News Wizards Team Notes

The Knicks were intentional about benching their starters against the Wizards

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The Washington Wizards beat the New York Knicks, 120-103 on Monday on the second night of a back-to-back in the preseason. Washington is now 1-1 and has some positive momentum before heading into their next game.

We have already written a bit about the likelihood that the Wizards will be one of the worst teams in the NBA this season once the regular season begins. But why did the Knicks sit out their starters against the Wizards? Even in a preseason game, the starters would show up for at least a little bit. The answer is that it turns out that benching the starters was all part of the plan.

According to Stefan Bondy of The New York Post, Knicks Head Coach Mike Brown did so in order to give reserve players more playing time before roster cuts. Here is the quote where Brown acknowledged the decision to play his reserves:

It’s important. We want to try to give some guys some extended minutes to take a look at them tonight. It’s important because they’ve all been busting their behinds and making that decision is extremely tough.

Do I think that deciding this is fair for Knicks fans who attended a preseason game at Madison Square Garden? No. But I get it. And if you’re a Wizards fan, getting the win isn’t a bad thing. However, when one of the league’s most talented teams decides to bench the starters to play your team where most players did get some time, that also could be rubbed off the wrong way.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/qual...gton-wizards-new-york-knicks-starters-benched
 
Wizards at Pistons preview: Washington finishes preseason in Detroit on Thursday

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The Washington Wizards close out their 2025 preseason run with a road game against the Detroit Pistons.

Game info​


When: Thursday, Oct. 15 at 7:00 p.m. ET

Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Mi.

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, Bilal Coulibaly (thumb) is out.

For the Pistons, Jaden Ivey, Caris LeVert, and Colby Jones are all questionable. Cade Cunningham missed Detroit’s last game for rest purposes, but should be back for this one.

What to watch for​


The Wizards will try to roll over some of their momentum from Monday’s dominant 120-107 win over the New York Knicks. Whereas the Knicks benched their starters reportedly to evaluate their depth, Washington will more than likely get a taste of the Pistons at full strength.

In many ways, the Pistons are what the Wizards hope to be in the next couple of years. Two seasons ago, Washington had a better record (15-67) than the Pistons did (14-68). The Pistons turned things around in a big way last season, finishing 44-38 and nabbing the East’s final guaranteed playoff spot.

Most teams usually try to simulate a full game of action in the preseason finale. The Wizards’ starting lineup and rotations may provide some indication of how the team plans to operate to start the 2025-26 campaign. Washington’s performance against a playoff-contending Pistons team may carry a bit more weight as well.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ds-detroit-pistons-nba-preseason-game-preview
 
Brothers, Blocks, and Bricks: Takeaways from Wizards’ Preseason Loss to Raptors

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The first rule of preseason NBA basketball is to not take anything seriously. It’s an exhibition of NBA basketball, but it’s not really NBA basketball. Sure, guys try, but it’s not full-bore regular season intensity, there’s no game planning, and no one even thinks about a scouting report.

What I’m looking for in a first preseason game is to start getting a sense of how much young players improved, see first clues at what the rotation might be, and no injuries.

For a first preseason game, the Washington Wizards loss to the Toronto Raptors was…fine. They fell behind big, came back, and…well…it doesn’t really matter. It’s just preseason, and we don’t take anything too seriously.

Here are a few things I liked:

  • Alex Sarr made shots — 4-5 from the floor — and attempted just one three in 17 minutes. He also blocked a couple shots.
  • Khris Middleton was spry, made shots, had a game-high five assists, and hit the boards. Presumably he’ll have the next game off.
  • CJ McCollum made shots — 5-9 from three.
  • Kyshawn George grabbed 9 rebounds and blocked 4 shots in 25 minutes.

And a few things I didn’t:

  • Bub Carrington, Tristan Vukcevic, and McCollum each had four turnovers. Carrington and McCollum comprised the team’s starting backcourt. The Wizards were -34 in Carrington’s 23 minutes of action.
  • The team shot 29.0% from three-point range, which was in keeping with them being the league’s second worst three-point shooting team last season.
  • Cam Whitmore was fine trying to score but had zero rebounds in 17 minutes.

Based on game one of the preseason minutes (and some pre-first game guessing), I’m anticipating an opening night rotation something like:

Starters​

  • G — Bub Carrington
  • G — CJ McCollum
  • W — Khris Middleton
  • W — Kyshawn George
  • C — Alex Sarr

Reserves​

  • G — Tre Johnson
  • W — Corey Kispert
  • F — Justin Champagnie
  • F — Cam Whitmore
  • C — Tristan Vukcevic

That’s 10, which is what head coach Brian Keefe seemed to want to play last season. It’ll be interesting to see who drops from the rotation when Bilal Coulibaly returns from a thumb injury.

