“Who knows what
their ceiling could be?”
Those were the
words of Bill Simmons during NBA Countdown prior to Game 6 between the Wizards and
the Pacers. It encapsulated why this now-concluded Wizards season seems like a
big question.
What could have been?
On the one hand,
it was obviously a success. They won their second playoff series in the past
three decades. They won a second-round game for the first time since 1982. They
have arguably the best young backcourt in the league. Bradley Beal, in
particular, took a giant
leap forward and did not shy away from any big moment.
Judged against
the prism of the Wizards franchise, the title of this blog post is stupid and
it was one of the most successful seasons ever.
Judged against
this particular NBA season, it is not the success it appears to be.
The team struggled
to remain above .500 in the worst Eastern Conference anyone can remember, with
multiple teams tanking from day 1. They dominated a short-handed Bulls team.
The Pacers, the subject
of so much scrutiny over the past three weeks, dispatched them in only 6
games. The Hawks, with a losing record, took the Pacers to 7.
Most damning is
that they blew two games at home against the Pacers. In Game 4, they blew a
19-point second half lead. In Game 6, they succumb to a 17-2 run in the fourth
quarter after taking the lead.
That is not good.
I read this excellent
piece on the 2002 Kings/Lakers series and how the Kings’ window evaporated
in a heartbeat when Chris Webber got hurt.
What if this was
the Wizards’ big chance? The Pacers were a mess. The Heat are LeBron James and
that’s it. The Western Conference is spending April and May slugging it out.
Watching the
Wizards season end is so frustrating because the potential was unlimited. They
should’ve beaten the Pacers. If they don’t blow Game 4. If they don’t crumble
in Game 6. I’m on record picking
the Pacers over the Heat because of how badly LeBron’s teammates are
playing.
No one in the DC
area is going to look at it like that because they can’t. The Wizards have been
so bad for so long that you are expected to be content and happy with this poor
performance. Why should we be easy on the Wizards in 2014 because they were so
bad in 2004 or 1994?
Here’s a fact
that will not be discussed in dissecting the Wizards’ playoff loss – the Wizards
had better players. That should hurt! The Pacers couldn’t stay in front of Wall
and they couldn’t stay close enough to Beal. Gortat and Nene, at times,
brutalized the Pacers on the boards. With the exception of the Roy Hibbert
Game, the Wizards were superior. And they lost.
This leads us to
Randy Wittman, who will be back next year, and that’s not good. With Beal and
Wall, the Wizards have a backcourt capable of winning an NBA title. With Randy
Wittman, they have a coach who is incapable of winning an NBA title.
I was spoiled
watching Kevin Ollie lead UConn to a national title in March by perfecting
two of the most important aspects of coaching basketball – juggling lineups
to exploit matchups and drawing up good dead-ball plays.
Wittman can’t do
either.
In Game 4, the
veteran trio of Andre Miller, Drew Gooden and Al Harrington helped build the
big lead. As the game slowly slipped away, Wittman stubbornly kept leaning on
them until it was too late. It reached the absurdity of Harrington taking – and
missing – a ridiculous layup attempt with 15 seconds left. The Thunder are
killed when All-Star Russell Westbrook takes a late shot – what about
Harrington shooting instead of Wall…or Beal…or Nene…or Ariza…or…
In Game 6,
Wittman stood there like a deer in the headlights as the Wizards chucked up bad
three after bad three during the 17-2 run. By the time he finally called
timeout, the Wizards were down 11 and the game was over.
Lastly, the lack
of adjustments Wittman made in Game 6 – and all season – have been mind-boggling.
The Wizards made David
West look like Karl Malone by giving him open jumper after open jumper.
Yes, you can live with West making a few jumpers. But then you guard him.
Instead, West kept getting open looks at the corner of the free throw line and
kept pouring them in. Did it ever occur to anyone on the Wizards coaching staff
to prevent that from happening?
Wittman’s
continued employment will be a continued reminder that Wizards fans, well, they
don’t really exist. A team with a real fanbase – say, the Pacers or the Thunder
– would be calling for their coach’s head after performances like that.
Instead, the majority of DC fans will shrug and go read
about RG3 and DeSean Jackson.
I was at the game
when the Wizards clinched their playoff spot against the Celtics. It was a
Wednesday night and the place was half-full, if that. There were a lot of
Celtics fans. There were a family of 7 in front of me, no joke, decked out in
all Kentucky gear, presumably to watch Wall and Rajan Rondo.
Fast-forward to
Game 4 of the Bulls series, and suddenly instead of the 200 section, I’m in the
first row of 415 and the place is jumping. The Verizon Center was live. It felt
like a real NBA building.
By Game 6 of the
Pacers series, there were hundreds upon
hundreds of empty seats. Despite winning Game 5 by a historic margin, no
one believed. Despite having an unimaginable ceiling, everyone on the ESPN
pregame set picked the Pacers.
Ultimately, it’s
impossible to judge the 2013-14 Wizards season as anything other than a
success. Wall and Beal are too good. The team proved it could win in the
playoffs. There is potential.
Alas, that p-word
won’t go away. The season was a success. But it could have been so much better.
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