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2023–24 Washington Wizards season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Season of National Basketball Association team the Washington Wizards

NBA professional basketball team season
2023–24 Washington Wizards season
Head coach
PresidentMichael Winger
General managerWill Dawkins
OwnerTed Leonsis
ArenaCapital One Arena
Results
Record15–67 (.183)
PlaceDivision: 5th (Southeast)
Conference: 14th (Eastern)
Playoff finishDid not qualify

Stats atBasketball Reference
Local media
TelevisionMonumental Sports Network
Radio
< 2022–232024–25 >

The2023–24 Washington Wizards season was the 63rd season of the franchise in theNational Basketball Association (NBA) and 50th in theWashington, D.C. area. This is the first season since2011–12, where the team entered the season withoutBradley Beal, who was traded to thePhoenix Suns during the off-season. The Wizards became the fifteenth team in NBA history to record a winless month, going 0–12 in February. They finished with a franchise worst 15–67 record.

The Washington Wizards drew an average home attendance of 16,898 in 41 home games in the 2023-24 NBA season.[1]

Background

[edit]

Theprevious season ended in disappointing fashion, with the Wizards falling all the way to 12th in the Eastern Conference and missing the playoffs entirely. General ManagerTommy Sheppard was unceremoniously fired after the end of the season. After about a month of searching, team ownerTed Leonsis decided to appoint former LA Clippers executiveMichael Winger as the President of Monumental Basketball,[2] Leonsis' organization that oversees all pro basketball teams in the Washington, DC area including the Wizards, theCapital City Go-Go, and theWashington Mystics. Winger then brought inWill Dawkins act as the new Wizards' GM andTravis Schlenk as the Senior VP of Player Personnel, and promotedJohn Thompson III as Senior VP of Monumental Basketball.[3]

At first, the team appeared ready to try building around their "Big 3" ofBradley Beal,Kristaps Porziņģis, andKyle Kuzma. However, the new Front Office decided to tear down and rebuild the roster shortly after getting settled in. Beal was traded to thePhoenix Suns, as one of the few destinations that would both make the space to take him and where Beal was willing to waive the No Trade Clause attached to his contract. The Wizards would receiveChris Paul,Landry Shamet, and a large list of future draft pick considerations in both rounds until 2030. Porziņģis was moved in a sign-and-trade deal to theBoston Celtics as part of a three-team trade with theMemphis Grizzlies that would net the WizardsTyus Jones,Danilo Gallinari, andMike Muscala. Kuzma declined to pick up his Player Option, instead opting for the Free Agent market. However, Kuzma would later be lured back to Washington with a 4-year contract worth about $90 Million.

On Draft Night, the Wizards made their proposed trades (above) official, but roped in theIndiana Pacers with their Phoenix trade to move up to the #7 draft spot and take the young Frenchman,Bilal Coulibaly. The Wizards also flipped Chris Paul to theGolden State Warriors, along with their 57th pick in the night's draft (which would be used onTrayce Jackson-Davis), to acquireJordan Poole,Ryan Rollins, andPatrick Baldwin Jr. on top of a couple of future draft picks and cash considerations. The Wizards later tradedMonté Morris to the Detroit Pistons and would later waiveXavier Cooks andTaj Gibson to be under the maximum player limit before the season started.

October

[edit]

The Wizards opened their season in Indiana with a brutal loss to the Pacers, 143-120. However, they would bounce back the very next game. With their home opener in DC against Memphis, the Wizards won 113-106 in a match where they led by 25 points in the third quarter. The Wizards would finish the month with a 1–2 record.

November

[edit]

The Wizards went into free-fall during this month, losing every game except for two against opponents who were close to them in the standings: the Charlotte Hornets and the Detroit Pistons, with a 9-game losing streak between those two wins. Between a lack of rebounding, a porous defense, and no true Center on the team (except Daniel Gafford) able to guard against taller opponents, the team had few paths to victory. The team would either let leads slip away late in close losses, or play the end of their bench earlier in games than usual, to give them some playing time during blowouts. The month ended with the Wizards at 2–13 record for the month, 3–15 overall, fighting with the Pistons and San Antonio Spurs for the ignoble honor of holding worst record in the entire NBA for the season.

