Hop on the Bullet(s) Train to the Lottery! Official Washington Wizards 2023-2026 REBUILD Thread 🧙🏾

WHERE DO THE BULLETS FINISH?


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Wiirdo

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Will Dawkins for president!!

Great trade deadline. Brogdon, Smart (if he stays) and Middleton are great vets to have in the locker room and they won't take too much minutes from the young guys.

I still don't believe in Keefe but he probably won't be kept on next season anyway
 

Blackrogue

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Man wtf is this thread for when i gotta sift through shyt to realize we got Marcus smart. And then I go hoopshype and see we got Alex len. We waived Reggie Evans..wtf happened? I still gotta go there to read what happened and what our roster is

Edit. Jared Butler gone too? Bagley? :martin::ufdup:

Y'all should have said so here on our thread

Googles. Washington wizards roster :lupe:
 

FAH1223

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From David Aldridge's article

Washington now has:

• All of its own first-round picks through 2031, with a caveat. Because of a trade several years ago, the Wizards have a prior obligation that is now owed to the New York Knicks. Washington’s first-round pick this year is protected 1-10 in the lottery, and so it’s highly, highly unlikely that that pick will convey this year.

If it doesn’t convey this year, the Wizards’ 2026 pick would be protected 1-8 in the lottery. If the Wizards finish the 2025-26 season in the bottom four of the NBA standings, they would have no chance of conveying the pick. Even if the Wizards finish the 2025-26 season with the league’s fifth- or sixth-worst record, the odds of having to convey their pick to New York would be miniscule.

If, as expected, Washington doesn’t convey a first to New York either this year or in 2026, Washington would have to send its 2026 second-round pick and its 2027 second-round pick to New York.

  • A 2025 first-round pick from Memphis, from Thursday’s Smart trade Thursday, that is protected 1-14 — the entire lottery. Because the Grizzlies are currently second in the Western Conference with a 35-16 record, you can pencil that pick in to go to the Wizards.
  • A 2026 first-round pick from Philadelphia, from the Reggie Jackson/Jared Butler trade Thursday, that will be the least-favorable first-rounder from among Houston, the Clippers and Thunder.
  • A 2028 first-round pick swap with Milwaukee, from the Khris Middleton/Kyle Kuzma trade Wednesday;
  • A 2029 first-round pick from Portland, from the Deni Avdija trade in 2024, that will be the second-most favorable first-rounder from among Boston, Milwaukee and Portland.
  • A 2030 first-round pick (protected 1-20) from Golden State, from the Chris Paul trade in 2023, which is not likely to convey to Washington.
  • First-round pick swaps with the Phoenix Suns in 2026, 2028 and 2030, stemming from the Bradley Beal trade in 2022. The ’26 and ’30 swaps are outright between Washington and Phoenix; the ’28 swap will be the second-best pick from among Washington, Phoenix and Brooklyn, and could also involve the 76ers’ first-round pick.
Smart, who will turn 31 in March, has been one of the NBA’s most physical perimeter defenders, though he’s dropped off somewhat from 2021, when he was named NBA Defensive Player of the Year while with the Celtics. In his two seasons with the Grizzlies, injuries limited him to a total of 39 regular-season games. On Wednesday, he played in his first game since mid-December, when he suffered a right index finger injury.

Prior to Thursday afternoon’s three-team deal with the Grizzlies and the Kings, Washington had already had a busy and productive trade deadline.

On Wednesday, they received Middleton, rookie guard AJ Johnson and the 2028 first-round pick swap from the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for Kuzma and Patrick Baldwin Jr. and a 2025 second-round pick. Later on Wednesday, the Wizards received two second-round picks from the Sacramento Kings for center Jonas Valanciunas. (In that transaction, the Kings also sent swingman Sidy Cissoko to Washington, but the Wizards waived Cissoko on Thursday to open a roster spot).

