News Wizards Team Notes

Wizards 2025-26 Meet the Team Party postponed due to government shutdown

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The Washington Wizards announced to season ticket holders yesterday that the 2025-26 Meet the Team Party was postponed due to the U.S. federal government shutdown. The party was initially scheduled to be on Tuesday, Oct. 7 from 6 to 9 p.m. ET at the Smithsonian National Zoo.

According to the Smithsonian Institution, which operates the National Zoo, all of their attractions will be open through Monday, Oct. 6. Unfortunately, the Meet the Team party was scheduled for Tuesday and it’s unclear whether Congress and the President can agree on a funding bill by then.

The Wizards have regularly hosted this event at Smithsonian facilities. The 2024-25 Meet the Team Party was held at the National Museum of American History from 7 to 10 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/comm...-the-team-party-postponed-government-shutdown
 
Wizards sign Leaky Black and Akdolah Gak to Exhibit 10 contracts, waive Jonathan Pierre and Keshon Gilbert

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The Washington Wizards have made a couple of moves in their training camp roster this week. On Tuesda,y they signed Akoldah Gak to an Exhibit 10 contract and waived Keshon Gilbert. And yesterday, the Wizards signed Leaky Black to an Exhibit 10 contract while waiving Jonathan Pierre.

Gilbert and Pierre were both signed to Exhibit 10 contracts on Sept.19.

The Washington Wizards have signed F Leaky Black to an Exhibit 10 contract.

In a related move, the team has waived F Jonathan Pierre.

— Wizards PR (@WizPRStats) October 2, 2025
The Washington Wizards have signed F Akoldah Gak to an Exhibit 10 contract.

In a related move, the team has waived G Keshon Gilbert.

— Wizards PR (@WizPRStats) September 30, 2025
The Washington Wizards have made the following roster moves, the team announced today:

• Signed guard Sharife Cooper to a two-way contract

• Signed guard Keshon Gilbert and forward Jonathan Pierre to Exhibit 10 contracts

— Wizards PR (@WizPRStats) September 19, 2025

It may sound counterintuitive to sign a player to an Exhibit 10 one day and then waive him within two weeks. However, Pierre and Gilbert are entering their rookie professional seasons. This indicates that they would likely head to the Capital City Go-Go.This is something that our own Greg Finberg has also indicated.

The Wizards have signed Sharife Cooper to a two-way contract, the team announced.

Cooper was a second-round pick in 2021 out of Auburn and spent three years in the G League.

Washington also signed Keshon Gilbert & Jonathan Pierre to exhibit-10 deals. Both are likely Go-Go guys. pic.twitter.com/2HhX23aahU

— Greg Finberg (@GregFinberg) September 19, 2025

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/late...acts-waive-jonathan-pierre-and-keshon-gilbert
 
Kyshawn George Was Good at AmeriCup, and I’m the Nerd Who Double-Checked

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Okay everyone, I got it — Kyshawn George played in the FIBA AmeriCup tournament. He made the all-tournament team, and the consensus view is that he played well.

Regular readers know that at this point, I will uncritically accept the consensus view and look no further. It would be highly unlikely for me to do something rash like pull up stats, crunch some numbers and compare his statistical performance with his competitors. So, just how great will George be? Will he post an all-time great season or merely an epic one?

Editor’s Note: This is the opposite of what Kevin does.

Yeah, I ran some numbers. And, the numbers suggest George was good though not really dominant for Team Canada this summer. This may sound like I want to inspire mass depression, but good is…well…good!

Sure, the level of competition wasn’t elite. There were some good players in the tournament, but AmeriCup was not a place where high level NBA players went to play for their countries — this competition was home to role players and guys who struggled to stick.

I mean, the Team USA roster included someone named Andrew Andrews, which a) sounds like one of the made-up names I used for solo shooting games I played when I was a kid, or b) sounds like someone in witness protection.

I kid — As a senior at University of Washington, Andrews was first team All-Pac-12 and led the conference in scoring. He’s made a living playing in international leagues the past nine years. In 2022, he was MVP of the EuroCup Eight Finals — the first round of the EuroCup playoffs where teams that finished third to sixth place in their regular season play a single-elimination tournament for a spot in the quarterfinals. That’s a pretty good resume.

Anyway, this is not to dismiss what George did. He played well against the competition that was available to him. Which is good!

Let’s talk numbers. Note: PPA (short for Player Production Average) is my all-around production metric. In PPA, average is 100 and higher is better. The sample size is so small (George totaled 155 minutes) that I didn’t apply the usual calculations for role or defensive impact. Also, PPA scores are for this tournament only — they’re a measure of relative dominance in this tournament, this year.

  • USG% — 23.3%
  • ORTG — 115 | tournament average (TA): 104.3 — ortg is short for offensive rating, which is points produced per individual possession x 100
  • eFG% — 63.5% | TA: 50.2%
  • 2pt% — 57.7% | TA: 52.2%
  • 3pt% — 46.2% | TA: 31.6% — 26 total attempts
  • FT% — 78.9% | TA: 71.5%
  • Points — 25.1 (per 48 minutes) | TA: 18.9
  • Rebounds — 7.7 | TA: 8.4
  • Assists — 5.9 | TA: 4.7
  • Steals — 2.2 | TA: 1.8
  • Blocks — 0.9 | TA: 1.1
  • Turnovers — 4.6 | TA: 2.7
  • Fouls — 4.6 | TA: 4.1
  • Ast/tov ratio — 1.3 | TA: 1.7
  • PPA: 148 | TA: 100

Compared to the tournament average, George shot better from everywhere and produced more points, assists and steals. He also committed more turnovers and fouled more. His assists-to-turnover ratio was a subpar 1.3, but his overall offensive efficiency was +11.1 points per 100 possessions relative to the AmeriCup average.

