Paolo Banchero isn’t close to returning from a torn right oblique he suffered in late October, but he was able to make some progress over the weekend, writes Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel. Banchero told reporters that he did some ball-handling and spot shooting at Saturday’s practice for the first time since the injury.
“I’m feeling good,” he said. “I finally got to do some court stuff on this trip at practice. It felt really good just to do that stuff again because I literally hadn’t done anything in a month, so it was my first time like really getting to dribble a ball, shoot a ball, so it felt really good doing that. Obviously, wasn’t any sprinting or cutting or anything, but hopefully in the next few weeks I can start getting into more of that and just work my way back into playing shape.”
The Magic have made the recovery process easier for Banchero by playing so well in his absence. Sunday’s win over Brooklyn was their sixth in a row, improving their record to 12-4 since the injury. Banchero has remained close to the team and is trying to learn as much as he can while he’s sidelined.
“Sitting on the bench you’ve got a lot different of a perspective than being on the court,” he said. “You see a lot more, you notice a lot more on both sides. It’s helped me just advance my knowledge. [I’ve] been watching more film, just trying to do what I can to be mentally sharp. Coaches tell you all the time it’s a lot different watching the game on the bench than it is when you’re in-and-out of the game, so I definitely understand what they mean now and it’s been fun just talking to them as well as the players, telling them what I see, how we can be better and what we’re doing well also.”
There’s more from Orlando:
- Franz Wagner continued his remarkable play without Banchero on the court, Beede states in the same piece. He had a near triple-double Sunday night with 20 points, nine rebounds and eight assists and is averaging 25.1 points, 6.6 assists and 6.1 rebounds over the last 17 games. “He’s just really stepped up to the plate and you can see him getting more and more comfortable,” Banchero said. “He really understood what had to be done with his role being increased. Every game he’s just being really consistent with his leadership, with his output of … the team knows what he’s going to do night in and night out, they know how he’s going to play, what shots he’s going to take, [and] they know he’s going to make the right play every time. So it’s been awesome to watch him and the rest of the team. We’re on a helluva run right now and it’s fun.”
- The top spot in East Group A and a guaranteed berth in the knockout round will be on the line Tuesday when the Magic travel to New York, Beede adds. The NBA removed the game from its TNT schedule after Banchero’s injury and a slow start by both teams, but eventually reversed that decision. “I don’t know why they took it off [TNT],” Jalen Suggs said. “I don’t know who didn’t want to watch us play, but just to have it on [national] TV again, being in that environment, in MSG is … Those are things that I think we’ve all grown up watching prime-time games in MSG. We know the stakes that are on the game, outside of all that, but to put it on [national] TV definitely adds a bit of joy to it.”
- Since Wendell Carter Jr. returned after missing 12 games with plantar fasciitis, coach Jamahl Mosley has been using him alongside Goga Bitadze in a big starting lineup, Beede observes in a separate story. The combination has been successful, especially on defense as the Magic have two rim protectors on the court together.