Wizards vs. Hornets preview: Washington hosts Charlotte on Sunday

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - JANUARY 24: Alex Sarr #20 of the Washington Wizards shoots the ball while guarded by Moussa Diabate #14 of the Charlotte Hornets during their game at Spectrum Center on January 24, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards host the Charlotte Hornets tomorrow night. Let’s get to the preview

Game info​


When: Sunday, Feb. 22 at 6 p.m. ET

Where: Capital One Arena, Washington, D.C.

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network, League Pass

Injuries: For the Wizards, Trae Young (knee, quad), Anthony Davis (hand, groin), Cam Whitmore (shoulder), Alex Sarr (hamstring), and D’Angelo Russell (not with team) are out.

For the Hornets, Liam McNeely and Coby White are out. Grant Williams is day-to-day.

What to watch for


The Wizards are looking to win their third straight game, this time against their Southeast Division foes in Charlotte. The Hornets have lose three of their last four games but had a recent nine game winning streak and are 26-31 heading into tomorrow’s game.

With the immediate Washington area under a winter weather advisory and a winter storm warning in some of the surrounding suburbs, do not expect this game to be postponed tomorrow. It is rare for NBA games to be postponed due to snow unless there are blizzard or near such conditions. The Washington area is not expected to get the worst effects. The northeast United States is expected to get such conditions, but all the northeast USA teams (Philadelphia 76ers, Brooklyn Nets, New York Knicks, Boston Celtics) and the Toronto Raptors are on the road in cities not affected by the storm.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...on-wizards-charlotte-hornets-nba-game-preview
 
The Tank’s Latest Problem: Kids on 10-Day Contracts

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WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 20: Alondes Williams #31 of the Washington Wizards dunks the ball during the game against the Indiana Pacers on February 20, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Wizards returned from the All-Star break with disastrous back-to-back wins in a tête-à-tête against the Indiana Pacers. In the one last night, the Wizards rallied from a 15-point second quarter deficit to win by 13.

In the NBA’s 2026 race for the bottom, Washington has fallen to fifth behind the Sacramento Kings, New Orleans Pelicans, Indiana, and the Brooklyn Nets. The Utah Jazz — an annual leader in tanking shenanigans — is lurking.

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I sympathize with Wizards head coach Brian Keefe and general manager Will Dawkins. Alex Sarr and Kyshawn George sat. They traded away productive to semi-productive veterans for Anthony Davis and Trae Young — neither of whom has played even a second for the Wizards.

Justin Champagnie, who produces when he plays, departed last night’s game after just 11 minutes with a sore knee.

Keefe is left with no choice but to play kids, and what’s making The Tank a bit of a challenge is that some of those kids are playing pretty well — at least when going up against a Pacers team missing virtually every useful NBA player in the organization.

Kids playing pretty well, even against what amounts to a G League squad, isn’t bad. The Wizards need to lose enough to keep that first round pick, so things could get downright debaculous in the near future. Just to be clear, I want Dawkins to know that I can help. I have enough vacation time to become the NBA’s oldest ever rookie on a 10-day contract. Maybe two.

I mean, yeah my body might not hold up for more than a game or two (if that), but I will brick lots of threes, be easy pickings on defense, and consistently fail to get back on defense.

Also, if Anthony Gill serves as the team dad, I can (briefly) be the team’s granddad.

Thoughts & Observations​

  • Full disclosure: I was on work travel and did not watch either of these games, so these observations are strictly from the numbers.
  • Amazing to think that the Wizards had a 61.1% effective field goal percentage, and the Pacers clocked in at 57.8% and the teams combined for a slightly subpar offensive night. Both teams committed loads of turnovers. Neither got to the free throw line or gathered offensive rebounds.
  • If the teams had combined for an average night offensively, they would have totaled 252 points. They tallied 249. Not a huge difference, but again — amazing considering the high shooting percentages from the floor.
  • Even more amazing: the Wizards shot 61.1% from the floor (eFG%) while also hitting just 6-29 — 20.7% — from three-point range. That’s because they hit 74.2% on twos. Yowza.
  • Washington’s ability to get inside was determinant — they outscored the Pacers 78-46 in the paint.
  • Kudos to Alondes Williams for having a great game halfway through a 10-day contract — 25 points, 10 rebounds, 4 assists in 30 minutes.
  • More kudos to Kadary Richmond, also on a 10-day contract, for producing 6 steals in 31 minutes.
  • Even more kudos to Sharife Cooper — on a two-way contract — for notching 18 points and 5 assists in 27 minutes.
  • Yet more kudos to Keefe for giving 55% of the game’s minutes to guys on two-way contracts and 10-day contracts.