December

[edit]

The Wizards continued their losing streak from the end of November, losing close games to the Magic and 76ers despite holding leads midway through the game, followed by blowouts from the Nets and 76ers where they were dominated through the entire game, including a 45-point loss against the 76ers on December 11.Jules Bernard was signed to a two-way contract from the Go-Go, andJohn Butler Jr. was waived in a corresponding move. Bernard picked up his first points as an NBA player in the latter match. On December 13, team owner Ted Leonsis announced that he planned to move the team across the Potomac River, to Alexandria, VA, and take advantage of an offer from Governor Glenn Youngkin to build his own new stadium and surrounding development in a deal worth up to $2 Billion, including at least $650 Million in public funding.[4]

By the end of the month, the Wizards had doubled their win total on the season, going 3–11 on the month and 6–26 for the season.

January

[edit]

The month of January saw the Wizards woes continue. The team waived Ryan Rollins on January 8, and three days later he was charged with multiple counts ofpetit larceny, accused of stealing multiple items from a Target store in Alexandria, VA, worth less than $1,000.[5] Winger would not confirm if the charges were the reason that Rollins was waived.[5] The team made other roster moves this month, signing Hamidou Diallo to a 10-Day Contract on January 9. On January 14, the team traded with the Pistons again, sending Danilo Gallinari and Mike Muscala to Detroit, in exchange forMarvin Bagley III,Isaiah Livers, and two future second-round draft picks. Bagley was soon integrated into the Wizards' rotation, but Livers never saw the floor for the team, recovering from inflammation in his right hip since the day he was traded until the Wizards made an official announcement to declare him out for the rest of the season in the following month.[6]

On the court, the Wizards were even worse, with two 6-game losing streaks split in the middle by a win against the Atlanta Hawks on January 13. On January 25, Wes Unseld Jr. was relieved of his coaching duties and transferred to a front office position.Brian Keefe was promoted to interim Head Coach for the remainder of the season. During the first games under his reign, the Wizards achieved their first winning streak of the season, winning two games back-to-back in Detroit and San Antonio, on January 27 and 29, respectively, scoring exactly 118 points in both. By the end of the month, the Wizards went 3–12, with all three wins coming on the road, and had a 9–38 record for the season.

February

[edit]

As the trade deadline approached, Winger continued to hold out for a willing partner that would give the Wizards a first-round pick for any players on the trading block. On February 8th, Winger got his wish, trading their starting Center,Daniel Gafford, to theDallas Mavericks in exchange forRichaun Holmes and Dallas' first-round pick in the2024 NBA draft. On the 16th, the team waivedDelon Wright. On the 22nd, the team would give a 10-Day Contract toJustin Champagnie.

This month saw the Wizards hit theirnadir on the court, winning zero games, and on a 13-game losing streak since their loss against the Clippers on January 31. The only Wizards representative at the2024 NBA All-Star Game in the middle of tne month was Coulibaly, who appeared in theRising Stars Challenge, as a member of Team Pau. The team would finish 0–12 for the month and with a 9–50 record on the season.

March

[edit]

With the Wizards mathematically eliminated from playoff contention this month, the front office made a few more moves looking to the future. The team converted the contracts of Eugene Omoruyi and Justin Champagnie to 2-year deals, with Omoruyi getting a spot on the main roster and Champagnie getting a Two-Way Contract. On March 14, second-round draft pickTristan Vukčević, who spent most of the year playing withPartizan Belgrade in Serbia, was also brought to DC and signed to a two-year deal with the Wizards. Meanwhile, Leonsis and Youngkin's plans to build a new stadium and real estate development in Alexandria fell through when the local and state governments refused to allow public tax dollars to fund the project. Leonsis decided to return to Mayor Muriel Bowser of Washington, DC, and quickly took her proposed deal to keep the Wizards home in the District.

The Wizards managed to win more games this month than any other in the season, including their first home victory since a December 29th match against the Nets. Even though they were eliminated from the playoffs, the team finished 5-11 for the month and had a 14-61 record for the season.

Draft picks

[edit]
Main article:2023 NBA draft
RoundPickPlayerPositionNationalityCollege
18Jarace WalkerPF/SFUnited StatesHouston(Fr.)
242Tristan VukčevićPF/CSerbiaPartizan Belgrade(Serbia)
257Trayce Jackson-DavisPF/CUnited StatesIndiana(Sr.)

The Wizards entered the 2023 NBA Draft holding one first-round pick and two second round picks.[7] After a series of moves on draft night, the Wizards swapped first-round spots with theIndiana Pacers to gain the rights to French forwardBilal Coulibaly with the 7th overall pick, sendingJarace Walker to the Pacers and a couple of future second-round picks. The team would use their #42 overall pick on the young Serbian player Tristan Vukčević. Later, the rights toTrayce Jackson-Davis (Pick #57 overall) were folded into a larger trade with theGolden State Warriors in exchange for cash considerations andPatrick Baldwin Jr.

