Hubbry Logo
Washington WizardsWashington WizardsMain
Open search
Washington Wizards
Community hub
Washington Wizards
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Washington Wizards
Washington Wizards
from Wikipedia

The Washington Wizards are an American professional basketball team based in Washington, D.C. The Wizards compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference. The team plays its home games at Capital One Arena, in the Chinatown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. an arena they share with the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League (NHL) and the Georgetown University men's basketball team. The team is owned by Ted Leonsis through Monumental Sports & Entertainment.

Key Information

The franchise was established in 1961 as the Chicago Packers in Chicago, Illinois; they were renamed the Chicago Zephyrs in the following season. In 1963, they moved to Baltimore, Maryland, and became the Baltimore Bullets, taking the name from a previous team of the same name. In 1973, the team moved to the Washington metropolitan area and changed its name first to the Capital Bullets, then the following season to Washington Bullets. In 1997, they rebranded themselves as the Wizards.

The Wizards have played in four NBA Finals; they won in 1978. They have appeared in 28 playoffs, won four conference titles (1971, 1975, 1978, 1979), and won eight division titles (1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1979, 2017). Their best season record, in 1975, was 60–22. Wes Unseld is the only player in franchise history to be named NBA MVP (1969) and Finals MVP (1978). Four players (Walt Bellamy, Terry Dischinger, Earl Monroe, and Unseld) have won the Rookie of the Year award.

History

[edit]

Team creation

[edit]
Bellamy (No. 8) averaged 31.6 points per game and 19.0 rebounds per game during his rookie season

The Wizards began playing as the Chicago Packers in 1961, as the NBA's first expansion team, an expansion prompted by Abe Saperstein's American Basketball League. Rookie Walt Bellamy was the team's star, averaging 31.6 points per game, 19.0 rebounds per game, and leading the NBA in field goal percentage. During the All-Star Game, Bellamy represented the team while scoring 23 points and grabbing 17 rebounds. Bellamy was named the league Rookie of the Year,[7] but the team finished with the NBA's worst record at 18–62.[8]

The team's original name was a reference to Chicago's meatpacking industry; their home arena, the International Amphitheater, was next door to the Union Stock Yards. However, it was extremely unpopular since it was the same name used by the NFL's Green Bay Packers, bitter rivals of the Chicago Bears. After only one year, the organization changed its name to the Chicago Zephyrs and played its home games at the Chicago Coliseum (Saperstein's ABL Majors prevented the team from playing in the larger Chicago Stadium). In their only season as the Zephyrs, former Purdue star Terry Dischinger was on the roster, and went on to win Rookie of the Year honors.[9] In 1963 the franchise moved to Baltimore, Maryland, and became the Baltimore Bullets, taking their name from a 1940s–1950s Baltimore Bullets BAA/NBA franchise and playing their home games at the Baltimore Civic Center. The NBA returned to Chicago in 1966 when the Chicago Bulls began play. In their first year in Baltimore, the Bullets finished fourth in a five–team Western Division.[10]

Prior to the 1964–65 season the Bullets pulled off a blockbuster trade, sending Dischinger, Rod Thorn and Don Kojis to the Detroit Pistons for Bailey Howell, Don Ohl, Bob Ferry and Wali Jones.[11] The trade worked out well; Howell proved to be a hustler and a fundamentally sound player. He helped the Bullets reach the playoffs for the first time in franchise history. In the 1965 NBA playoffs, the Bullets stunned the St. Louis Hawks 3–1, and advanced to the Western Conference finals.[12] In the finals, Baltimore managed to split the first four games with the Los Angeles Lakers before losing the series 4–2.[13]

Within the first two months of that season, the Bullets were purchased from original franchise managing partner Dave Trager by Abe Pollin, Earl Foreman and real estate investor and former NBA referee Arnold Heft for $1.1 million, on November 23, 1964.[14][15]

1967–1981: The Wes Unseld era

[edit]
Wes Unseld, who won the NBA Rookie of the Year, NBA Regular Season MVP, and NBA Finals MVP awards, played all 13 seasons of his career with the Bullets.

In the late 1960s, the Bullets drafted two future Hall of Fame members: Earl Monroe, in the 1967 draft, number two overall, and Wes Unseld, in the following year's draft, also number two overall.[16][17] The team improved dramatically, from 36 wins the previous season to 57 in the 1968–69 season, and Unseld received both the rookie of the year and MVP awards.[18] The Bullets hosted the 1969 NBA All-Star Game and reached the playoffs with high expectations, but they were eliminated by the New York Knicks in the first round.[19] The next season the two teams met again in the first round, and although this one went to seven games, the Knicks emerged victorious again.[20]

In the 1970–71 season, the 42–40 Bullets again met the Knicks, this time though in the Eastern Conference finals. With the Knicks team captain Willis Reed injured in the finals, the injury-free Bullets took advantage of his absence, and in game seven, at New York's Madison Square Garden, the Bullets' Gus Johnson made a critical basket late in the game to lift the Bullets over the Knicks 93–91 and advance to their first NBA Finals.[21] They were swept in four games by the powerful Milwaukee Bucks led by future Hall of Fame members Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (known in 1971 as Lew Alcindor) and Oscar Robertson.[22]

Even after the trades of Earl Monroe (to the Knicks) and Gus Johnson (to the Suns), the Bullets remained a playoff contender throughout the 1970s. Following a less than spectacular 1971–72 season, Baltimore acquired Elvin Hayes from the Houston Rockets and drafted Kevin Porter in the third round of the 1972 NBA draft, out of St. Francis.[23][24]

After a slow start in 1972–73, Baltimore made their charge in December, posting a 10–4 record on the way to capturing the Central Division title for the third straight year. The Bullets again faced the Knicks in the 1973 NBA playoffs, losing for the fourth time in five series against New York.[25]

Move to Washington, D.C. area

[edit]

In February 1973, the team announced its pending move 30 miles (50 km) southwest to the Capital Centre in Landover, a Washington, D.C. suburb, and became the Capital Bullets.[26] After that 1973–74 season, they changed their geographic identifier name to the Washington Bullets.[27][28] The Bullets would return to Baltimore to play a few home games per season during the late 1980s and 1990s.[29]

During November 1973, while waiting for the completion of their new arena in Landover, the Bullets played their home games at Cole Field House on the campus of the University of Maryland in College Park. The Capital Centre (later known as the US Airways Arena) opened on December 2, 1973, with the Bullets defeating the SuperSonics.[30]

During his nine seasons with the Bullets, Elvin Hayes averaged 21.3 points per game and 12.7 rebounds per game. He led the NBA in rebounding in the 1973–74 season with an average of 18.1 rebounds per game.

The 60–22 Bullets made it back to the 1975 NBA playoffs. In the regular season, Washington posted a 36–5 home record at the Capital Centre.[31] In the first round of the playoffs, they survived a seven-game series against the Buffalo Braves as both teams won all of their games at home.[32] In the Eastern Conference finals, they beat the defending NBA champion Boston Celtics in six games to advance to the NBA Finals.[33] The Bullets were favorites to win the NBA championship, but were swept by the Al Attles-led Golden State Warriors in four games, losing games one and four at the Capital Centre.[34]

The loss at the NBA Finals lingered into the 1975–76 season, as they won 12 fewer games than last year, and in the playoffs they were eliminated by the Cleveland Cavaliers in seven games.[35] After the season, the Bullets fired head coach K.C. Jones, despite having a career 62 percent winning percentage as the Bullets head coach.[36]

In 1976–77, under new head coach Dick Motta, the Bullets again fell short of the Central Division title for the second straight year. Elvin Hayes finished sixth in the league in rebounds with 12.5 rebounds per game. After opening the 1977 NBA playoffs with a three-game series victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Bullets took a 2–1 series lead in the second round against the Houston Rockets. With a chance to take a 3–1 series lead at home, the Bullets lost 107–103, and the Rockets took the series in six games.[37]

1977–78: NBA championship season

[edit]

Although they had future hall of famers Elvin Hayes and Wes Unseld on the team, the Bullets finished the 1977–78 season 44–38 and were a longshot to win the NBA Finals, but San Antonio journalist Dan Cook used the famed phrase "It ain't over 'til the fat lady sings".[38] This became the rallying cry for the Bullets as they finished a playoff run that led to the NBA Finals, defeating the Seattle SuperSonics in seven games to bring a professional sports championship to Washington, D.C. for the first time in 36 years.[39] It remains the only NBA title won by the team as of 2025.

1978–79: Finalists

[edit]

In the 1978–79 season the Bullets moved to the Atlantic Division, capturing the title in their first season there.[40] They entered the 1979 NBA playoffs having lost eight of the final 11 games to finish the regular season at 54–28. In the playoffs the Bullets nearly blew a 3–1 series lead against the Atlanta Hawks, but managed to hold off the Hawks in seven games.[41]

In the Eastern Conference finals, they trailed the San Antonio Spurs 3–1, but they mounted a comeback by winning two straight games to force a game seven at the Capital Centre. The Bullets rallied again, overcoming a fourth–quarter deficit to beat George Gervin and the Spurs 107–105 in one of the NBA's all-time greatest games and advance to the NBA Finals and a rematch with the Seattle SuperSonics.[42]

In Game 1 of the finals, the Bullets defeated the SuperSonics, 99–97, on two game-winning free throws. They lost the next four games, and the series, to Seattle. The Bullets were the only team to play in the NBA Finals four times during the 1970s.[43]

1979–1988: Playoff disappointments

[edit]

In August 1979, the Bullets became the first NBA team to visit China, where they defeated the Bayi Rockets and the Shanghai Sharks.[44]: 156 

Age and injuries finally caught up with the Bullets. In the 1979–80 season, they barely made the playoffs as they captured the sixth and final playoff spot via a tiebreaker despite posting a 39–43 record. In the playoffs, they were swept by the Philadelphia 76ers in a two-game playoff series.[45] The following year the Bullets failed to make the playoffs for the first time in 13 years.[46] Wes Unseld retired[47] and Elvin Hayes was traded back to the Houston Rockets the following season.[48]

A ticket for a 1988–89 game between the Bullets and the Hornets.