If there’s any positional intrigue, I think it could be Marvin Bagley III pushing Vukcevic for the backup big man spot. I don’t think Will Riley or Jamir Watkins are close to ready to push any of the wings or forwards in front of them.

One fun thing​


Washington Wizards big man Alex Sarr and his older brother — Toronto Raptors big, Olivier — exchanged jerseys after the game.

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Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...eaways-from-wizards-preseason-loss-to-raptors
 
Wizards at Pistons final score: Washington falls 119-98 in preseason finale

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The Washington Wizards got run out of the gym Thursday in their preseason finale, losing 119-98 to the Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena.

The Pistons trotted out their projected starting lineup for this one, in a contest that felt like a dress rehearsal for both sides. The Wizards’ starting lineup of Bub Carrington, Alex Sarr, Kyshawn George, Khris Middleton, and CJ McCollum lasted all of four minutes.

An awkward fall forced Carrington out of the game, with teammates needing to help him to the locker room. The 20-year-old was ruled out for the rest of the game with a knee injury, but was later able to return to the bench in street clothes. Bub looked fine.

Bub Carrington is back on the Wizards' bench, smiling and joking with teammates. https://t.co/kjB8e8q6WV pic.twitter.com/UqQqlDbVN3

— Chase Hughes (@chasedcsports) October 17, 2025

The Wizards fell behind by double digits early and trailed 39-23 midway through the second quarter. But the boys battled back to close the half with Sarr, George, and Kispert keying a 28-18 to cut the deficit to 57-51 at the break. The Sarr-George-Kispert trio combined for 21 of those 28 points. Washington came back despite shooting 1-of-13 from beyond the arc in the first and second quarters.

George stayed hot to start the third quarter. He scored seven of Washington’s first 16 points in the half to help tie the game at 67. The Miami product did it in impressive fashion as well. He shed Cade Cunningham with a nasty behind-the-back dribble for a top-of-the-key three.

Ky's in his bag with this one 💼 pic.twitter.com/3gBAspQAH9

— Washington Wizards (@WashWizards) October 17, 2025

George also challenged Jalen Duren at the rim and won that battle for an And-1, which impressed the Pistons’ broadcast team enough that announcer Greg Kesler had to say, “Look at this dude.”

George finished with 20 points on 8-of-11 shooting to go along with 6 rebounds, 2 assists, a steal, and a block.

COUNT IT FOR KYSHAWN 🧙‍♂️

🔥 20 PTS 🔥 6 REB 🔥 pic.twitter.com/SEsDGwoqnZ

— Washington Wizards (@WashWizards) October 17, 2025

The Wizards took a 70-69 lead at the 7:01 mark after a three by McCollum. But alas, the good times did not last.

The Pistons closed the quarter out on a 24-9 run to retake a double-digit lead and piled on even more in the fourth quarter. The Wizards fell behind by as many as 26 points late in the 119-98 defeat.

Rookies Tre Johnson and Will Riley did not look comfortable in this one, finishing a combined 2-of-12 from the field for six points. Sarr tallied 10 points, nine rebounds, and a couple of blocks in 23 minutes of work. Kispert added 12 points off the bench.

The games and stats will start to count from here on out.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...e-washington-falls-119-98-in-preseason-finale
 
Impressions from a three-game Washington Wizards preseason

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Once upon a time, the NBA exhibition season was eight games. When players were suspended or pay was pro-rated in some way (say for a 10-day contract), the salary was divided over 90 games, not the 82-game regular season schedule.

While eight games isn’t much, it weirdly provided a surprising amount of information about what was to come in the regular season. For example, for established good teams, the preseason meant basically nothing. They could go 0-8 and still roll in the regular season. In practice, better teams didn’t crater in preseason — they were usually measurably better than opponents, even while not going full bore.

For up-and-coming teams, performance in exhibition games provided a decent barometer on team quality. If they played well in preseason action, they tended to play similarly well in the regular season. If they were bad, they tended to be similarly bad in the real games.

This year — I assume specifically to annoy me and make useless my habit of running statistical analysis on small sample size events like summer league, international tournaments, and preseason games — the Wizards played just three exhibition games to “prepare” for the 2025-26 season.

Yes, I know reducing the preseason schedule was a smart move to trim the length of the schedule, try to reduce the number of injuries, and get more quickly to the games people actually want to see. Me included.