His PPA was 148, which is solidly above average for the tournament. Based on the numbers, I don’t think that merited all-tournament honors, but it’s still good.

Okay, let’s take a look at tournament leaders in various categories — minimum 4 games and 50 minutes played.

Points​

  1. Ismael Romero, Puerto Rico — 31.5
  2. Yago Dos Santos, Brazil — 31.0
  3. Javonte Smart, United States — 30.2
  4. Mfiondu Kabengele, Canada — 29.8
  5. Bruno Caboclo, Brazil — 28.7

Rebounds​

  1. Jack Cooley, United States — 26.2
  2. Arnaldo Toro Barea, Puerto Rico — 18.6
  3. Robert Baker, Jr., United States — 17.6
  4. Charles Bediako, Canada — 16.4
  5. George Conditt IV, Puerto Rico — 15.8

Assists​

  1. Luciano Parodi Gonzalez, Uruguay — 13.9
  2. Bruno Fitipaldo, Uruguay — 13.3
  3. Alexey Thiago Borges, Brazil — 12.1
  4. Andres Feliz, Dominican Republic — 11.4
  5. Yago Dos Santos, Brazil — 10.7

Steals​

  1. Gary Browne, Puerto Rico — 5.3
  2. Romario Roque, Colombia — 4.9
  3. Nicolas Martinez, Uruguay — 4.4
  4. Juani Marcos, Argentina — 4.0
  5. Jassel Perez, Dominican Republic — 3.7

Blocks​

  1. Joel Soriano, Dominican Republic — 5.9
  2. Juan Francisco Fernandez, Argentina — 4.9
  3. Arnaldo Toro Barea, Puerto Rico — 4.0
  4. George Conditt IV, Puerto Rico — 3.7
  5. Robert Baker, Jr., United States — 3.6

Turnovers​

  1. Nicolas Martinez, Uruguay — 6.1
  2. Alex Negrete, Argentina — 5.5
  3. Gary Browne, Puerto Rico — 5.3
  4. Mfiondu Kabengele, Canada — 5.2
  5. Francisco Caffaro, Argentina — 5.2

Assists-to-Turnovers​

  1. Georginho de Paula, Brazil — 20.0 (seriously, 20 assists and 1 turnover)
  2. Andres Feliz, Dominican Republic — 11.0
  3. Cam Reynolds, United States — 9.0
  4. Jerian Grant, United States — 5.8
  5. Kyle Wiltjer, Canada — 5.5

Offensive Rating​

  1. Santiago Vescovi, Uruguay — 155
  2. Ismael Romero, Puerto Rico — 149
  3. Emiliano Serres, Uruguay — 141
  4. Yago Dos Santos, Brazil — 137
  5. Georginho de Paula, Brazil — 133

PPA​

  1. Ismael Romero, Puerto Rico — 287
  2. Kyle Wiltjer, Canada — 222
  3. Yago Dos Santos, Brazil — 219
  4. Santiago Vescovi, Uruguay — 216
  5. Mfiondu Kabengele, Canada — 215

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...t-americup-and-im-the-nerd-who-double-checked
 
The WNBA could have a lockout after the current CBA expires

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The Las Vegas Aces and Phoenix Mercury are playing each other in the 2025 WNBA Finals. That series will be the first best-of-seven series in WNBA history, and it will conclude on Oct. 17 if necessary. All games are on ESPN.

However, that is not what most fans of the league are chatting about. It’s about what will happen in 2026, and whether a 2026 WNBA season happens at all. In this season, a new Collective Bargaining Agreement will kick in.

I have written many times that the WNBA is about to enter a brand new era in 2026. Every WNBA player hitting free agency will be up for grabs. It’s an opportunity for teams, including expansion teams like the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire, to get a head start in the team-building process. Meanwhile, for the Washington Mystics, General Manager Jamila Wideman and Monumental Basketball President Michael Winger think the Mystics are behind the Wizards in their team-building trajectories — even if the Mystics were competitive in the first half of the 2025 WNBA season.

But as basketball fans, I think we agree that it’s not a good thing when there are work stoppages, especially when a league is experiencing growth like the WNBA — even if the Mystics aren’t getting as much of that spotlight as other teams like the Aces and Mercury.

Why will there be a new Collective Bargaining Agreement?


In short, the WNBPA, the WNBA players union, opted out of the current CBA in late Oct. 2024. The original CBA was to expire after the 2026 season. However, the players opted out so the CBA now expires on Oct. 31, 2025.

There are a number of things that players wanted more at the time. They include more pay, standardization of team practice facilities and revenue sharing between players and teams. Those would still be on the table today.

Players also know that the WNBA will get a $2.2 billion media rights deal starting in 2026 which is looped in with the NBA’s new media rights deal which is starting this season. I wrote on the implications this deal would have on the Mystics specifically in this article in 2024, and I wrote another piece touching on the broader themes for all of Monumental Basketball (including the Wizards) here.

WNBA teams will see triple the media revenue of the current deal, and players stand to see some significant pay increases and an improved quality of life. However, players will still try to maximize their leverage wherever possible.

Some of the things that players want more say on is the length of the WNBA season. In 2014, when our site started writing on the Mystics games regularly, there were just 34 regular season games. Starting this season, there are 44. This gives teams more opportunity to make revenue selling tickets and it dilutes salary increases the players have. This is a sticking point, which Raptors HQ’s Chelsea Leite wrote recently.

Also, WNBA team rosters have remained at a maximum of 12 players witih many teams holding just 11 players, the minimum allowed. In fact, team rosters haven’t been bigger than 12 players since the 2008 season. In 2009, the roster size dropped to 11. The current roster limit is now 12, as per the 2014 CBA, but it has remained unchanged since then.

Why are players unhappy with the WNBA leadership?


I could write several long pieces why, but in short, players want to reap the benefits and be seen as partners with team owners for league growth, not as the pawns.