On Thursday morning, the Wizards traded Butler, a guard who’d played quite well on a two-way contract the last year, and four second-round picks to the Philadelphia 76ers for a 2026 first-round pick and Jackson, who was promptly waived.


The Wizards also have added more young players that they can evaluate over the next year or two, along with their existing core of rookies Alex Sarr, Bub Carrington and Kyshawn George, second-year forward Bilal Coulibaly and Corey Kispert, Washington’s 2021 first-rounder, who got a four-year, $54 million extension last fall.


Washington had good pre-draft grades on the 6-foot-5 Johnson, who played in Australia’s National Basketball League during the 2023-24 season before he was selected 23rd overall by the Bucks in last year’s draft. He played mostly for Milwaukee’s G League team this season.

Jones, a second-team All-Big East selection in 2023, was an early second-round pick (34th overall) in the ’23 draft by Charlotte. His draft rights were traded, through Boston, to Sacramento on draft night. He played spot minutes in 54 games over a season and a half for the Kings, spending most of his time with the team’s G League affiliate. But Jones had first-round grades from many NBA scouts and teams before the draft.

One college assistant coach said of him before the ’23 draft: “I just like the fact that he competes. He’s not cool. Some of these guys are cool and they play cool. He’s not like that. That’s why I fell in love with the kid. I just like his whole DNA. He’s one of the best defenders in the (Big East). He can guard one through four because he’s such a tough competitor. Physical, doesn’t back down. I might be overselling him, but I’ve watched him play for three years, and he’s my scout. I’ve watched him a ton, beyond watching him on TV.”

This will be Len’s second go-round with the Wizards. The former University of Maryland big man started 40 games for Washington in the 2020-21 season, playing almost 16 minutes a game. He’s spent the last three-plus seasons in spot duty for Sacramento.

The Wizards took Davis with the 10th pick in the 2022 draft, after his sophomore season at Wisconsin. But the 22-year-old never came close to living up to his lottery status. He struggled at both ends of the court and rarely displayed the form that made him the 2021-22 Big Ten Player of the Year. He started 11 games over two-plus seasons. His departure leaves Kispert and Anthony Gill as the only remaining players from the previous regime still on the team.
 

FAH1223

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I feel bad for Smart.. smh
Tough. But hey, he's getting paid, and he'll be a free agent after next season... maybe he gets moved before then.

Middleton in the same boat.

It is clear Will Dawkins strategy is to tank again in 2025-26, make sure our 1st rounder (protected 1-8) doesn't convey to the Knicks, and then have another top prospect plus cap space to get some proven guys with the very young core.

2026-27 is the year we try to compete like Detroit is doing this year. Or like Houston began to compete last year and now took a giant leap this year under Udoka.





WASHINGTON — Marcus Smart’s new teammates didn’t waste any time. Less than 24 hours after Smart’s trade from the Memphis Grizzlies to the Washington Wizards became official, youngsters Bilal Coulibaly and Bub Carrington peppered him with questions about how to become better defenders.

On Feb. 7, during the Wizards’ first game following their flurry of moves at the NBA trade deadline, Coulibaly sought advice about how he should approach his challenging defensive assignment that night: guarding Cleveland Cavaliers star Donovan Mitchell. Carrington welcomed any suggestions about how to slow another key Cavaliers player, Darius Garland.

Smart, a former NBA Defensive Player of the Year, happily obliged. Even though the Wizards lost the game to the Eastern Conference-leading Cavaliers, 134-124, Coulibaly and Carrington sounded ecstatic to have Smart, along with his decade’s worth of knowledge, on the Wizards’ roster.

“Myself and the Wizards want me to really solidify myself on the defensive end, and (with Marcus) that’s someone who has solidified himself on the defensive end since he walked in the league,” Carrington told The Athletic after the final buzzer. “He’s really good at it, really crafty at it. So I definitely, from day one, just want to pick his brain and just make my life easier on making other guys’ lives terrible.”