The numbers don’t mean much, so I’ll share a few impressions amalgamated from the three games they played:

  • As would be expected for a team so young, the Wizards aren’t going to have many games this season where they’re as strong or stronger than their opponent. Maybe that comes after a couple more years of grinding in the weight room.
  • If I could give Tre Johnson a “work on this” list, it would include getting stronger and working on his ball handling.
  • Lacking strength or not, Alex Sarr looks like he’s going to be a defensive presence at the rim.
  • Corey Kispert didn’t look bad as a ball handler in pick-and-roll sets. He made a couple nice passes in the preseason finale against the Detroit Pistons.
  • Will Riley has good length and skills. He has a very long way to go physically.
  • Justin Champagnie is going to be a solid pro for several years. I would not be shocked if a contending team that needs a boost came calling for a Kispert-Champagnie package.
  • Head coach Brian Keefe is adamant about pushing the pace. He hectored the team to get the ball over half court fast, and yelled repeatedly at his team to “RUN!”
  • If preseason is any indicator, the Wizards will follow the Indiana Pacers in picking up defensively full court. I like it.
  • Kyshawn George looked promising in preseason — he’s one guy who clearly got stronger and worked on his game in the offseason. His production was a bit uneven, but he’s the guy I’m most interested in seeing against real opponents this season.

Hopefully, Bub Carrington makes a quick return from a “sore knee” that kept him out of much of last night’s game.

Next up: My annual forecast.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...rom-a-three-game-washington-wizards-preseason
 
The Wizards raise season ticket prices and some fans aren’t happy about that

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The Washington Wizards are expected to be the one of the worst teams in the NBA for the 2025-26 season. But ticket prices are expected to keep going up in most locations. And because the team is rebuilding, that means at least some fans are deciding to not renew their tickets altogether.

Varun Shankar of The Washington Post wrote a column recently where several fans were interviewed about their reactions to the Wizards raising prices on season tickets despite the team’s poor record on the court. Some fans have also stopped renewing.

The biggest takeaway however from Shankar’s piece is that the Wizards probably aren’t that dependent on season ticket revenue. Here’s the money quote.

Ticket sales make up about 25 percent of a team’s revenue, according to an executive in another team’s front office, who cautioned that number varies depending on team and market. That figure also excludes game day revenue such as parking and concessions.

NBA teams derive the largest share of their revenue from the league’s media rights deals, the value of which increased sharply and now total over $70 billion. Media revenue is distributed equally among the 30 teams. That might mean the Wizards could have fewer fans walk through their turnstiles and still not suffer too much financially.

And that gives the team’s front office a bit more leniency to execute its patient rebuild. But it could push away some of the team’s most dedicated fans — those shelling out thousands for season tickets — and leave Capital One Arena significantly empty on many nights.

Since ticket sales are a minority of the Wizards’ revenue, the reality is that the team can choose to rebuild the long and hard way without cutting into profits. Also, if a team doesn’t spend extravagantly on players, it’s a way for teams to also keep their profits thanks to revenue sharing of the national media deals.

I’m not trying to insinuate that the Wizards are doing this simply to make or keep profits. But given that the Wizards are rebuilding and aren’t investing into salaries at the moment, it is feasible to see them do this long rebuild, see if things work out or not and not become unprofitable in the process.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/qual...s-season-ticket-price-increases-with-bad-team
 
Bub Carrington fully participates in practice

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On Oct. 16, Washington Wizards guard suffered sore knee injury in Washington’s game against the Detroit Pistons. This forced him to miss the rest of the game.

Knee got caught underneath Bub after an awkward fall.

Gotta hope he’s okay https://t.co/WSP7ss1n3S pic.twitter.com/75tH2jQVYq

— Greg Finberg (@GregFinberg) October 16, 2025

Carrington is entering his second NBA season and will be a key player for the Wizards’ 2025-26 campaign. If he had to miss regular season time, that would be a blow to the Wizards’ goal of having a mostly healthy roster to start the year.

Today, the Wizards hosted practice. And thankfully, Carrington participated fully.

Bub Carrington (sore knee) was a full participant in the Wizards' practice today, Brian Keefe said.

— Josh Robbins (@JoshuaBRobbins) October 19, 2025

What do you hope Carrington shows on the court this season? Let us know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...b-carrington-washington-wizards-injury-update
 
Wizards waive Kadary Richmond and Alondes Williams

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The Washington Wizards announced that they waived guard Kadary Richmond guard Alondra Williams earlier today.

