...ton-mystics-phoenix-mercury-wnba-game-preview
 
Recap: Mystics lose to Mercury, 88-72

Phoenix Mercury v Washington Mystics

Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images

The first half looked promising, but the second half was a bloodbath.

The Washington Mystics lost to the Phoenix Mercury, 88-72 on Sunday night at CareFirst Arena.

If you watched the first half of this game Washington didn’t look too bad. In fact, they were leading 46-42. But the Mercury shot 73.3 percent in the third quarter whil Washington struggled to get into a rhythm, setting the stage for the blowout that came at Washington’s expense.

For Washington, Shakira Austin led with 20 points and 8 rebounds while Sonia Citron added 13 points. Brittney Sykes was uncharacteristically shut out. She didn’t socre a single point but still had 4 assists.

Meanwhile, for Phoenix, Alyssa Thomas had a monster game, scoring 27 points, grabbing 11 rebounds and dishing 8 assists.

The Mystics’ next game is on Tuesday against the Chicago Sky at home. Tipoff is at 7:30 p.m. ET. See you then.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...ngton-mystics-phoenix-mercury-wnba-game-recap
 
The Unique Rookie Season of Alex Sarr

2025 NBA Summer League - Brooklyn Nets v Washington Wizards

Washington Wizards center Alex Sarr. | Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

The Statistical Doppelganger Machine rides again

When last seen, the Statistical Doppelganger Machine was sleuthing the statistical similarities between Bilal Coulibaly and basketball history and producing a list that included Metta World Peace, Brandon Ingram, and Shaedon Sharpe. This time, The Machine turns its algorithm on Alex Sarr.

And immediately runs into some...issues. First, Sarr is fairly unique in basketball history. In the doppelganger machine, an identical match across the 14 categories gets a score of 100. Scores drop from there as player seasons diverge from the reference season. Most players have a few “similars” who score in the 90s. For example, Coulibaly’s second season had four similars that scored in 90 or above.

For Sarr, the “most similar” player season scores an 84. For Coulibaly, that’s the score of the 50th “most similar” player season (which was Danny Granger at age 23). It seems the doppelganger algorithm doesn’t quite know what to do with a player who scored inefficiently while doing a decent job on the boards, and produced assists and blocked shots while also shooting lots of threes.

The second issue — the player seasons most similar to Sarr’s rookie year were posted last season. The problem? Part of the fun of this is getting names of barely remembered players from yesteryear and digging into the yellowing pages of Basketball-Reference for a history lesson.

The other “problem” raised by the second issue is that these comps are more interesting when we can see what happened next. We don’t get that when the most similar seasons are from the same year.

I’m going to solve this by filtering out player seasons from the last two years. For the record, the player seasons most similar to Sarr’s rookie year (including 2024-25 and 2023-24) were from Zaccharie Risacher, Atlanta Hawks; Naz Reid, Minnesota Timberwolves, and GG Jackson, Memphis Grizzlies (2023-24 season).

Let’s turn now to The Statistical Doppelganger Machine. For those who haven’t read previous installments, The Machine crunches together 14 categories of information, including age, playing time, and an array of per possession box score stats. It spits out a list of player seasons from history “most similar” to the reference season. In this case, Coulibaly’s 2024-25 season is the reference, so The Machine gives me a list of player seasons most similar to his performance last season.

Here we go:

