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Kristaps Porzingis hopes 4th quarter vs. Lakers a sign of things to come

Porzingis hopes 4th quarter takeover just the start originally appeared on NBC Sports Washington

WASHINGTON — Midway through the fourth quarter on Saturday night, LeBron James bulldozed his way through Ish Smith for an and-1 layup and afterward held his hand out to suggest Smith was ‘too small.’ While James was celebrating in the moment, the gesture foreshadowed how the game would end.

It was just before that when Kristaps Porzingis checked in to replace Daniel Gafford as the Wizards’ center and in the closing minutes of the game, he took over to score 16 of his 27 points and lead Washington to a comeback victory in front of a soldout crowd. He did that by taking advantage of smaller players guarding him, in some cases simply shooting over hapless defenders. 

At 7-foot-3, few players in the NBA can match his height and the Lakers decided to counter by going small. It backfired.

“It just kind of happened naturally,” Porzingis said of his fourth quarter scoring surge. “We were getting a mismatch and I was trying to get out of there. I shot over a couple times on some smaller guys.”

Porzingis began the game 3-for-11, then made his final six shots. His biggest was a 3-pointer from 27 feet out with 38.7 seconds to go in the fourth quarter. Tomas Satoransky drove into the lane and found him wide open at the top of the key. 

Porzingis scored 16 of the Wizards’ 21 points during a stretch of nearly seven minutes in the fourth. Part of that run included a two-handed dunk on James, which served as one of several exclamation points on the night.

“Just down the stretch, we wanted to play through him,” Kentavious Caldwell-Pope said. “No one could stop K.P. at the elbow. He was just turning around, shooting over everybody.”

Saturday’s win represented a step forward for Porzingis, who was playing in just his seventh game for the Wizards after arriving in a deal with the Mavericks at the Feb. 10 trade deadline. He missed a month in total with a bone bruise in his right knee, but is now back with few limitations other than a loose minutes restriction. Saturday was the first time he played in the second night of a back-to-back since returning.

“I think I’m building my way back up. I’m feeling good rhythm-wise and physically also. I still feel like I’m a good way away from where I want to be,” Porzingis said.

The more Porzingis plays for the Wizards, the more he is getting comfortable with his teammates and the expectations of head coach Wes Unseld Jr. The more he learns about them, the more he likes. In fact, Porzingis is already sensing the change of going from Dallas to Washington was a good one for him.

After Saturday’s game, he spoke glowingly of how the Wizards’ coaching staff and his teammates are trusting him in big moments, especially after he began the game cold. He believes there is a lot of potential in the fit he has found in Washington.

Part of that is because of how they use him, which he says includes more responsibility on the block.

“[In Dallas] I was on the perimeter the whole time. It was completely different to when I was in New York. I was making an adjustment to my game also to be effective in that kind of system. I think this system is better for my game. I’m being able to be more effective,” he said.

The Wizards have still lost five of their seven games with Porzingis in the lineup, though all of it has been without star guard Bradley Beal, who suffered a season-ending injury just before the trade deadline. Regardless of the game results, Porzingis is encouraged by how things have started with his new team.

Monte Morris ready to take his game to another level as Wizards’ point guard

Morris ready to take his game to another level with Wizards originally appeared on NBC Sports WashingtonWhen the Wizards agreed to a trade with the Nuggets sending Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Ish Smith to Denver for Monte Morris and Will Barton, they effectively turned one of the best backup point guards in the NBA into a starter. Morris, 27, has been a backup his entire career, but now he has a chance to establish himself in the league as a starting floor general alongside star two-guard Bradley Beal. It's an opportunity Morris is excited to embark on. "I played a role in Denver, so many years just playing behind Jamal [Murray], and I was playing like 18 to 20 minutes but averaging double figures and things like that," Morris told NBC Sports Washington's Chris Miller on the Off the Bench podcast. "I'm excited to finally just get my opportunity to play more extended minutes and actually show the world more of what I'm capable of. That's leading, my character and just my willingness and drive to win and make others around me better."From 2018-21, Morris provided the Nuggets with stable point guard play behind their star, Jamal Murray. He averaged 9.9 points, 3.5 assists, 2.1 rebounds, shooting 47.9% from the floor and 39.4% from three in roughly 24 minutes per game. Once Murray went down at the end of the 2020-21 season with a torn ACL, Morris assumed the starting role for a Nuggets team vying for a title. Injuries to Murray and eventually Michael Porter Jr. derailed those championship aspirations for Denver, but from the 2021 playoffs to the Nuggets' first-round playoff loss to Golden State in 2022, Morris proved he was more than just a backup. 2021 playoffs: 13.7 PPG / 5.5 APG / 43.1% FG / 40% 3P2021-22 regular season: 12.6 PPG / 4.4 APG / 48.4% FG / 39.5% 3P2022 playoffs: 14.0 PPG / 5.4 APG / 49% FG / 42.3% 3PMorris started 79 of the 80 games he played in 2021-22, including the playoffs. His former Denver teammate who comes with him to Washington, Will Barton believes Morris' season as a starter will only motivate him to do more with the Wizards."I think it helped him see himself in a different light," Barton told Miller. "He was already one of the best backup point guards in the league, but then he got the opportunity to start and he played well and we won. It helped him to see himself as a starter in the league and want more from himself and his career. Once you have a taste of success you're always going to want more."The Wizards aren't strangers to watching newly acquired players grow with a more featured role. Just last season, Kyle Kuzma established himself as Washington's second-best player after he was traded by the Lakers. They started him at power forward, leaned on his shot-making in clutch situations and even asked him to facilitate the offense once Beal was lost for the season with a wrist injury. Kuzma averaged career highs in minutes, shot attempts, rebounds and assists while dropping 17 points a night on 45% shooting from the floor and 34% from three. In Morris, the Wizards will likely hope for another career year from a new acquisition. "Wes [Unseld Jr.] knows me very well," Morris said. "He knows what I'm capable of, the shots I'm capable of making... I played my role the best I could [with the Nuggets], and now I'm ready to show I got more than what people have seen in Denver... I'm gonna give it my all. I'm a go-getter. I play very hard and take this game very seriously."
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