The Washington Wizards have waived G Kadary Richmond and G Alondes Williams.

— Wizards PR (@WizPRStats) October 18, 2025

The move isn’t particularly surprising because Richmond only played once in the preseason for just under six minutes. Williams also played only one game and had just under 12 minutes of action. The two were previously on Exhibit 10 contracts.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/late...izards-waive-kadary-richmond-alondes-williams
 
Check out this reel of a “time traveler” from 2005 seeing a Wizards game in 2025

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If you are an older millennial like me, sometimes you may wonder in a vacuum if your 20-ish year old self meets your 40-ish year old reality. Back then, the internet existed, cell phones existed, but smartphones weren’t as prevalent as they are today among other things. But what if your 20-ish year old self somehow showed up to Capital One Arena to see a modern day Washington Wizards basketball game?

That’s what social media reel creator “thacrowdpleazer” posted yesterday. He shows up in a baggy 2000s era Gilbert Arenas jersey and wonders why MCI Center is now Capital One Arena, why the Wizards are now back in red, white and blue. And of course, who the jabroni wearing number zero is. Current Wizards guard Bilal Coulibaly wears No. 0.


I found this video to be hilarious. Let us know your thoughts in the comment below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/qual...eel-washington-wizards-2005-flashback-to-2025
 
Shabazz Napier joins Wizards coaching staff as apprentice, according to report

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Former NBA point guard Shabazz Napier will join the Washington Wizards as a coaching apprentice, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype.

Napier is a seven year NBA veteran who played for six NBA teams, finishing with the Wizards in the 2019-20 season. He averaged 7.1 points per game during his career. After the 2019-20 NBA season, he played for several European teams, most recently FC Bayern Munich for the German Basketball Bundesliga and EuroLeague in the 2024-25 season.

Scotto added in his report that the coaching apprentice program is part of an initiative by Wizards head coach Brian Keefe.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/late...shington-wizards-coaching-staff-as-apprentice
 
The Wizards are toward or at the bottom of final preseason NBA power rankings

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The 2025-26 NBA regular season starts today with the Oklahoma City Thunder hosting the Houston Rockets at 7:30 p.m. ET followed by the Los Angeles Lakers hosting the Golden State Warriors at 10 p.m. ET. So let’s take one last look at some NBA power rankings before the season tips off.

John Schuhmann of NBA.com has the Washington Wizards at No. 28, also noting that Washington went 2-28 against Eastern Conference teams that made the playoffs last season. But here is where Schuhmann may have some cautious optimism:

The second-year guys. The Wizards have nine former first-round picks who are still on their rookie contracts. That includes four from the 2024 Draft, and all four – Sarr, Bub Carrington, AJ Johnson and Kyshawn George – are intriguing in regard to their second-year development.

ESPN isn’t as optimistic. In fact, they ranked the Wizards dead last at No. 30. That said, here is the biggest strength:

It almost certainly won’t translate to wins, but this is going to be a fun team. The Wizards should play fast and use their athleticism to create easy shots in transition — if their defense can create the turnovers to get out and run.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/latest-news/65704/washington-wizards-nba-power-rankings-bottom-team
 
SB Nation Reacts: Grade the Wizards’ preseason

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

This week, it’s time for you to grade the Washington Wizards’ offseason. Then, go ahead and give us your take on whether you think the loss of Monumental Sports Network from platforms like YouTube TV and Hulu will hurt the fanbase long term.

Survey is below. We will post the results later this week!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/comm.../sb-nation-reacts-grade-the-wizards-preseason
 
Good News: Wizards Fought Back. Bad News: Giannis Exists

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The first game of the Washington Wizards 2025-26 season went about as well as could be expected. They got dominated right from the start, never held a lead, and fell behind by 22 in the second quarter, and then by 20 midway through the fourth and ended up losing by 13.

Okay, none of that sounds like “going well.”

But, in the second half, they got chippy, hit some shots, cut the Milwaukee Bucks lead to as little as seven, and at least made things interesting.

One good sign: they made the game enough of a contest that Giannis Antetokounmpo had to play in the fourth quarter. Unfortunately for the Wizards, Giannis Antetokounmpo played in the fourth quarter. The Greek Freak overwhelmed Washington defenders throughout the game, especially when he scored 10 straight points during a 12-2 Bucks run in the final period. He got to sit the final couple minutes.

