News Wizards Team Notes

Wizards vs. Hornets final score: Washington blown out 139-113 in home opener

gettyimages-2243194489.jpg


The Washington Wizards lost to the Charlotte Hornets on Sunday evening, 139-113 in their home opener of the 2025-26 NBA season.

I felt pretty good about the first half of the game. Washington led 62-51, was winning the field goal percentage battle by a fair amount, and they were also draining threes at a good rate (40 percent, or 8-of-20).

But of course, there is a second half. And the third quarter was ugly here. Kon Knueppel and Liam McNeely led Charlotte to a 44-26 rout in the third quarter, also giving the Hornets a 95-88 lead. It’s natural that teams go on runs in basketball games, but the third quarter also was one where Washington allowed Charlotte to score 11 points off of turnovers, while the Wizards? They didn’t score a single point off a turnover. Then the wheels fell off in the fourth quarter.

CJ McCollum scored 24 points to lead Washington and Alex Sarr added 21 more. Tre Johnson added 18 points off the bench.

LaMelo Ball scored 38 points, dished 13 assists and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the Hornets. Four of Charlotte’s five starters scored 20 points tonight as ewell.

The Wizards’ next game is on Tuesday when they host the Philadelphia 76ers. Tip off is at 7 p.m. ET. See you then.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...gton-wizards-charlotte-hornets-nba-game-recap
 
Wizards get stung by Ball and Hornets in home opener

gettyimages-2243200875.jpg

gettyimages-2243180297.jpg

If you’re going to be one of the NBA’s worst teams, which the Wizards are, there are going to be nights like this one. The Wizards rode an off shooting half for the Hornets (3-22 from deep despite getting multiple open and wide-open looks) to a halftime lead, which they extended to as much as 13 early in the third quarter. Then Charlotte started hitting shots, Washington laid bricks, and the game avalanched away.

Last night’s matchup was the first of the season where Washington’s opponent had good perimeter players, and the Wizards got torched. Against the Milwaukee Bucks and Dallas Mavericks, Washington had some success pressuring opposing ball handlers. When they tried against LaMelo Ball and Collin Sexton, they got torched. Tre Mann and Sion James were able to generate paint touches as well, though Mann had a rough time finishing or setting up teammates.

The story of this one was Ball, who toyed with the Wizards en route to a 38 point, 13 rebound, 13 assist triple-double. Charlotte rookie Kon Knueppel was impressive, hitting five threes to finish with 20 points and 6 rebounds.

I was also impressed by Sion James, who looked every bit the solid reserve guard every good team needs. I was also entertained by Moussa Diabate and Washington’s inability to keep him off boards — 10 rebounds, 4 on the offensive end in just 23 minutes.

It wasn’t all bad for the Wizards. Alex Sarr was good (21 points, 4 rebounds, 5 assists, 3 blocks). He’s a decent rim protector, but he needs help on the boards and he needs perimeter defenders to execute the team’s force rules (translation: stop giving up so much penetration to the middle).

CJ McCollum had his best game of the season. It wasn’t particularly good overall — 24 points on 20 shots — but it was markedly better than his first two outings.

Justin Champagnie got the call when Kyshawn George committed his fourth foul early in the third quarter. He took the floor looking like he’d hit the snooze button on his alarm a few times but scrapped and battled in his six minutes of action.

Champagnie was also part of an amusing sequence highlighted by Charlotte play-by-play man Eric Collins. Wizards head coach Brian Keefe put Champagnie in with 2.4 seconds left in the first half. On the inbounds, officials called Ball for a foul. The clock didn’t run. If he hadn’t gotten those second half minutes, Champagnie would have been credited with a game played but with 0:00 of playing time.

Semi-random Observations​

  • Khris Middleton’s lack of lateral agility is understandable given his age and injury history. It also makes things tough for the big men, of whom the Wizards have exactly one competent defender (Sarr).
  • Cam Whitmore got credited with two assists. One was a true assist — he hit Tristan Vukcevic wide-open in the paint for a dunk. The other? Technically, I can kinda-sorta see it, though I think it’s a very generous interpretation of the rule. On the first quarter play, he passed to Tre Johnson on the perimeter. Johnson drove to the basket and hit a tough runner over Salaun.
  • Rough night for Kyshawn George after a good first two games. I see to persistent issues he needs to address: turnovers and fouling. He’s gotta cut back on both. The fouls undermine what seems to be high defensive potential.
  • Disappearing Wizards was a theme. Middleton felt absent, especially in the second half. Carrington too. Probably the biggest vanisher was Corey Kispert who managed 1 rebound, 1 steal, 1 missed shot, and 1 foul in 20 minutes.