Roster

[edit]
2023–24 Washington Wizards roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.PlayerHeightWeightDOBFrom
F8Deni Avdija6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)210 lb (95 kg)2001-01-03Israel
F/C35Marvin III Bagley6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)235 lb (107 kg)1999-03-14Duke
F7Patrick Jr. Baldwin6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)215 lb (98 kg)2002-11-18Milwaukee
G14Jules Bernard (TW)6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)210 lb (95 kg)2000-01-21UCLA
G4Jared Butler6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)193 lb (88 kg)2000-08-25Baylor
G/F9Justin Champagnie (TW)6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)206 lb (93 kg)2001-06-29Pittsburgh
F0Bilal Coulibaly6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)195 lb (88 kg)2004-07-26France
G/F1Johnny Davis6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)195 lb (88 kg)2002-02-27Wisconsin
F16Anthony Gill6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)230 lb (104 kg)1992-10-17Virginia
F/C22Richaun Holmes6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)235 lb (107 kg)1993-10-15Bowling Green
G5Tyus Jones6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)196 lb (89 kg)1996-05-10Duke
F24Corey Kispert6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)224 lb (102 kg)1999-03-03Gonzaga
F33Kyle Kuzma6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)221 lb (100 kg)1995-07-24Utah
F97Eugene Omoruyi6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)235 lb (107 kg)1997-02-14Oregon
G13Jordan Poole6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)194 lb (88 kg)1999-06-19Michigan
G20Landry Shamet6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)190 lb (86 kg)1997-03-13Wichita State
F/C00Tristan Vukčević6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)220 lb (100 kg)2003-03-11Serbia
Head coach
Assistant(s)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) Onassignment to G League
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Updated: April 5, 2024

Standings

[edit]

Division

[edit]
Southeast DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
yOrlando Magic4735.57329‍–‍1218‍–‍239‍–‍782
xMiami Heat4636.5611.022‍–‍1924‍–‍1713‍–‍382
piAtlanta Hawks3646.43911.021‍–‍2015‍–‍268‍–‍882
Charlotte Hornets2161.25626.011‍–‍3010‍–‍316‍–‍1082
Washington Wizards1567.18332.07‍–‍348‍–‍334‍–‍1282

Conference

[edit]
Eastern Conference
#TeamWLPCTGBGP
1zBoston Celtics *6418.78082
2xNew York Knicks5032.61014.082
3yMilwaukee Bucks *4933.59815.082
4xCleveland Cavaliers4834.58516.082
5yOrlando Magic *4735.57317.082
6xIndiana Pacers4735.57317.082
7xPhiladelphia 76ers4735.57317.082
8xMiami Heat4636.56118.082
9piChicago Bulls3943.47625.082
10piAtlanta Hawks3646.43928.082
11Brooklyn Nets3250.39032.082
12Toronto Raptors2557.30539.082
13Charlotte Hornets2161.25643.082
14Washington Wizards1567.18349.082
15Detroit Pistons1468.17150.082

Game log

[edit]

Preseason

[edit]
2023 preseason game log
Total: 3–1 (Home: 2–0; Road: 1–1)
Preseason: 3–1 (home: 2–0; road: 1–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1October 10CairnsW 145–82Kyle Kuzma (22)Daniel Gafford (8)Delon Wright (6)Capital One Arena
6,856
1–0
2October 12CharlotteW 98–92Kyle Kuzma (19)Tyus Jones (7)Davis,Kispert, Kuzma,Muscala,Poole, Wright (3)Capital One Arena
7,297
2–0
3October 18@New YorkW 131–106Jordan Poole (41)Mike Muscala (8)Tyus Jones (7)Madison Square Garden
18,881
3–0
4October 20@TorontoL 98–134Deni Avdija (18)Deni Avdija (7)Jordan Poole (4)Scotiabank Arena
18,426
3–1
2023–24 preseason schedule

Regular season

[edit]

This became the first regular season where all the NBA teams competed in a mid-season tournament setting due to the implementation of the2023 NBA In-Season Tournament.[8][9]