  1. Jaren Jackson Jr., Memphis Grizzlies, 2019-20 | PPA: 90— While my analysis suggests Jackson has been a bit overrated, he’s an excellent defender (though he has had a fouling problem) and his offensive efficiency has been subpar in most seasons of his career. All that said, Jackson is a two-time All-Star, won Defensive Player of the Year in 2022-23, and his peak PPA was 182, which is All-NBA level most years.
  2. Jabari Parker, Chicago Bulls, 2018-19 | PPA: 75 — This was a 23-year-old Parker who was on his third NBA team. His previous stop was Washington when the Wizards took him and Bobby Portis in exchange for Otto Porter. When in Washington, he stood out for giving the worst defensive effort I’ve ever seen, including when Isaiah Thomas was in a Wizards uniform. Despite considerable physical ability and real basketball skill, he was finished in the NBA at age 26. His career included stints with six franchises over his eight seasons. Sarr would have to make a serious heel turn to end up with this kind of career.
  3. Dario Saric, Philadelphia 76ers, 2016-17 | PPA: 70 — Saric was a 22-year-old rookie in this season. The following season, his PPA hit 140, which was the best production of his career. And then dropped pretty steadily. Sarr’s a better athlete and better defensive presence than Saric.
  4. Michael Beasley, Miami Heat, 2008-09 | PPA: 88 — Beasley is a cautionary tale. The second overall pick in 2008, he was blessed with good size and athleticism, and he’d shown considerable skill at Kansas State. His collegiate production was superb. His rookie season was fine, and he improved in year two to a 103 PPA. And then...his production cratered, the Miami Heat traded him to Minnesota, who let him leave in free agency to the Phoenix Suns, who waived him with a year remaining on his contract. He then bounced around on 10-day contracts and minimum salary deals until the league was done with him at age 30.
  5. Charlie Villanueva, Milwaukee Bucks, 2007-08 | PPA: 81 — This was third year Villanueva — age 23, and it was the worst of those three seasons. Villanueva’s career trajectory was...odd. A 104 rookie year, 96 in year two, 81 in year three, and then back up to 118 in year four. That was his peak — his PPA wouldn’t approach average again, and he was finished in the NBA at 31.

Others with seasons near the top of Sarr’s “most similar” list include: Bobby Portis, Jared Sullinger (who was good until his weight got out of control), 20-year-old Kristaps Porzingis, 23-year-old Andray Blatche, and 21-year-old Marvin Bagley III.

For Sarr, my biggest concern is his poor offensive efficiency. His relative offensive efficiency (individual offensive rating - league average offensive rating) was -16.3 points per 100 possessions last season. In that regard, his summer league was not encouraging — while his defensive performance was excellent, his offensive rating was still 7.9 points per 100 possessions below average.

To get his offense up to even average, he’ll have to do something he didn’t in Australia or in either summer league or in his rookie year: make shots. Last season, he shot 45.4% on twos and 30.8% on threes. He’s athletic and looks smooth and skilled to they eye. He has yet to figure out how to harness the size, athleticism and apparent skills into consistently getting the ball to go through the basket.

To reach his potential, that will need to change. Even if he can’t improve the shotmaking, he can probably have a successful NBA career based on his size, athleticism, and defense...if he’s also willing to reduce his offensive usage and become more of a specialist.

Like virtually all young players, Sarr’s future is heavily depending on how hard and smart he’s able to work. One advantage he’ll have is that Washington will give him every chance to succeed.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/2025/7/28/24475030/the-unique-rookie-season-of-alex-sarr
 
Recap: Mystics beat Sky, 103-86

Chicago Sky v Washington Mystics

Photo by Kenny Giarla/NBAE via Getty Images

Sonia Citron scored 28 points in the win.

The Washington Mystics defeated the Chicago Sky, 103-86 on Tuesday night at CareFirst Arena. The Mystics now improve to 13-13 while the Sky fall to 7-19.

This game was a solid win in Washington’s favor. Besides a short stretch in the first quarter, the Mystics effectively had a wire-to-wire win. Chicago was held to just 18 free throws attempts and shot just 31.6 percent from the three point line. Meanwhile, Washington attempted 27 free throws (making 21 of them) and they also made 10-of-24 three points shots.

Sonia Citron was the Mystics’ standout tonight. She scored 28 points on 10-of-15 shooting, and even made 5-of-6 three pointers. Kiki Iriafen added 22 points and 10 rebounds. Brittney Sykes added 18 points and 6 assists. Let’s call this a win where the Mystics’ stars came out swinging.

For Chicago, Angel Reese led with 22 points (but on 6-of-16 shooting) and grabbed 13 rebounds.

Washington’s next game is on Thursday when they host the Golden State Valkyries. Tip off is at 7:30 p.m ET.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...ashington-mystics-chicago-sky-wnba-game-recap
 
Preview: Mystics host Valkyries in crucial midseason matchup

WNBA: Chicago Sky at Washington Mystics

Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

The Mystics and Valkyries are fighting for playoff positioning.

The Washington Mystics are hosting the expansion Golden State Valkyries tomorrow night. I’ve got you covered with the preview ahead of the action.