The only Wizards defender who seemed to have any semblance of effectiveness slowing Antetokounmpo was Kyshawn George, who also committed three first-half fouls. Washington tried Alex Sarr, who didn’t have the strength to compete. They also matched Cam Whitmore against the All-World Antetokounmpo, which on a few plays actually resembled the proverbial turnstile.

Stuff I Liked​

  • Washington’s competitiveness. The Bucks were better, no question. Bigger, stronger, more skilled, more experienced. Yet Bub Carrington woofed up when Gary Trent Jr. inadvertently hit him in the face (refs hit them with the standard double technical foul). Carrington mugged Antetokounmpo in the fourth quarter to earn a flagrant. And (until he got into foul trouble), George was a wonderfully in-the-way pest to Antetokounmpo.
  • Alex Sarr’s at-rim defense against everyone not named Antetokounmpo. He was officially credited with zero blocks, which felt inaccurate.
  • Tre Johnson can really shoot, and he’s aggressive pulling the trigger.
  • Cam Whitmore’s offensive aggression was fun to see.
  • Corey Kispert shook off a poor shooting start to knock down three consecutive threes that were part of making things interesting.
  • George had 21 points, 9 rebounds, 4 assists, a steal and 2 blocks, and he gave a strong defensive effort. I’m fine with the two turnovers — sometimes that’s the price of trying to make plays. I’d like to see him foul less.
  • Khris Middleton played well in his first game back in Milwaukee since getting traded to Washington. The Bucks gave him a nice remembrance video, and he got a couple ovations from Milwaukee fans. He harassed Antetokounmpo with a couple defensive plays, hit a three in Antetokounmpo’s face, induced Antetokounmpo to foul him on a three-point attempt, and drew a charge. Oh yeah, he also scored 23 points on 14 shots. That’s good work.

Stuff I Didn’t Like​

  • Whitmore’s tunnel vision was something. He missed an easy swing pass to Kispert, who was wide open at the three-point line out top. He missed multiple cutters coming open in the paint. The value of being able to score — and I think Whitmore can be an effective scorer — is distorting defenses in ways that open things up for teammates, thereby boosting the overall team offense. In other words, if he’s going to be part of leading a high-quality offense, he has to be able to make at least basic passes.
  • Washington’s perimeter defenders had a terrible time containing Milwaukee’s…well…substandard guards.
  • Washington’s interior defenders had a terrible time containing Milwaukee’s good big men.
  • The Wizards need to figure out their pick-and-roll coverage. They let former Wizards great Kyle Kuzma repeatedly slip screens into wide open layups.

Below are the four factors that decide wins and losses in basketball — shooting (efg), rebounding (offensive rebounds), ball handling (turnovers), fouling (free throws made).

The four factors are measured by:

  • eFG% (effective field goal percentage, which accounts for the three-point shot)
  • OREB% (offensive rebound percentage)
  • TOV% (turnover percentage — turnovers divided by possessions)
  • FTM/FGA (free throws made divided by field goal attempts)

In the table below are the four factors using the percentages and rates traditionally presented.

FOUR FACTORSWIZARDSBUCKS
eFG%55.6%60.2%
OREB%26.4%12.2%
TOV%13.3%7.6%
FTM/FGA0.1120.153
PACE106
ORTG114126

Stats & Metrics​


Below are a few performance metrics. PPA is my overall production metric, which credits players for things they do that help a team win (scoring, rebounding, playmaking, defending) and dings them for things that hurt (missed shots, turnovers, bad defense, fouls).

PPA is a per possession metric designed for larger data sets. In small sample sizes, the numbers can get weird. In PPA, 100 is average, higher is better and replacement level is 45. For a single game, replacement level isn’t much use, and I reiterate the caution about small samples sometimes producing weird results.

POSS is the number of possessions each player was on the floor in this game.

ORTG = offensive rating, which is points produced per individual possessions x 100. League average last season was 114.8. Points produced is not the same as points scored. It includes the value of assists and offensive rebounds, as well as sharing credit when receiving an assist.

USG = offensive usage rate. Average is 20%.

ORTG and USG are versions of stats created by former Wizards assistant coach Dean Oliver and modified by me. ORTG is an efficiency measure that accounts for the value of shooting, offensive rebounds, assists and turnovers. USG includes shooting from the floor and free throw line, offensive rebounds, assists and turnovers.

The +PTS metric will return when there’s an established league average offensive rating.

Players are sorted by total production in the game.