2023–24 game log
Total: 15–67 (Home: 7–34; Road: 8–33)
October: 1–2 (home: 1–1; road: 0–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1October 25@IndianaL 120–143Kyle Kuzma (25)Deni Avdija (7)Jones,Wright (6)Gainbridge Fieldhouse
16,004
0–1
2October 28MemphisW 113–106Jordan Poole (27)Kyle Kuzma (13)Jones, Wright (7)Capital One Arena
16,191
1–1
3October 30BostonL 107–126Kyle Kuzma (21)Deni Avdija (7)Tyus Jones (7)Capital One Arena
17,898
1–2
November: 2–13 (home: 0–5; road: 2–8)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
4November 1@AtlantaL 121–130Kyle Kuzma (25)Kyle Kuzma (9)Delon Wright (9)State Farm Arena
15,925
1–3
5November 3@MiamiL 114–121Kyle Kuzma (22)Daniel Gafford (5)Jordan Poole (6)Kaseya Center
19,660
1–4
6November 6@PhiladelphiaL 128–146Kyle Kuzma (28)Daniel Gafford (7)Avdija,Jones, Poole (6)Wells Fargo Center
19,765
1–5
7November 8@CharlotteW 132–116Kyle Kuzma (33)Kyle Kuzma (9)Deni Avdija (5)Spectrum Center
14,267
2–5
8November 10CharlotteL 117–124Kyle Kuzma (17)Daniel Gafford (9)Poole, Wright (6)Capital One Arena
17,602
2–6
9November 12@BrooklynL 94–102Bilal Coulibaly (20)Deni Avdija (9)Corey Kispert (4)Barclays Center
17,732
2–7
10November 13@TorontoL 107–111Kyle Kuzma (34)Daniel Gafford (9)Tyus Jones (8)Scotiabank Arena
19,800
2–8
11November 15DallasL 117–130Kyle Kuzma (22)Daniel Gafford (9)Avdija, Kispert (4)Capital One Arena
16,632
2–9
12November 17New YorkL 99–120Kyle Kuzma (19)Daniel Gafford (7)Jones, Kuzma (5)Capital One Arena
16,886
2–10
13November 20MilwaukeeL 129–142Jordan Poole (30)Daniel Gafford (5)Kyle Kuzma (13)Capital One Arena
17,746
2–11
14November 22@CharlotteL 114–117Kyle Kuzma (28)Daniel Gafford (16)Kyle Kuzma (10)Spectrum Center
16,432
2–12
15November 24@MilwaukeeL 128–131Jordan Poole (26)Daniel Gafford (9)Jones, Poole (7)Fiserv Forum
17,880
2–13
16November 25AtlantaL 108–136Jared Butler (13)Kyle Kuzma (7)Kyle Kuzma (8)Capital One Arena
16,276
2–14
17November 27@DetroitW 126–107Kyle Kuzma (32)Kyle Kuzma (12)Kyle Kuzma (8)Little Caesars Arena
14,346
3–14
18November 29@OrlandoL 120–139Kyle Kuzma (23)Coulibaly, Poole (5)Kyle Kuzma (6)Amway Center
17,109
3–15
December: 3–11 (home: 2–5; road: 1–6)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
19December 1@OrlandoL 125–130Kyle Kuzma (27)Daniel Gafford (11)Tyus Jones (6)Amway Center
18,846
3–16
20December 6PhiladelphiaL 126–131Jordan Poole (23)Deni Avdija (8)Avdija, Jones (8)Capital One Arena
15,568
3–17
21December 8@BrooklynL 97–124Kyle Kuzma (17)Bilal Coulibaly (10)Deni Avdija (4)Barclays Center
16,587
3–18
22December 11@PhiladelphiaL 101–146Kyle Kuzma (21)Kyle Kuzma (9)Butler, Coulibaly (4)Wells Fargo Center
19,762
3–19
23December 13New OrleansL 122–142Kyle Kuzma (27)Kyle Kuzma (7)Deni Avdija (7)Capital One Arena
14,080
3–20
24December 15IndianaW 137–123Kyle Kuzma (31)Gafford, Jones (10)Tyus Jones (11)Capital One Arena
15,208
4–20
25December 17@PhoenixL 108–112Daniel Gafford (26)Daniel Gafford (17)Tyus Jones (11)Footprint Center
17,071
4–21
26December 18@SacramentoL 131–143Jordan Poole (28)Kyle Kuzma (8)Tyus Jones (9)Golden 1 Center
17,794
4–22
27December 21@PortlandW 118–117Kyle Kuzma (32)Deni Avdija (11)three players (6)Moda Center
18,690
5–22