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 FACTORSHORNETSWIZARDSLGAVG
eFG%59.2%50.5%54.4%
OREB%25.0%14.6%25.6%
TOV%11.1%13.9%13.8%
FTM/FGA0.3260.2310.240
PACE108101.7
ORTG129105114.5

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+/-
Alex Sarr255612429.2%1.6157-7
CJ McCollum306711031.6%-0.9114-5
Tre Johnson296512321.0%1.290-16
Khris Middleton204512019.3%0.583-4
Justin Champagnie61317224.0%1.8188-6
Bub Carrington26588414.1%-2.531-8
Tristan Vukcevic112514813.5%1.167-1
Will Riley9219819.1%-0.746-3
Corey Kispert204501.8%-0.90-13
Marvin Bagley III1022828.4%-0.6-31-14
Cam Whitmore21466829.6%-6.4-20-16
Kyshawn George25567718.0%-3.8-29-22
AJ Johnson4908.4%-0.9-154-4
Sharife Cooper250.0%0.00-7
Anthony Gill2410545.4%-0.20-4
HORNETSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
LaMelo Ball357813639.1%6.540032
Sion James204517715.2%4.430513
Kon Knueppel357813415.9%2.415919
Collin Sexton337412919.6%2.01404
Miles Bridges327212224.0%1.21224
Moussa Diabate235211721.9%0.313912
Tidjane Salaun16371448.7%0.916122
Ryan Kalkbrenner22501218.1%0.3469
Liam McNeeley6146214.3%-1.1-647
Tre Mann1227011.1%-3.4-129-4
Mason Plumlee3720011.5%0.62635
Pat Connaughton2516441.9%1.15377

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...-get-stung-by-ball-and-hornets-in-home-opener
 
Wizards vs. 76ers preview: Washington continues road trip on Friday

gettyimages-2208797988.jpg


The Washington Wizards play the Philadelphia 76ers tomorrow night. Here’s the preview.

Game info​


When: Tuesday, Oct. 28 p.m. ET

Where: Capital One Arena, Washington DC

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, Bilal Coulibaly is out. For the 76ers, Dominick Barlow, Paul George, Trenton Watford, Joel Embiid and Jared McCain were out for today’s game against the Orlando Magic so keep that in mind for tomorrows.

What to watch for​


The Wizards will look to get to .500 once more after losing to the Charlotte Hornets last night. The 76ers will be on the second night of a back-to-back after playing against the Magic tonight. Will the rest advantage help give the Wizards an edge? We shall see.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...n-wizards-philadelphia-76ers-nba-game-preview
 
The WNBA offers players union 30 day extension on CBA negotiations

gettyimages-2224983380.jpg


The WNBA and WNBPA (hereon the players) are currently negotiation a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA). The deadline is this Friday, Oct. 31. After that date, it’s unclear whether negotiations will continue without a set CBA or if there will be a work stoppage. The owners could lock out the players or the players could go on strike. The former seemed more likely until recently.

Yesterday, Alexa Philippou of ESPN wrote that the WNBA offered a 30-day extension on negotiations. It’s unclear whether the players will accept it. At least this much is clear. The owners do not want to lock the players out, at least not yet.

As for the players, Philippou wrote that they are willing to take the extension, but they must be “under the right circumstances,” per a source in her piece.

It is not uncommon for the WNBA and the players to extend CBA negotiations. This is due to precedent and the fact that a lockout or strike has never happened before. Since the WNBA Draft won’t happen until at least April 2026, and that the Draft Lottery and Expansion Draft won’t happen until at least last fall, it wouldn’t surprise me to see these negotiations move on through the rest of the 2025 calendar year.

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/mystics/65824/wnba-cba-negotaiton-update
 
Wizards at Thunder preview: Washington visits the defending champs on Thursday

gettyimages-2193041913.jpg


The Washington Wizards face a huge early test on Thursday night against the reigning NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder.

Game info​


When: Thursday, Oct. 30th at 8:00 p.m. ET

Where: Paycom Center, Oklahoma City, OK

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, Bilal Coulibaly (thumb) is expected to make his season debut. For the Thunder, Jalen Williams (wrist), Chet Holmgren (back), and Isaiah Joe (knee) are all game-time decisions.

What to watch for​


The Wizards are looking to erase Tuesday’s overtime collapse against the Philadelphia 76ers. What better way to do that than to take on the juggernaut Thunder on their home floor.

The Thunder have hardly had any semblance of a championship hangover. Even without the injured Jalen Williams, OKC has swept its first five games en route to the NBA’s best record in the young season.

It’ll be interesting to see how Washington’s young ball-handlers perform against the immense pressure OKC constantly applies on the ball. With the Thunder rotation stacked with a plethora of lockdown perimeter defenders, Bub Carrington, Kyshawn George, and Tre Johnson will have their ball security and playmaking abilities tested by the league’s best.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ngton-visits-the-defending-champs-on-thursday
 
Elena Delle Donne named to Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame

gettyimages-2233638857.jpg


On Thursday, former Washington Mystics star Elena Delle Donne was named to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026.