Game info:


When: 7:30 p.m. EST on Thursday, Jul. 31

Where: CareFirst Arena in Washington DC

How to watch: Amazon Prime Video

Injuries:


Mystics — Sika Kone and Georgia Amoore remain OUT. Aaliyah Edwards is listed as DAY-TO-DAY with a wrist injury.

Valkyries — Kayla Thornton is out for the season after undergoing knee surgery. Monique Billings is DAY-TO-DAY with an ankle injury.

Game notes and more:

  • The Mystics (13-13) are half a game up on the Valkyries (12-13) for the eighth and final WNBA playoff spot. There’s still a lot of season left to play, but this is the Mystics’ biggest game of the season so far.
  • This game is the Mystics’ fourth in six days. Check out my recent column about the WNBA scheduling crunch and what the players’ union should do to address the issue.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...tics-golden-state-calkyries-wnba-game-preview
 
The WNBA needs to fix its schedule

Syndication: The Indianapolis Star

Grace Smith/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The WNBA players’ union must push heavily to lengthen the season, which has become far too condensed.

“Pay us what you owe us.”

The now-iconic slogan, donned by the WNBA All-Stars on t-shirts during warmups for the league’s annual All-Star game, underscores the divide in the ongoing negotiations between the WNBA players’ union and the league that employs them.


WNBA players making a statement at the All-Star game:

“Pay us what you owe us.” pic.twitter.com/AL1uf7lfEB

— Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) July 20, 2025

The WNBA players’ association (WNBPA) is currently negotiating with the WNBA to draft a new collective bargaining agreement after the league signed a gargantuan $2.2 billion media rights deal. Media rights deals are the league’s largest source of revenue (and thus the primary source of player salaries), and the new one is at least four times larger than the previous one with the potential to grow, should even more media partners sign on in the future.

The soon-to-be completely transformed WNBA salary structure warrants volumes of discussion on its own, but for now, there is a different issue I would like to focus on: season length.

Hall of famer Rebecca Lobo recently took to Twitter to point out the dramatic decrease in average rest time between WNBA games — since 2021, the average days of rest between games dropped from 4.03 to 2.7.


A priority of @TheWNBPA in the new CBA has to be addressing the condensed schedule. This season there are too many games in too short a period of time. (Research: Garrett Gastfield)

AVERAGE # OF DAYS BETWEEN GAMES

2021: 4.03
2022: 2.81
2023: 2.88
2024: 3.23
2025: 2.70

— Rebecca Lobo (@RebeccaLobo) July 27, 2025

The week the Washington Mystics are currently enduring exemplifies this schedule crunch: from Jul. 26-29 they play three games in four days, then they get a day off before having to suit up for a fourth game in a six-day span.

The WNBA has added 12 games to the schedule since 2021, an unequivocal positive in the eyes of league sponsors and stakeholders. More games means more eyes on screens, more moments to be turned into highlights, and more to sell to potential sponsors, meaning more money.

For players, the requisite changes to schedule length have not been made. The 2021 WNBA season ran from mid-May to mid-October. The 2025 season runs in the exact same window of time with 12 more games, plus the 2025 Finals will now be a best-of-seven series as opposed to the previous best-of-five format.

This crowding of the schedule is desirable for league partners, as it simply means that more of the WNBA product is being offered to the consumer. But for the players, the condensed rest time means both less time with their families and greater risk of injury due to stress and overexertion.

Given that the WNBA product cannot function without the players, this is not a fair trade-off, and expanding the existing season schedule over a longer period of time should be a crucial point in negotiations for the WNBPA in their ongoing negotiations with the owners.

The primary drawback with such a proposition is the potential for a lengthened WNBA season to interfere with overseas commitments, as a large number of players play overseas in the WNBA offseason to supplement their salaries.

However, since player salaries are set to dramatically increase in 2026, far fewer players will have to play overseas, and most will be able to finally enjoy the type of proper offseason previously only accessible to the players with large endorsement deals and offseason coaching or media jobs.

