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How will the Wizards’ new-look roster fit around Bradley Beal?

How will the Wizards' new-look roster fit around Beal? originally appeared on NBC Sports Washington

Though this upcoming season won’t be the first with Bradley Beal as the face of the Wizards, it will be to a different degree than we have seen before. There is no future Hall of Famer for him to share the backcourt with or a multi-time All-Star earning a supermax contract rehabbing an injury on the sidelines. It is also not shaping up to be a rebuilding year with lowered expectations.

The Wizards are Beal’s team to a greater extent than it ever was in the past. That may on a surface-level lead to him receiving more credit or blame for their results, but it also presents an important dynamic for the roster. If the Wizards are going to look towards Beal as their lone star, they need to have a supporting cast that complements his skillset.

After a series of trades and other moves, it appears the Wizards have a roster that may be able to do just that. Instead of centering everything around Beal and another star, they have spread their salary cap resources around to create depth and balance. The players they acquired could collectively fill in the gaps around Beal and should, in the most basic sense, ask him to do less.

Beal is good enough to warrant that strategy. He is the leading scorer in the Eastern Conference two years running, an All-NBA selection and an All-Star starter. He’s about as complete and consistent an offensive player as you can find in today’s NBA.

Where Beal needs help the most is on defense and in making things easier for him on offense. The Wizards have added defenders at more positions, more outside shooting and more guys who can create their own shot. All of it should help.

Start at point guard. In Spencer Dinwiddie, Raul Neto and Aaron Holiday, the Wizards have three point guards who can defend. Not just one of them can defend, all three of them can, and Dinwiddie’s size (6-foot-5) should allow him to take on some shooting guards. Having a scrappy defender alongside Beal at all times should limit his responsibility on that end of the floor.

The Wizards now have more defensive options at the wing as well. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope could play some at the three next to Beal and he’s a tough and willing perimeter defender. Kyle Kuzma offers versatility and athleticism at forward and Deni Avdija should be better in his second season after flashing potential as a rookie.

Behind the guards and wings they can place Daniel Gafford, who has shown through two seasons the potential to be an elite rim-protector. Though the same element won’t be there when he’s off the court, when he’s playing Beal and others will have a security blanket in the lane and a trap they can try to lead drivers into.

More capable defenders should lead to Beal expending less energy on defense and fewer times where he has to assume physical mismatches against taller wings. Having more shooters and shot creators should also help Beal’s cause.

The Wizards’ offense was squeezed at times last season by a lack of outside shooting. They were 22nd in three-point percentage (35.1%) and 28th in makes (10.2/g), so they de-emphasized shooting threes, ranking 29th in attempts (29.0/g). That allowed opposing defenses to collapse their defense into the midrange to clog up driving lanes.

The defense contracting led to a lot of attention placed on Beal. He faced the fifth-most double-teams of any player in the NBA last season and had the highest percentage of his possessions involve double-teams. According to NBA tracking data, 47.1% of his possessions last season, so almost half, included double-teams. His former teammate, Russell Westbrook, faced the 10th-most double-teams of any player.

In order to prevent that from happening again, Beal’s teammates will have to make opposing teams pay for the double coverage. Others will have to knock down shots and make timely cuts to capitalize on their man leaving them. The data shows the Wizards weren’t good at that last year.

Among the 10 players who received the most double-teams last season, Beal and Westbrook ranked eighth and ninth in points per possession on those plays. That means the double-teams worked, as the Wizards weren’t able to turn those into points by finding the open man as well as other teams were.

More attention from defenses means far fewer open shots. Last season, only 20.7% of Beal’s threes were deemed open or wide open (closest defender 4-to-6 feet or 6-plus feet away) according to NBA.com. Four years ago, in the 2016-17 season, 38.7% of his threes fell in those categories.

The Wizards as a team attempted the third-fewest wide open threes. A bigger problem: they made the sixth-lowest percentage on those shots (36.8%). They also made the seventh-lowest percentage (56.9%) on wide open twos. So, they didn’t get wide open shots often and when they did, they didn’t make them often enough.

Spread the offense out with shooters around Beal and he will have a better chance to do damage in isolation. If he draws defenders towards him, a better three-point shooting attack can make opponents regret helping and should lead to more chances of the like. In an ideal scenario, it could look like James Harden in Houston.

Another way the Wizards can make life easier for Beal is by providing scoring behind him. A consistent scoring guard off the bench has been a need for years, but Caldwell-Pope could help fill the void, depending on what his role ends up being, as there is a chance he starts. If he is the starting three, and he started all 67 of his games with the Lakers last season, the Wizards may have some trouble finding bench scoring at the guard spot.