28December 22@Golden StateL 118–129Jordan Poole (25)Kyle Kuzma (9)Tyus Jones (6)Chase Center
18,064
5–23
29December 26OrlandoL 119–127Jordan Poole (30)Daniel Gafford (13)Jones, Kuzma (6)Capital One Arena
16,293
5–24
30December 27TorontoL 102–132Poole, Kuzma (14)Daniel Gafford (8)Kyle Kuzma (7)Capital One Arena
15,437
5–25
31December 29BrooklynW 110–104Kyle Kuzma (26)Deni Avdija (13)Avdija, Jones (6)Capital One Arena
16,825
6–25
32December 31AtlantaL 126–130Kyle Kuzma (38)Deni Avdija (12)Tyus Jones (8)Capital One Arena
17,042
6–26
January: 3–12 (home: 0–8; road: 3–4)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
33January 3@ClevelandL 101–140Kyle Kuzma (16)Deni Avdija (6)Avdija,Wright (4)Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
19,432
6–27
34January 5@ClevelandL 90–114Tyus Jones (16)Bilal Coulibaly (7)Tyus Jones (5)Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
19,432
6–28
35January 6New YorkL 105–121Kyle Kuzma (27)Daniel Gafford (12)Tyus Jones (8)Capital One Arena
20,333
6–29
36January 8Oklahoma CityL 128–136Jordan Poole (24)Kyle Kuzma (15)Tyus Jones (9)Capital One Arena
15,297
6–30
37January 10@IndianaL 104–112Jordan Poole (28)Kyle Kuzma (11)Jordan Poole (7)Gainbridge Fieldhouse
15,721
6–31
38January 13@AtlantaW 127–99Kyle Kuzma (29)Deni Avdija (14)Deni Avdija (9)State Farm Arena
17,108
7–31
39January 15DetroitL 117–129Tyus Jones (22)Kyle Kuzma (8)Tyus Jones (7)Capital One Arena
15,156
7–32
40January 18@New YorkL 109–113Jordan Poole (24)Marvin Bagley III (11)Tyus Jones (15)Madison Square Garden
19,466
7–33
41January 20San AntonioL 127–131Marvin Bagley III (21)Bagley III, Kuzma (12)Jones, Kuzma (6)Capital One Arena
17,922
7–34
42January 21DenverL 104–113Kyle Kuzma (17)Deni Avdija (8)Tyus Jones (13)Capital One Arena
17,107
7–35
43January 24MinnesotaL 107–118Deni Avdija (24)Marvin Bagley III (15)Kyle Kuzma (8)Capital One Arena
15,446
7–36
44January 25UtahL 108–123Kyle Kuzma (26)Daniel Gafford (9)Tyus Jones (14)Capital One Arena
14,027
7–37
45January 27@DetroitW 118–104Kyle Kuzma (30)Daniel Gafford (13)Tyus Jones (9)Little Caesars Arena
16,922
8–37
46January 29@San AntonioW 118–113Kyle Kuzma (18)Daniel Gafford (13)Tyus Jones (9)Frost Bank Center
17,020
9–37
47January 31L.A. ClippersL 109–125Kyle Kuzma (27)Bagley III, Gafford (8)Tyus Jones (7)Capital One Arena
17,201
9–38
February: 0–12 (home: 0–6; road: 0–6)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
48February 2MiamiL 102–110Corey Kispert (26)Daniel Gafford (14)Jordan Poole (10)Capital One Arena
18,308
9–39
49February 4PhoenixL 112–140Deni Avdija (24)Eugene Omoruyi (10)Tyus Jones (8)Capital One Arena
16,984
9–40
50February 7ClevelandL 106–114Kyle Kuzma (28)Daniel Gafford (13)Tyus Jones (8)Capital One Arena
15,860
9–41
51February 9@BostonL 129–133Avdija, Kispert (24)Deni Avdija (11)Tyus Jones (9)TD Garden
19,156
9–42
52February 10PhiladelphiaL 113–119Tyus Jones (25)Deni Avdija (13)Tyus Jones (9)Capital One Arena
20,333
9–43
53February 12@DallasL 104–112Deni Avdija (25)Marvin Bagley III (13)Tyus Jones (16)American Airlines Center
19,921
9–44
54February 14@New OrleansL 126–133Deni Avdija (43)Deni Avdija (15)Tyus Jones (15)Smoothie King Center
18,316
9–45
All-Star Game