Congratulations, @De11eDonne 👏 @WBHOF @WNBA pic.twitter.com/wLGYonSaqu

— Washington Mystics (@WashMystics) October 30, 2025

Delle Donne played for the Chicago Sky from 2013-16 and the Mystics from 2017-23. Today, she is a Monumental Basketball advisor and is also the USA Basketball 3X3 women’s national team’s managing director. While with the Mystics, Delle Donne won the 2019 WNBA MVP award and was one of the lead contributors to the Mystics’ WNBA championship that same year.

There are seven other inductees to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026, including retired player Candace Parker, Minnesota Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve and ESPN NBA analyst Doris Burke.

Delle Donne and the other class members will be inducted on June 27, 2026 in Knoxville, Tenn.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/myst...donne-named-to-womens-basketball-hall-of-fame
 
Wizards vs. Magic preview: Washington hosts Orlando on Saturday

gettyimages-2207753579.jpg


The Washington Wizards play the Orlando Magic tomorrow night. Here’s the preview.

Game info​


When: Saturday, Nov. 1 at 7 p.m. ET

Where: Capital One Arena, Washington DC

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, THEY HAVE A FULL ROSTER! For the Magic, Moritz Wagner (knee) is out.

What to watch for​


The Wizards will host the reigning Southeast Division champions tomorrow night. Currently, Orlando is 2-4 coming off a win on the road against the Charlotte Hornets yesterday. Before that Hornets game, the Magic lost four straight games, which is not exactly the way they envisioned starting their season.

Washington is back home after their road match against the Oklahoma City Thunder. Hopefully they can make this another battle — and one where they can come out with the win!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ington-wizards-orlando-magic-nba-game-preview
 
SB Nation Reacts: Wizards fans pleased with Kyshawn George’s and Tre Johnson’s starts

gettyimages-2243706810.jpg


Thank you for participating in this week’s SB nation Reacts Survey for the Washington Wizards. This week, we asked you to grade sophomore guard Kyshawn George’s and rookie forward Tre Johnson’s starts for the 2025-26 NBA season.

Here are this week’s SBN Reacts survey results pic.twitter.com/0YuHv1TrQ4

— Bullets Forever (@BulletsForever) November 1, 2025

Our respondents overwhelmingly gave George an A. And nearly half gave Johnson an A as well. Though the Wizards may not be off to a hot start in the standings, individual players are still off to great starts as Washington’s rebuild continues to take shape.






FanDuel is an SB Nation/Vox Media partner.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/comm...-with-kyshawn-georges-and-tre-johnsons-starts
 
Recap: Washington Wizards blown out, 125-94 by Orlando Magic

gettyimages-2244072243.jpg

gettyimages-2244071027.jpg

The Washington Wizards played awful and got blasted at home by the Orlando Magic. The final was 125-94, and the game really wasn’t as close as the 31-point margin might suggest. No, I’m not exaggerating.

It wasn’t all bad. The Wizards scrapped a bit in the first quarter, the Magic laid bricks, and Washington finished the first 12 minutes up three.

And then, they got outscored in the second quarter, 43-21. Which the Wizards followed up with 19 points in the third quarter and just 19 in the fourth. They couldn’t even win garbage time, getting outscored by nine over the final 5:59 of game time.

How bad was it? Washington allowed 125 points and a 116 offensive rating, and the Magic cannot shoot. Orlando was the NBA’s worst three-point shooting team last season, they rank 23rd so far this season, and they shot just 12-36 from three against Washington despite getting an abundance of good looks throughout the game.

As Magic analyst and former NBA player Jeff Turner said during the second half, “The Magic can get an open three any trip down the floor, if they want it.”

The Magic were not mesmerized into taking all those open looks. As assistant coach Joe Prunty told the sideline reporter at halftime, the team generated 48 first-half paint touches, which resulted in 61 points. The trend continued in the second half.

How bad was it? I’ve been watching and analyzing NBA games for many years now. I’ve been running single-game PPA (my all-around production metric — more info below) for at least the past 8-10 seasons. I don’t keep a database of these individual game score sheets, so I can’t confirm 100% that what I’m about to say is the first or only time this has ever happened. But I don’t remember it ever happening before.

What am I talking about? The Wizards had no one with an above average PPA for the night. Not one. I’m sure it’s happened before in NBA history. It’s probably happened in Wizards history. I just don’t recall seeing it.

Even when a team gets their teeth kicked in — like the Wizards did against the Magic — someone has a decent game. That didn’t happen for Washington. The guy who came closest was Marvin Bagley III. For a stretch in the second quarter, Washington found offensive success by missing shots and having Bagley go get the rebound and score. That’s no way to run an offense.