In 1981–82, Washington played strong under the coaching of Gene Shue and Don Moran, finishing the regular season with a 43–39 record, and although they advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals in the playoffs, they had clearly lost the power of the late 1970s.[49] The 1983 Bullets continued to play with the same talent they had in the previous year. They finished with a winning record, but in a highly competitive Atlantic Division they finished last and missed the playoffs.[50]

The next two years saw the Bullets continue to play mediocre basketball as they finished with losing records but they made the playoffs in the new expanded NBA Playoffs format that involved the 16 best teams to make the playoffs; the Bullets were eliminated in both years in the first round.[51][52]

In 1985, the Bullets acquired Manute Bol in the 1985 NBA draft, whose specialty was blocking shots.[53] That year, he blocked 397 shots (a Bullets record), part of a team that blocked 716 shots (a Bullets team record).[54] However, the Bullets finished with a disappointing 39–43 record, and were eliminated by the 76ers in the first round of the NBA Playoffs.[55] The Bullets acquired center Moses Malone from the Philadelphia 76ers for center Jeff Ruland the following season for hope of improvement.[56] Malone would lead the team in scoring with a 24.1 points per game as he would be joined by Jeff Malone who averaged 22.0 points per game.[57] The Bullets' 42–40 record would be their last winning season until 1996–97. Washington was eliminated by the Detroit Pistons in three games in the playoffs.[58]

Twelfth overall in the 1987 NBA draft, the Bullets selected Muggsy Bogues, who at 5 feet 3 inches (160 cm) is the shortest player in NBA history.[59] The Bullets would get off to a slow start as coach Kevin Loughery was fired 27 games into the season with the Bullets holding an 8–19 record. To replace Loughery, the Bullets hired former MVP Wes Unseld.[60] Under Unseld, the Bullets improved as they were able to reach the playoffs again with a record of 38–44. After losing the first two games on the road in the first round of the 1988 NBA playoffs to the Detroit Pistons, the Bullets fought back and forced a fifth game with two home wins. They would lose game 5 by 21 points.[61] It would be nine seasons before Washington would return to the NBA Playoffs.

1989–1997: End of the Bullets

[edit]

The Bullets got off to a 5–1 start in 1988–89, but they lost 16 of 18 games from mid-December to mid-January. On January 6, 1989,[62] the Bullets franchise played its first regular season game in Baltimore since 1973; this would be the first of 35 regular season "home" games the Bullets played in Baltimore from 1989 to 1997.[29] They finished with a 31–51 record despite stellar seasons by Jeff Malone and Bernard King, who averaged 24.3 and 22.3 points per game respectively to lead the team.[63]

The lone highlight of the Bullets' 30-win 1990–91 season was the successful comeback effort by Bernard King as he recovered from knee surgery he suffered while playing for the Knicks in the 1984–85 season to finish third in the NBA in scoring with a 28.4 points per game.[64] In 1990, the team named Susan O'Malley as its president, the first female president of a franchise in the history of the NBA, who is the daughter of Peter O'Malley, the prominent lawyer from Maryland and former president of the Washington Capitals.[65]

The Bullets continued to struggle due to injuries and inconsistent play. They posted a 25–57 record in the 1991–92 season.[66] Pervis Ellison was named 1992 Most Improved Player of The Year, averaging 20.0 points, 11.2 rebounds, and 2.7 blocks per game. Undrafted rookie Larry Stewart became the first undrafted player in NBA history to make an All-Rookie Team, being selected to the All-Rookie Second Team.[67] The Bullets drafted Tom Gugliotta with their sixth overall pick in the 1992 NBA draft.[68] They finished the 1992–93 season with a 22–60 record.[69] Following the season, the Bullets traded Harvey Grant to the Portland Trail Blazers for former All-Star center Kevin Duckworth.[70] In 1993, the Bullets did a rap music video of their version of Naughty by Nature's rap single "Hip Hop Hooray", featuring the rap trio themselves.[71]

Injuries continued as key players Rex Chapman and Calbert Cheaney (the club's first-round draft pick) missed significant stretches, and Ellison missed almost the entire season. The result was a 24–58 record for the 1993–94 season.[72] Don MacLean was named 1994 Most Improved Player of the season, leading the Bullets with 18.2 points per game (tied with Chapman).[73]

The Bullets selected Juwan Howard in the 1994 NBA draft[74] and traded Gugliotta along with three first-round draft picks to the Golden State Warriors for the rights to Chris Webber.[75] While the season started out with promise, a shoulder injury to Chris Webber (ironically against the Warriors) caused him to miss 19 games,[76] and the Bullets struggled through the rest of the season finishing a then franchise-worst (percentage-wise) 21–61.[77] Webber averaged 20.1 points and 9.6 rebounds per game, but declined surgery for his dislocated shoulder.[78] This would prove costly for the next season. The Bullets released a holiday video, "You da Man, You da Man, that's the reason I'm a Bullets Fan!" in 1994, which featured all 12 Bullets dancing in front of the Reflecting Pool in Washington, D.C.[79][80][81]

In the Bullets' 1995–96 season Webber suffered a dislocated left shoulder in a preseason game against the Indiana Pacers on October 21, and opened the season on the injured list. He was activated on November 27, but strained his shoulder against the New York Knicks on December 29. After hoping the injury would get better with rest, Webber finally underwent surgery on Feb 1 which sidelined him for the remainder of the season.[82] The Bullets were 9–6 with Webber in the lineup as he averaged a team-high 23.7 points plus 7.6 rebounds, 5.0 assists and 1.80 steals in 37.2 minutes per game when he was able to play. Other players injured included Mark Price (who only played in seven games) and Robert Pack (31 games played out of 82). Bright spots of the season included the selection of Rasheed Wallace in the 1995 NBA draft and the All-Star play of Howard. Howard averaged a career-best 22.1 ppg and 8.1 rpg and kept the Bullets slim playoff hopes alive until the end of the season. Center Gheorghe Mureșan was named Most Improved Player of The Year, averaging 14.5 points, 9.6 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks.[83] The Bullets improved to 39–43 but just missed the playoffs for the eighth consecutive season.[84]

Washington, boasting the league's tallest player (Mureșan, whose height is 7 feet 7 inches or 231 centimetres), two very athletic forwards (Howard and Webber) and one of the league's top point guards (Rod Strickland), started the 1996–97 season at 22–24. That led to the dismissal of head coach Jim Lynam.[85] Bernie Bickerstaff, an assistant coach with the Bullets when they won their only NBA championship in 1978, was called upon to resurrect his former team.[86] The Bullets responded, winning 16 of their final 21 games to finish 44–38, their best record since 1978–79. The late surge enabled the Bullets to climb within reach of the Cleveland Cavaliers for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. In a win-or-go-home game with the Cavaliers on the season's final day, the Bullets squeezed past Cleveland 85–81 to end the franchise's longest playoff drought.[87] Whilst the Bullets were swept by the Bulls in the first round, they lost the three games by a total of 18 points.[88]

Webber led the way in scoring (20.1 ppg), rebounding (10.3) and blocks (1.9) and shot 51.8 percent from the floor to make his first All-Star team. Howard averaged 19.1 ppg and 8.0 rpg, while Strickland averaged 17.2 ppg and 1.74 spg and finished fifth in the league in assists with 8.9 per game. Mureşan dominated the middle and led the NBA in field goal percentage (.599). Washington received contributions from Calbert Cheaney (10.6 ppg) and Tracy Murray (10.0 ppg).[89]

Becoming the Wizards

[edit]
The Wizards moved to the MCI Center (later Verizon Center and then Capital One Arena) in 1997.

In November 1995, owner Abe Pollin announced he was changing the team's nickname,[90] because Bullets had acquired violent overtones that had made him increasingly uncomfortable over the years, particularly given the high homicide and crime rate in the early 1990s in Washington, D.C. The name change was widely and incorrectly believed to be related to the assassination of Pollin's longtime friend, Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.[91]

A contest was held to choose a new name and the choices were narrowed to the Dragons, Express, Stallions, Sea Dogs, and the Wizards.[92] On May 15, 1997, the Bullets officially became the Wizards. The new name generated some controversy because "wizard" is a rank in the Ku Klux Klan, and Washington has a large African American population.[92] A new logo was unveiled and the team colors were changed from the traditional red, white and blue to a lighter shade of blue, black and bronze, the same colors as the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League (NHL), also owned by Pollin and changed from red, white and blue before the 1995–96 season. Washington forward Juwan Howard sat on the committee that decided on the logo design.[93] That same year the Wizards moved to the then MCI Center (Capital One Arena), also home to the Capitals and the Georgetown Hoyas men's college basketball team.[94]

In 1998, they became the brother team to the Washington Mystics of the Women's National Basketball Association, and remained officially thus until 2005 when the Mystics were sold to Lincoln Holdings (headed by Ted Leonsis), parent company of the Capitals.[95] However, upon the purchase of the Wizards by Leonsis in 2010, the Wizards and Mystics again became sibling teams.[96]

1997–2001: Rebranded as the Wizards

[edit]

The newly named Wizards began the 1997–98 season playing five home games at the Capital Centre before moving to the new MCI Center on December 2, 1997.[94] The Wizards finished the season with a 42–40 record including four straight victories to end the season but just missed the playoffs.[97] Highlights of the season included Chris Webber leading the team in scoring (21.9 ppg) and rebounding (9.5 rpg). Strickland led the league in assists (10.5 apg) before suffering an injury near the end of the season. He was also named on the All-NBA Second Team. Tracy Murray averaged 15.1 ppg off the bench including a 50-point game against Golden State. Off-court distractions led to the trade of Webber to the Sacramento Kings for Mitch Richmond and Otis Thorpe in May 1998.[98]

The Wizards finished the lockout-shortened season of 1998–99 with a record of 18–32.[99] Mitch Richmond led the team in scoring with a 19.7 ppg average. In the 1999–2000 season, the Wizards finished with a 29–53 record.[100] Mitch Richmond led the team with 17.4 ppg. In the 2000–01 season, under newly hired coach Leonard Hamilton, 1999 NBA draft pick Richard Hamilton led the team in scoring with 18.1 ppg, but the team finished with a 19–63 record, the most losses the team had ever suffered in one season.[101]

On February 23, 2001, the Wizards were involved in a blockbuster trade days before the trading deadline. The team sent Juwan Howard, Obinna Ekezie and Calvin Booth to the Dallas Mavericks. In return, Washington received Hubert Davis, Courtney Alexander, Christian Laettner, Loy Vaught and Etan Thomas along with $3 million.[102]

2001–2003: The Michael Jordan era

[edit]
Michael Jordan served as president of basketball operations and was a minority owner.