55February 22@DenverL 110–130Kyle Kuzma (31)Kyle Kuzma (12)Tyus Jones (14)Ball Arena
19,621
9–46
56February 23@Oklahoma CityL 106–147Jordan Poole (21)Marvin Bagley III (14)Tyus Jones (6)Paycom Center
18,203
9–47
57February 25ClevelandL 105–114Jordan Poole (31)Marvin Bagley III (9)Tyus Jones (11)Capital One Arena
17,895
9–48
58February 27Golden StateL 112–123Kyle Kuzma (27)Kyle Kuzma (12)Tyus Jones (17)Capital One Arena
20,333
9–49
59February 29@L.A. LakersL 131–134 (OT)Jordan Poole (34)Deni Avdija (15)Tyus Jones (11)Crypto.com Arena
18,997
9–50
March: 5–11 (home: 3–6; road: 2–5)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
60March 1@L.A. ClippersL 115–140Kyle Kuzma (32)Marvin Bagley III (10)Tyus Jones (9)Crypto.com Arena
19,370
9–51
61March 4@UtahL 115–127Jordan Poole (32)Deni Avdija (11)Kyle Kuzma (8)Delta Center
18,206
9–52
62March 6OrlandoL 109–119Jordan Poole (26)Deni Avdija (7)Tyus Jones (6)Capital One Arena
16,018
9–53
63March 8CharlotteW 112–100Kyle Kuzma (28)Deni Avdija (14)Kyle Kuzma (9)Capital One Arena
18,778
10–53
64March 10@MiamiW 110–108Kyle Kuzma (32)Deni Avdija (10)Tyus Jones (16)Kaseya Center
19,730
11–53
65March 12@MemphisL 97–109Kyle Kuzma (24)Kyle Kuzma (7)Tyus Jones (9)FedExForum
15,291
11–54
66March 14@HoustonL 119–135Jordan Poole (25)Deni Avdija (9)Tyus Jones (8)Toyota Center
18,055
11–55
67March 16@ChicagoL 98–127Corey Kispert (16)Bilal Coulibaly (8)Jordan Poole (8)United Center
21,697
11–56
68March 17BostonL 104–130Jordan Poole (31)Justin Champagnie (8)Jared Butler (6)Capital One Arena
20,333
11–57
69March 19HoustonL 114–147Bernard, Champagnie, Kispert (16)Richaun Holmes (9)Jared Butler (9)Capital One Arena
14,137
11–58
70March 21SacramentoW 109–102Kyle Kuzma (31)Richaun Holmes (16)Avdija, Kuzma (5)Capital One Arena
14,495
12–58
71March 23TorontoW 112–109Deni Avdija (22)Richaun Holmes (14)Jordan Poole (12)Capital One Arena
15,746
13–58
72March 25@ChicagoW 107–105Jordan Poole (23)Richaun Holmes (15)Jared Butler (13)United Center
21,726
14–58
73March 27BrooklynL 119–122 (OT)Jordan Poole (38)Deni Avdija (12)Kyle Kuzma (10)Capital One Arena
15,159
14–59
74March 29DetroitL 87–96Corey Kispert (23)Avdija, Bagley III (11)Deni Avdija (9)Capital One Arena
15,023
14–60
75March 31MiamiL 107–119Jordan Poole (22)Marvin Bagley III (10)Jordan Poole (8)Capital One Arena
16,039
14–61
April: 1–6 (home: 1–3; road: 0–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
76April 2MilwaukeeW 117–113Corey Kispert (27)Anthony Gill (9)Jordan Poole (13)Capital One Arena
16,492
15–61
77April 3L.A. LakersL 120–125Jordan Poole (29)Kyle Kuzma (12)Jared Butler (7)Capital One Arena
20,333
15–62
78April 5PortlandL 102–108Deni Avdija (22)Deni Avdija (12)Jordan Poole (9)Capital One Arena
18,079
15–63
79April 7@TorontoL 122–130Deni Avdija (32)Patrick Baldwin Jr. (11)Jordan Poole (12)Scotiabank Arena
19,502
15–64
80April 9@MinnesotaL 121–130Corey Kispert (25)Anthony Gill (9)Jordan Poole (6)Target Center
18,024
15–65
81April 12ChicagoL 127–129Avdija, Kispert (23)Avdija, Baldwin Jr. (12)Jared Butler (10)Capital One Arena
20,333
15–66
82April 14@BostonL 122–132Eugene Omoruyi (26)Baldwin Jr.,Champagnie (7)Corey Kispert (8)TD Garden
19,156
15–67
2023–24 season schedule