Players unions and the leagues rattle sabers regularly. But in the WNBA semifinals series between the Minnesota Lynx and Phoenix Mercury, the Lynx lost their chance to advance into the WNBA Finals for the second straight year. Lynx Head Coach Cheryl Reeve was fined suspended a game after confronting referees and making rude comments about them. And their star Napheesa Collier made some pretty bold remarks in an exit interview speech below, claiming that WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert, a former women’s college basketball player herself, said that WNBA players should be grateful for their opportunities, among other things.

Napheesa Collier’s full statement today, where she challenged Commissioner Cathy Engelbert and the WNBA with directness and stunning detail we rarely hear from active players. Worth listening to every word. pic.twitter.com/IRTvTc52EA

— Malika Andrews (@malika_andrews) September 30, 2025

Zachary Draves of Swish Appeal, our general WNBA blog, has more of a pointed take on Collier’s remarks. But in short, if Engelbert is saying these things, should she be the Commissioner at all?

What leverage do the players have against the WNBA team owners?​


The number one thing players have against the owners is simple: there are other playing options. During the winter, WNBA players can play overseas where many players make more money than they do at home. This has been a point of frustration for all parties.

But the incentive for American players has gone down in recent years due to existing pay increases AND alternative winter time leagues in the United States, which are also drawing audiences:

  • Athletes Unlimited — This is a oneleague that lasts roughtly one month in February. Players play 5-on-5 but represent themselves in an unique scoring format. the top players get to captain teams and draft teammates. The investors of this league agree to cap their profits while players have more direct say and share in the profits directly.
  • UnrivaledThis is a 3X3 league which lasts from Jan. through Mar. It is founded by Collier and New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart. A fair number of WNBA players are in this league. And in 2026, Mystics guard Sonia Citron and forward Kiki Iriafen are expected to be here.

Both of these leagues have television rights as well, and this allows WNBA players to make money playing basketball by being investors in the league they play in. So going back to Collier’s statements, keep in mind that she is also a cofounder of Unrivaled. She’ll play one way or another.

What leverage do the WNBA team owners have against the players?


Every negotiation is a two-way street. The owners already own the largest women’s sports league in the United States. The WNBA gets more coverage and air time than any other option. Also, the WNBA is getting a media deal that is multiple times bigger than the still-current one.

Additionally, WNBA team owners benefit from favorable macroeconomic factors and the political environment in the United States. The U.S. economy continued to grow but the labor market is stagnating as a whole, just as negotiations for a new CBA were about to begin. Additionally, with the return of U.S. President Donald Trump, international trade has been impacted by tariffs, threats of additional tariffs, and a decline in net migration (immigrants moving into the U.S.). It’s early to say whether the U.S. economy will be in a recession soon, but the environment doesn’t scream “let’s make this a very worker friendly CBA” either.

That said, I don’t see a lopsided WNBA CBA in favor of the owners because the WNBA’s exposure grew significantly in the 2000s and the economy is not in a recession based on GDP growth. At least not yet.

That said, CBA’s have been negotiated during tough economic times. During the Great Recession of the late 2000s, the WNBA CBA of 2008 wasn’t particularly friendly to players. And the owners did cut the roster size from 13 to 11 the following year due to the economy. Additionally, the 2011 NBA CBA reduced the share of BRI from 57 percent to 50 percent, a deal that followed a lockout and was made during an economic environment in which the U.S. was emerging from the Great Recession.

The WNBA needs players for its next phase of growth. And players need the league, too.


Ultimately, I hope that the 2026 WNBA season begins on time. The league has experienced significant growth since 2020, and teams have benefited from it, gaining more star power and respect. That said, it wouldn’t surprise me to see a lockout that happens for some part of the offseason. It seems like both sides are dug in and a lockout appears possible.

All of that said, the WNBA is the biggest women’s sports league in the U.S. It deserves the big media contract that takes effect next year. And it also deserves to have the best players in the world playing on time next summer.

Hopefully, both sides can reach a fair agreement so fans can continue to watch the league continue to prosper like it has over this past decade.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/mystics/65461/wnba-lockout-possibilty-2026-washington-mystics
 
Kuzma’s DC Shot Diet: The Numbers vs. Doc Rivers

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Sometimes, NBA coaches and executives say weird things, which is what Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers just did.

Per Eric Nehm, Bucks beat writers for The Athletic, Rivers had this to say about former Wizards great Kyle Kuzma:

With so much talk about the strength of the Bucks' frontcourt yesterday, I asked Doc Rivers where he thought Kyle Kuzma fit in positionally on this roster and Rivers said 3/4.

Then, Rivers said the following about Kuzma: pic.twitter.com/U5g4W4mfVJ

— Eric Nehm (@eric_nehm) September 30, 2025

Let’s unpack. Saying Kuzma fits as a 3/4 isn’t odd — that’s what Kuzma is. With Milwaukee’s personnel, he probably starts at three with Giannis Antetokounmpo at four and Myles Turner at five. That’s a big front court, which might be good for the Bucks.

The stuff about how Kuzma practiced is normal coach-speak. This seems to be a case of a coach using the media to reinforce how he wants Kuzma to play, which he (or an assistant coach) likely said to Kuzma directly. Normal stuff — praise a guy publicly for doing something the way the coach wants it done.

Edging into the weird was the comment about Bucks defenders being forced to foul him when he “got downhill,” considering that Kuzma has not reliably produced free throws through eight NBA seasons.

The part that struck me as genuinely weird was what Rivers said about Kuzma’s shot profile. Because the numbers show his summary is needlessly wrong.

Now, in Washington (three-and-a-half seasons, not five — but we can forgive him that one), Kuzma, “could literally take any shot,” as Rivers said. And he did. But, Kuzma did not take “a ton of midrange shots.” Not by league standards, and not even by his own.