WIZARDSMINPOSSORTGUSGPPA
Khris Middleton296315122.2%172
Kyshawn George337211425.2%110
Tre Johnson265610925.4%120
Cam Whitmore194312723.9%125
Corey Kispert184012618.4%125
Bub Carrington296410614.6%55
Will Riley41021710.3%327
Alex Sarr26569320.9%55
AJ Johnson242516.8%236
Marvin Bagley III1533977.4%21
CJ McCollum29648519.2%10
Anthony Gill2420520.1%136
Justin Champagnie6137825.6%0
Tristan Vukcevic240.0%0
Sharife Cooper24027.2%-314
BUCKSMINPOSSORTGUSGPPA
Giannis Antetokounmpo275912448.0%250
Gary Trent Jr.245412920.5%206
Taurean Prince22482219.4%175
Kevin Porter Jr.92117826.5%408
AJ Green27601858.5%108
Kyle Kuzma235111021.2%116
Cole Anthony122616124.5%210
Myles Turner29649720.8%66
Ryan Rollins29659119.5%55
Amir Coffey13282144.9%94
Jericho Sims2422825.5%279
Gary Harris240.0%0
Andre Jackson Jr.240.0%0
Bobby Portis17385414.1%-7
Thanasis Antetokounmpo24021.4%-226

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...s-wizards-fought-back-bad-news-giannis-exists
 
Wizards at Mavericks preview: Washington continues road trip on Friday

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The Washington Wizards play the Dallas Mavericks on Friday night. Here’s the preview

Game info​


When: Friday, Oct. 24th at 8:30 p.m. ET

Where: American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, Bilal Coulibaly is out. For the Mavericks, Daniel Gafford (ankle), Dante Exum (knee) and Kyrie Irving (knee) are out.

What to watch for​


The Wizards will head to Dallas to continue their road trip as they begin the season. Dallas is 0-1 to start off the season after a 125-92 loss to the San Antonino Spurs yesterday. This is also the first match between Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg, the No. 1 pick in the draft and Wizards rookie Tre Johnson, the No. 6 pick. Hopefully we’ll see an exciting battle of the rookies tomorrow!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ton-wizards-dallas-mavericks-nba-game-preview
 
The Rozier-Billups gambling scandal is the NBA’s own undoing

The Miami Heat’s Terry Rozier has been placed on leave.


Out in Manhattan Beach, Kawhi Leonard and Steve Ballmer just bumped chests and popped a bottle of champagne. The financial scandal implicating the Clippers’ star player and owner is now officially small peanuts compared to today’s bombshell involving Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier and Portland Trail Blazers head coach (and Hall-of-Fame player) Chauncey Billups.

I will not dive too deep into the details at this time, as the story is still rapidly developing. In short, Rozier and Billups were both arrested for their involvement in massive financial fraud schemes — Rozier for allegedly coordinating with bettors using private NBA information and receiving a cut of said bettors’ winnings, and Billups for alleged involvement in a ring of rigged illegal poker games. Both Rozier’s and Billups’ actions had ties to mafia families, according to the New York Times.

Given Billups and Rozier are both big names in the NBA world, navigating a gambling scandal involving the duo’s arrests may prove to be the most gargantuan challenge of commissioner Adam Silver’s career. Billups, who earned the nickname “Mr. Big Shot” in his playing days, is in the Hall of Fame and won the 2004 Finals MVP after his Detroit Pistons downed the mighty Shaq and Kobe Lakers.

Rozier is in the twilight of his career, but at the peak of his game he was a borderline All-Star with the Charlotte Hornets. He was also a key bench piece for the 2017 Boston Celtics squad who squandered the last great Wizards playoff run.

Rozier’s arrest especially is as clear a sign as any to me that the NBA has been slowly poisoning itself with its open-armed embrace of sports gambling. The consequence of the irresponsible nature with which the league has been desensitizing its viewers to this wildly addictive behavior appears to be finally rearing its nasty head.

Since the legalization of sports betting in 2018, the NBA has been passing out cigarettes to kids and collecting exponentially-growing checks from the society of smokers it’s built. Gambling is ubiquitous across the NBA viewing experience — gambling ads litter the courts and commercials air every break, the talking heads won’t shut up about player props, and the NBA’s media partners and its own League Pass have rolled out live betting integration during games.

The almighty dollar is what allows us as fans to experience the highest level of basketball in the world on demand on a daily basis. But I fear the NBA may be flying a little too close to the sun in the pursuit of profit.

It is almost too rich that every picture in every news report of Rozier features the Heat’s jersey sponsor, Robinhood, the stock trading platform with a history of anti-consumer practices.