In-Season Tournament

[edit]
Main article:2023 NBA In-Season Tournament

This was the first regular season where all the NBA teams would compete in a mid-season tournament setting due to the implementation of the2023 NBA In-Season Tournament.[10][11] During the in-season tournament period, the Wizards competed in Group B of the Eastern Conference, which included theMilwaukee Bucks,New York Knicks,Miami Heat, andCharlotte Hornets.

East group B

[edit]

PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDQualificationMILNYKMIACHAWAS
1Milwaukee Bucks440502456+46Advance toknockout stage110–105131–124130–99131–128
2New York Knicks431440398+42105–110100–98115–91120–99
3Miami Heat422454450+4124–13198–100111–105121–114
4Charlotte Hornets413419473−5499–13091–115105–111124–117
5Washington Wizards404458496−38128–13199–120114–121117–124
Source:NBA
Rules for classification:Tiebreakers

Player statistics

[edit]
Legend
  GPGames played  GS Games started MPG Minutes per game
 FG% Field-goal percentage 3P% 3-point field-goal percentage FT% Free-throw percentage
 RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game
 BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game

Regular season

[edit]
Washington Wizards statistics
PlayerGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
Deni Avdija757530.1.506.374.7407.23.8.8.514.7
Marvin Bagley III241524.0.581.471.7088.11.2.6.813.3
Patrick Baldwin Jr.38713.0.381.320.6793.2.8.5.44.4
Jules Bernard1907.8.453.379.5561.4.8.2.13.9
Jared Butler40014.2.488.308.8611.53.2.7.26.3
Justin Champagnie15115.7.410.289.8003.51.3.7.65.9
Bilal Coulibaly631527.2.435.346.7024.11.7.9.88.4
Johnny Davis50612.3.403.350.5831.4.6.4.23.0
Hamidou Diallo202.5.5001.0.51.0.01.0
Daniel Gafford454526.5.690.7068.01.51.02.210.9
Danilo Gallinari26014.8.435.313.8392.91.2.2.17.0
Anthony Gill5039.3.469.244.8061.9.7.3.23.8
Richaun Holmes17818.7.557.333.8466.1.6.5.67.1
Trey Jemison200.5.5.0.0.0.0
Tyus Jones666629.3.489.414.8002.77.31.1.312.0
Corey Kispert802225.8.486.383.7262.82.0.5.213.4
Kyle Kuzma707032.6.463.336.7756.64.2.5.722.2
Mike Muscala24214.1.367.275.7503.1.9.2.34.0
Eugene Omoruyi4309.1.485.283.6532.0.8.6.14.8
Jordan Poole786630.1.413.326.8772.74.41.1.317.4
Ryan Rollins1006.6.520.667.7651.11.1.8.34.1
Landry Shamet46515.8.431.338.8261.31.2.5.27.1
Tristan Vukčević10415.3.433.278.7733.61.3.5.78.5
Delon Wright33013.8.393.368.8281.82.51.1.24.1
  • Denotes player spent time with another team in the season. Stats reflect time with the Wizards only.

Transactions

[edit]
Main article:List of 2023–24 NBA season transactions

Trades

[edit]
June 23, 2023[12]ToWashington Wizards
Tyus Jones (from Memphis)
Danilo Gallinari (from Boston)
Mike Muscala (from Boston)
Draft rights toJulian Phillips (No. 35) (from Boston)
ToBoston Celtics
Kristaps Porziņģis (from Washington)
Draft rights toMarcus Sasser (No. 25) (from Memphis)
2024 GSW first-round pick (from Memphis)
ToMemphis Grizzlies
Marcus Smart (from Boston)
June 24, 2023[13]ToWashington Wizards
Chris Paul (from Phoenix)
Landry Shamet (from Phoenix)
Draft rights toBilal Coulibaly (No. 7) (from Indiana)
Right to swap 2024 first round pick with Phoenix
Right to swap 2026 first round pick with Phoenix
Right to swap 2028 first round pick with Phoenix
Right to swap 2030 first round pick with Phoenix
2024 second round pick (from Phoenix)
2025 second round pick (from Phoenix)
2026 second round pick (from Phoenix)
2027 second round pick (from Phoenix)
2030 second round pick (from Phoenix)
Cash considerations (from Phoenix)
ToIndiana Pacers
Draft rights toJarace Walker (No. 8) (from Washington)
2028 second-round pick (from Phoenix)
2029 second-round pick (from Washington)
ToPhoenix Suns
Bradley Beal (from Washington)
Jordan Goodwin (from Washington)
Isaiah Todd (from Washington)
June 28, 2023[14]ToWashington Wizards

2026 CHI second-round pick
2027 CHI second-round pick

ToChicago Bulls

Draft rights toJulian Phillips (No. 35)

July 6, 2023[15]ToWashington Wizards

Jordan Poole
Ryan Rollins
Patrick Baldwin Jr.
2027 GSW second-round draft pick
2030 GSW protected first-round pick
Cash Considerations

ToGolden State Warriors

Chris Paul
Draft rights toTrayce Jackson-Davis (Pick #57)