2001–02 season

[edit]

After retiring from the Chicago Bulls in early 1999, Michael Jordan became the Washington Wizards' president of basketball operations as well as a minority owner in January 2000.[103] In September 2001, Jordan came out of retirement at age 38 to play for Washington.[104] Jordan stated that he was returning "for the love of the game".[105] Because of NBA rules, he had to divest himself of any ownership of the team.[106] Before the All-Star break, Jordan was one of only two players to average more than 25 points, 5 assists, and 5 rebounds[107] as he led the Wizards to a 26–21 record. After the All-Star break, Jordan's knee could not handle the workload of a full-season as he ended the season on the injured list,[108] and the Wizards concluded the season with a 37–45 record but could not make the Eastern Conference playoffs.[109]

2002–03 season

[edit]

Jordan announced he would return for the 2002–03 season, and this time he was determined to be equipped with reinforcements, as he traded for All-Star Jerry Stackhouse and signed budding star Larry Hughes.[110][111] Jordan even accepted a sixth-man role on the bench in order for his knee to survive the rigors of an 82-game season. A combination of numerous team injuries and uninspired play led to Jordan's return to the starting lineup, where he tried to rebound the franchise from its early-season struggles. By the end of the season, the Wizards finished with a 37–45 record once again.[112] Jordan ended the season as the only Wizard to play in all 82 games, as he averaged 20.0 points,[113] 6.9 rebounds, 3.8 assists, and 1.5 steals in 37.0 minutes per game. Jordan retired from playing for a third and final time after the season.[114]

Jordan's departure

[edit]

After the season, majority owner Pollin fired Jordan as team president, much to the shock of players, associates, and the public. Jordan felt betrayed, thinking that he would get his ownership back after his playing days ended, but Pollin justified Jordan's dismissal by noting that Jordan had detrimental effects on the team, such as benching Hughes for Tyronn Lue, making poor trades, and using the team's first-round draft pick on high schooler Kwame Brown.[115][116] The Wizards replaced Jordan's managerial role with general manager Ernie Grunfeld.[117]

2003–2010: The Gilbert Arenas era

[edit]
The Wizards G-Man, one of the team's mascots

2003–04: The arrival of Gilbert Arenas

[edit]

Without Jordan in the fold the following year, the Washington Wizards were not expected to win, and they did not. Despite the signing of future All-Star point guard Gilbert Arenas, in a move that was ironically made possible by Jordan's prior cap-clearing maneuvers as a team executive,[118] the team stumbled to a 25–57 record in the 2003–04 season.[119]

2004–05: Return to the playoffs

[edit]

In the off-season, the team traded Stackhouse, Christian Laettner, and the draft rights to Devin Harris to the Dallas Mavericks for Antawn Jamison.[120] During the regular season, the scoring trio of Arenas, Jamison and Hughes was the highest in the NBA and earned the nickname of "The Big Three". Hughes led the NBA in steals with 2.89 per game.[121] Arenas and Jamison were both named to the 2005 Eastern Conference All-Star team, marking the first time Washington had two players in the All-Star game since Jeff Malone and Moses Malone represented the Bullets in the 1987 All-Star Game.[122]

The 2004–05 season saw the team (now in the new Southeast Division) post its best regular season record in 26 years (45–37) and marked the first time the franchise had ever made the playoffs as the Wizards.[123] With a 93–82 win over the Chicago Bulls on April 13, 2005, the Wizards clinched a playoff spot for the first time since 1996–97.[124] Long-suffering fans celebrated by buying over 16,000 playoff tickets in two and a half hours the day tickets went on sale.[125] In game three of the first round against the Bulls, the Wizards won their first playoff game since 1988.[126] Adding to the "long-overdue" feeling was that game three was the first NBA playoff game to be held within Washington, D.C. city limits.[127] In the Wizards' game five victory in Chicago, Arenas hit a buzzer-beater to win the game[128] and the Wizards took their first lead in a playoff series since 1986. In game six, at the MCI Center, Jared Jeffries picked up a loose ball and went in for an uncontested tie-breaking dunk with 32 seconds left, giving the Wizards a 94–91 win and the team's first playoff series win in 23 years. They were only the 12th team in NBA history to win a playoff series after being down 0–2.[129] This playoff series victory ended the second longest streak with no postseason series wins in NBA history.

In the conference semifinals, the Wizards were swept by the Miami Heat, the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference.[130]

2005–06

[edit]
Antawn Jamison shooting a free throw in 2006 while wearing the team's gold alternate jersey.

The 2005–06 season was filled with ups and downs. During the off-season, Washington acquired Caron Butler[131] and Antonio Daniels.[132] During the regular season, the Wizards again had the best scoring trio in the NBA, this time consisting of Arenas, Jamison and Butler as the "Big Three".[133] The Wizards started the 2005–06 season at 5–1, but went on an 8–17 funk to go to 13–18 through 31 games. Then, they went 13–5 in the next eighteen games. On April 5, 2006, the team was 39–35 and looking to close in on the 45-win mark achieved the previous year, until Butler suffered a thumb sprain and the Wizards lost all five games without him.[134] Butler returned and the team pulled out their final three games, against the Pistons, Cavaliers and Bucks, all playoff-bound teams, to finish the year at 42–40 and clinch the fifth seed in the Eastern Conference. They averaged 101.7 points a game, third in the NBA and best in the East and clinched a playoff berth for the second consecutive season for the first time since 1987.[135]

Their first-round match-up with Cleveland was widely seen as the most evenly matched series in the 2006 NBA playoffs. The teams exchanged wins during the first two games in Cleveland, with game two highlighted by the Wizards holding LeBron James to 7–25 shooting from the floor while Brendan Haywood gave James a hard foul in the first quarter that many cited as the key to shaking up the rest of James's game. In game three at the Verizon Center, James hit a 4-footer on the way down with 5.7 seconds left to take the game and the series lead for the Cavs with a 97–96 win. Arenas missed a potential game-winning three-pointer on the other end to seal the win for the Cavs. Game 4 saw the Wizards heat up again, as Arenas scored 20 in the fourth quarter after claiming he changed his jersey, shorts, shoes and tights in the room and the Wizards won 106–96. Yet in games five and six, the Cavs took control of the series, both games decided by one point in overtime. In game five, despite the Wizards being down 107–100 with 1:18 to play, the team drove back and eventually tied the game on Butler's layup with 7.5 seconds remaining to send the game to overtime, where James scored with 0.9 seconds left to send the Cavs to a 121–120 win. The series returned to the Verizon Center for game six, where the game went back and forth all night. The Wizards blew a 14-point first-quarter lead, then for 24 minutes, from early in the second quarter to early in the fourth, neither team led by more than five points at any time. The Wizards blew a seven-point lead with just under five to play and needed Arenas to hit a 31-foot shot at the end of regulation to take the game to overtime. In overtime, Arenas missed two key free throws. Cleveland rebounded the ball, went downcourt and Damon Jones hit a 17-foot baseline jump shot with 4.8 seconds remaining to give the Cavs the lead for good. Butler missed a three-pointer on the other end to seal the game, and the series, for the Cavaliers.[136]

2006–07

[edit]
The Wizards in a home game against the Toronto Raptors, March 30, 2007.

