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At the midway point, the struggling Wizards are far from panicking | At the midway point, the struggling Wizards are far from panicking |
(about 1 hour later) | |
In the days leading up to their 106-87 trouncing of the Miami Heat on Wednesday, the Washington Wizards, losers of two straight games, did not watch one second of film on their opponents. The focus, the coaching staff decided, should be on themselves, so the team instead viewed a summary of its recent four-game winning streak — of better times, when they were playing their best basketball of their turbulent season. | In the days leading up to their 106-87 trouncing of the Miami Heat on Wednesday, the Washington Wizards, losers of two straight games, did not watch one second of film on their opponents. The focus, the coaching staff decided, should be on themselves, so the team instead viewed a summary of its recent four-game winning streak — of better times, when they were playing their best basketball of their turbulent season. |
The players saw themselves stifling offenses. Layups were at a premium. They deflected balls and turned teams over. They converted the mishaps into points and spread the offensive shine around. | The players saw themselves stifling offenses. Layups were at a premium. They deflected balls and turned teams over. They converted the mishaps into points and spread the offensive shine around. |
“That’s our identity,” point guard John Wall said. “We know what it is.” | “That’s our identity,” point guard John Wall said. “We know what it is.” |
Knowing and executing, as the Wizards can testify, are very different. They had promptly followed that promising four-game run with consecutive losses at Verizon Center, surrendering a combined 227 points, before pulverizing the Heat. The sequence was a fitting sample of Washington’s enigmatic season. | Knowing and executing, as the Wizards can testify, are very different. They had promptly followed that promising four-game run with consecutive losses at Verizon Center, surrendering a combined 227 points, before pulverizing the Heat. The sequence was a fitting sample of Washington’s enigmatic season. |
[Porter, Gooden could return for Monday’s game vs. Celtics] | [Porter, Gooden could return for Monday’s game vs. Celtics] |
At the halfway point of their schedule, the Wizards are 20-21, good for ninth place in the Eastern Conference through Saturday’s games. There have been nights when they look like a top-flight contender — their resume includes a home win over the San Antonio Spurs and road victories over the Cleveland Cavaliers and Chicago Bulls — and just as many nights when they assume the identity of a team bound for the lottery. | |
They have already lost more games at home than they did all of last season — 13 to 12 — and have not played a game with a record better than .500 since the day before Thanksgiving. | |
“We’re not nearly where we want to be,” Washington guard Garrett Temple said. | “We’re not nearly where we want to be,” Washington guard Garrett Temple said. |
Inconsistent intensity and defensive efforts, intertwined elements, have regularly sabotaged them. When shots don’t fall, they often fold at the other end. There have been flashes of the defense that ranked in the top 10 each of the past three seasons, but they’ve tumbled to 18th in defensive efficiency. After giving up 100-plus points in 33 games last season, they’ve already 25 such instances this year, though the inflated number is partly the product of their faster pace. | |
“It’s simple,” Wall said. “We’ve proven it. Just play defense.” | “It’s simple,” Wall said. “We’ve proven it. Just play defense.” |
But for all their injuries and struggles, the Wizards are still just 1.5 games behind the Boston Celtics and Heat, despite playing the NBA’s toughest schedule based on opponents’ winning percentages. Through Saturday, a mere 4.5-game gulf separated them from the third-place Atlanta Hawks. | |
“It gives you a belief,” Coach Randy Wittman said. | |
[Wizards reunite the two towers, Gortat and Nene] | [Wizards reunite the two towers, Gortat and Nene] |
The Wizards are confident a second-half surge is forthcoming, and the assurance starts with better health. According to mangameslost.com, the Wizards have had players miss a combined 186 games because of injuries; the Denver Nuggets, owners of a 16-27 record, are next on the list, at 135. The deluge often left Washington with just nine or 10 players available, forcing Wittman to experiment with the strangest of lineups and rely on Wall more than ever before. | |
“We’re nowhere where we wanted to be,” said Wall, who has played in every game despite several nagging injuries, averaging a career-high 19.9 points to go along with 9.7 assists. “Even with the injuries that we have, we still could have been above .500. . . . We have the opportunity to do better when we start getting guys back, but even with guys injured, with the people in this locker room, we feel like we can win.” | |
The roster is finally becoming complete. Bradley Beal and Nene each recently returned from long absences and, though they are now on minutes restrictions, have made substantial contributions. Drew Gooden III (calf), who has missed 26 of Washington’s past 32 game, said he was supposed to be active for Saturday’s postponed game against the Utah Jazz. Otto Porter Jr. (hip), sidelined the past four games, returned to practice Friday, and Alan Anderson (ankle), who hasn’t yet played this season, is closing in on his debut. | |
“We’re not satisfied, obviously, with where we’re at,” Wittman said. “But I think also, with all the injuries, it could’ve been worse.” | “We’re not satisfied, obviously, with where we’re at,” Wittman said. “But I think also, with all the injuries, it could’ve been worse.” |
[Gortat puts injury problems on the players] | [Gortat puts injury problems on the players] |
The injuries have made Washington’s transition to the pace-and-space style they adopted this season — which the organization assumed would be bumpy even before the turmoil — all the more difficult, particularly on defense. Offensively, the Wizards have only jumped to 15th from 19th last season in efficiency, but they do rank seventh in the NBA since Dec. 1. | The injuries have made Washington’s transition to the pace-and-space style they adopted this season — which the organization assumed would be bumpy even before the turmoil — all the more difficult, particularly on defense. Offensively, the Wizards have only jumped to 15th from 19th last season in efficiency, but they do rank seventh in the NBA since Dec. 1. |
Now it’s a matter of matching that offensive output with a stingy defense on a consistent basis to formulate a second-half surge and afford themselves another crack at the postseason. The Wizards did it two years ago, when they didn’t clear .500 for good until Feb. 25, then finished 44-38 and wound up two games shy of the Eastern Conference finals. | |
“We’ve got to this point with a lot of guys hurt,” Wittman said. “We’ve proven that it doesn’t matter who plays. If we’re the aggressors at both ends of the floor, we’ve proven we can beat anybody.” | “We’ve got to this point with a lot of guys hurt,” Wittman said. “We’ve proven that it doesn’t matter who plays. If we’re the aggressors at both ends of the floor, we’ve proven we can beat anybody.” |