Nameless, faceless private equity billionaires are buying up NBA teams, including the Celtics’ new owner, Bill Chisholm, who didn’t even have a Wikipedia page until this year. The NBA’s in-season tournament has been renamed the “Emirates NBA Cup,” and preseason games have been played in Abu Dhabi.

I understand that business is business, and that it is overly idealistic to wish that every NBA team operated like the Green Bay Packers or some fifth-tier English football team. But at what point does the NBA’s pursuit of profit at the expense of the fans go too far? I would argue that ship has sailed.

The NBA is detrimentally unscrupulous regarding the corporate sponsors and entities with which it chooses to do business. The league is playing an active role in exposing its viewers to antisocial and addictive behaviors like problem gambling while simultaneously pulling in revenue from private equity and human rights sportswashing regimes.

The fans deserve better than this.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/general/65743/terry-rozier-chauncey-billups-nba-gambling-scandal
 
Kyshawn George Carries Wizards, Puts the NBA on Notice

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The Washington Wizards beat the Dallas Mavericks for their first win of the season in a game that was hard-fought, entertaining, and incredibly encouraging.

I know — I’m aways the one telling folks not to take too much from one game. And I’m saying it now in part to get myself to tap the brakes. Because this was fun and inspires hope.

The story of this one was the performance of Kyshawn George — career highs in points and rebounds (34 and 11), plus four assists, two steals, three blocks, and probably another dozen high-quality defensive plays. What should worry opponents and make Wizards fans grin: while it’s unlikely he’ll shoot any better (11-15 from the floor, 7-9 from three), he can play better.

Last night, he committed five turnovers (three were just youthful sloppiness) and five fouls (3-4 were thoroughly unnecessary). But let’s pause for a moment to appreciate what he did — 34 points, 11 rebounds, 4 assists, a PPA of 362 (more on PPA below)…and…he…could…have…played…better.

Wait, you want more to be encouraged about? The Wizards got you. They won against the Mavericks while their designated veteran leaders stunk. Khris Middleton shot poorly (4-13) and was a turnstile on defense. CJ McCollum hit just 2-8 from the floor (1-4 from deep), though he did produce five assists. He could not plausibly be accused of defending well.

The Wizards won because the kids played well. Alex Sarr battled inside against Anthony Davis and Dereck Lively and finished the night with 14 points on 5-10 shooting to go with 9 rebounds, 5 assists, and 3 blocks. The four turnovers were a bit much, but it was a solid game against strong opponents.

Tre Johnson, the 19-year-old rookie, came off the bench to bomb the Mavericks with 17 points in 26 minutes. The (yes, I want to say this again) 19-year-old rookie shot 7-13 from the floor and 3-6 from deep in his first NBA game in his hometown.

The Wizards did get some contributions from veterans — a solid floor game from Corey Kispert (3-5 shooting, 4 rebounds, 4 assists), and a competitive and productive night from Marvin Bagley III (10 points and 4 rebounds in 15 minutes).

As long as we’re handing out flowers, toss a few to Brian Keefe and the coaching staff. At halftime, a Mavericks assistant told the Dallas sideline reporter that the Wizards wanted to play fast and shoot threes, and that Dallas needed to get them into a half court contest if they were going to make a second half comeback. The Mavericks failed in that quest.

While helped along by Dallas’ poor roster construction — two injuries left the team with zero competent guards — Washington’s defense was impressive. Sure, Wizards defenders at times failed to contain dribble penetration, and they let Davis, Lively and P.J. Washington get inside too often, but they were also active and all over the place. They harassed Dallas’ incompetent guards, and pushed ball handling responsibilities onto players (like Washington — 8 turnovers, and Davis, 5 turnovers) ill-suited for them.

The Mavericks are calling 6-9 Cooper Flagg a guard. And while he has impressive skills (especially in that fourth quarter), he’s…well…not a guard. They desperately need Kyrie Irving back. Dante Exum might at least stabilize the backcourt, but there’s no timetable for his return. Yikes.

Four Factors​


Below are the four factors that decide wins and losses in basketball — shooting (efg), rebounding (offensive rebounds), ball handling (turnovers), fouling (free throws made).

The four factors are measured by:

  • eFG% (effective field goal percentage, which accounts for the three-point shot)
  • OREB% (offensive rebound percentage)
  • TOV% (turnover percentage — turnovers divided by possessions)
  • FTM/FGA (free throws made divided by field goal attempts)

In the table below are the four factors using the percentages and rates traditionally presented.