The 2006–07 season started out very promisingly for the Wizards. In the off-season they signed free agents DeShawn Stevenson and Darius Songaila.[137][138] Etan Thomas beat out Haywood for the starting center job.[139] After starting the season 0–8 on the road, Washington rebounded to win 6 of 7 away from Verizon Center. After a November 4–9, Washington went 22–9 through December and January. Arenas scored a franchise-record 60 points against the Lakers on December 17.[140] He and Eddie Jordan were named player of the month and coach of the month for December, respectively. On January 3 and again on January 15, Arenas hit buzzer-beating three-pointers to beat Milwaukee and Utah.[141]

On January 30, Jamison went down with a sprained left knee in a win against Detroit.[142] Washington went 4–8 in the 12 games without him. On February 3, Songaila made his Wizards debut against the Lakers. On February 18, Eddie Jordan became the first Wizards/Bullets coach to coach in the NBA All-Star Game since Dick Motta in 1978–1979. Arenas played in his third straight All-Star game and Butler made his All-Star Game debut.[143]

On March 14, Butler went out with a knee injury that kept him out of the lineup for six games.[144] He returned for only three games until he fractured his right hand on April 1 against Milwaukee.[145] On April 4, Arenas suffered a season-ending knee injury, of the meniscus. An April 15 article in The Washington Post pointed out that with Arenas and Butler gone, the team had lost 42.3% of their offensive production, quite possibly "the most costly" loss for any team in the midst of a playoff hunt in NBA history.[146]

Despite their late-season struggles without Arenas and Butler, the Wizards still managed to make the Eastern Conference playoffs, taking the 7th seed at 41–41.[147] They were swept four games to none in a rematch of the previous year's first-round series against the Cleveland Cavaliers. Despite a depleted roster, the Wizards still managed to keep things close in every game in the series and only lost the final three games by a combined 20 points.[148] The team enjoyed their best attendance figures in the post-Jordan era with a season attendance of 753,283 (18,372 per game).[149]

2007–08

[edit]

The Wizards retained a majority of their roster from the 2006–07 season, only losing Jarvis Hayes to Detroit, Calvin Booth to the Philadelphia 76ers, and Michael Ruffin to the Milwaukee Bucks as free agents.[150][151][152] Washington signed Oleksiy Pecherov, the team's first-round pick in 2006, as well as 2007 picks Nick Young and Dominic McGuire. Etan Thomas missed the regular season after undergoing open-heart surgery.[153]

The team began the season starting 0–5, but rebounded to win six straight. After eight games, Arenas underwent surgery to repair a torn medial meniscus in his left knee,[154] as well as a microfracture surgery.[155] This was the same knee he had injured the previous year. The injury forced Arenas out for a total of 68 games. Midway through the season, Butler was forced to the sidelines for a total of 20 games with what initially was a strained hip flexor, but turned out to be a labral tear.[156] Despite all of the injuries, the Wizards managed to finish 43–39 on the regular season, good for 5th place in the Eastern Conference and a first-round playoff matchup with the Cleveland Cavaliers for the third straight season.[157] However, the Wizards lost that series in six games.[158]

2008–09

[edit]

During the off-season, Arenas signed a six-year, $111 million contract, while Jamison signed a four-year, $50 million contract.[159][160] The Wizards did not re-sign guard Roger Mason, who signed with the San Antonio Spurs. The Wizards added guards Dee Brown and Juan Dixon, and drafted JaVale McGee 18th overall[161] in the 2008 NBA Draft.

In September, Arenas underwent a third operation on his surgically repaired left knee to clean out fluid and debris, and was expected to miss at least the first month of the season.[162] The forecast came in longer than expected, as Arenas missed five months of action due to concerns about his knee, before returning on March 29, 2009.[163] In the first game of the preseason, Jamison suffered a right knee contusion, and was expected to miss the rest of the preseason.[164] Haywood announced that he would undergo surgery on his right wrist and was expected to miss four to six months.[165] The preseason marked the return of Etan Thomas who had missed all of the 2007–2008 season while recovering from open-heart surgery. The Wizards added guard Fenny Falmagne from the Dakota Wizards on August 23, 2008, who was later waived by the team after a knee injury.

Gilbert Arenas in November 2010

The Wizards opened the season on October 29 with a loss against New Jersey, and dropped fifteen of their first nineteen games. Head coach Eddie Jordan was fired on November 24 after a 1–10 start, and was replaced by interim coach Ed Tapscott.[166] On December 10, Washington acquired guards Javaris Crittenton and Mike James in a three-team deal that sent Antonio Daniels to New Orleans.[167] The team waived guard Dee Brown. They won just 14 of their first 60 games and in the end tied a franchise-worst record of 19–63.[168]

One of the few high points of the season came on February 27 when recently inaugurated President Barack Obama attended a Wizards game against the Chicago Bulls, sitting in a northeast court-side seat. The Wizards produced their second-biggest victory margin of the season with a 113–90 win; Jamison paced the side with 27 points.[169][170]

On April 2, the Wizards shut down the Cleveland Cavaliers, who came in with a record of 61–13, and ended Cleveland's franchise-best winning streak at 13.[171]

Flip Saunders reached an agreement to become the new coach of the team in mid-April 2009.[172] Despite having the second-best chance at obtaining the number one overall pick in the 2009 draft, the Wizards were randomly chosen to pick fifth overall in the NBA Draft Lottery.[173] This pick was later traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves, along with Songaila, Thomas, and Oleksiy Pecherov, in exchange for Randy Foye and Mike Miller.[174] On May 21, 2009, Wizards president Ernie Grunfeld announced that the team had named Randy Wittman and Sam Cassell as assistant coaches.[175] Then on August 11, 2009, the Wizards signed Fabricio Oberto, many weeks after he committed to signing with the team.[176]

2009–10

[edit]

In November, majority owner Abe Pollin died at the age of 85. At the time of his death, he was the longest-tenured owner in NBA history.[177] Control of the franchise passed to his widow Irene, though minority owner Ted Leonsis was known to be preparing a takeover bid.[177]

On December 24, 2009, it was revealed that Arenas had admitted to storing unloaded firearms in his locker at Verizon Center and had surrendered them to team security. In doing so, Arenas violated both NBA rules against bringing firearms into an arena and D.C. ordinances.[178] On January 1, 2010, it was reported that Arenas and teammate Javaris Crittenton had unloaded guns in the Wizards' locker room during a Christmas Eve argument regarding gambling debts resulting in Arenas's suspension.[179] Despite Stern's longstanding practice of not disciplining players until the legal process played out, he felt compelled to act when Arenas' teammates surrounded him during pregame introductions prior to a game with the Philadelphia 76ers and he pantomimed shooting them with guns made from his fingers.[180] The Wizards issued a statement condemning the players' pregame stunt as "unacceptable".[181]

On February 13, 2010, after a 17–33 record at the season's midway point, The Wizards traded Butler, Haywood, and Stevenson to the Mavericks in exchange for Josh Howard, Drew Gooden, Quinton Ross and James Singleton.[182] Three days later, the Wizards traded Antawn Jamison to the Cavaliers in exchange for Zydrunas Ilgauskas and obtained Al Thornton from the Los Angeles Clippers in a three-team deal.[183] Ilgauskas reported long enough to take a physical (to make the trade official). His contract was immediately bought out, making him a free agent.[184] On February 26, 2010, the Wizards signed Shaun Livingston to a 10-day contract.[185] With Gilbert Arenas suspended and Caron Butler and Antawn Jamison being traded, the Wizards finished the season at 26–56, posting an abysmal 9–23 record to finish the season. They were the only Southeast Division team not to make the postseason.[186]

2010–2019: The John Wall era

[edit]

2010–11: The arrival of John Wall

[edit]

Leonsis completed his takeover of the Wizards and Verizon Center in June through his newly-formed holding company, Monumental Sports & Entertainment.[187] He had previously purchased the Washington Capitals and Mystics from the Pollin family.[188] Leonsis took a fan-centric approach to running the franchise, by listening and responding to the concerns of Wizards supporters through his email and personal website.[189] He wrote a manifesto of 101 changes he hoped to implement during his ownership, including changing the team's colors back to the red, white and blue of the Bullets era, and possibly changing the team nickname back to "Bullets" as well.[189] Team president Ernie Grunfeld later confirmed that the franchise's colors would revert to red, white and blue from the 2011–12 season onwards. The team also adopted new uniforms that were very similar to the ones they wore from 1974 to 1987. Although the Wizards did not change their name to the Bullets again, they adopted a variation of the 1969–1987 Bullets logo with "wizards" spelled in all lowercase letters like the "bullets" logo was printed.[190]

Despite having only the fifth-best odds of obtaining the No. 1 pick (10.3%), the Wizards won the 2010 NBA draft lottery and selected All-American Kentucky point guard John Wall with the first overall pick.[191] Later in the off-season, the team acquired the Chicago Bulls' all-time leader in three-point field goals, Kirk Hinrich and the draft rights to forward Kevin Seraphin in exchange for the draft rights to Vladimir Veremeenko.[192]

Hyper-athletic point guard John Wall led the Wizards to 4 playoff appearances during the 2010s

In a blockbuster trade, the Wizards sent Gilbert Arenas to the Orlando Magic in return for Rashard Lewis on December 18.[193] Kirk Hinrich and Hilton Armstrong were traded to the Atlanta Hawks for Jordan Crawford, Maurice Evans, Mike Bibby, and a 2011 first-round pick that became Chris Singleton, although Mike Bibby bought out his contract after playing two games and eventually signed with the Miami Heat.[194] The Wizards finished with a 30–52 record, once again occupying the bottom of the Southeast Division.

2011–12

[edit]

After a poor start to the 2011–12 season, head coach Flip Saunders was fired and replaced by assistant Randy Wittman.[195] On March 15, the Wizards were involved in a three-way trade that sent JaVale McGee and Ronny Turiaf to the Nuggets and Nick Young to the Clippers in exchange for Nenê and Brian Cook.[196] After ending the season on a six-game win streak, the Wizards finished with a record of 20–46 (season was shortened due to the 2011 NBA Lockout) and the second-worst record in the NBA, comfortably ahead of the 7–59 Charlotte Bobcats who set an NBA record for the lowest win percentage in a season with .106. On June 20, the Wizards sent Lewis and a pick to the Hornets for Emeka Okafor and Trevor Ariza.[197]

2012–13: The arrival of Bradley Beal

[edit]

In the 2012 NBA Draft, the Wizards selected Bradley Beal and Tomáš Satoranský.[198] On July 17, 2012, the Wizards exercised the amnesty provision from the 2011 CBA to release Andray Blatche.[199] They also signed A. J. Price.[200] Then, on August 29, 2012, Martell Webster was signed to the Wizards for one year on a $1.6 million contract.[201] He played well for what he was signed for and had a .422 average for three-point shots and a .442 field goal percentage. On April 30, 2013, Jason Collins, who joined the team in February, announced his homosexuality as a member of the Wizards. His announcement made him the first openly gay member of a North American team sport.[202] The Wizards ended the season with a 33–49 record, finishing 12th in the Eastern Conference and fourth in the Southeast Division, 10 games ahead of the Orlando Magic.[203]

On May 21, 2013, the Wizards went up five spots in the NBA draft lottery to make the number three overall selection for the second year in a row.[204] They used that pick to draft Consensus All-American Otto Porter of Georgetown University.[205] On October 25, 2013, Wizards' center Emeka Okafor and a top-12 protected 2014 first-round pick were traded to the Phoenix Suns for the center Marcin Gortat, Shannon Brown, Malcolm Lee and Kendall Marshall.[206]

2013–14: Return to playoffs

[edit]
The Wizards returned to the playoffs in the 2014 season.

