Paolo Banchero knows exactly what’s at stake for the Orlando Magic, and he’s not hiding from it.
Around the Eastern Conference, the conversation has drifted toward a crowded field of contenders. The New York Knicks are the defending champions.
The Philadelphia 76ers added Jaylen Brown. The Cleveland Cavaliers will get a full year of James Harden, once he actually signs his new contract.
The Boston Celtics have Jayson Tatum back for a full season. The Toronto Raptors added Kawhi Leonard.
The Miami Heat finally got their star in Giannis Antetokounmpo. Even the Detroit Pistons are coming off a 60-win season, with Jalen Duren’s free agency still unresolved.
In that noise, Orlando has slipped into the background.
That’s a sharp fall from where the Magic were a year ago, when their own big move pushed them into the East conversation. Instead, they’re now carrying the baggage of a 45-win season that ended with the 8-seed and a playoff collapse that still lingers. A 3-1 series lead disappeared, and the closeout Game 6 loss at home only made the damage worse.
Now the questions are everywhere, and nearly all of them land on Banchero.
“The East is wide open in my opinion - a lot of guys feel that, that's why a lot of free agents are coming," Banchero told Kelly Iko of Yahoo! Sports in Las Vegas this weekend.
"But I'm excited and the team's excited. Like I said earlier, last year wasn't what we wanted.
It didn't go how we wanted. But a lot of people are going to forget about us and count us out, so it's on us to go and show that we're an elite team in this league.
We got a chance to win the East."
That’s the job now: drag Orlando back into the picture.
Banchero has made clear he isn’t satisfied with his own season, even though he found a better rhythm as the year went on. His numbers were strong - 22.2 points, a career-high 8.4 rebounds and 5.2 assists per game, along with career-best field goal and true shooting percentages. He also took fewer of the mid-range jumpers that draw the most criticism.
Still, the Magic are judged by results, and the results didn’t match the expectations. Even with Franz Wagner missing large chunks of the season, Orlando went only 26-25 in the 51 games he mostly sat out.
And when the season was on the line against the Detroit Pistons, Banchero couldn’t deliver the final win, even after putting up 45 points in Game 5 and 38 in Game 7.
That’s the reality of being the guy. The only number that really sticks is wins, and after three straight first-round exits, Banchero has yet to make the leap that turns promise into status.
He’s aware of that, too. Banchero told Kelly Iko that he sees himself as a 25-8-7 player, someone who can do everything for a team. That’s the level he believes he belongs at.
There were signs last season that he was moving in that direction. After the All-Star break, he averaged 23.6 points, 8.3 rebounds and 5.8 assists per game while shooting 46.7 percent from the field and posting a 57.7 percent true shooting percentage. He also finished with a positive plus-minus, and the Magic were plus-3.1 in net rating with him on the floor after the break.
That stretch mattered because it hinted at the version of Banchero Orlando still believes in. He’s still chasing the level he showed in the first five games of the 2025 season before tearing his oblique, and the Magic are eager to see that player back.
If he gets there, the whole team changes with him.
The offseason’s biggest move in Orlando wasn’t a roster shakeup. It was the hiring of Sean Sweeney, and that brings a new layer of uncertainty and possibility. The Magic are still expected to lean on defense, but Sweeney is supposed to bring fresh ideas on offense.
How quickly he and Banchero connect will matter.
So far, the early signs are encouraging. Banchero said Sweeney visited him in Seattle last week and worked out with him for a couple of days. He also said he likes the coach’s direct style.
"Me and him have really hit it off so far," Banchero told Kelly Iko. "He came out to Seattle last week, worked out with me for a couple days.
And obviously we've been working out here in Vegas with the rest of the coaching staff. I'm just really excited about what he can do for me and the team.
Like you said, he's a great mind on both sides of the ball. Extremely detail-oriented and he's an intense guy too.
And I feel like that's what I need, that's what the team needs. So it's really exciting."
That relationship will be important, but it won’t remove the pressure from Banchero. Sweeney can put him in the right spots. Banchero still has to become the kind of star who changes the conversation.
Orlando is banking on him and Franz Wagner to carry that load. The roster was kept together because of what those two might become, not just what they’ve already done.
For now, the rest of the league has left the Magic out of the spotlight. Banchero intends to change that.
In Other News...
Paolo Banchero Just Put Real Pressure On Orlandos Next Step
Paolo Banchero is already setting a higher bar for himself as Orlando heads into the new season, and the timing matters. In a recent interview, the Magic forward talked through his personal goals and the teams bigger picture, making clear that he wants to sharpen his efficiency while taking on even more of the offensive load. He also pointed to the arrival of new head coach Sean Sweeney as part of the backdrop for what comes next, with the sense that Orlandos next step is supposed to be more than incremental.
Bancheros confidence extends beyond his own numbers, too. He sees a conference that can be attacked, and he believes the Magic have enough to make noise in the East if the group comes together the right way. For a team trying to turn promise into something sturdier, that kind of expectation is useful, but it also raises the standard in a hurry. [Read more 🡒]
Magic Summer League Win Came With One Concerning Development
The Magic kept their Summer League momentum going with a second straight win, but it took a little extra work to do it. Orlando erased a 15-point deficit, forced overtime after tying the game late in regulation and then finished off Portland, 112-105, even while resting second-year players Jase Richardson and Noah Penda after their heavy workloads in the first two games.
Lester Quinones provided the scoring punch with 30 points, giving Orlando another encouraging look at its depth. The bigger concern came when Izaiyah Nelson left early, leaving the Magic to monitor how the frontcourt rotation holds up as the team gets two days off before facing the 76ers. [Read more 🡒]
Magic Rookie Suddenly Faces A Major Camp Setback
Orlandos rookie camp plans took a hit when Izaiyah Nelson went down in a Summer League game, a reminder that even the quietest parts of the offseason can reshape a young players path. For a team trying to sort out its next wave of frontcourt depth, losing a developmental big before the calendar even turns to training camp is the kind of setback that can slow both evaluation and momentum.
Nelson is expected to be sidelined for three to four months, which puts his availability for the start of the season in doubt and leaves the Magic waiting on a player they were hoping to get more looks at soon. For a rookie trying to make an impression, the timing is especially rough, because the next stretch of work is usually where roster battles and early opportunities start to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
