Jeff Weltman didn’t need a dramatic offseason to explain why the Orlando Magic stayed put. He had one simple answer: health.
That was the message Weltman delivered during Sunday’s Summer League broadcast in Las Vegas, where he addressed the decision to bring back the roster after a season that ended with 45 wins and the 8-seed, even after last summer’s big swing for Desmond Bane.
“We're really excited about this season,” Weltman said on the broadcast. “First and foremost, with all teams, we hope for health.
We lost a lot of guys for a lot of games last season. The stretches that we were able to provide ourselves with health, we performed at a pretty good level.
We felt it was really important, especially with the age profile of our team, try to understand what we have and bring the group back.”
That’s been the theme around Orlando all offseason: the belief that the team’s ceiling was masked by injuries, not exposed by a lack of talent. The Magic have also pointed to the addition of Nikola Vucevic and the arrival of Sean Sweeney as ways to help clean up some of the issues, but the biggest fix still comes down to getting the group on the floor together.
There’s evidence behind that thinking.
Orlando’s opening-night starting five of Jalen Suggs, Desmond Bane, Franz Wagner, Paolo Banchero and Wendell Carter posted a +11.6 net rating in 182 minutes across 19 games together. That group produced a 117.3 offensive rating and a 105.7 defensive rating, numbers that put it in the conversation with the league’s best. It was the ninth-best starting lineup to log at least 150 minutes together in the NBA, and it never really got a full runway.
The same five also flashed in the Playoffs, where they put up a +14.7 net rating with a 115.5 offensive rating and a 100.8 defensive rating in 61 minutes. That was the best non-San Antonio Spurs lineup to play at least 50 minutes together in the Playoffs.
Even the smaller lineup combinations tell the same story. According to DataBallr, Orlando was at -0.7 when Banchero, Bane and Wagner shared the floor. But the pairings were encouraging: +2.3 with Banchero and Bane without Wagner, +5.2 with Bane and Wagner without Banchero, and a huge +21.2 with Banchero and Wagner without Bane.
The Magic’s bet is that more time together will sharpen those combinations and make the whole thing click.
That’s part of why the team is also leaning into the coaching change. Sweeney is expected to bring a fresh set of ideas, and Orlando is hoping his track record with young players helps unlock another level for a roster that has not yet shown its full version on the court.
Age is a big part of the equation, too. Orlando’s starting lineup had an average age of 24.8 years old, and adjusted for minutes played, the Magic had the third-youngest roster in the league at 24.0 years old. Weltman made clear on Sunday that he sees that as a reason to stay patient, not a reason to panic.
“Our starting lineup is one of the youngest in the NBA,” Weltman said on the ESPN broadcast Sunday. “When you think about Paolo and Franz and Anthony Black and even guys like Jalen, they have been togehter for a while, but they are still very young players. They are still pre-prime.”
The front office is also betting on the mindset of the group itself. Weltman said the disappointment from last season is still fresh, and that the players have responded with urgency this summer.
“I think our guys are hungry,” Weltman said on the ESPN broadcast Sunday. “We have been in the playoffs each of the last three seasons.
One and out. The first year against Cleveland within the last minute of Game 7.
This year, having had a 3-1 lead, losing Franz and still being competitive for the remainder of the series. They are hungry and ready to break through.
They have been very attached this summer, receptive to the new coaches and eager to get back and run it back.”
That’s the gamble Orlando is making: one more run with the same core, one more chance for a young team to turn promise into something sturdier. The Magic are trusting the health, the age curve and the internal growth. Weltman has decided the roster deserves that opportunity.
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Which Magic Youngster Makes The Leap This Team Desperately Needs
The Magic head into the new season with a fresh voice on the sideline in Sean Sweeney, and with it comes the familiar hope that one of their young cornerstones will take the kind of step that changes the teams ceiling. Orlando has built its identity around youth, and the next leap matters because the roster already has a strong base of promising talent that still has room to grow under a new coaching staff.
Anthony Black, Franz Wagner, Paolo Banchero and a second-year French forward all stand out as the most obvious candidates to make that jump, but the biggest intrigue may be how Sweeney can help Banchero sharpen the consistency that separates good stars from elite ones. Wagner also remains a key part of the equation, and the Magic need more than incremental progress from at least one of these players if they want this season to feel like a real step forward rather than another year of waiting on potential. [Read more 🡒]
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For Magic fans, the timing makes the change feel even more significant after another longtime in-arena voice also departed the organization not long ago. Steeles exit closes a major chapter in the teams broadcast identity, and it leaves the franchise with a new look in a place where continuity has mattered for decades. [Read more 🡒]