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)
FOUR FACTORSPACERSWIZARDSLGAVG
eFG%57.8%61.1%54.3%
OREB%19.1%24.4%26.1%
TOV%19.3%15.6%12.8%
FTM/FGA0.1560.1580.208
PACE10999.4
ORTG108120115.4

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 listed in the Four Factors table above. 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 115, the league — on average — would produced 23.0 points in the same 20 possessions. So, the player in this hypothetical would have a +PTS score of -3.0.

Players are sorted by total production in the game.

WIZARDSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Alondes Williams296718419.9%9.23614
Kadary Richmond31719311.7%-1.91343
Anthony Gill235315916.0%3.71758
Tre Johnson194212721.4%1.01883
Tristan Vukcevic204611423.5%-0.11624
Sharife Cooper276211524.2%-0.1962
Will Riley122813432.1%1.72016
Jamir Watkins235311217.0%-0.310012
Bilal Coulibaly22509326.3%-2.910016
Bub Carrington22509019.8%-2.58212
Justin Champagnie11243813.6%-2.6-45-5
PACERSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Jay Huff163618726.9%6.931412
Micah Potter266012122.9%0.7124-16
Kobe Brown337612511.4%0.992-21
Ben Sheppard204513314.0%1.112613
Taelon Peter37849813.2%-1.964-17
Quenton Jackson235311831.9%0.4100-14
Jarace Walker31708925.0%-4.748-15
T.J. McConnell15339325.6%-1.9900
Kam Jones39885918.9%-9.3-25-7

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...tanks-latest-problem-kids-on-10-day-contracts
 
Wizards vs. Hornets final score: Washigton loses 129-112 on Sunday night

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WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 22: Bilal Coulibaly #0 of the Washington Wizards shoots the ball during the game against the Charlotte Hornets on February 22, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Washington Wizards lost to the Charlotte Hornets on Sunday night, 129-112 at Capital One Arena.

LaMelo Ball went off in the first half, scoring 19 of his 37 points in the first half for Charlotte. Bilal Coulibaly scored 15 of his 17 for Washington to counter Ball. Ultimately, the Wizards headed into halftime with a 61-56 deficit. Still, the Hornets were in control throughout the half, and Washington was in danger of letting the game break wide open.

Unfortunately, that’s exactly what happened in the second half as the Hornets expanded their lead by outscoring the Wizards 44-28 in the third quarter. Ball scored the rest of his points in that quarter alone. By then, the rest of the game was garbage time.

Coulibaly led Washington in scoring, but Jaden Hardy added 16 more points off the bench.

The Wizards’ next game is on Tuesday when they head on the road to play the Atlanta Hawks. Tip off is at 7 p.m. ET. See you then and stay safe from the snowstorm.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...gton-wizards-charlotte-hornets-nba-game-recap
 
Wizards Meet the Team That Could Not Miss

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WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 22: Sion James #4 of the Charlotte Hornets brings the ball up court against Bilal Coulibaly #0 of the Washington Wizards during the first half at Capital One Arena on February 22, 2026 in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a couple wins against the cellar-dwelling Indiana Pacers, the Wizards took on a surging Charlotte Hornets and got buried under an avalanche of threes. The Hornets made 25 in the game — one shy of their franchise record. Along the way, Charlotte connected on 12-14 from deep in the third quarter alone.

The Wizards did give up some open and wide-open looks in that ridiculous third quarter, but in fairness that kind of shooting is largely outlier flukish luck. Even All-Star teams going against All-Star level “defense” won’t make 12-14 from three-point range.

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The Hornets deserve some credit too. Several of those threes came from stellar offensive design — multiple screens and side-switching player movement that befuddled the Wizards and created open looks. While the Wizards made a habit of dying on screens and not communicating effectively on switches, but those actions are tough to cover, and the league as a whole has had difficulty keeping up with them over the past couple months.

Overall, I’d have to say there wasn’t much to learn in this one. Washington was missing several players, head coach Brian Keefe kept the team’s available maintstays on a tight minutes leash, and gave biggest minutes to the two-way and 10-day guys. All part of the Keep That Pick campaign.

