Magic Summer League Hopefuls Face A Crucial Test Under New Staff

As Orlando Magic hopefuls vie for NBA recognition, the Summer League tests their ability to shine through teamwork and strategy.

For the Orlando Magic’s Summer League group, the path forward is pretty clear: nobody is going to separate from the pack by freelancing.

That’s the tension baked into this time of year. Players are fighting for attention, but the ones who usually get it are the ones who make the team look better. For a roster built around familiar faces from Osceola and a few players still trying to crack the league, the best showcase is a collective one.

Lester Quinones knows that grind as well as anyone on this team. He has played 54 NBA games, including an extended run with the Golden State Warriors in 2024, when he scored 164 points and went 32 for 88 from three in 37 games. Most of his work, though, has come in the G-League, where he averaged 23.3 points per game and shot 41.0 percent from three in 36 regular-season games with the Osceola Magic.

That kind of résumé is exactly what fills Summer League rosters: players on the edge, looking for the right opening. And in that setting, the temptation is always there to force the issue. Quinones said the Magic want the opposite.

"Just emphasizing our pace, getting up the floor, running the right lanes in transition and just having the right spacing," Lester Quinones said after the Magic's practice Friday. "Summer league can tend to be a lot of isolation basketball, a lot of me guys. We kind of want to emphasize action and not sitting there isolating and really getting into things that make the defense react."

Phillip Wheeler echoed that same idea. He said the focus is on learning the system and letting the game open up through structure, not one-on-one shot hunting.

"Honestly, just getting the flow of Orlando's offense and defense and continue to improve on my game. Everybody sharpening the iron.

It's always good," Phillip Wheeler said after the Magic's practice Friday. "We're big on defense and running the floor and spacing the floor so we can create everybody's opportunity to create a free run."

Wheeler is still trying to carve out his place too. He has only five NBA appearances, all in 2024 with the Philadelphia 76ers, and he averaged 14.9 points per game while shooting 39.9 percent from three in 36 games off the bench with the Osceola Magic last season.

Both Wheeler and Quinones were among the more noticeable G-League holdovers in Thursday’s Summer League opener. Wheeler finished with four points on 2-for-5 shooting and missed all three of his 3-pointers. Quinones posted 10 points and four assists on 4-for-11 shooting.

The game itself got away from the Magic in the second half, when the ball movement that helped them build a 10-point lead early started to fade. Fouls and offensive rebounds hurt them, and the group looked like what it is: a team still trying to come together.

That’s why Friday’s practice mattered. This is a short runway, with only five days of training camp to get the basics in place and build something functional before the games keep coming. The Magic are also trying to install the identity and foundations of a new coaching staff, which adds another layer to the challenge.

"Really just getting the chemistry together," Quinones said after practice Friday. "That was our first real game together.

And you can kind of see there were a lot of things where we were not on the same page. I feel like we will fix a lot of our mistakes."

There’s a reason Orlando’s roster has so many players who already know one another. Nine players on this Summer League team spent time with Osceola last year, including Noah Penda and Jase Richardson’s spot games throughout the season. That familiarity should matter in a setting where there’s barely time to learn names, let alone habits.

Wheeler said that shared background can make a difference.

"It's always a blessing to play with people and see them down the line and play with them again," Wheeler said after practice Friday. "It's always a blessing to get up and own with the guys you are familiar with and hopefully build a connection in the game like me and Alex [Morales] usually do."

Now the challenge is turning that comfort into production. The Magic have a quick turnaround ahead of this weekend’s back-to-back against the Miami Heat and Portland Trail Blazers, and there’s plenty to clean up before then.

Summer League is built for players trying to stand out. For this Magic group, the best way to do that is by helping each other do it.

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Noah Penda also gave Orlando a reason to build on the loss with a strong shooting night, and Richardson made a point of noting the work his teammate put in. There was also a little extra energy on the sideline, with regular-season Magic teammates showing up to support the group after teasing their appearance in the group chat, a reminder that even in Summer League, Orlando is treating these games like part of a bigger picture. [Read more 🡒]