Orlando Magic Re-Sign  $79 Million Star Player For 2024 Season On A Year Contract…

How shorthanded Magic fought back to defeat Wizards

 

The Orlando Magic are close to making their first postseason since 2020. With the amount of cap space they have this offseason, they may add more to their promising team. One possible option is D’Angelo Russell.

HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto explained why the Magic may look into adding Russell in a March 27 story.

“With Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner, and Jalen Suggs on rookie-scale contracts and Wendell Carter on a team-friendly deal, rival executives believe the Magic are a team to monitor this offseason to make a notable upgrade and improve their shooting.

“Should Orlando have interest in Russell during free agency, he could play on or off the ball alongside Banchero, Wagner, and Suggs.”

Scotto delved further into how Russell would thrive next to Banchero and Wagner.

“Russell is shooting 44.5 percent on catch-and-shoot threes and is averaging 1.25 points per possession on spot-up shots. The 28-year-old guard has also been efficient beyond the arc from either corner spot at 44.4 percent from the left corner and 41.7 percent from the right corner as a floor spacer.

“Such shooting efficiency could open the lanes for Banchero and Wagner as playmakers.”

After agreeing to a two-year, $36 million contract with the Los Angeles Lakers, Russell has a player option in 2024. If he opts out, he will hit free agency, where Magic could offer him a big contract. The Lakers originally picked Russell No. 2 in the 2015 NBA Draft, and he made the All-Star team in 2019.

In that same story, Russell told Scotto that he hopes to stick with the Lakers long-term.

“I’d love to be here and continue to give it a run and be where my feet are now,” Russell told Scotto. “Obviously, I’ve been on the other side of it, and I’ve been through the roller coaster of free agency and having to sit back and wait. I’m looking forward to not having to worry about that. I’ve been blessed enough to put myself in this position with my play. I’m definitely planning on taking advantage of that. When that time comes, I feel that everything will play out how it’s supposed to play out.”

Now, this doesn’t necessarily mean Russell will opt into his current contract. He may very well opt out in the hopes of getting a bigger contract from the Lakers.

Russell has been a solid contributor for the Lakers. Averaging 18.2 points a game, Russell is shooting 46.2% from the field and 42.3% from three. His contributions could lead to a bigger contract in the offseason.

Bleacher Report’s Andy Bailey explained why, despite the Magic’s rise, Malik Monk is a “reasonable” free agent target for them.

“But they still rank in the bottom third of the league on offense, in part because Banchero is one of the NBA’s least efficient volume scorers. And Monk could open up the floor a bit for those two while also taking some ball-handling pressure away from them,” Bailey wrote in a March 19 story.

Bailey also mentions James Harden as an “optimistic” target and Tyrese Maxey as a “dream” target. The commonality between all three of these guards is that they are scoring guards, much like Russell.

And the Orlando Magic coaching staff has to turn back to the drawing board after back-to-back losses against the Sacramento Kings and the Golden State Warriors. There are no moral victories for a team in the playoff chase.

Moral victories are for bottom-feeder teams. The Magic must right the ship before this losing streak gets out of hand. They have to keep pace in the race to finish third with the New York Knicks (two games ahead) and Cleveland Cavaliers (1.5 games ahead).

The Magic have to stay ahead and raise their level of play. The goal, after all, is to play their best basketball at the end of the season.

The urgency to win must be there too.

For some reason, the Magic have been lethargic in the first quarter of these last two games, putting the team in a hole it has to climb out of.

The Magic lost the first quarter in both of their last games, struggling to hit shots and facing a deficit. Wednesday’s result was alarming as the Magic could only score 11 points in the first quarter on an icy 3-for-22 shooting.

It was almost like the Magic felt like they were the established veteran team and they had accomplished more than the Warriors

Some of it too was a change in the starting lineup. Gary Harris’ absence was certainly felt as the Magic have dominated minutes with Harris in the game lately. Still, there has to be something more considering how little Harris shoots. His floor-spacing cannot be that valuable.

And that is where the Magic’s coaching staff has to go back to the drawing board and figure out how to keep the players motivated, focused and in rhythm at this point in the season.

They will get some good news with Harris taken off the injury report for Friday’s game after a two-game absence. That familiarity should help.

But the Magic are experiencing something very new. They control their own destiny in the playoff race — trailing the fourth-place Cleveland Cavaliers by 1.5 games and leading the sixth-place Indiana Pacers by two games. They can either climb the standings or fall back down to the pack.

In either case, they have to get used to being the team that opponents want to raise their energy against and beat. They have to get used to playing high-pressure games against teams as desperate to win as they are — like the Golden State Warriors were Wednesday as they fend off the Houston Rockets in the Play-in Chase

The Magic will have to raise their level of play to end the season because of this. And that takes extra effort and focus.

We did not get a chance to see that extra effort against the Kings or the Warriors for the most part. If it did come, it came too late. The Magic were blitzed early and found their fire later in the game — they trailed the Warriors by one with about three minutes to play before struggling to finish the game.

Orlando can find that energy eventually clearly.

Against the Kings, it was a reserve that looked like he was the best player on the court. Jonathan Isaac scored 17 points in eight minutes and also had a few rebounds and a couple of blocks. The energy that Isaac showed is the type of energy that the entire team should have come out with.

His passion lifted the team and created a winnable scenario for the Magic in the waning part of the game. The whole bench stepped up to carry the group.

The Magic would have had a better chance to win the game had his teammates matched his energy on both sides of the ball.

The coaching staff might have to rethink his minute restriction when the team is playing that poorly and he is playing that well. Orlando is still not quite working with a playoff rotation.

Coach Jamahl Mosley showed some flexibility in Wednesday’s game sticking with Jonathan Isaac and Cole Anthony late in the game as he and the Magic searched for any offense.

Anthony was the key to keeping things close in Wednesday’s game against the Warriors. Anthony finished the game with 26 points, seven rebounds and four assists. His stat line was better than both Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner as the starters struggled to get anything going.

Anthony’s three-point shot-making ability was on full display and created an opportunity for the Magic to pull off a late win. But again the Magic would have had a better chance to win had Anthony’s teammates matched his energy and will to win.

After all, it takes a team effort.

That is what has been missing. Perhaps Harris’ return will settle everything back down. But it should not take a perfect lineup to play with the intensity and focus they need. The Magic have to raise their level of play against the Playoff competition they are facing.

With the Magic homestand coming to a close, they have a chance to correct the mistakes that were made during these back-to-back losses. It starts with the intensity they bring from the jump.

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