For his career, according to Basketball-Reference, 14.8% of Kuzma’s field goal attempts were midrangers (two pointers from 10 feet out to the three-point line). In Washington, it was 15.6% of his shot attempts. The league average was about 14% during his time with the Wizards.

So, the “ton” Rivers was referencing is not quite one shot out of every 100 compared to Kuzma’s career average, and about 1.6 shots of every 100 compared to the league.

To be charitable to Rivers, his point is sorta okay with a tweak. During his time in Washington, Kuzma got to the rim a bit less than his career norm — 19.0% of his FGA were at-rim in DC vs. 22.0% for his career. He didn’t trade those at-rim attempts for midrangers, though. He swapped them for floater range shots (3-10 feet).

With the Wizards, floater range attempts were 27.1% of his attempts compared to a career average of 23.0%.

Floater range shots typically come as a result of failed drives — a player trying to get to the rim but being forced by the defense to take a shot from a little further out. Which makes sense if you watched Kuzma with the Wizards. He’d drive and fling up some wild runner if he couldn’t get to the rim.

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Wild runners or not, Kuzma was about average at converting those attempts (46.4% when with the Wizards — league average is around 46%), but — to Rivers’ message — those floater range shots are lower-yield shots. Usually. In Kuzma’s case, there’s a caveat.

That’s because Kuzma is a subpar three-point shooter — 33.4% for his career and 33.0% in Washington. His floater range shots produce 0.91 points per shot (using his career conversion rate), and 0.93 (using his conversion rate with the Wizards). His three-point shooting yields 1.00 and 0.99 points per shot.

In other words, Kuzma’s floater range shots are almost as good as his three-point shots at producing points. Add in the effect of drawing fouls and maybe even turnovers and assists, and they probably come out “about the same.”

Now, to extend further charity to Rivers, the numbers do support Kuzma taking even fewer midrange shots. His career percentage on twos from 10+ feet is poor (around 38%), and it was even worse with Washington. Like most players, he’d benefit from taking fewer of them, even though they’ve actually been a small part of his shot diet.

So, why am I picking at Doc Rivers? Because even though there’s a kernel of a point in his comment to reporters, his message and coaching advice would be strengthened by accuracy. The issue with Kuzma’s inefficiency in Washington — and throughout his entire career — is not a result of taking a ton of mid-rangers — because (as the numbers show) Kuzma hasn’t taken “a ton.”

Rather, his inefficiency results from the reality that he’s not a good shooter from anywhere except inside three feet, he commits a lot of turnovers, and he doesn’t get offensive rebounds. There’d be a modest benefit to swapping midrange twos for at-rim attempts, if there was a way to reliably get more at-rim attempts. His NBA coaches haven’t been able to figure out how to do that, even when he shared the floor with LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

Exchanging midrangers for three-point attempts would be somewhat easier, though the boost to offensive efficiency would be small because Kuzma is not a good long-range shooter.

The experiment I’d propose (which may have already been tried by his actual coaches) would be to urge Kuzma to drive frequently and shoot if he can get to the rim or make a safe pass out if he can’t. Have designed safe passes to give him easier reads and help him reduce turnovers. And, I’d ask him to resist taking jumpers from any range outside 10 feet unless it’s a wide-open three or the shot clock is running out.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...kuzmas-dc-shot-diet-the-numbers-vs-doc-rivers
 
The Wizards are younger but bigger to start the 2025-26 NBA season

Yesterday, the Washington Wizards held Media Day at CareFirst Arena which is adjacaent to the joint Monumnetal Basketball Practice Facility. A lot of the Wizards’ younger players are coming into camp bigger than ever. Literally.

The Young WizKids BULKED UP 💪 (measurements over the last year)

Bub Carrington: 190 LB -> 204
AJ Johnson: 160 -> 174 (+.5 inch)
Alex Sarr: 205 -> 224 🔥🔥
Kyshawn George: 200 -> 209 pic.twitter.com/yXEYjaedMz

— WizardsMuse (@WizardsMuse1) September 29, 2025

As one of the youngest teams in the NBA, this shouldn’t be surprising. With a young roster, players haven’t filled in their frames yet. Some players, most notably Alex Sarr, have shown promise as a shot alterer in 2024-25. Since he has put on 20 pounds since last season, perhaps that will help him build a more physical presence as well.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/quality-shots/65413/washington-wizards-bigger-younger-roster
 
SB Nation Reacts: Does the WNBA have an officiating problem?

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In this week’s national SB Nation Reacts survey, we ask you about the WNBA being at a crossroads for various things. Does the league have an officiating problem? And what is the WNBA’s biggest issue at the moment? Let us know by clicking on the survey below. The survey ends at 3 p.m. ET tomorrow!

CLICK HERE FOR THE SURVEY

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/comm...cts-does-the-wnba-have-an-officiating-problem
 
The Wizards will offer replica jerseys, a plus G-Wiz and more giveaways in 2025-26

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The Washington Wizards released their promotional schedule for the 2025-26 season. Here are the days where the Wizards awill host various promotions to bring more fans in the stands.


College Series Giveaways


The Wizards will offer Hawaiian shirts with various university logos on them. Many of these universities are not based in the D.C. area but they still have major alumni bases here.

  • University of North Carolina — Chapel Hill (Dec 1 vs Bucks)
  • University of Maryland — College Park (Jan 9 vs Pelicans)
  • University of Virginia (Jan 9 vs Pelicans)
  • Wake Forest University (Jan 19 vs Clippers)
  • University of Pittsburgh (Jan 22 vs Nuggets)
  • Villanova University (Feb 3 vs Knicks)
  • University of Texas — Austin (Mar 2 vs Rockets)
  • Johns Hopkins University (Mar 2 vs Rockets)
  • University of Michigan — Ann Arbor (Mar 19 vs Pistons)
  • Georgetown University (Mar 21 vs Thunder)

Heritage Series Hawaiian Shirts


Hawaiian shirts will be given at various games to celebrate the many diasporas based here in Washington.