Additionally, WNBA players wield more influence over foreign leagues than international-first players do over the WNBA. For example, Ivana Dojkić, who during her two years in the WNBA prioritized her overseas commitments in the Italian Lega Basket Femminile, was allowed to report to WNBA training camp late, a standard grace granted to foreign stars. Surely WNBA players still playing in Europe and Asia in the coming years will be given similar grace by their overseas teams should the WNBA season be extended.

During this round of CBA negotiations, the WNBA players have more leverage than they’ve ever had before — the threat of a work stoppage given the WNBA’s exponential growth since 2022 certainly keeps the owners laying awake at night staring at their diamond-encrusted ceilings.

Since the WNBA’s recent growth has been driven by individual players’ star power (plus the players have a viable offseason league in Unrivaled upon which to fall back), the WNBPA is uniquely positioned to force the owners into acquiescing to their demands. Chief among these should be the demand that the timeframe of the season be extended to account for the additional games being worked into the schedule.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...ngelbert-napheesa-collier-caitlin-clark-wnbpa
 
Recap: Mystics lose to Valkyries, 68-67

Golden State Valkyries v Washington Mystics

Photo by Kenny Giarla/NBAE via Getty Images

This was also a not so great game in general but Sonia Citron scored 16 points.

The Washington Mystics lost to the Golden State Valkyries on Thursday night at home 68-67.

Washington started this game on a poor note with Golden State outscoring them 30-20. While the Mystics were able to stabilize things and ultimately make things more interesting in the second half, including leading by one point in the fourth quarter, this wasn’t enough.

Sonia Citron led the Mystics with 16 points. Meanwhile, Kate Martin led the Valkyries with 14 points.

Washington’s next game is on Sunday when they go on the road to play the Atlanta Dream. Tip off is at 3 p.m. ET. See you then.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...ystics-golden-state-valkyries-wnba-game-recap
 
Preview: Mystics host Sky Tuesday night

WNBA: Chicago Sky at Washington Mystics

Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

The Mystics are playing their third game in four nights on Tuesday.

The Washington Mystics are hosting the Chicago Sky on Tuesday night. I’ve got you covered with the preview for tomorrow night’s action.

Game info


When: 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jul. 29

Where: CareFirst Arena in Washington DC

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries


Mystics — Aaliyah Edwards (wrist) was ruled OUT for Sunday’s game against the Phoenix Mercury. Sika Kone and Georgia Amoore remain OUT.

Sky — Hailey Van Lith (ankle), Angel Reese (back), Moriah Jefferson (leg) and Ariel Atkins (leg) were all ruled OUT for Sunday’s game against the Indiana Fever. Their status for Tuesday is not yet clear.

Game notes and more

  • The game against the Sky is the Mystics’ third outing in four days. Such a cramped schedule underscores an observation made by Rebecca Lobo recently that the WNBA’s schedule is getting a little bit too chaotic to be sustainable:

A priority of @TheWNBPA in the new CBA has to be addressing the condensed schedule. This season there are too many games in too short a period of time. (Research: Garrett Gastfield)

AVERAGE # OF DAYS BETWEEN GAMES

2021: 4.03
2022: 2.81
2023: 2.88
2024: 3.23
2025: 2.70

— Rebecca Lobo (@RebeccaLobo) July 27, 2025

I would expect the dramatically reduced rest time to become a sticking point in the WNBPA’s ongoing negotiations with the league, similar to how the NFLPA steadfastly opposes the addition of an 18th game to the schedule. This sort of physical overworking can tear ligaments and end careers.

  • The 7-18 Sky are one of the worst teams in the WNBA (again), and the Mystics need to pick up a win against them to stay afloat in the playoff race. Washington (12-13) is currently a half-game up on the expansion Golden State Valkyries for the league’s final playoff spot.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...6/washington-mystics-chicago-sky-wnba-preview
 
Preview: Mystics play Dream on Sunday

Washington Mystics v Atlanta Dream

Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images

The Mystics look to get back in the win column after a few days off.

The Washington Mystics play the Atlanta Dream on Sunday afternoon. Here’s the preview.

Game info:


When: 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, Aug. 3

Where: Gateway Center Arena, College Park, GA

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries:


Mystics — Sika Kone (AfroBasket), Georgia Amoore (knee), Aaliyah Edwards (wrist) are out.

Dream — Brittney Griner is day-to-day and Rhyne Howard is out (knee).

