Wizards Summer League Just Answered One Big Trae Young Question

Wizards' summer squad depth shines a light on free agency prospects, as key roles and player strategies come into focus amid an evolving team dynamic.

The Washington Wizards’ Summer League group is making one thing impossible to miss: this roster has gotten a lot deeper, and the last open spot may not need to be used on another ball-dominant guard.

That’s the real backdrop here. Washington has already added Trae Young, Anthony Davis, Deandre Ayton and a returning Khris Middleton, and those moves have changed the shape of the team in a hurry.

What used to be a roster built around hand-picked young pieces now looks crowded with players who can actually demand minutes. Even on the Las Vegas sideline at UNLV’s Thomas & Mack Center, the contrast is obvious.

The Wizards still have one vacancy to fill after the trades for Ayton and Middleton, but the direction seems pretty clear. Some fans want a straightforward backup point guard behind Young. Others see the bigger picture: if Washington is serious about letting its young talent grow into real on-ball roles, then adding another player who handles the ball like Young would only get in the way.

That’s especially true because Young is still the center of the plan. He re-signed with Washington last month, and the organization is making no secret about building around him and the draft picks around him. At the same time, the team is also trying to reshape how he operates.

“We have multiple decision-makers, and we’ve talked to him about playing on and off the ball, and I think we’re going to open that up for him in a way he hasn’t been able to do in his career,” Wizards General Manager Will Dawkins said at a press conference commemorating Young’s free agency commitment.

That approach is designed to give more room to players like Kyshawn George, Tre Johnson and reigning No. 1 draft pick AJ Dybantsa. George, in particular, has already shown he can handle a featured two-way role, while Dybantsa has wasted no time looking like a franchise centerpiece in just one Summer League game.

AJ Dybantsa 27 PTS, 7 REB, 2 STL, 1 BLK, 7/18 FG, 7/8 FT, 62.7% TS vs. Jazz https://t.co/EE5tBh0ChL pic.twitter.com/8X8AqaeNwO

Dybantsa also made clear after his Summer League debut that the setup is helping him get ready for what comes next. He said, “They have Willy [Riley] playing a lot of point, so he’s like a 6'8 point guard, and Tre [Johnson] having the ball in his hands forces me to be off-ball, and they can’t help a lot,” he told Wizards On SI after his Summer League debut. “Just getting me prepared for the regular season.”

That kind of setup is exactly why Washington doesn’t appear eager to force another high-usage guard into the mix. The team seems more interested in preserving space for its young creators to learn, experiment and carry more of the scoring load themselves.

There’s also a practical side to the final roster spot. The Wizards don’t sound like a team in a rush to chase a win-now fix, even with Davis on the roster. A 15th man like Anthony Gill, for example, would fit a different need entirely - the kind of low-drama, locker-room presence and physical depth that doesn’t crowd the rotation.

For now, the message from Summer League is straightforward: Washington wants to see how its prospects respond to a more shared offensive setup, and the early returns suggest the group is already handling it well.

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For a team talking openly about contending in 2027, those details matter as much as any headline name on the roster. The idea is not just to develop players individually, but to get everyone moving in the same direction, on the court and away from it, and the next step in that process is watching how much of that togetherness actually carries over once the games start to count. [Read more 🡒]

Wizards Make Abrupt Summer League Call After Fast Start

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Now the focus shifts from evaluation to caution, with coach T.J. Sorrentine saying the club is making a change in how it handles the rest of the schedule. The next test comes against the Bulls, and Jamir Watkins is set to miss a second consecutive game as the Wizards weigh how much more they need to see from this group before the summer slate moves on. [Read more 🡒]

AJ Dybantsa Is Already Framing The Wizards' Future On Defense

AJ Dybantsa has spent his first stretch in a Wizards uniform making the kind of early impression that can shape how a franchise talks about its future. The first overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft has looked comfortable on both ends through two Summer League games, and Washingtons staff has already pointed to the defensive upside that comes with his size, length and movement. For a team trying to build something sustainable, that matters just as much as the scoring bursts.

Dybantsa has also had no shortage of veteran eyes on him along the way. During a minicamp in Las Vegas, established players including Trae Young, Anthony Davis, Deandre Ayton, Khris Middleton and Alex Sarr were among those around to help, giving the rookie a chance to absorb ideas from players who understand what it takes to stay on the floor and make an impact. The offense has been there, but the bigger question for Washington is how quickly his defense can become the kind of calling card that changes the tone around the roster. [Read more 🡒]