  • Muslim Family Day – Nov 16 vs Nets
  • Greek Heritage – Dec 1 vs Bucks
  • Latvian Heritage – Dec 6 vs Hawks
  • French Heritage – Dec 21 vs Spurs
  • Filipino Heritage – Dec 29 vs Suns
  • Canadian Heritage – Jan 2 vs Nets
  • Italian Heritage – Jan 6 vs Magic
  • German Heritage – Jan 6 vs Magic
  • Croatian Heritage – Jan 19 vs Clippers
  • Serbian Heritage – Jan 22 vs Nuggets
  • Jewish Heritage – Jan 27 vs Trail Blazers
  • Slovenian Heritage – Jan 30 vs Lakers
  • Lithuanian Heritage – Feb 1 vs Kings
  • Taiwanese Heritage – Feb 20 vs Pacers
  • Swiss Heritage – Mar 5 vs Jazz
  • Australian Heritage – Apr 7 vs Bulls
  • Peruvian Heritage – Apr 9 vs Bulls
  • Noche Wizards / Hispanic & Latinx Night – Apr 9 vs Bulls

Other Ticket-Package Giveaways


You will get these giveawys if you buy a special ticket for these games.

  • Wizards Tumbler – Dec 4 vs Celtics
  • Wizards Shirsey (First Responders Night) – Dec 28 vs Grizzlies
  • Camouflage Patch Hat (Military Appreciation) – Jan 22 vs Nuggets
  • Wizards Socks (Sneaker Night) – Feb 20 vs Pacers
  • G-Wiz Mascot Dog Toy (Hoops & Hounds Night) – Feb 22 vs Hornets
  • HBCU & Divine 9 Hawaiian Shirt – Feb 28 vs Raptors
  • Hand Fan + Sunglasses (Pride Night) – Mar 19 vs Pistons
  • Cherry Blossom Hat – Mar 21 vs Thunder
  • Scout Patch (Scout Night) – Mar 21 vs Thunder

General Giveaways


If you come in early enough, you’ll get a prize.

  • Rally Towel – Oct 26 vs Hornets (15,000 fans)
  • Bub Carrington Pajama Pants – Nov 25 vs Hawks (10,000 fans)
  • Hat with Charms – Dec 6 vs Hawks (5,000 fans)
  • Kyshawn George City Edition Bobblehead – Jan 2 vs Nets (10,000 fans)
  • SpongeBob SquarePants Hat – Jan 4 vs Timberwolves (10,000 fans)
  • Crewneck Sweatshirt – Jan 27 vs Trail Blazers (10,000 fans)
  • AJ Johnson City Edition Hat – Feb 3 vs Knicks (10,000 fans)
  • Wizards 2006-09 Replica Jersey – Mar 5 vs Jazz (10,000 fans)
  • G-Wiz Fuzzy Friend – Apr 1 vs 76ers (10,000 fans)
  • City Edition T-Shirt (Fan Appreciation Night) – Apr 10 vs Heat (15,000 fans)

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/quality-shots/65482/washington-wizards-promotional-schedule-giveaways
 
SB Nation Reacts: How good do you think the Wizards will be in the 2025-26 season?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Washington Wizards fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

This week, the national survey from SB Nation focused on the WNBA’s impasse with its labor agreement with the players and the quality of their officiating. But we also have a general survey for you on how many wins you think the Wizards will get in the 2025-26 season and more.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/comm...ink-the-wizards-will-be-in-the-2025-26-season
 
One NBA analyst believes the Wizards will be the league’s worst team in the Eastern Conference 2025-26

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Since Michael Winger became the President of Monumental Basketball and Will Dawkins became the Washington Wizards General Manager in 2023, the team has decided to “deconstruct” or rebuild from the ground up. The 2023-24 Wizards only won 15 regular season games and the 2024-25 team won just 18. The 2025-26 Wizards are still rebuilding, but are they now about to turn a corner?

Probably not.

This is the time of year when multiple NBA preseason predictions come out. And according to The Athletic’s John Hollinger, he predicted every NBA team’s win-loss record for the 2025-26 season. And he predicts Washington will have the worst record in the Eastern Conference with a 16-66 record, well below the Charlotte Hornets who are predicted to have a 25-57 record.

Here are some of the more notable snippets from Hollinger’s analysis on the Wizards.

The Wizards need to finish with one of the NBA’s four worst records this season to guarantee they keep their first-round pick, which is top-eight protected to New York. Alas, the roster should not impede them from pulling off this feat. (The Wizards will owe the Knicks second-rounders in 2026 and 2027 if the first-rounder doesn’t convey.)



Expect the Wizards to continue building that draft pick war chest during the season, likely in deals that send out contributors such as McCollum, Middleton, Kispert and the wildly underrated Justin Champagnie. Don’t expect many wins just yet, but after two wasted decades spent chasing the eighth seed, Washington is doing this the right way.

In short, Hollinger believes the Wizards will continue to look to sell their best players and this will be another tough season when it comes to wins and losses. I can see CJ McCollum, Khris Middleton, and/or Corey Kispert traded before the end of this season as the Wizards look to continue stocking up on first round draft picks. It is refreshing to see the Wizards take a nearly scorched-earth approach to rebuild their roster. However, at some point, fans will expect tangible wins from the team. That time isn’t now, but it will come at some point.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/late...ards-worst-eastern-conference-team-projection
 
How to make sure Bullets Forever shows up in your Google search

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As many of you are likely aware, Google searches are different these days from what they were back in the 2000s and 2010s. Boolean searches, a popular technique that is seeing diminished returns today.