Game notes:


The Mystics have spent the last few days off and will look to get back to .500, a mark that they have hovered around most of this season. Meanwhile the Dream have won four of their last games and are now 17-11. Hopefully Washington can get a big win here and perhaps get above .500 as this season continues!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...ngton-mystics-atlanta-dream-wnba-game-preview
 
Corey Kispert: Not Bad, Not Better, Not a Bargain

Washington Wizards v Detroit Pistons

Washington Wizards wing Corey Kispert | Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images

No doppelgangers, just analysis

I was about to get started writing what I thought would be a fun piece about Corey Kispert’s statistical doppelgangers. I figured The Machine would spit out a list of good shooters, and it does. But I kept getting stuck on some of the narratives about Kispert that...well...don’t hold up under scrutiny.

The biggest of these is that of Kispert’s improvement. The Official Narrative is that he’s gotten better. Except...he hasn’t. Here’s his progression year by year, according to my PPA metric.

(PPA is my all-around rating system that rewards players for doing things that help a team win and dings them for things that hurt the cause. It’s pace neutral and includes accounting for role and defensive impact. In PPA, 100 is average and higher is better. Replacement level is 45.)

  • 2021-22 — 87
  • 2022-23 — 95
  • 2023-24 — 80
  • 2024-25 — 57

You’ll find something similar using other metrics with slight differences. John Hollinger’s PER, for example, rates Kispert’s rookie year as his worst and his third year as his best, but a) rookie year and last season were about the same (10.9 PER vs. 11.0), and b) PER rewards inefficient usage. Year three was Kispert’s high-water mark in possession usage.

Other advanced metrics (RAPM, DARKO, LEBRON, MAMBA) show a neutral to modestly positive contribution on offense and a significantly negative defensive impact.

We see the same when looking at the numbers on a per possession basis. Kispert’s rebounds, assists, steals, and blocks have bounced within a narrow range for four seasons. His turnovers have ticked up (though not egregiously) as his usage has risen.

His offensive efficiency has been meh except for year two — his offensive rating was about +2 per 100 possessions compared to league average as a rookie, -1.3 per 100 in year three, and -2.5 per 100 last season. The one exception: year two, when is offensive rating was +9.2.

Drafted as a three-point marksman, Kispert’s three-point shooting has been decent but unexceptional...except for year two (42.4%) and kinda year three (38.3% vs. a league average of 36.6%. Last year, he shot 36.4% — league average was 36.0%.

I had accepted the narrative that Kispert had improved as a driver, but the numbers don’t agree. Last season, at-rim attempts became a bit less frequent in his shot diet (20.0% of his FGA in 2023-24 down to 18.9% last season), and his at-rim conversion rate fell to a career low (but still excellent) 72.9%.

In other words, Kispert does a good job of converting when he’s able to get to the rim, but he seldom does. He also experienced a dropoff in floater range conversion rate (46.6% last season vs. 50+% each of the previous three, but he took more of them. That 3-10 foot range is the place of dead or dying drives — a player has attacked, can’t get to the rim, and has to put up something. That something is often heavily contested, often by a big, and those are tough shots for nearly everyone, including Kispert.

Elite players often draw fouls in this area. That’s not Kispert, however. He’s an excellent free throw shooter, he just doesn’t stress the defense enough to get to the line with any regularity.

Another (partially true) narrative that needs some nuance is the (repeated) assertion by chief propagandist play-by-play guy Chris Miller is that Kispert is a great cutter.

Last season, NBA tracking data had Kispert as a cutter 0.7 times per game, which was about 6.6% of his possessions. In other words, a Kispert cut that led to finishing a play happened about once every six quarters. Those cuts produced nearly 1.5 points per possession, which ranked in the 83rd percentile.

The point? Kispert is an effective cutter...when he cuts, which is actually pretty rare. I’m ready to believe that he could be a more frequent cutter with the right teammate (it’d be cool to see him with Nikola Jokic or Lebron James and Luka Doncic or with a healthy Tyrese Haliburton). But a cut every six quarters? That doesn’t scream “greatness” at that particular aspect of his game, especially when his cut frequency is basically right at the team average, and his reputation as a shooter should lead to defensive overplays and more cutting opportunities.