But overall, the Wizards’ depth could shine through with more second-unit scoring. If you look at the last two NBA seasons, the Wizards now have two players who were among the top-eight in 20-point scoring games off the bench. Montrezl Harrell (35) is second only behind Jordan Clarkson and Davis Bertans (19) is eighth. 

Another question as it pertains to complementing Beal may be who the Wizards can rely on as their second and third scoring options. Though Beal is very good and reliable, every player has off-shooting nights. They will need guys like Dinwiddie, Rui Hachimura, Kuzma and others to score consistently, and ideally to create their own shots when the offense stalls.

Regardless, add it all up and the Wizards seem to have done a nice job filling in the gaps around Beal. By compensating for his weaknesses, it could augment his strengths and lead to an even better version of him than we have seen to this point.

Wizards lose third straight as James Harden records 17 assists for 76ers

Wizards lose third straight as Harden records 17 assists originally appeared on NBC Sports WashingtonWASHINGTON -- The Washington Wizards lost to the Philadelphia 76ers 118-111 on Halloween at Capital One Arena. Here are five takeaways from what went down...Three in a rowThe Wizards were 3-1 through their first four games this season, but a lot can change in a short period of time as it only took four days for them to lose three consecutive games, leaving them at 3-4. After losing to the Pacers at home and the Celtics on the road, they returned home for a lopsided defeat at the hands of the Sixers.Philly played without superstar Joel Embiid, who sat with a non-COVID illness. But James Harden (23 points, 17 assists) and Tyrese Maxey (28 points) were plenty enough for them to get the win. The Sixers created separation with a +13 margin in the third quarter and were able to hold the Wizards off after that.The Wizards fell to 3-4 on the season and it won't get any easier moving forward. They see the Sixers again on Wednesday, then the Nets and Grizzlies after that.No Embiid changed some thingsWithout Embiid, the Sixers went micro with P.J. Tucker starting at center. He's 6-foot-5, which means he had a 10-inch height disadvantage battling the 7-foot-3 Kristaps Porzingis in the post. Porzingis was able to capitalize with a strong offensive game of 32 points (10-16 FG) to go along with nine rebounds, but Tucker held his own in other areas, as he usually does. He did a nice job of creating openings for Sixers' guards off screens and broke free for a few baskets of his own, scoring 13 points.Former Wizards fan favorite Montrezl Harrell also made a big difference in the second half, partly leading to Taj Gibson replacing Daniel Gafford in the second unit. Where the Wizards probably wish they took advantage more is in the paint. The Sixers outdid the Wizards in paint points, 56-50. Deni to the benchBefore the game, when asked the customary question of whether he would use the same starters, head coach Wes Unseld Jr. responded with a vague "maybe." It wasn't clear at the time if that actually meant a change was coming, as he could have just been practicing gamesmanship. But sure enough, there was a new lineup, as Deni Avdija moved to the bench after starting the first six games. He was replaced by Anthony Gill.Avdija only played 11 minutes in the Wizards' loss to the Celtics on Sunday night, as Unseld Jr. went away from him after a poor defensive start, albeit due to some very difficult assignments. Avdija played 17 minutes in this one and played better. He had a rough beginning, but rallied to get some stops against Harden and was able to show a little bit more of his passing ability with a handful of assists. That's the thing about Avdija coming off the bench. While he balances out the starting lineup well, he should have more of an opportunity to spread his wings offensively in the second unit.Slow start for BealAfter going scoreless in the first half of Sunday's loss for the first time since 2018, Bradley Beal managed only four points in the first half against Philadelphia. He was better in the third quarter, with eight points in the frame, and ended up with 20 points for the night on 7-for-18 shooting with four turnovers. With 12 points against Boston, that means he combined to score 32 points in two games. It wasn't long ago that was a single-game number for Beal.Beal, though, has had a heck of a time against two tough defenses on back-to-back nights. Against Philly, he saw a lot of contact, yet only got to the line four times. He's in a bit of a rut right now and the referees seem intent on not lending any help. It will be interesting to see if the Wizards do anything differently next game to try to shake his slump.Still waiting on KispertCorey Kispert sat out once again due to his sprained left ankle, despite last week practicing for the Wizards and being described by Unseld Jr. as "really close." According to the Wizards' coach, Kispert continues to make progress practicing with the Capital City Go-Go. He's just not quite ready yet.Wednesday will mark four weeks since Kispert's injury was first revealed and the original timeline was 4-6 weeks. So, given that, it probably shouldn't be a surprise he hasn't played yet, even though it seemed like his return was imminent late last week. The Wizards play their next game on Wednesday and that will technically be within the original window the team gave as a projection. Maybe he plays against Philly. If not, the Wizards' next game is Friday vs. the Nets.
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