Injured Magic starters Markelle Fultz and Wendell Carter Jr. were partial practice participants on Wednesday, head coach Jamahl Mosley told reporters, including Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel (subscription required).
“It was a great day for them,” Mosley said.
Fultz has been sidelined since November 9 with left knee tendinitis, having missed the past 15 games. Carter has been out even longer, as he sustained his injury — a broken left hand — on November 4.
According to Beede, Carter said his left hand isn’t quite full strength yet, calling it “85-90%.”
“It’s like right at the last bit of my recovery. … I just kind of look at each day as an opportunity to allow it get better,” he said.
It’s unclear when Fultz, a guard, and Carter, a center, might return to action, but it’s certainly encouraging that they seem to be getting close. Fultz will be an unrestricted free agent in 2024, while Carter is under contract through 2025/26.
Here’s more from the Southeast:
- No firm timetable was given, but Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel hears the Heat could be getting a couple key contributors back in the next couple weeks. Guard Tyler Herro (ankle sprain) and center Bam Adebayo (hip contusion) are expected to return prior to Miami’s West Coast trip that begins on December 28, according to Winderman. Herro has been out since November 8, while Adebayo has missed the past four games.
- Hawks guard Trae Young was ejected during Monday’s loss against Denver for continually complaining about a non-foul call, which Jeff Schultz of The Athletic views as a sign of his immaturity. Young is the team’s best offensive player, but he doesn’t lead in the locker room or by example on the court, according to Schultz. At 9-13, Atlanta is off to a disappointing start, and Schultz says if things don’t turn around, the “unproven” front office and Young will be under the microscope, as head coach Quin Snyder was just hired at the end of last season.
- At one point in the first quarter on Monday, Atlanta led Denver by 11 points. That lead turned into a 20-point deficit in the third quarter, when Young was ejected. Despite the loss, the Hawks mounted a furious comeback to make it competitive late, led by a huge performance by wing Bogdan Bogdanovic (a career-high 40 points, including 10 three-pointers), who could be trending toward a career year, writes Lauren L. Williams of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (subscriber link). “Insane,” Clint Capela said. “I love it. Especially for Bogi. Because he’s the guy that I always see it in the weight room with me after games. He’s always the guy that I see after practice get more reps than everyone. … He’s doing everything right. And he deserved that.”
Trade Fultz and Carter Jr and some 2nds to Utah for Sexton(flip him for something), Horton-Tucker and Kessler or trade Fultz to Washington for either Tyus Jones or Shamet with picks or Delon Wright, Johnny Davis and Galo with picks(waive Wright and Galo). Orlando has the young PGs of the future already and have a good rotation going with this winning streak. I prefer a younger center to pair with Paolo. They are winning without Fultz and Carter Jr. Get younger. I like the Utah trade. Hope that Howard or Houston can develop at the SG spot
Trades in the NBA are NOT easy to make, at this moment Markelle Fultz does not have too much trade value due to the fact of his injury history and that he will be free agent this summer, in the other hand I don’t see any reason to Orlando trade for Wendell Carter Jr.
I understand that. These trades only improve Orlando by addition by subtraction along with helping Utah or Washington. Orlando already is winning with Fultz and Carter Jr not playing, their team is younger and Utah is in limbo at the moment. I’m not asking much for Fultz. Kessler would be better than Carter Jr next to Paulo. Utah has a veteran team with a rookie PG starting. Thank you for replying
Bogdan and Dejounte make up a nice backcourt. One with size. And better defensively. Hawks can get a lot for Young. Have to agree with Young not being a leader. Your top players should always lead. Always