The good news is Google is offering a solution for folks who like to get their news from specific sources. If you want to help Bullets Forever — while also streamlining all your Google searches — there is now a way.

Simply click on this link and add Bullets Forever as one of your “Source preferences.” That’s all there is to it!

In August, the tech giant introduced a feature called “Preferred Sources.” It’s a way for Google to prominently feature the results from websites you trust, like Bullets Forever:

“With the launch of Preferred Sources in the U.S. and India, you can select your favorite sources and stay up to date on the latest content from the sites you follow and subscribe to — whether that’s your favorite sports blog or a local news outlet. …

When you select your preferred sources, you’ll start to see more of their articles prominently displayed within Top Stories, when those sources have published fresh and relevant content for your search.“

As some of you may be aware, generative AI searches are harming news outlets worldwide and across all platforms. For over 18 years, we’ve worked hard at Bullets Forever to build a brand you can trust and rely on for Washington Wizards and Mystics coverage. Our goal is to serve you, the fans.

If you’re a fan of our work and want to get the best Wizards and Mystics coverage possible, this is an excellent win-win to improve your Google searches while helping Bullets Forever out.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/bull...ullets-forever-shows-up-in-your-google-search
 
Wizards sign Skal Labissiere to Exhibit 10 deal

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The Washington Wizards have signed F/C Skal Labissiere to an Exhibit 10 contract, the team announced Monday.

The Washington Wizards have signed F/C Skal Labissiere to an Exhibit 10 contract.

In a related move, the team has waived F Akoldah Gak.

— Wizards PR (@WizPRStats) October 6, 2025

Labissiere, 29, spent Summer League with the Orlando Magic. He played the 2024-25 season with the Stockton Kings of the G League, averaging 16.1 points and 8.2 rebounds per game.

In a corresponding move, the team announced it waived Akoldah Gak, who was recently signed to an Exhibit 10 contract. Teams do this during training camp to lock players into their G League team, for if a player signs an Exhibit 10 contract with an NBA team and later signs with that team’s G League affiliate, they get a $75k bonus.

Gak joins Jonathan Pierre and Keshon Gilbert as players who signed an Exhibit 10 contract with the Wizards before being waived. Those three, plus Leaky Black and now Labiessiere, will likely join the Capital City Go-Go in the coming weeks.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...zards-sign-skal-labissiere-to-exhibit-10-deal
 
SB Nation Reacts: WNBA fans believe officiating is poor and that leadership is the biggest problem

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In this week’s SB Nation Reacts national survey, all eyes are on the WNBA. The 2025 Finals between the Las Vegas Aces and Phoenix Mercury is in full swing. The Aces are leading the series 3-0 and could win it all tonight in Game 4, which will be at 8 p.m. ET tonight and aired on ESPN.

The survey however focuses on two different issues. One is on the officiating in the WNBA. The second is on what the biggest issue in the WNBA is given that the current Collective Bargaining Agreement will end on Oct. 31 where a lockout, is possible.

Here are this week's SB Nation Reacts results to the national survey regarding WNBA officiating quality and more. pic.twitter.com/jAIBB4Ijvl

— BF_Mystics (@BF_mystics) October 10, 2025

With officiating, the verdict is clear. Of the respondents to our national survey, 97 percent — nearly everyone — believe that there is an officiating problem in the league, in particular with the degree of physical contact that is tolerated. Check out this article by Kendra Andrews of ESPN to learn more.

Now, the WNBA is about to enter a period of uncertainty due to the current CBA negotiations. And nearly half — of 49 percent — of respondents believe that league leadership is the issue. This sentiment also tends to be pro-player among the fans who voted.

We have seen plenty of clashes between players and league leaders. Former NBA Commissioner David Stern was a notoriously tough negotiator who was both respected for growing the NBA and maintaining a hard line with players, the latter of which made him unpopular with NBA fans, despite his overall respect. While Stern was one of the best marketers and strategists out there (and he was a lawyer bytrade), the reality is that Stern was an employee of the owners — NOT a players’ union leader.

Cathy Engelbert, the WNBA Commissioner, is being cast as a bad leader. But again, she, like Stern or current NBA Commissioner Adam Silver represents the WNBA team owners — and yes, Silver himself. Her job is to grow the game and the league’s presence. I think she has done a good job of those things since 2019 when she took the job. The WNBA now has 13 teams, up from 12 when she started. There will be 15 teams in the 2026 season. And in 2030, the WNBA will have 30 teams. The league is funded more than it ever has. The coverage is bigger than it ever has. From this stand, things are going well.

But while NBA players feared Stern, they still respected him. And that’s what Engelbert may not have as much of right now. If players lack confidence in a commissioner, team owners will eventually worry about whether star players will want to play in the WNBA (remember, players can still play overseas). And so will Silver himself.



How do you think WNBA officiating is? And do you think Engelbert should stay as WNBA Commissioner? Let us know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/mystics/65528/sb-nation-reacts-wnba-survey-results
 
The Wizards are projected to be the NBA’s worst team in 2025-26 per ESPN model

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The 2025-26 NBA season projections are coming in, and we’re starting to see how good (or not so good) teams will be this fall and winter. For the Washington Wizards, there isn’t much hope that they will win more than 20 games this season. According to an ESPN model released yesterday, they are projected to be the worst NBA team overall.

First, a hat tip to this feed post by TrillBroDude (yes, he is an SB Nation employee) who shared this link. According to Kevin Pelton of ESPN, his statistical based model on regular season projects has the Wizards projected to get just 14.2 wins in 2025-26, worst in the Eastern Conference and worst in the NBA overall.

To be fair, Pelton says that he doesn’t think that the Wizards would only win just 14 or so games this season:

15. Washington Wizards
Projected wins:
14.2
ESPN BET over/under total: 20.5

Why they project to be worse than their total: Given how my model tends to compress the expected standings to avoid bad misses, this is a shockingly low projection for the Wizards. In fact, it’s the worst I’ve calculated for a team since adopting this model in 2010. After trading away veterans at the deadline and again this past summer, Washington doesn’t have a single player who rates in the league’s top 130.