Where does all this leave the Wizards? If Kispert is going to survive as a shooting specialist — and based on his performance thus far, that’s what he’ll need to do — he needs to make more threes. Last season, nearly a third of his three-point attempts were wide open, and he shot just 37.5%. On open looks: 37.9%. That’s not good enough to create the defense-distorting three-alarm fire that creates openings for teammates.

The rest of his game hasn’t improved in a meaningful way through four seasons and isn’t likely to take a big leap forward in the years ahead. That is to say, he’s not about to become an impactful defender, a strong rebounder, or a stellar playmaker. He might shoot better and generate more opportunities to attack closeouts — exactly the kind of thing that becomes more probable if he’s with better teammates.

Given his age (entering his age 26 season), and that he’s starting a contract paying him nearly $14 million per season, the best hope for the Wizards is that he starts the season hot (40+% from three) and entices a team to trade a first round pick to add him to their rotation.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/2025/8/3/24479598/corey-kispert-not-bad-not-better-not-a-bargain
 
Recap: Mystics lose to Dream, 99-83

Washington Mystics v Atlanta Dream


Kiki Iriafen led Washington with 22 points.

The Washington Mystics lost to the Atlanta Dream on Sunday, 99-83.

If you watched this game for just the first quarter, you were thinking that the Mystics were going to be in the driver’s seat, you’d be right. Washington led, 23-12 shooting 60 percent while holding Atlanta to just 23.1 percent shooting.

But there are three more quarters after that. A turnover filled second quarter flipped the script and allowed the Dream to have a 40-39 lead at the half. Then in the third quarter and fourth quarter, it was just a complete butt kicking at the Mystics’ expense. There isn’t much to be said there.

For the Mystics, Kiki Iriafen led with 22 points with Sonia Citron adding 16 more. For the Dream, Brionna Jones led with 23 points while Naz Hillmon added 14 points and 13 rebounds.

The Mystics’ next game is on Tuesday against the Chicago Sky. Tip off is at 8 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...hington-mystics-atlanta-dream-wnba-game-recap
 
Preview: Mystics play Sky on Tuesday

Chicago Sky v Washington Mystics


Thankfully, Washington is playing one of the league’s more disappointing teams.

The Washington Mystics play the Chicago Sky on Tuesday evening. Here is the preview.

Game info:


When: 8 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Aug. 5

Where: Wintrust Arena, Chicago, IL

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries:


For the Mystics, Sika Kone (AfroBasket), and Georgia Amoore (knee) are out.

For the Sky, Courtney Vandersloot (knee) is out. Angel Reese and Angel Reese are day-to-day.

Game notes:


The Mystics have lost two games in a row and are now sitting with a 13-15 record. If the season ended today, they will not make the postseason. That said, the Mystics will play against the 7-21 Chicago Sky, where they are int he middle of an eight-game losing streak.

If there is a game that the Mystics should be able to win without overextending themselves (and not get cocky), it’s this one. Let’s hope for a big W tonight so Washington gets back in a playoff spot.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...hington-mystics-chicago-sky-wnba-game-preview
 
Welcome to the new Bullets Forever: A fresh look, fewer ads and a new feature

Things will look a little different around here today.

A few weeks ago we told you something new was coming to Bullets Forever and today it’s here. Things are cleaner, faster and easier to use. There are the same writers, coverage, comments, and community you’ve come to rely on, now with less clutter and clunkiness.

Let’s dive in. If you scroll down the page on your phone or computer, it’s smoother. You’ll notice that the most talked-about stories have a bigger font displaying the number of comments. You’ll also see a section called Active Conversations to point you to the busiest conversations right now.

But there’s two changes we’re most excited to tell you about:

Fewer ads for logged-in users​


Our loyal readers and commenters are the heartbeat of our communities, and with this new design we’re excited to offer them fewer ads when they’re logged in. Specifically:

  • Video players will no longer chase you down the page. Just scroll past one and it will be gone.
  • Full page pop-ups that would sometimes interrupt your commenting experience have been disabled.

You can log in or sign up here and check it out.

A new feature by the community, for the community: The Feed​


Today we’re launching a brand new space for you to come together. The Feed is a running stream of posts and updates from you, the community, mixed in with links and updates from the team and our staff. Think of it as our community’s group text where you can easily grab your phone and share a link to a story, post a question or write your own post on the day’s news.