On February 3, 2014, the Wizards defeated the Portland Trail Blazers to improve to a 24–23 record. The win marked the first time the team had held a winning record since 2009.[207]

On April 2, 2014, the Wizards defeated the Boston Celtics by a score of 118–92 to clinch the team's first playoff berth since the 2007–08 season.[208] Led by first time All-Star John Wall, on April 29, 2014, the Wizards defeated the Chicago Bulls in game 5 of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals by a score of 75–69 to win the series 4–1. This was the Wizards first series victory since the 2005 NBA playoffs when they defeated the same team in 6 games.[209] The Wizards advanced to the Eastern Conference semi-finals against the Indiana Pacers. The Wizards won game one 102–96. In Game 2, the Wizards lost a 19-point second-half lead, as they dropped the game 88–82. After being routed by Indiana in game three 85–63, they also lost game four 95–92. They showed grit and determination as they staved off elimination with a 102–79 game five win. They were behind most of game 6, but battled back to take the lead late in the game. However, Indiana closed out the series with a 93–80 win.[210] Trevor Ariza would leave in the off-season.[211]

2014–15

[edit]
Bradley Beal in 2013

After the departure of Trevor Ariza, the Wizards signed veteran small forward Paul Pierce to a two-year contract.[212] Pierce's veteran leadership proved to be a major factor on and off the court in the team's improvement. On November 12, 2014, the Wizards defeated the Detroit Pistons 107–103, extending their record to 6–2 for the first time since the 1975–76 season.[213] The following game three days later, the Wizards defeated the Orlando Magic 98–93 as they won their third straight and moved to 7–2, their best start since opening 7–1 during the 1974–75 season.[214] With a 104–96 win over the Los Angeles Clippers on December 12, the Wizards moved to an 11–2 record at home to start the season for the first time in franchise history.[215] They would struggle throughout the later months of the season but the Washington Wizards would finish the season with a 46–36 record, their best record since the 1978–1979 season.[216] They played the Toronto Raptors in the first round of the NBA Playoffs and won in four games, marking their first sweep in franchise history.[217] Following the victory over Toronto, the Wizards next had to play the top-seeded Atlanta Hawks. The Wizards managed to take the first game in the series, but suffered the loss of Wall due to a fractured wrist.[218] Although small forward Paul Pierce made several big shots throughout the series, the loss of Wall proved too much, and Atlanta took the series in six games.[219]

2015–16

[edit]

However, the 2015–16 season was much less successful. The Wizards finished 10th in the Eastern Conference with a 41–41 record, and missed the playoffs.[220] On April 13, 2016, the Wizards fired head coach Randy Wittman.[221][222]

On April 21, 2016, Scott Brooks, the former head coach of the Oklahoma City Thunder, agreed to a five-year, $35 million deal to be the head coach of the Wizards.[223] On September 8, 2016, the team unveiled new alternative jerseys.[224] From 2015 on, their logo was the "monument ball" with "Navy Blue, Red, Silver, White" colors.[225] In October 2016, they were ranked 93rd of 122 worst franchises in major sports by Ultimate Standings.[226]

Scott Brooks served as head coach from 2016 to 2021.

2016–17

[edit]

The 2016–17 season would prove to be the most successful in recent Wizards history, following a 49–33 record and winning the Southeast Division for the first time since 1979.[227] This came off the breakout of Bradley Beal who averaged a then career-high 23.1 points. Beal's rise matched the continued All-Star play of John Wall who averaged career highs in points and assists with 23.1 and 10.7, respectively, earning him an All-NBA team spot.[228]

Despite starting the season 1–5, the Wizards would defeat the Boston Celtics 118–93 on November 9.[229] After mediocre play through much of the early part of the season, after December the Wizards would turn their season around, holding a record of 34–21 at the All-Star break. The Wizards finished the season 49–33, their highest win total since 1979.

In the first round of the playoffs the 4-seed Wizards were matched against the 5-seed Atlanta Hawks. After winning the first two games at home, the Wizards struggled on the road as the Hawks tied the series 2–2. The Wizards went on to win the next two games to close out the series at home behind stellar play from their backcourt of Wall and Beal who dropped a combined 73 points in the closeout Game 6 win.[230]

In the second round, the Wizards faced the first-seeded Boston Celtics. They would go on to lose the series in 7 games.[231]

2017–18

[edit]

For the 2017–18 season, the Wizards would play their next season in the newly named Capital One Arena.[232][233] The Wizards finished with a 43–39 record, which was good for the 8th seed, but lost the first round in six games to the top-seeded Toronto Raptors.[234] Bradley Beal made his first All-Star team this season along with John Wall, who made his fifth in a row and last.

2018–19

[edit]

In the off-season, the Wizards picked up Thomas Bryant off waivers and Troy Brown in the draft with the 15th pick in the 2018 NBA draft.[235] Despite Bryant becoming a valuable asset and Bradley Beal having a career season, the season would end up being an underwhelming one full of turmoil and on-court troubles. The Wizards also went through injuries, including Dwight Howard playing 9 games before missing the rest of the season due to back problems and losing John Wall who underwent a season-ending surgery on his left Achilles which he injured while recovering from a previous injury,[236] while trading Kelly Oubre Jr., Otto Porter Jr., and Markieff Morris at the same time.[237][238][239] As a result, the Wizards would miss the playoffs for the first time since the 2015–16 season. Bradley Beal made his second All-Star Team.

2019–20

[edit]

In April 2019, the Wizards fired general manager Ernie Grunfeld, who had been with the team since 2003, with Tommy Sheppard taking over as interim general manager until being officially hired fulltime in July 2019.[240][241] Alongside other front office moves, the Wizards selected Japanese player Rui Hachimura with their 9th pick in the 2019 NBA draft, as well as acquiring the Philadelphia 76ers' draft rights to 42nd pick Admiral Schofield in a trade.[242]

Following the suspension of the 2019–20 NBA season, the Wizards were one of the 22 teams invited to the NBA Bubble to participate in the final eight games of the regular season,[243] where the Wizards went 1–7 and missed the playoffs.

2019–2023: The Bradley Beal era

[edit]
Bradley Beal in 2019

In December 2020, the Wizards traded John Wall and a first-round draft pick to the Houston Rockets for Russell Westbrook.[244][245]

In the 2020 NBA draft, the Wizards drafted Deni Avdija and Vít Krejčí;[246] Krejčí's draft rights were later traded to the Oklahoma City Thunder for the rights to Cassius Winston.[247] Avdija fractured his ankle in April 2021, effectively ending his season.[248] Bradley Beal had a career season, making All-NBA Third Team for the first time of his career. Russell Westbrook averaged a triple double for the fourth time in his career, despite not making the All-Star team.

The Wizards returned to the playoffs this season, but were defeated by the Philadelphia 76ers in five games.

On June 16, 2021, Brooks and the Wizards agreed to part ways after not being able to agree to a new contract.[249]

On August 6, 2021, Washington Wizards traded Russell Westbrook, 2024 second-round pick and 2028 second-round pick to the Los Angeles Lakers for Kyle Kuzma, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Montrezl Harrell.[250]

After a hot start to the season, the Wizards record slowly slipped. Notable losses include a 35-point lead blown to the Clippers and a loss to the 76ers which started a fight between Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Montrezl Harrell. The Wizard's woes continued as a wrist injury that required surgery kept the team's scoring leader, Beal, out for the remainder of the season.

The trade deadline of the 2021–22 season saw a major roster change. The Wizards acquired All-Star Kristaps Porziņģis in a trade for Spencer Dinwiddie and Davis Bertans, a sharpshooter whose 5-year, $80 million contract yielded lackluster results during his time in Washington.[251]

On April 19, 2023, after a consecutive season of 35-47 and missing the playoffs, the Wizards fired GM Tommy Sheppard.[252]

2023–present: Rebuild

[edit]
Kyle Kuzma joined the team in 2021

During the off-season of the 2023–24 season, the Wizards started a rebuild, trading their franchise player Bradley Beal to the Phoenix Suns for a 12-time All Star Chris Paul and traded Porziņģis to the Celtics in a three-team trade for Tyus Jones, Danilo Gallinari, Mike Muscala and draft picks. Chris Paul was then traded to the Warriors for Patrick Baldwin Jr., Jordan Poole, draft picks and cash considerations.

On January 26, 2024, head coach Wes Unseld Jr. was fired and replaced by assistant coach Brian Keefe for the rest of the season. During February, the Wizards became just the 15th team in NBA history to go winless for a month. The Wizards finished with a record of 15–67, led in scoring by Kyle Kuzma with 22.2 points per game, his career high, in 70 games.

