doclinkin wrote:thomas1897 wrote:The Wizard's management is making some very creative moves but what will the final product look like? Training camp will be very competitive and challenging. The Wizards have a bundle of talented players. The forward positions are loaded with skilled players who will be contending for 3/4/5 positions on the active roster.
The guard positions are not as strong of an asset but have good players CJ McCullum, Tre Johnson, and Bud Carrington with Bilal Coulibaly. These players have a high level of skills, but the leadership is best from CJ McCullum. Tre Johnson is still unknown at the NBA level does he get better and get a starting position. What was accomplished in the summer league is not a guarantee for success in the NBA?
I expect Tre Johnson to swiftly show why he was the right pick. The only questions I have on him relate to his defense/physical strength, and therefore whether he’s playable with Bub long term. But I’d bet Tre’s shooting wins him the starting job in preseason. Then it’s just a matter of whether they want to bring the veteran CJ in off the bench or if they want him to set the tone as the starting Point.
And yeah. Lead ball handling guard is still a question that I hope Bub answers this year. We have secondary playmakers but not a true offensive initiator to conduct the team. I think the same way they tried Kyshawn in the role, they might audition Tre and even Will Riley as potential 1’s. Dawkins loves the option to go big at every spot. At 6’4”
Bub is big for a PG but next to the 6’5” Tre we’re not dominant and long. But everybody moving over a slot makes us huge.
1G. (CJ 6’3”). Bub 6’4”. Tre 6’5”. Riley 6’8”.
2G. Tre 6’5”. AJJ 6’5”. Riley 6’8”.
2/3. JC 6’6”. (KMidd 6’7”). Cam 6’7”. Kispert 6’7”. Watkins 6’7”. Bilal 6’8”. Kyshawn 6’8”.
3/4. Bilal 6’8”. Kyshawn 6’8+”.
4/5. Vuk 7’. Sarr 7’
C. Sarr.
As an experiment I want to see Cam at 2. Riley at 1.
Now what will the coaching staff do for 2025-2026? Dawkins has done the job supplying the coaching staff with very good players. The next steps are critical who are your core players, bench personnel. Players who show potential is there development in the G league or they can be traded for future assets. This is a good scenario for the Wizards if all the pieces fall into the right places. Can the Wizard's Management keep it together?
Roster construction wise, aside from growth and development, I think we are a dominant rebounder away from having a solid team. I’d like to see that guy in a solid 4/5 type who is an intimidating defender in the paint. Especially with a decent high post game in passing and shooting out the midrange.
This despite that Sarr is opening my eyes in his Euro play, adding a package of hook shots on the fly to replace those weak fading jumpers in the midrange. I still think his instincts are as a forward. But it’s good to see his growth in the front court. Except he got injured. His body isn’t ready for the pounding at C.
I still want a monster in the middle. Or at least a strong power 4. Give me Boozer and I think I’m happy.
I'm not as worried about finding dominant rebounder. I think as everyone gets a little stronger, and after acquiring a veteran backup center with real size (Mitchell Robinson is a free agent), the rebounding will be adequate. I'd rather roll with length, speed, skill and shooting at the wing positions than sacrifice those qualities for big goon at PF. Whatever we lose in rebounding at the 4 and 5 positions we can make up by being huge at 1, 2 and 3.
For me, I think the missing link is still a star PG - preferably one with size. We need a Cade Cunningham type of player. Hopefully, that's Darryn Peterson, or maybe we trade our top 5 pick on draft day for Dylan Harper. I want to see a future lineup that looks like this:
PG Peterson/Bub
SG Tre/Riley
SF Bilal/Champagnie
PF Kyshawn/Cam
C Sarr/Robinson
Maybe, it will eventually be necessary to trade one of our small forwards for a true power forward, but I think that's an easy to make move down the line. The critical step is to find that defense-bending primary initiator first.