You can find it in two places:

  • On the homepage, adjacent to the top stories. Community participation is core to who we are, so we want it right on the front page to share your stuff.
  • A devoted homepage for The Feed where you can see the full stream of posts coming in from the community. You might want to bookmark that.

Log in or sign up here and you can start posting on The Feed and seeing fewer ads immediately.

Today’s launch is a big deal for our community, and it’s also a kickoff of broader efforts to build around the community we have here. Soon you’ll get alerts when someone replies to your comment or your post on The Feed, with more to come thereafter. We want to put the community in the driver’s seat, so let us know what you want in the comments below or in The Feed.

If you want to dig into more of this updated experience, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton, where he expands on the changes in our ads and design. Ed will be responding to questions in the comments. If you have any questions about how to log in to our new system, check out this article from last week.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/bull...ever-a-fresh-look-fewer-ads-and-a-new-feature
 
Wizards announce 2025-26 NBA preseason schedule

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On Wednesday, the Washington Wizards announced their 2025-26 NBA preseason schedule. Here are the dates and times.

  • Sunday, October 12 vs. Toronto Raptors at Capital One Arena – 3 p.m. ET
  • Monday, October 13 at New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden – 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Thursday, October 16 at Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena – 7 p.m. ET

It’s interesting to see that the Wizards are hosting the Raptors in the afternoon in their lone home preseason game. But hey, at least we now know when NBA basketball returns to Chinatown.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/latest-news/57361/washington-wizards-preseason-schedule-announcement
 
Mystics at Lynx preview: Washington looks to stop losing streak on Friday

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The Washington Mystics play the Minnesota Lynx on Friday. Here is the preview.

Game Info


When: Friday, Aug. 8 at 7:30 p.m. ET

Where: Target Center, Minneapolis, MN

How to watch: ION

Injury report: For the Mystics, Georgia Amoore (knee) is out. Jacy Sheldon is questionable due to trade timing. Alysha Clark (day-to-day) is expected to join Washington on Friday after she was acquired earlier this week.

For the Lynx, Napheesa Collier (ankle) is out.

What to watch for​


Well, for the second straight game, the Mystics will be in a state of flux due to the two major trades they made this week. Brittney Sykes and Aaliyah Edwards are gone. We’ll see how Alysha Clark and Jacy Sheldon do in their place.

The Lynx are the WNBA’s top team in the standings. Given that the Mystics have made a couple major trades, that will make things harder for Washington as they look to climb out of a three game losing streak. Unfortunately, I think the Mystics will continue to spiral.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/mystics/57899/washington-mystics-minnesota-lynx-wnba-game-preview
 
The Mystics’ latest trades mirror the Wizards’ blueprint — and it’s the wrong path

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The Washington Mystics made two big trades this week. They traded away veteran guard Brittney Sykes for Alysha Clark and a 2026 first round draft pick. Then yesterday they traded Aaliyah Edwards for Jacy Sheldon and a draft pick swap that is likely happening.

What the Mystics prioritized: DRAFT PICKS by any means necessary​


First, let’s look at both trades and see what Washington’s priority was in both. In the Sykes for Clark deal, they also got a first round pick out of it. And in the Edwards for Sheldon deal, they will almost definitely likely have a higher first round pick with the swap because Washington currently has the Minnesota Lynx’s 2026 first round pick.

In short, the Mystics are looking to build with youth. They are looking to build around Sonia Citron and Kiki Iriafen, both of whom were All-Stars this year. And that’s great. It also helps give a base of players for the Mystics to build around in 2026.

If this playbook sounds familiar, it is. Monumental Basketball President Michael Winger is clearly putting his mark on the Mystics now with the gut-everything-except-the-youth strategy, just like he is currently doing with the Wizards.

Are the Wizards going to improve a lot this season? My feeling is that it will be another sub-30 win campaign, but not like these doomsday predictions some were thinking before the 2024-25 NBA season. But the Wizards are playing in a league that is well-established, is not going to expand by many teams. And most importantly, the Wizards haven’t, and never will, play in an NBA free agency that will mirror the WNBA’s in 2026. That leads me to the next point.