We are still waiting on our SB Nation Reacts survey results to our survey regarding how many wins the Wizards will get this year. But I would think that fans would expect more than 14 wins. Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/late...izards-season-projection-worst-team-2025-2026
 
Wizards vs. Raptors preview: Washington begins preseason at home on Sunday

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The Washington Wizards host the Toronto Raptors on Sunday. Here’s the preview.

Game info​


When: Sunday, Oct. 12 at 3 p.m. ET

Where: Capital One Arena, Washington

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network or NBA TV

Injuries: For the Wizards, Bilal Coulibaly (thumb) is out. Alex Sarr (calf) and AJ Johnson (leg) are day-to-day.

For the Raptors, no players are definitively out, but Scottie Barnes (knee) and Jakob Poeltl (back) sat out their preseason game against the Boston Celtics last night. Collin Murray-Boyles had a rib injury during the Celtics game and is day-to-day.

What to watch for​


The Wizards finally begin their 2025-26 NBA season. Sort of. It’s really the preseason. But still, we haven’t seen the Wizards play a game in six months. So tomorrow, we will see how returning young players like Alex Sarr (hopefully), Bub Carrington, Kyshawn George and Tristan Vukcevic will mesh with the rookies like Tre Johnson, Will Riley and Jamir Watkins. And of course, we have to see how the Wizards’ veterans such as CJ McCollum, Khris Middleton and Corey Kispert. Bilal Coulibaly will be out due to a thumb injury he suffered during EuroBasket.

Do I expect to see heavy minutes from the veterans? Probably not.

For the Raptors, hopefully, we’ll see more of their rookie forward Murray-Bowles and see some minutes from Poeltl and former Wizards Garrett Temple, the latter who re-signed with them last season. The Raptors also had one of the NBA’s top defenses after the All-Star break (SECOND in fact) last season, and we’ll have to see how Washington fares against that tomorrow.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ds-toronto-raptors-nba-preseason-game-preview
 
#SoWizards Podcast is Back! Talking Player Development with Coach Brian McCormick

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We’re back!

The first episode of the #SoWizards Podcast in nearly a year is a fun one — an in-depth conversation with coach Brian McCormick about player development strategies and techniques, and how those might be applied by the Washington Wizards and other NBA teams with young players.

We covered a lot of ground, including comparing development in Europe and the U.S. and how organizational philosophy influences the coaching approach to helping players improve.

McCormick is an ideal person to engage in this discussion because he’s coached young and developing players in CYO, AAU, high school, junior college, and college basketball. He’s also worked as a strength and conditioning coach for two junior-college basketball programs.

And he’s well traveled with coaching stops in Denmark, Estonia, Ireland, and Sweden, as well as directing clinics in Canada, China, Greece, Ghana, Kenya, India, Macedonia, Trinidad & Tobago, Uganda, and throughout the United States.

McCormick completed his PhD in Exercise and Sports Science at the University of Utah and published peer-reviewed papers in the International Journal of Exercise Science, International Journal of Sports Science and Coaching, and Strength & Conditioning Journal. He has spoken at coaching, strength & conditioning, and sports psychology conferences in the United States and Canada.

He’s also the author of several books to help players and coaches improve in their craft, which are available on Amazon or many places where you might buy books.

Programming Note​


As you might have noticed at the top, the podcast is on YouTube now. Yes, I know there’s stuff that needs to get done on the channel, which I’ll be getting to in the days/weeks ahead.

You can still listen by clicking here, streaming the embed below, or by finding it wherever you get your podcasts.

The plan is to record episodes — including some lives — more or less weekly. Please drop a note in the comments or email me with topics, questions, or guests you’d like me to have on.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/beck...player-development-with-coach-brian-mccormick
 
SB Nation Reacts: Wizards fans believe Kyshawn George will make biggest jump in 2025-26, win more than 20 games

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This week, the national SB Nation Reacts survey for basketball focused on the WNBA. However, for our site, we focused our team specific survey to the Washington Wizards where training camp is underway and their first preseason game will be on Sunday.

We had two questions. First, we asked how many wins you think the Wizards will have in the 2025-26 season. Fifty two percent of respondents believe that the Wizards will win 21-30 games this season while 34 percent believe Washington will win just 10-20. Wizards fans are a little more optimistic than various preseason analyses here and here.

Here are the SB Nation Reacts results for this week's Wizards survey. pic.twitter.com/WI94oJkJ10

— Bullets Forever (@BulletsForever) October 10, 2025

Our second question focused on which player will make the biggest jump in the 2025-26 season. Of our respondents, 41 percent believe Kyshawn George will make the biggest jump followed by Alex Sarr with 35 percent.



That’s all I have with our two SB Nation reacts surveys this week. Just two more days until the Wizards are playing preseason basketball!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/comm...ey-win-predictions-kyshawn-george-improvement
 
Wizards at Knicks preview: Washington continues preseason with back-to-back on Monday

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The Washington Wizards play the New York Knicks on Monday night. Let’s get right to it.

Game info​


When: Monday, Oct. 13 at 7:30 p.m. ET

Where: Madison Square Garden, New York, NY

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries: For the Wizards, Bilal Coulibaly (thumb) is out. Alex Sarr (calf) and AJ Johnson (leg) are day-to-day.

For the Knicks, Josh Hart was under the weather last Thursday in their last preseason game. But they are otherwise with a full roster.

What to watch for​


The Wizards have started the preseason pretty late. After all, most teams played games last week, and Washington’s first game was today which they lost at the buzzer to the Toronto Raptors.