2024–25: Arrival of Alex Sarr

[edit]

On June 26, 2024, the Wizards drafted Alex Sarr from France in the NBA draft with the second overall pick. They also acquired the fourteenth pick in the draft, Carlton Carrington as well as 2023 Sixth Man of The Year Malcolm Brogdon and future first round picks for Deni Avdija.[253] Brian Keefe was also promoted from Interim Coach to full-time Head Coach.

Season-by-season record

[edit]

List of the last five seasons completed by the Wizards. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Washington Wizards seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage

Season GP W L W–L% Finish Playoffs
2020–21 72 34 38 .472 3rd, Southeast Lost in first round, 1–4 (76ers)
2021–22 82 35 47 .427 4th, Southeast Did not qualify
2022–23 82 35 47 .427 3rd, Southeast Did not qualify
2023–24 82 15 67 .183 5th, Southeast Did not qualify
2024–25 82 18 64 .220 5th, Southeast Did not qualify

Team name, logos and uniforms

[edit]
Washington Wizards G-Wiz, current team mascot

After moving from Chicago in 1963, the Baltimore Bullets originally went with a blue and orange scheme, which matched the city's Orioles baseball team (orange) and Colts football team (blue). The Bullets initially wore blue and white uniforms with orange trim, but in the early 1970s, orange supplanted blue as the primary color. During this era, the Bullets also wore unconventional uniforms, featuring three thick stripes which ran from the right leg up to the left side of the jersey. Beginning with the 1973–74 season, coinciding with the team's move to Landover, Maryland, to become the Capital Bullets, they changed their colors to red, white and blue to match the American flag. Those uniforms also featured large horizontal stripes on the chest of the jerseys, and three stars on the side panels of the shorts. The uniforms were kept when they changed their location identifier a year later to the Washington Bullets.[254]

The Bullets kept the "Stars and Stripes" uniform until 1987, although they made a minor adjustment prior to the 1985–86 season with additional thin stripes, the "Bullets" logo on the right leg, and thin shorts stripes replacing the three stars. In 1987, the Bullets changed their logo and uniforms, going with red uniforms on the road and white uniforms at home. With the exception of a switch to block lettering and numbers before the 1990–91 season (switching over from the Serpentine font used for both elements, with the player name on back rendered in lower case as well), the Bullets kept these uniforms until 1997.

In 1997, the team owner, Abe Pollin, decided to change the club's nickname from "Bullets" to "Wizards". The reasoning behind the name change was because Pollin did not want the team's name to continue to be associated with any violent connotations.[255] The name change also included new logos, colors and uniforms, coinciding with the team's move to the new MCI Center (now Capital One Arena); though they would not play in the new arena until December 2, during which they played their first few home dates at the USAir Arena. The new team's colors were blue, bronze and black, the same colors used by the Capitals which they first unveiled two years earlier. The primary logo depicted a wizard conjuring a basketball with a quarter moon. In 2007, the Wizards made minor modifications on their team jerseys and logos. To accommodate the gold–black alternate jerseys they introduced the previous season along with the design change on the Verizon Center floor, they changed their secondary team colors from bronze to metallic gold, and the player's name on the back of the jersey was changed from white and blue with bronze trim to gold (blue on home uniforms) with a change in lettering; the road uniform name lettering changed back to white with gold trim before the 2010–11 season.

The old Washington Wizards Logo from 2011-2015.
The current wordmark for the Wizards

On May 10, 2011, the Wizards unveiled a new color scheme, uniforms, and logo. David Safren, Pat Sullivan, and Michael Glazer were the product designers for the new jerseys which include the Washington Monument as an alternate logo. The team of product designers was led by Jessie Caples, who made most of the design decisions. James Pinder was also an essential part of the team, as he helped to engineer the jerseys to meet the players' standards. The team reverted to its traditional red, white and blue colors, which are the colors of the U.S. flag. The uniforms are based very closely on those worn from 1973 to 1987, during the team's glory years. Leonsis said the throwback to the old Bullets' uniforms was intentional; the only difference between those uniforms and the current ones is the team name on the jerseys. The colors were also used by Leonsis' other franchises, the Capitals and the Mystics, who adopted those colors in 2007 and 2011, respectively. Another Washington-based team, baseball's Washington Nationals, also use this scheme; the Washington Commanders (burgundy and gold) and D.C. United (red and black) are currently the city's only professional sports teams not to adopt the red, white and blue scheme.[3]

On July 23, 2014, the Wizards unveiled a new alternate uniform. The uniform was similar to the club's road set, with the navy and red colors switched, so that navy was the predominant color instead of red.[256]

The Wizards in their alternate white uniforms in a 2017 playoff game against the Celtics

On April 15, 2015, the Wizards unveiled a new primary logo. The new logo features the Washington Monument ball logo set in a roundel, with the striping pattern from the team's uniforms, three stars (each representing Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia, similar to that of the NHL's Capitals), and the team's wordmarks.[257][258] The team also said it would immediately discontinue the use of the wizard-partial moon logo, which had been used since 1997.

On September 30, 2015, the Wizards unveiled a new alternate uniform. Called the "Baltimore Pride" uniform, the uniform was intended to be worn for six select games during the Wizards' 2015–16 season.[259]

On September 8, 2016, the Wizards released a second white uniform to honor the United States Armed Forces. The side stripes pay homage to the American flag.[260]

The Wizards in their white "City" uniforms during a 2018 playoff game against Toronto.

The Wizards kept their existing uniforms (minus the two alternate uniforms) when Nike took over as uniform supplier in 2017. Along with the white "Association", red "Icon" and navy "Statement" uniforms, a "City" uniform was also released as part of the collection. The 2017–18 "City" uniform featured a white base, "The District of Columbia" wordmark in navy and numbers in white. The uniform paid tribute to the Washington Monument.[261] The "City" uniform for 2018–19 was similar to the previous set, but with a black base, white letters and orange trim. The uniform paid homage to the National Mall at night.[262] A red version of the 2017–18 "City" uniform served as the team's "Earned" uniform, which was a reward for making the 2018 playoffs.[263]

Prior to the 2019–20 season, the navy "Statement" uniform received a minor adjustment as the city name was replaced with "The District of Columbia" wordmark previously used on the team's "City" uniforms.[264]

For the Wizards' 2019–20 "City" uniform, they brought back the white alternate uniform design worn in the 2016–17 season, but with the "dc" alternate logo in front and red numbers.[265] The same design was carried over to the 2020–21 "City" uniform, but with a grey base.

In the 2021–22 season, the Wizards were one of 27 teams to wear mashup "City" uniforms in commemoration of the NBA's 75th anniversary. This uniform featured a lighter blue base and red stripes (a nod to the 1973–1985 Bullets uniforms), gold trim and stylized uniform numbers (acknowledging the 1997–2011 Wizards uniforms), the stylized "Washington" typeface (like the present-day uniforms), and a tribute to the recently deceased Wes Unseld along the jock tag. Three mashup logos were also added. The alternate, "Monument", logo on the waist was altered to feature the throwback ball from the 1973–1987 Bullets logo, while the logos on the shorts feature the alternate "dc" logo in the shape of the Bullets logo, and the "DMV" logo modeled after the alternate 1997–2011 Wizards' "dc" logo.[266]

The 2022–23 "City" uniform was unveiled alongside the Washington Nationals' "City Connect" uniform; both the NBA and Major League Baseball currently have uniform deals with Nike. This uniform, which is predominantly pink with blue accents, pays homage to the cherry blossoms which permeate Washington, D.C. in the spring.[267]

The "City" uniform used for the 2023–24 season featured a black and anthracite base with red, bronze and patina accents. The uniform was a nod to the history of Washington, D.C. with blackletter lettering based on the original prints used in the 1700s, three red stars representing the capital flag, red diagonal stripes representing the original map of the district, and boundary stones represented by the bronze and patina gradients.[268]

Ahead of the 2024–25 season, the Wizards changed their "Statement" uniform, taking cues from the Washington, D.C. flag with three red stars and two thick red stripes. "The District of Columbia" wordmark remained on the uniforms, with the only white elements being on the numbers and letters.[269] Their "City" uniform for the season kept last year's blackletter lettering but with a hydrogen blue base, red letters and blue trim. The uniform was nicknamed the "Beyond Boundaries" uniform.[270]

The 2025–26 "City" uniform brought back the template of the 2021–22 "City" uniform, but with gold and black elements inspired by the team's 2006–2009 alternate uniform.[271]

Home arenas

[edit]

In December 2023, Monumental Sports & Entertainment founder and team owner Ted Leonsis engaged in a non-binding partnership with Virginia governor Glenn Youngkin to move the Wizards and Washington Capitals to a planned arena in Potomac Yard in Alexandria, Virginia, by 2028.[272] The structure would be part of an arts and entertainment district at the site, which would include a practice facility, restaurants, an esports venue, concert hall, and a new headquarters for Monumental.[273] In March 2024, after officials in Alexandria announced that the $2 billion entertainment and sports complex plans were scrapped, Washington, D.C. mayor Muriel Bowser announced she has signed a deal with both teams' majority owner, Ted Leonsis, to keep the Wizards and Capitals in the District "at least until 2050."[274]

Personnel

[edit]

Current roster

[edit]
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Player Height Weight DOB From
F 35 Marvin Bagley III 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 1999-03-14 Duke
F 8 Malaki Branham 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2003-05-12 Ohio State
G 7 Bub Carrington 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2005-07-21 Pittsburgh
G/F 9 Justin Champagnie 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 206 lb (93 kg) 2001-06-29 Pittsburgh
G 13 Sharife Cooper (TW) 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2001-06-11 Auburn
G 0 Bilal Coulibaly 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2004-07-26 France
F 18 Kyshawn George 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 2003-12-12 Miami (FL)
F 16 Anthony Gill 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 1992-10-17 Virginia
G 4 AJ Johnson 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 160 lb (73 kg) 2004-12-01 SoCal Academy (CA)
G 12 Tre Johnson 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2006-03-07 Texas
F 24 Corey Kispert 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 224 lb (102 kg) 1999-03-03 Gonzaga
G 3 CJ McCollum 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1991-09-19 Lehigh
F 22 Khris Middleton 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 222 lb (101 kg) 1991-08-12 Texas A&M
F 27 Will Riley 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 2006-02-10 Illinois
C 20 Alex Sarr 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2005-04-26 France
F 00 Tristan Vukčević (TW) 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 2003-03-11 Serbia
F 5 Jamir Watkins (TW) 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 2001-07-06 Florida State
F 1 Cam Whitmore 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 2004-07-08 Villanova
Head coach
Assistant(s)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) G League assignment
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Updated: October 19, 2025

Retained draft rights

[edit]

The Wizards hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA. A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[275] This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.