The Wizards’ primary motivation in trading for Smart and, in a separate move, for former Milwaukee Bucks All-Star Khris Middleton, was to add to their stockpile of future first-round draft picks and to bring aboard promising young talent. But it’s no coincidence that the Washington front office also made certain to bring aboard highly respected, hard-nosed veterans in the process, all the better to provide positive examples for the first- and second-year players already on the roster. Smart, 30, and Middleton, 33, remain effective players when healthy, but they also will assume the roles of elder statesmen. How much Smart and Middleton will help Washington’s youngest players improve will be one of the team’s key storylines over its remaining 28 games.

Smart knows firsthand how important veteran players can be to young teammates. As a Boston Celtics rookie during the 2014-15 season, he learned from Rajon Rondo, Jameer Nelson and Brandon Bass even though Rondo and Nelson spent relatively little time that season on the Celtics’ roster. Smart recalled that Rondo, Nelson and Bass advised him to carve out a niche other than offense — a special skill that would motivate coaches to keep him on the court.

“I think this league has lost those type of guys,” Smart said. “I think there (are) not as many left like that, and those guys are big. The vets are key. The vets, they’re the ones that the young guys see when they first come in. … So I think having vets like me who love to teach, who love to see guys get better, is definitely important.”

Smart has made defense and all-out effort his calling cards throughout his 11 NBA seasons. He was named the 2021-22 NBA Defensive Player of the Year, becoming the first guard to win the award since Gary Payton in the 1995-96 season.

Coulibaly, a second-year wing who almost always is assigned to guard opponents’ top perimeter scorers, had played against Smart only once before Smart’s trade to Washington. But Coulibaly discovered that Smart had earned his reputation as one of the most rugged point-of-attack defenders in recent league history.

“He’s a DPOY,” Coulibaly said, smiling. “I’m trying to get one of those (awards) at some point. So, yeah, I respect him. He’s really, really strong, really tough. I remember some (center) trying to post him up. He wasn’t moving.”

In 2022, Smart reached the NBA Finals, with his Celtics falling to the Golden State Warriors in six games. That finals appearance burnishes his résumé.

Middleton, a three-time All-Star, won an NBA title as a critical member of the 2020-21 Bucks and an Olympic gold medal with the U.S. men’s team in 2021.

Both Smart and Middleton participated fully in the Wizards’ practice Wednesday night, marking the first time they’ve practiced with their new team. Coach Brian Keefe was noncommittal about whether Smart and Middleton will play Friday when the Wizards host the Bucks.

Asked what he wants Wizards fans to know about himself, Middleton answered, “I’m here to be a basketball player. I’m here to win games, here to help win games however I can. I am going to be here as a mentor and whatnot, but I want Wizards fans to know that I’m not here just to be a mentor. I’m here to be a basketball player and compete out there and help win games.”

Jordan Poole has played against Middleton and Smart often, but already the dynamics have shifted from opponent to teammate. During Washington’s game on Feb. 8 against the Atlanta Hawks, Smart gave Poole advice on defensive positioning.

“He has the utmost respect being a Defensive Player of the Year,” Poole said. “So I’ve had my fair share of Marcus guarding me on the other side, and it’s pretty cool to have him on our team. I want to pick his brain a little bit, ask him questions, see how he guards, see the way he sees the game.

“But I think it’s also good with our group because it gets to help Bilal, it gets to help Kyshawn (George), it gets to help Bub being able to just learn from a Defensive Player of the Year who’s played in the finals, who played high-level basketball, who is a real vet in this league. Great move. Great move. (I’m) really excited, really excited just for that. And honestly, I just can’t wait to get out there and play on the court with him. His energy, his toughness and his winning mentality — I think that’s something that we can all vibe off of and learn from, for sure.”
 

FAH1223

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lochead

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I'm from where Petey come from

We finally have some smart mfer’s in decision making positions :blessed:
 
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