But now, the Wizards are going to hit reality somewhat thanks to a back-to-back scheduled for tomorrow. They will play the Knicks, who are currently 3-0 in their preseason, which includes two games against the Philadelphia 76ers in a series held in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Their last game was a 100-95 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

New York is coming off a 2025 Eastern Conference Finals appearance and looks to make the Finals this year, so expect the Knicks to be the favorites tomorrow night. That said, preseason is about playing bench players and deep rotations, so it wouldn’t be out of the question to see the Wizards sneak a win here as well.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ds-new-york-knicks-nba-preseason-game-preview
 
Washington Wizards blast New York Knicks for 120-103 preseason win

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Justin Champagnie was in midseason form in the Washington Wizards preseason win over the New York Knicks.
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For at least one night, the Washington Wizards B team was a lot better than the New York Knicks C team, and the Wizards rolled to a comfortable 120-103 preseason victory. The final 17-point margin tells a sort of traditional NBA story.

The Wizards dominated most of the way. They led by 23 at the half, grew their lead to as much as 36 in the third quarter, and then the Knicks made a bit of a comeback in the late third quarter and fourth to make the final margin more respectable.

This brings me to what I wrote after their first preseason game: “The first rule of preseason NBA basketball is to not take anything seriously.” The second rule: It’s still okay to like things you saw. And dislike some too.

Stuff I liked:

  • Tre Johnson — to quote from my notes, “Quick release, confident shooter.” He launched seven shots in 14 minutes, including four threes. None of them were bad shots. His shot chart is an analytics work of art — every attempt was from three-point range or inside the restricted area.
  • Justin Champagnie looked to be in midseason form, which is a good thing. He was productive last season — the first time in his career he got extended minutes. He’s young enough and good enough to push his teammates with higher draft status for minutes if they’re not careful.
  • Marvin Bagley III had a classic Bagley kind of game. The undermanned Knicks couldn’t keep him from the offensive glass (five offensive boards in 24 minutes). He’s become kind of a punchline, but he’s talented, athletic, and still just 26 years old.
  • Bub Carrington bounced back from an atrocious first preseason game with a very good one — 8 points, 3 rebounds, 4 assists in just 14 minutes. And he took care of the ball (just one turnover).
  • Tristan Vukcevic was aggressive both looking for his shot (6-9 from the floor) and trying to set up teammates (3 assists and 2 turnovers). He has offensive talent.
  • Cam Whitmore flashed eye-popping athletic tools on multiple plays — one a routine defensive rebound where it looked for a moment like he might hit his head on the rim.
  • Will Riley was confident and assertive in his 26 minutes. He scored 17 points on 11 shots and was actively attacking New York’s defense.
  • Dillon Jones flashed impressive hands — three steals, including two live-dribble swipes.
  • Jamir Watkins grabbed 6 rebounds and 17 minutes and showcased some of the defense that will be what earns him a spot in the NBA.
  • Tyler Kolek from the Knicks was competitive, physical and effective. He probably won’t get a ton of minutes in New York, but he seems the kind of guy a good team needs — who plays just a bit better than you’d expect when they need him.
  • Former Wizards great Trey Jemison III is big, athletic and has maybe somewhat refined his game.
  • For all the talk about how hard the Wizards youngsters worked this offseason, Kyshawn George and Corey Kispert were the only two who look visibly different. George clearly added muscle in his arms and shoulders. Kispert made a similar change last season and looks even more chiseled this year.
  • Speaking of George, it was interesting to see him trying Doncic-like pace control on drives. He might have overdone it a bit, but I liked seeing him try to keep his defender on his hip and make a play in the paint. Next step: change pace like Doncic does — go slow to fast or fast to slow to befuddle defenders.

And, a few things I didn’t like:

  • Dillon Jones’ feet are as slow as his hands are quick. After one excellent steal, he botched the transition possession because it took him so long to get up court. I continue to think what I thought of him in summer league — he needs to lose 15-20 pounds.
  • Tre Johnson missed a transition hit-ahead pass in the first quarter. I wasn’t sure whether he didn’t see Kyshawn George or whether he fumbled the ball when trying to make the pass. It might’ve been a bit of both. Call it a teachable moment — he can learn to keep his head up when bringing the ball up court or to work on his ball handling.
  • As long as I’m picking on Johnson, I wasn’t thrilled with his elevation when trying to finish inside. That was okay against a Knicks team playing a 6-7 center, but it’s potentially worrying when they face legit NBA size. I did like his willingness to attack closeouts and keep his dribble until he got to the rim.
  • Okay, one more on Johnson — in the first quarter, he went left on pick-and-roll. This is good. What didn’t I like? He dropped a pocket pass to Bagley out at the elbow. Bagley scored because he’s skilled, and Johnson drew praise from the Monumental broadcast team. But the pass was too early and left his big with a challenging move in traffic to score. Better would have been to keep his dribble, probe the defense, draw the big man, and THEN drop it to Bagley for an easy bucket. While I didn’t like that pass, it’s okay — he’s 19-years-old. And it’s preseason.
  • The Monumental broadcast was in the midseason form, which is not a good thing. They did their usual “miss a play because they were showing a replay and no one noticed the game was starting” thing. At one point, Drew Gooden talked about the team having a “point guard by committee” or something that doesn’t reflect the reality that many teams don’t really have PGs anymore. Which might have just glided past my ears if Chris Miller hadn’t asked Gooden if that “point guard by committee” could make it hard for opponents to “figure out” who’s bringing the ball up. As if opposing players can’t just…you know…look at who has the ball and is dribbling it up court.

One thing I did love from the Monumental broadcast was a preseason mistake — a graphic that read: “NYK: 0 FG last 0:05.” Legit made me laugh.

The Wizards are back in action Thursday night when they’ll close out the preseason at the Detroit Pistons.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ast-new-york-knicks-for-120-103-preseason-win
 
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