Draft Round Pick Player Pos. Nationality Current team Note(s) Ref
2022 2 54 Yannick Nzosa C  DR Congo Flexicar Fuenlabrada (Spain) [276]
2017 2 50 Mathias Lessort C  France Panathinaikos (Greece) Acquired as part of a multi-team trade on February 6th, 2025 [277]

Retired numbers

[edit]
Washington Wizards retired numbers
No. Player Position Tenure Retired
10 Earl Monroe G 1967–19711 December 1, 2007
11 Elvin Hayes F 1972–19812 November 20, 1981
25 Gus Johnson F 1963–19721 December 13, 1986
41 Wes Unseld C3 1968–19814 November 3, 1981
45 Phil Chenier G5 1971–19796 March 23, 2018

Notes:

  • 1 All in Baltimore
  • 2 1972–1973 in Baltimore
  • 3 Also served as coach (1987–1994)
  • 4 1968–1973 in Baltimore
  • 5 Also served as Bullets/Wizards television color analyst (1984–2017)
  • 6 1971–1973 in Baltimore
  • The NBA retired Bill Russell's No. 6 for all its member teams on August 11, 2022.[278][279]

Basketball Hall of Fame members

[edit]
Former Bullets players honored during a Wizards game in March 2012 at the Verizon Center
Washington Wizards Hall of Fame members
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
41 Wes Unseld 1 C/F 1968–1981 1988
10
33
Earl Monroe G 1967–1971 1990
11 Elvin Hayes C/F 1972–1981 1990
21 Dave Bing G 1975–1977 1990
8 Walt Bellamy 2 C 1961–1965 1993
15 Bailey Howell F/G 1964–1966 1997
4 Moses Malone C/F 1986–1988 2001
23 Michael Jordan 3 G/F 2001–2003 2009
25 Gus Johnson F/C 1963–1972 2010
50 Ralph Sampson C/C 1991 2012
30 Bernard King F 1987–1993 2013
2 Mitch Richmond G 1998–2001 2014
24 Spencer Haywood F/C 1981–1983 2015
10 Bob Dandridge F/G 1977–1981 2021
2
4
Chris Webber F/C 1994–1998 2021
30 Ben Wallace C/F 1996–1999 2021
34 Paul Pierce F 2014–2015 2021
Coaches
Name Position Tenure Inducted
21 Bobby Leonard 4 Head coach 1962–1964 2014
Contributors
Name Position Tenure Inducted
44 Rod Thorn 5 G 1963–1964 2018
Doug Collins Head coach 2001–2003 2024

Notes:

  • 1 He also coached the team in 1987–1994
  • 2 In total, Bellamy was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice – as player and as a member of the 1960 Olympic team
  • 3 In total, Jordan was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice – as player and as a member of the 1992 Olympic team
  • 4 He also played for the team from 1961 to 1963
  • 5 Thorn was inducted as a contributor[280]

FIBA Hall of Fame members

[edit]
Washington Wizards Hall of Fame members
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
10 Andrew Gaze G 1994 2013
23 Michael Jordan 1 G/F 2001–2003 2015
21 Fabricio Oberto C 2009–2010 2019

Notes:

  • 1 In total, Jordan was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame twice – as player and as a member of the 1992 Olympic team

Head coaches

[edit]

Individual records and awards

[edit]

Franchise leaders

[edit]

Bold denotes still active with team.

Italic denotes still active but not with team. Points scored (regular season) (as of the end of the 2024–25 season)[281]

  1. Elvin Hayes (15,551)
  2. Bradley Beal (15,391)
  3. Jeff Malone (11,083)
  4. John Wall (10,879)
  5. Wes Unseld (10,624)
  6. Kevin Loughery (9,833)
  7. Gus Johnson (9,781)
  8. Phil Chenier (9,778)
  9. Walt Bellamy (9,020)
  10. Gilbert Arenas (8,930)
  11. Antawn Jamison (8,736)
  12. Greg Ballard (8,706)
  13. Juwan Howard (8,530)
  14. Jack Marin (8,017)
  15. Earl Monroe (7,775)
  16. Bernard King (6,516)
  17. Kevin Grevey (6,442)
  18. Caron Butler (5,889)
  19. Jeff Ruland (5,653)
  20. Harvey Grant (5,445)

Other statistics (regular season) (as of the end of the 2024–25 season)[281]

Most minutes played
Player Minutes
Wes Unseld 35,832
Elvin Hayes 29,218
Bradley Beal 24,091
John Wall 20,545
Gus Johnson 19,723
Greg Ballard 18,687
Kevin Loughery 18,677
Phil Chenier 18,654
Jeff Malone 17,984
Juwan Howard 17,845
Most rebounds
Player Rebounds
Wes Unseld 13,769
Elvin Hayes 9,305
Gus Johnson 7,243
Walt Bellamy 5,438
Greg Ballard 4,094
Antawn Jamison 3,735
Marcin Gortat 3,697
Brendan Haywood 3,648
Juwan Howard 3,448
Jeff Ruland 3,285
Most assists
Player Assists
John Wall 5,282
Wes Unseld 3,822
Bradley Beal 2,972
Rod Strickland 2,712
Kevin Porter 2,593
Kevin Loughery 2,363
Gilbert Arenas 2,046
Frank Johnson 1,961
Michael Adams 1,844
Darrell Walker 1,707
Most three-pointers made
Player 3-pointers made
Bradley Beal 1,514
Gilbert Arenas 868
Antawn Jamison 646
Corey Kispert 579
John Wall 539
Chris Whitney 489
Otto Porter Jr. 488
Kyle Kuzma 439
Jordan Poole 419
Dāvis Bertāns 415

Individual awards

[edit]

All-NBA First Team

All-NBA Second Team

All-NBA Third Team

NBA All-Defensive First Team

NBA All-Defensive Second Team

NBA All-Rookie First Team

NBA All-Rookie Second Team

NBA All-Star weekend

[edit]

NBA All-Star Game

* Starter

NBA All-Star Game head coaches

Three-Point shootout

Slam Dunk Contest

Skills Challenge

Rookie/Rising Stars Challenge

Rookie/Rising Stars Challenge MVP

See also

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Washington Wizards are an American professional basketball team competing in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Eastern Conference's Southeast Division. Founded in 1961 as the Chicago Packers, the franchise relocated to Baltimore in 1963 and became the Bullets, then moved to Washington, D.C., in 1973, initially as the Capital Bullets before adopting the Washington Bullets name; it changed to Wizards in 1997 owing to concerns over the violent connotations of "Bullets." The team plays its home games at Capital One Arena and has earned one NBA championship, in 1978 as the Washington Bullets, when Wes Unseld earned Finals MVP honors in a victory over the Seattle SuperSonics. Notable players in franchise history include Hall of Famers Unseld, who also won NBA MVP in 1969, and , alongside later contributors such as , , , and . Despite four conference titles and eight division championships overall, the Wizards have been hampered by management missteps, including the 2001 selection of as the first overall draft pick—who failed to develop into a star—and lackluster performance under part-owner Michael Jordan's influence from 2000 to 2003. The franchise has endured prolonged mediocrity, with no Finals appearances since 1979 and a 18-64 record in the 2024-25 season preceding a rebuilding effort in 2025-26.

Franchise History

Origins and Early Years as Chicago Packers/Baltimore Bullets

The Washington Wizards franchise traces its origins to 1961, when the NBA awarded an expansion franchise to , marking the league's first significant postwar expansion. Owned by Dick Klein, a former professional player, the team was christened the Chicago Packers, drawing its name from the successful football team to capitalize on regional familiarity. The Packers played their home games at and were coached by in their debut 1961–62 season, finishing with an 18–62 record and placing fifth in the Western Division. , selected in the 1961 NBA , emerged as a standout , averaging 31.6 points and 19.0 rebounds per game en route to winning Rookie of the Year honors. Struggling with attendance and finances, the franchise rebranded as the Chicago Zephyrs for the 1962–63 season while remaining in . Under coaches Jack McMahon, who led for the first 38 games with a 12–26 record, and Slick Leonard, who coached the remainder at 13–29, the Zephyrs improved marginally to 25–55 but again finished fifth in the Western Division. Key contributors included Bellamy, who continued his dominance before being traded mid-season, and , the prior year's Rookie of the Year. Persistent economic challenges prompted owner Klein to relocate the team to , , ahead of the 1963–64 season, where it adopted the Baltimore Bullets moniker—a nod to a previous professional team in the city that had folded nearly a decade earlier. The Bullets' inaugural game in Baltimore occurred on October 16, 1963, at the Baltimore Civic Center, resulting in a 109–95 loss to the . Coached by , the team compiled a 31–49 record in 1963–64, securing fourth place in the Western Division and narrowly missing the . Subsequent seasons showed gradual progress amid roster turnover; the 1964–65 Bullets finished 37–43 under , while the 1965–66 squad, now led by , ended 31–49. By 1967–68, with as coach, Baltimore achieved a 36–46 mark, reflecting incremental stability before the arrival of transformative talent. Players like Gus Johnson, drafted in 1967, began providing defensive prowess and athleticism that hinted at future contention.

