All-Star forward Paolo Banchero says he was “all the way spent” following Game 7 of the Magic‘s first-round playoff loss to Cleveland last spring, so he spent the majority of the summer working to get in “tip-top, elite shape” for a possible deeper postseason run in 2024/25, he tells David Aldridge of The Athletic.
“I worked on my body three or four days a week — sometimes lifting, sometimes agility, some days conditioning,” Banchero said. “Just trying to get in the best shape heading into this season. And obviously, as the season goes on and on, just trying to stay consistent with my habits, and once you get to the playoffs, just having that second wind.”
Franz Wagner, who signed a maximum-salary rookie scale extension this offseason, says that both he and Banchero need to evolve into more vocal leaders as the team’s best players, Aldridge writes. Wagner admits it doesn’t come naturally to either player.
“Honestly, that’s something we have to grow into,” Wagner said. “We’re not the super-outgoing personalities, not the yellers on the team. At some point, that’s going to be required from us, though, especially with each other. We’ve got a great deal of respect for each other. We both really enjoy playing together. I think we have a great relationship. I think that’s the start, just having that trust that when you are holding each other accountable, the other person knows it’s coming from a good place.”
“This year, (I want to be) just a super consistent voice for our team and for the group,” Banchero said, per Aldridge. “When I see something, when you just say it, it gives everyone, whether it’s the guys you’re playing with, your coaches, whoever you say it to, it gives them a chance to take what you said and adjust. … I think me just being a consistent leader and consistent voice is going to take us to another level.”
Here’s more on the Magic:
- While Wagner posted career highs in several major statistics in ’23/24, he struggled with his three-point shot, converting a career-low 28.1% from beyond the arc after shooting a combined 35.8% from deep over his first two seasons. The 23-year-old says he spent a lot of time working to fine-tune his outside shot this offseason and is confident in it entering ’24/25, writes Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel. “Getting the mechanics right and my mindset too,” Wagner said. “That’s where it starts coming in with the right mentality and just having a clear mind knowing what I want to accomplish and what the team’s intentions are. That’s when I can be at my best.”
- Former first-round pick Goga Bitadze was unable to finish out his rookie scale contract with Indiana, having been waived by the Pacers during the ’22/23 season. The Magic gave him a second chance, inking the Georgian big man to a two-year, minimum-salary contract that expired over the summer. Bitadze suggested he could have gotten more money from another team in free agency, but he re-signed with the Magic on a three-year, $25MM deal because “he’s really happy” in Orlando, according to Beede. “You [can] get paid a little bit more somewhere else, but this is like home,” Bitadze said. “How much this team has done for me, I feel like I still got to give it back so I’m just super excited to be back.”
- The Magic recently announced several promotions and additions to their basketball operations department. Ameer Bahhur (assistant coach/staff coordinator), Becky Bonner (director of pro personnel), Randy Gregory (assistant coach), Stephen Mervis (assistant general manager) and Rodney “Sid” Powell (vice president of team operations) are a handful of the 23 employees listed in the press release.