Thoughts and Observations​

  • Washington wants to play fast, which…fine…whatever. Play fast, if you want. It’s just…there’s no correlation between fast pace and efficient offense. Transition possessions tend to be high efficiency, but that doesn’t call for a strategy of running down the court and flinging up the first shot anyone decides to take. The rules allow players to work together to score. Maybe the Wizards could give that a try?
  • The Wizards’ perimeter defense is a problem. So is their interior defense, despite the presence of Alex Sarr, who’s actually a pretty good defender. I see two main things making their defense so bad: 1) Perimeter defenders are not consistently executing force rules, and 2) They’re over-helping, which leads to mad scrambles and wide-open looks.
  • This is feeling a bit broken record, but I’ll say it again — Kyshawn George has to learn how to defend (well, also play offense) without fouling so much. He committed five more fouls (in 24 minutes) tonight, giving him 30 fouls through the team’s first six games. That’s the most in the NBA, surpassing Memphis Grizzlies big man Jaren Jackson Jr. (26 fouls through 6 games).
  • For the uninitiated, “force rules” are foundational defensive principles. I first heard the term in a conversation with then-Detroit Pistons coach Rick Carlisle in the hallway outside the visitor’s locker room. When he describe the rules, I realized I’d read about them in an article written by Larry Brown for a book called “Coaching Basketball.” Basically, most teams in most situations seek to force opposing ball handlers to the sideline and then to the baseline. The principle is to keep the ball out of the middle, which is where an offensive player has the greatest number of options. There are other factors in effective defense, but most good defenses start with trying to keep the ball out of the paint by directing penetration to places where a big man can help. This is what Wizards defenders are failing to do.

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 FACTORSMAGICWIZARDSLGAVG
eFG%57.6%44.4%54.3%
OREB%21.6%19.6%26.3%
TOV%13.9%15.8%13.4%
FTM/FGA0.2070.0710.234
PACE108100.8
ORTG11687115.3

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+/-
Alex Sarr28639917.8%-1.868-17
CJ McCollum22518925.7%-3.480-20
Marvin Bagley III153313318.7%1.193-7
Khris Middleton204611512.8%0.064-21
Cam Whitmore163510018.1%-1.083-4
Bilal Coulibaly276010419.9%-1.340-18
Kyshawn George245410225.3%-1.832-8
Bub Carrington22497723.2%-4.417-5
Tre Johnson25554921.4%-7.9-55-9
Corey Kispert15343214.7%-4.1-152-7
Justin Champagnie5128622.3%-0.876-7
AJ Johnson6138619.3%-0.825-9
Will Riley6138619.3%-0.85-9
Anthony Gill496311.3%-0.50-7
Tristan Vukcevic512022.4%-3.0-266-7
MAGICMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Paolo Banchero265913633.0%4.034219
Franz Wagner316912430.9%1.827824
Goga Bitadze204518514.4%4.53645
Wendell Carter Jr.286312816.5%1.416226
Desmond Bane204511613.3%0.011817
Jalen Suggs19436228.3%-6.59422
Tyus Jones153315310.2%1.31194
Jonathan Isaac163611217.3%-0.2983
Anthony Black25559718.2%-1.9571
Tristan da Silva22494110.6%-3.9-329
Noah Penda71512322.3%0.24227
Jett Howard61313323.2%0.62899
Jase Richardson61305.8%-0.9-619

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ton-wizards-blown-out-125-94-by-orlando-magic
 
Wizards at Knicks preview: Washington plays New York on Monday

gettyimages-2240507623.jpg


The Washington Wizards play the New York Knicks tomorrow night. Here’s the preview.

Game info​


When: Monday, Nov. 3 at 7:30 p.m. ET

Where: Madison Square Garden, New York City

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, THEY STILL HAVE A FULL ROSTER! For the Knicks, Mitchell Robinson is day-to-day.

What to watch for​


The Wizards are on a three game losing streak. Tomorrow night, they will play the Knicks at Madison Square Garden where New York will be on the second half of a back-to-back where they will host the 5-0 Chicago Bulls tonight at 7 p.m. ET. So Washington will have fresher legs, but will it be enough for them to sneak out with a win? We shall see!

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...gton-wizards-new-york-knicks-nba-game-preview
 
Wizards vs. Magic GameThread

gettyimages-2207753294.jpg


The Washington Wizards host the Orlando Magic tonight at 7 p.m. ET. Watch on Monumental Sports Network. Washington has a healthy roster because Bilal Coulibaly is back and let’s see what Matt Modderno and Jahadi White had to say about that yesterday.

Bilal Coulibaly is BACK! Can he provide the Wizards with the perimeter defense they disparately need? https://t.co/MFSjoApqCx

— Matt Modderno (@MattModderno) October 31, 2025

Let’s get a second home win, shall we?

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/washington-wizards-gamethreads/65902/wizards-vs-magic-gamethread
 
Back
Top