The Mystics apparently don’t feel that they can compete in free agency for 2026


It has been written on this site and many others that nearly every WNBA player who is not on a rookie scale contract will be a free agent. There will be a lot of player movement because of anticipated pay increases. And even though the Lynx and New York Liberty have the best teams in 2025, it’s far from a given that they will still be top tier teams in 2026 due to the anticipation of this season.

And what does this mean for the Mystics? Well, before the trades, the Mystics were sitting close to .500 and had a realistic chance of getting a playoff spot. The Sykes-Citron-Iriafen trio looked solid, and a lot better than preseason predictions writing them off. And just when Washington can legitimately go for a playoff push, they decide to trade Sykes away for an extra first round pick. Though I’ve enjoyed seeing Alysha Clark throughout her playing career, she is toward the end of her career now, instead of in her prime.

I don’t think the Edwards trade is a bad move, however. Sheldon was picked one spot above Edwards in the 2024 WNBA Draft and is producing at a decent level this season. And the draft pick swap is icing on the cake. Given that Edwards wasn’t prioritized as much in 2025, this trade seemed inevitable.

This move could hurt Washington in 2026 right when they look to build the roster. But that may be what they actually want.


Right now, most teams, except probably the Connecticut Sun (who are in the process of an ownership change), are nominally looking to play as well as they can this season and put their best foot forward in 2026. If there was no expansion (two new teams are coming in 2026), or no major free agency changes, then I’d understand why the Mystics would trade Sykes.

And I’ll even give Winger and Wideman this regarding the Sykes trade. If the Mystics were a bottom-two team in the standings, I could get why Sykes would be traded at the deadline — even before the highly anticipated 2026 free agency season. However, why make that move when the team is competing for a playoff spot? A better-than-expected 2025 season is a stronger case to make Washington a destination team for 2026 than seeing General Manager Jamila Wideman saying, “I have cap room, roster spots and a couple rising stars” as selling points. A strong season in 2025, even if it doesn’t end up with a playoff berth should be the goal in 2025 and that gives her a fourth selling point — “I have a team that looks happy together, can more than hold its own on the court, and you are the missing piece to take us toward our second WNBA championship.”

Given how the Wizards have been building through youth nearly at all costs in the last three seasons under Winger’s leadership, I’m not surprised that he will do the same with the Mystics to a point since he began to take a more hands on approach with them this season. I’m just surprised that Winger would want that process to start now at a major inflection point in the WNBA’s history when every team will be rebuilding before 2026.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...trade-analysis-brittney-sykes-aaliyah-edwards
 
EuroBasket 2025: Three Wizards players expected to play in summer tournament

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In August, there isn’t much to write about in the NBA except for the upcoming regular season schedule release. Given tbe timing of the year, I would expect that we will have content on the Washington Wizards’ 2025-26 regular season schedule release very soon. For now, we only know their preseason schedule.

That said, like August 2024, there will be plenty of international men’s basketball to write about. And thankfully, the Wizards are part of the party. Guard Bilal Coulibaly and center Alex Sarr are expected to play for the France men’s national team and are already playing in friendlies with Les Bleus. They were previously named on a preliminary roster. Barring something unexpected, I think we can say that the Wizards will be represented in FIBA Europe’s biggest tournament.

And it gets better for Wizards fans. Center Tristan Vukcevic is expected to play for Serbia as well. Vukcevic until this year had the possibility to play for multiple countries, including Sweden through his mother’s citizenship, Greece through spending his childhood there, or Italy because he was born there. Vukcevic ultimately decided to play for the country his father, which was announced last July.

Unlike Women’s EuroBasket which is held every two years on odd numbered years in the summer, the men’s version is held once every four years. The last edition was held in 2022, but it was also held with a one year delay due to effects of the coronavirus pandemic because the 2020 Summer Olympics were held in 2021.

France is in Group D and will begin play on Aug. 28 against Belgium at 11 a.m. ET in Katowice, Poland. Serbia is in Group A and will begin play on Aug. 27 against Estonia at 2:15 p.m. ET against Estonia in Riga, Latvia.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/inte...ia-bilal-coulibaly-alex-sarr-tristan-vukcevic
 
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