FOUR FACTORSWIZARDSMAVERICKSLGAVG
eFG%53.9%48.9%54.5%
OREB%20.4%19.1%23.6%
TOV%13.9%19.4%12.8%
FTM/FGA0.2220.2390.247
PACE108102.3
ORTG10899115.1

Stats & Metrics​


PPA is my overall production metric, which credits players for things they do that help a team win (scoring, rebounding, playmaking, defending) and dings them for things that hurt (missed shots, turnovers, bad defense, fouls).

PPA is a per possession metric designed for larger data sets. In small sample sizes, the numbers can get weird. In PPA, 100 is average, higher is better and replacement level is 45. For a single game, replacement level isn’t much use, and I reiterate the caution about small samples sometimes producing weird results.

POSS is the number of possessions each player was on the floor in this game.

ORTG = offensive rating, which is points produced per individual possessions x 100. League average so far this season is 115.1. Points produced is not the same as points scored. It includes the value of assists and offensive rebounds, as well as sharing credit when receiving an assist.

USG = offensive usage rate. Average is 20%.

ORTG and USG are versions of stats created by former Wizards assistant coach Dean Oliver and modified by me. ORTG is an efficiency measure that accounts for the value of shooting, offensive rebounds, assists and turnovers. USG includes shooting from the floor and free throw line, offensive rebounds, assists and turnovers.

+PTS = “Plus Points” is a measure of the points gained or lost by each player based on their efficiency in this game compared to league average efficiency on the same number of possessions. A player with an offensive rating (points produced per possession x 100) of 100 who uses 20 possessions would produce 20 points. If the league average efficiency is 114, the league — on average — would produced 22.8 points in the same 20 possessions. So, the player in this hypothetical would have a +PTS score of -2.8.

Players are sorted by total production in the game.

WIZARDSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Kyshawn George357915026.0%7.136214
Tre Johnson265913618.3%2.31837
Alex Sarr265810527.3%-1.61455
Corey Kispert214814511.2%1.61075
Marvin Bagley III153415318.9%2.4144-6
Will Riley4816921.8%1.04243
Cam Whitmore16368325.9%-3.0483
Khris Middleton30677017.1%-5.2133
CJ McCollum33758014.3%-3.8-210
Bub Carrington26597518.7%-4.4-22-5
Tristan Vukcevic7163328.6%-3.8-13811
MAVERICKSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Anthony Davis388510331.4%-3.3107-3
Dereck Lively II194312515.7%0.71723
Cooper Flagg357810024.6%-3.064-6
Naji Marshall255711414.3%-0.182-1
Max Christie29661408.7%1.566-5
Klay Thompson173910517.0%-0.793-14
Jaden Hardy112511524.3%0.092-3
P.J. Washington39887622.2%-7.715-9
Dwight Powell010.0%0.000
Moussa Cisse010.0%0.000
D’Angelo Russell9197420.5%-1.6-232
Brandon Williams7163511.3%-1.4-471
Ryan Nembhard10226514.9%-1.6-65-15

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...george-carries-wizards-puts-the-nba-on-notice
 
Wizards vs. Hornets Preview: Wizards Host Hornets for Home Opener

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The Washington Wizards come home to face the Hornets in first home game of the season.

Game info​


When: Sunday, Oct. 26th at 6:00 p.m. ET

Where: Capital One Arena, Washington, DC

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries:

Hornets: No Injured Players

Wizards: Bilal Coulibaly (Thumb) – Out

What to watch for​


Coming off a huge win on Friday night, the Wizards look to bring some more momentum home as they face their division foe, the Charlotte Hornets, in a Sunday evening showdown.

The Hornets won their first game of the season over the Brooklyn Nets. The Wizards have been a tough opponent for the Hornets over the past few years. Just last season, the Wizards swept the season series. The Hornets, like the Wizards, are trying to find their identity and develop a young core to carry them into the future. Players like Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel will be players to watch for, to go along with their former All-Star guard, LaMelo Ball.

For the Wizards, Friday’s game had a few ups and downs, but perhaps the biggest outcome was the play of Kyshawn George, who has been the team’s leading scorer thus far this season. He came up big on both ends on Friday. The Wizards will need a little more help from some of their veterans like CJ McCollum and Khris Middleton, as they both have been up and down to start the season. Perhaps this is an opportunity to continue to see the maturation of the Wizards’ young core, but if they have aspiration of making a leap this season, McCollum and Middleton will still be key parts of leading this young team.

Let’s see if the Wizards can build off of the moment from Friday night and beat a team that they are slightly favored to beat, in the Hornets.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...-preview-wizards-host-hornets-for-home-opener
 
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