After finishing with a 35-47 record in each of the last two seasons, the Wizards are off to a 2-9 start in 2023/24. However, third-year head coach Wes Unseld Jr.‘s job with the organization isn’t in any immediate danger, according to Josh Robbins of The Athletic.
Given that Washington missed the playoffs in Unseld’s first two years with the team and then overhauled the front office this past offseason, there was a sense that it may just be a matter of time before the new decision-makers, including team president Michael Winger and general manager Will Dawkins, bring in their own coach.
However, Robbins says that management is prepared to give Unseld “significant leeway” this season, since player development – rather than winning games – will be the main goal in the short term. Although the Wizards have lost nine of their first 11 games, key young players such as rookie wing Bilal Coulibaly and recently extended forward Deni Avdija have taken steps forward in the first few weeks of this season, Robbins observes.
Coulibaly is shooting the ball well (.523 FG%, .471 3PT%) and handling challenging defensive assignments while logging 25.7 minutes per night. Avdija, who received a four-year, $55MM contract just before the season began, has been a full-time starter and is averaging career highs in PPG (12.7), APG (3.9), FG% (.519), and 3PT% (.412), among other statistical categories.
Winger and Dawkins have also asked Unseld to help Jordan Poole and Kyle Kuzma get comfortable with being Washington’s go-to offensive options, Robbins says. While Poole’s play has been shaky so far this season, the front office didn’t expect his transition from complementary player in Golden State to primary scorer in D.C. to be seamless, so they’re willing to be patient.
As Robbins acknowledges, the pieces on the Wizards’ roster don’t all fit together smoothly, especially from a defensive standpoint, which may make it more challenging for management to evaluate Unseld’s performance and determine whether he’s the long-term answer as the club’s head coach. The team has no desire to make a change in the near future, but Unseld’s future in Washington beyond the 2023/24 season isn’t assured, Robbins adds.
Even though the Wizards have exercised Unseld’s option for 2024/25, that only guarantees that he’ll be paid next season — not necessarily that he’ll still be on the sidelines, Robbins writes. That decision may come down to how the Wizards’ youngsters develop and the strides that players like Poole and Kuzma make in their new roles during the rest of this season.
Booooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
the wizards should trade for a backup center
Move muscala to a contender
Also trade shamet
There gleague shooting guard are playing better than wizards sg.
Yeh, a rebuilding team should definitely commit resources to trade for a backup center
Wes, wait til nationally televised game
Then. Smack the ish out of
Poo-le
I’d love some sort of breakdown on why coaches get fired. It’s obviously not all tied to performance (what is Unseld supposed to achieve with this group, really?). Between owner egos or player disagreements would be interested in getting some insight into the real reasons and which are most common.
What comes to mind for me is that really it’s a revolving door.
A certain coach will be fantastic for a period of time but then after a while the players will tune him out.
I think of Pat Riley with the Lakers and after 8 or so years he really didn’t change or become a bad coach, it’s just another voice, someone different not necessarily better, needed to come in.
He went to the Knicks and was pretty successful and the same thing eventually happened. His style, his methods, reached their effective end and he moved on to Miami.
It’s really just a revolving door to see what type of voice works. Do you need a Pat Riley hard ass type for your team, or does a Phil Jackson type fit, someone who is great at massaging the egos?
It’s not necessarily about finding great coaches and avoiding bad coaches. Make sense? Just my opinion.
In other words this team is so bad, there is no reason to pay 2 coaches.
Here comes a #1 pick!
Of course his job is not in danger coz he doesn’t have a real team… a real team needs a legit experienced coach.
That headline is usually the kiss of death for a coach.