Thoughts & Observations​

  • With Alex Sarr and Tristan Vukcevic in street clothes, Anthony Gill got his first start of the season and the 16th start of his career. Nice that it happened against Charlotte, so Hornets play-by-play man Eric Collins could talk about Gill coming from Charlotte.
  • Kyshawn George played pretty well in his first game back from a toe injury.
  • Bilal Coulibaly exhibited shocking offensive aggression (for him) from the opening tip. He scored Washington’s first 11 points, and it was more than three minutes before anyone other Wizards player even attempting a field goal. He finished the period with 15 points — the highest offensive output in a single quarter in his career.
  • Coulibaly’s previous high for a quarter was 13.
  • Note I jotted during the first quarter: LaMelo has the weirdest shot in the NBA. It got even weirder later when he hit a contested and fading three off one leg with the shot clock expiring. He hit 10-15 from three-point range.
  • Kudos to the Wizards defense for holding Ball to 2-5 shooting on twos. (No, this is not a serious observation.)
  • It’s a little weird to talk about a 33-year-old lacking experience, but I think it might apply to Gill. Example: in the second quarter, he turned down a wide open catch-and-shoot three and instead drove into multiple defenders…and turned it over. The lesson? Take. The. Open. Shot.
  • After Coulibaly’s personal best first quarter, he got zero minutes in the second and just eight minutes the rest of the game.
  • The Christian and Scooby halftime show was great. If you haven’t seen the show, Google it. You’re welcome.
  • I get that the franchise wants to lose so they can keep that first round pick and improve their odds of getting the highest possible draft slot. Even so, why would they start the second half running a postup for Bub Carrington who was being defended by Ball — who’s three inches taller?
  • Charlotte’s offensive rating (points per possession x 100) through three quarter was 146. League average this season: 115.4.
  • Charlotte is on a seven-game road winning streak.

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)
FOUR FACTORSHORNETSWIZARDSLGAVG
eFG%63.8%59.5%54.3%
OREB%36.4%19.6%26.1%
TOV%13.0%11.9%12.8%
FTM/FGA0.2070.1430.208
PACE9299.5
ORTG140121115.4

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 listed in the Four Factors table above. 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 115, the league — on average — would produced 23.0 points in the same 20 possessions. So, the player in this hypothetical would have a +PTS score of -3.0.

Players are sorted by total production in the game.

WIZARDSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Bilal Coulibaly173316628.8%4.8329-6
Jaden Hardy224215621.2%3.61786
Kyshawn George183413724.8%1.8185-21
Sharife Cooper224211925.8%0.41394
Jamir Watkins163213628.1%1.818513
Alondes Williams346613210.9%1.2894
Anthony Gill315912611.8%0.866-33
Will Riley315914012.3%1.865-4
Tre Johnson19379131.2%-2.82-21
Bub Carrington30585521.5%-7.5-81-27
HORNETSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
LaMelo Ball275319932.2%14.253020
Kon Knueppel285513533.9%3.724233
Brandon Miller265014526.6%4.02107
Josh Green234519912.2%4.523410
Ryan Kalkbrenner152920414.7%3.829924
Tidjane Salaun21402457.9%4.1172-9
Grant Williams264910514.4%-0.73933
Pat Connaughton112110711.9%-0.268-17
Tre Mann21399818.0%-1.231-3
PJ Hall17327119.8%-2.9-22-7
Xavier Tillman473326.6%-1.5-208-4
Sion James21402413.0%-4.8-120-2

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...240/wizards-meet-the-team-that-could-not-miss
 
Wizards at Hawks preview: Trae Young not yet to debut versus former team

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Feb 5, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Hawks forward Corey Kispert (24) dribbles against the Utah Jazz in the second quarter at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

The Washington Wizards are playing the Hawks in Atlanta tomorrow night. I’ve got you covered with the preview:

Game info​


When: 7:30 p.m. EST on Tuesday, Feb. 24

Where: State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia

How to watch: Monumental Sports Network

Injuries​


Wizards — Trae Young, Anthony Davis, Alex Sarr and Cam Whitmore are all listed as OUT. Tristan Vukcevic and Justin Champagnie are listed as DAY-TO-DAY. Additionally, D’Angelo Russell is not being asked to report to the team.

Hawks — Jonathan Kuminga is listed as OUT and has yet to make his Hawks debut.

Game notes and more​

  • The Atlanta Hawks were a hip NBA Finals contender ahead of the season, yet even in a rollercoaster of a season they’ve failed to kick their play-in addiction. They’ve traded their franchise player in Trae Young, minted a new All-Star in Jalen Johnson, rolled the dice on Jonathan Kuminga and watched Zaccharie Risacher, who they selected no. 1 overall last year, fail to make an impact. They are still the same middling old Hawks, and they currently sit at a meager 28-31, fending off a challenge from the flaming hot Charlotte Hornets.
  • The aforementioned Young was, as any reader of this site is no doubt aware, traded to the Wizards ahead of the trade deadline. He has yet to make his debut, and it is unknown whether he will be playing this season or not, as all team-issued updates have been quite vague.

Source: https://www.bulletsforever.com/wash...ington-wizards-atlanta-hawks-nba-game-preview
 
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