Wizards Still Have One Frontcourt Problem The Draft Didn't Fix

With a promising future centered around top prospect AJ Dybantsa and a strong supporting cast, the Wizards are contemplating strategic free-agent acquisitions to bolster their roster's depth for a competitive edge.

The Washington Wizards may look like a team that needs help everywhere, but the clearest pressure point right now is in the frontcourt.

Last week’s draft gave them one answer when they took 22-year-old Felix Okpara with the 46th pick. It was a straight-up need selection, and it makes sense for a roster that still has uncertainty around the center spot. Okpara doesn’t bring the kind of ceiling that AJ Dybantsa does, but his value is obvious: he’s a rim-running big who can protect the paint and fit next to Trae Young.

“I like the Okpara pick. Solid 2nd round swing.Has the size + length to play center in the league and can excel in both switching and drop coverage schemes.

Limited offensively but good lob threat, great Gortat screener and offensive rebounder. Fills a need for the Wiz as well👍 pic.twitter.com/pmPCNKez1r”

The problem for Washington is that the need doesn’t stop there. Alex Sarr is already injured, Anthony Davis has his own durability questions, and Okpara still looks a long way from handling real NBA minutes. Behind him, the depth chart gets thin fast, with Tristan Vukcevic and Julian Reese also in the mix.

That’s why free agency matters so much for the Wizards. If they move on from Anthony Gill and D’Angelo Russell, they could open up both cap space and roster spots, which would give them room to shop for a reserve big.

Marvin Bagley III is the name that keeps coming up, and for good reason. He was a 2x Wizard, improved each time he was in Washington, and his rebounding and defense would fit what this roster still needs.

If Bagley doesn’t happen, there are other routes. Walker Kessler, a restricted free agent from the Utah Jazz, would bring shot-blocking. Sandro Mamukelashvili, formerly of the Toronto Raptors, offers floor spacing and could give the Wizards a sturdier version of Vukcevic’s offensive game.

The backcourt is trickier to sort through. Trae Young is set to reclaim the starting point guard job on opening night, which leaves Tre Johnson and Bub Carrington as the only true guards behind him.

That’s part of why Russell Westbrook’s name surfaced so quickly in rumors. The doubt around fringe options like Jaden Hardy and Cam Whitmore only added to that chatter.

Still, Washington may not need another small guard clogging up the second unit. The roster already has a cluster of wings who can create, including Kyshawn George, Will Riley and Dybantsa.

That gives the Wizards a path to bigger lineups when Young sits, and it also means the young point-forwards need touches and reps of their own. The best way to do that is to let them work outside of Young’s structure instead of stuffing another ball-dominant guard into the mix.

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