July 6, 2023[16]ToWashington Wizards
2027 second-round pick (from Brooklyn or Dallas)
ToDetroit Pistons
Monté Morris
January 14, 2024[17]ToWashington Wizards
Marvin Bagley III
Isaiah Livers
Second-round pick in the2025 NBA draft
Second-round pick in the2026 NBA draft
ToDetroit Pistons
Danilo Gallinari
Mike Muscala
February 8, 2024[18]ToWashington Wizards
Richaun Holmes
First-round pick in the2024 NBA draft
ToDallas Mavericks
Daniel Gafford

Free agency

[edit]

Re-signed

[edit]
PlayerDate SignedContractRef.
Kyle KuzmaJune 30, 20234 years, $90M[19]

Additions

[edit]
PlayerDate SignedContractFormer TeamRef.
Eugene OmoruyiJuly 13, 2023Two-way contractDetroit Pistons[20]
Jared ButlerJuly 24, 2023Two-way contractOklahoma City Thunder[21]

Subtractions

[edit]
PlayerDate LeftReasonNew TeamRef.
Jay HuffJune 29, 2023No Qualifying Offer, UFADenver Nuggets
Quenton JacksonJuly 24, 2023Waived
Ryan RollinsJanuary 8, 2024Waived[22]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"2023-2024 NBA Attendance - National Basketball Association - ESPN".ESPN.com. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2025.
  2. ^Wallace, Ava (May 25, 2023)."Wizards hire Michael Winger, former Clippers GM, as new president".Washington Post. RetrievedJune 26, 2023.
  3. ^"Dawkins, Schlenk Named to Wizards Executive Team; Thompson Promoted to SVP of Monumental Basketball".NBA.com.
  4. ^DiMargo, Carissa; Wilder, Drew; Segraves, Mark (December 13, 2023)."Virginia officials and Wizards, Caps owner agree on $2B plan to bring teams across the river".NBC4 Washington. RetrievedJanuary 18, 2024.
  5. ^abRobbins, Josh (January 11, 2024)."Former Wizards guard Ryan Rollins faces 7 theft charges".The Athletic. RetrievedApril 4, 2024.
  6. ^Lee, Albert (February 26, 2024)."Livers to sit out the remainder of the 2023-24 season".Bullets Forever. SB Nation. RetrievedApril 4, 2024.
  7. ^"2023 NBA Draft: Complete 1-58 order of picks".NBA.com. June 8, 2023. RetrievedJune 8, 2023.
  8. ^"NBA officially unveils format, groups for new in-season tournament".ESPN. July 8, 2023. RetrievedAugust 4, 2023.
  9. ^"In-Season Tournament 101: Rules, format and how it works". National Basketball Association. July 8, 2023. RetrievedAugust 4, 2023.
  10. ^"NBA officially unveils format, groups for new in-season tournament".ESPN. July 8, 2023. RetrievedAugust 4, 2023.
  11. ^"In-Season Tournament 101: Rules, format and how it works". National Basketball Association. July 8, 2023. RetrievedAugust 4, 2023.
  12. ^"Wizards Acquire Three Veteran Players in Three-Team Deal".NBA.com. June 23, 2023. RetrievedJune 23, 2023.
  13. ^"Wizards Agree to Trade Beal to Phoenix, Acquire Paul, Shamet and Draft Picks".NBA.com. June 24, 2023. RetrievedJune 24, 2023.
  14. ^"Wizards Acquire two Future Second-Round Picks".NBA.com. June 28, 2023. RetrievedJuly 8, 2023.
  15. ^"Wizards acquire Poole, Baldwin Jr. and Rollins along with a First and Second Round Pick in trade with Warriors".NBA. July 6, 2023. RetrievedJuly 7, 2023.
  16. ^"Wizards acquire Second Round Pick from Pistons".NBA.com. Washington Wizards. July 6, 2023. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  17. ^Wojnarowski, Adrian (January 14, 2024)."Pistons trade Bagley to Wizards, sources say".ESPN. RetrievedJanuary 14, 2024.
  18. ^"Wizards Acquire Holmes, 2024 First Round Pick".NBA. February 8, 2024. RetrievedFebruary 14, 2024.
  19. ^Charania, Shams; Robbins, Josh (July 8, 2023)."Kyle Kuzma's contract worth 4 years, $90 million guaranteed".The Athletic. RetrievedJuly 10, 2023.
  20. ^Lee, Albert (July 13, 2023)."Omoruyi signs two-way contract with the Wizards".Bullets Forever. SB Nation. RetrievedJuly 15, 2023.
  21. ^Ibrahim, Gabriel (July 24, 2023)."Butler signs two-way contract with the Wizards".Bullets Forever. SB Nation. RetrievedJuly 25, 2023.
  22. ^"Wizards Waive Ryan Rollins".NBA.com.
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