Wes Unseld Era and 1978 NBA Championship

joined the Baltimore Bullets as the second overall pick in the , immediately transforming the franchise with his rebounding prowess and court vision. In his rookie season of 1968–69, Unseld averaged 18.2 points and a league-leading 22.0 rebounds per game, earning both NBA Rookie of the Year and honors—the first player to achieve the latter as a rookie since in 1960. His outlet passing initiated fast breaks, complementing the Bullets' up-tempo style and leading the team to a 57–25 record and their first division title. Following the franchise's relocation to Washington, D.C., in 1973 and rebranding as the Washington Bullets, Unseld continued as the team's anchor, captaining them to four appearances in the 1970s (1971, 1975, 1978, and 1979). Acquired in 1972, bolstered the frontcourt alongside Unseld, forming one of the league's most formidable rebounding tandems; the pair combined for over 3,000 rebounds in the 1974–75 season alone. Under coaches like and later , the Bullets emphasized physical play and defensive tenacity, though early Finals losses to the in 1971 and in 1975 highlighted challenges against elite competition. The pinnacle came in the 1977–78 season, when the Bullets finished 44–38, securing the third seed in the Eastern Conference. They advanced past the in the first round (2–0), defeated the in the conference semifinals (4–2), and overcame the in a grueling Eastern Conference (4–2), with Unseld's rebounding proving crucial in tight games. In the against the , the series extended to seven games; after splitting the first six, the Bullets won Game 7 on June 7, 1978, by a 105–99 score in , clinching the franchise's sole . Unseld earned MVP honors, averaging 9.0 points, 11.7 rebounds, and 3.9 assists per game despite a , underscoring his leadership and resilience. Key contributions from Hayes (21.8 points, 12.1 rebounds) and reserves like Bobby Dandridge propelled the victory, marking the Bullets' triumph through collective grit over Seattle's perimeter-oriented attack led by and .

Bullets Decline and Playoff Struggles (1979-1997)

Following the 1978 NBA Championship, the Washington Bullets experienced a gradual decline marked by the aging of their core players and unsuccessful efforts to rebuild a competitive roster. In the 1978–79 season, the team achieved a strong 54–28 record, winning the Atlantic Division, but fell to the 4–1 in the , hampered by injuries to key contributors like and . The subsequent 1979–80 season saw a drop to 39–43, with a first-round playoff loss to the in three games, as Unseld transitioned toward retirement and the team struggled with depth issues. Unseld retired as a player after the 1980–81 season, during which the Bullets posted another 39–43 record and missed the playoffs, signaling the end of the championship-era nucleus that included Hayes, who was traded to the San Antonio Spurs in October 1981 for cash and a future draft pick. Under coach Gene Shue, the early 1980s featured sporadic playoff appearances amid mediocrity: a 43–39 mark in 1981–82 led to an Eastern Conference Semifinals loss to the Boston Celtics, but the team followed with non-playoff finishes in 1982–83 (42–40) and 1983–84 (35–47, though they sneaked into the playoffs as the eighth seed and lost in the first round to the Celtics). Efforts to inject youth and size included drafting Jeff Ruland in 1980 (via trade acquisition) and acquiring Manute Bol in 1985 for his league-leading shot-blocking (5.8 blocks per game that season), but Ruland's career was derailed by chronic knee injuries after averaging 17.8 points and 13.0 rebounds in 1983–84, limiting the team's interior presence. The mid-to-late 1980s brought further first-round frustrations despite additions like , signed as a in 1986, who averaged 25.8 points in his first season but could not elevate the team beyond 42–40 records and quick exits against dominant Eastern Conference foes such as the Celtics (1984–85, 1985–86) and Pistons (1986–87, 1987–88). Coaching instability ensued, with replacing Shue mid-1985–86, followed by Unseld's return as in 1988, yielding a 38–44 record and another first-round sweep by Detroit. By 1988–89, the Bullets finished 40–42 and missed the playoffs, initiating a nine-year postseason drought exacerbated by poor drafting returns—such as busts like Ledell Eackles—and trades that failed to land star talent amid competition from rebuilding rivals. The 1990s represented the nadir, with sub-.500 records dominating: from 1989–90 to 1994–95, the team compiled marks ranging from 31–51 to 21–61, the latter being the franchise's worst, due to front-office missteps under general manager John Nash, including the underutilization of drafted talents like Harvey Grant and ineffective free-agent signings. Unseld's coaching tenure ended after the 1994–95 season's 21–61 debacle, replaced by Jim Lynam, but relief came modestly in 1995–96 (39–43, no playoffs) via the emergence of 7-foot-7 center Gheorghe Mureșan. A brief resurgence occurred in 1996–97, fueled by the 1994 draft acquisitions of Juwan Howard (via selection) and Chris Webber (via trade with the Golden State Warriors for Tom Gugliotta and three first-round picks), yielding a 44–38 record and a first-round sweep by the Miami Heat, yet underscoring persistent struggles against elite teams like the Michael Jordan-led Bulls. Overall, the era's playoff woes stemmed from inadequate talent evaluation, injury proneness among anchors, and an inability to match the depth and star power of conference powers, resulting in only six postseason berths and no series wins.

Rebranding to Wizards and Initial Struggles (1997-2001)

On May 15, 1997, the franchise officially rebranded from the Washington Bullets to the Washington Wizards, a decision driven by owner Abe Pollin's concerns over the "Bullets" name's connotations of , exacerbated by high crime rates and incidents like the 1995 of Israeli Prime Minister , a personal friend of Pollin. The change, first proposed in 1994, aimed to adopt a less aggressive identity inspired by fantasy and magic, aligning with a new era symbolized by the team's move from the aging Capital Centre to the state-of-the-art MCI Center (later renamed Verizon Center and now ). This rebranding occurred ahead of the 1997–98 season, introducing new blue-and-bronze uniforms and a wizard-themed featuring a sorcerer casting a spell on a . The Wizards' first season under the new name showed initial promise, finishing with a 42–40 record under head coach —their first winning mark since 1987–88—powered by scoring from guards (17.5 points, 9.0 assists per game) and (19.7 after joining midseason). Despite the improvement from the prior year's 25–57 Bullets finish, the team placed fourth in the Atlantic Division and ninth in the Eastern Conference, missing the playoffs as the secured the final spot with 55 wins. Key contributors included forward (18.5 points, 8.0 rebounds per game), but underlying issues like inconsistent defense (allowing 103.3 ) and a lack of playoff experience foreshadowed ongoing challenges. Progress stalled in the lockout-shortened 1998–99 season, where the Wizards compiled an 18–32 record (.360 winning percentage) across 50 games, finishing sixth in the Atlantic Division under Bickerstaff (13–19) and interim coach Jim Brovelli (5–13). Forward Juwan Howard's 25-game suspension for violating the league's anti-drug policy severely hampered the frontcourt, while injuries limited Richmond to 30 games; the team ranked near in scoring defense (100.2 points allowed per game). A pivotal misstep came on February 20, 1998, when the Wizards traded promising forward to the for veteran guard , a move that exchanged youthful potential for short-term scoring but depleted long-term assets without acquiring draft picks or young talent in return. The 1999–2000 season devolved further to a 29–53 record, with midseason coaching changes from Gar Heard (14–30) to Darrell Walker (15–23), as the team struggled with Richmond's declining production due to knee injuries (14.0 points per game) and Howard's trade demands amid contract disputes. In 2000–01, the Wizards hit a low of 19–63 under rookie head coach Leonard Hamilton, losing nine of their final ten games and ranking last in the Atlantic Division; Michael Jordan assumed the role of president of basketball operations in January 2000, but early decisions like drafting Kwame Brown first overall in 2001 failed to reverse the slide, with the team posting the Eastern Conference's second-worst record. These years highlighted chronic instability, including four head coaches in five seasons, poor asset management, and an aging core unable to contend, extending the franchise's playoff drought to 24 consecutive seasons dating back to 1988.

Michael Jordan Ownership and Playing Tenure (2001-2003)

In January 2000, acquired a minority ownership stake of approximately 10% in the Washington Wizards and was appointed president of basketball operations, roles intended to revitalize the franchise amid declining attendance and poor performance. On September 25, 2001, Jordan announced his return to playing at age 38, relinquishing his front-office duties to focus on the court while retaining his ownership interest; this move aimed to boost ticket sales and team competitiveness, as the Wizards had finished with a 19-63 record the prior season. During the 2001-02 season, played in 60 games, averaging 22.9 points, 5.7 rebounds, 5.2 assists, and 1.4 steals per game while shooting 41.6% from the field, though a injury in March sidelined him for the final 22 games. The improved to a 37-45 record, going 30-30 in games featuring Jordan, but missed the playoffs; early success with a 26-21 mark before his injury highlighted his influence, yet the team faltered afterward, posting an 11-24 stretch without him. In the 2002-03 season, appeared in all 82 games at age 39-40, averaging 20.0 points, 6.1 rebounds, 3.8 assists, and 1.5 steals per game with a 44.5% field-goal percentage, earning selection to his 14th . The team again finished 37-45, showing resilience but failing to qualify for the postseason; 's scoring outbursts, including a 51-point career high with the on , 2001, underscored his enduring competitiveness despite diminished athleticism. Jordan retired for the final time on April 16, 2003, after the season finale, having donated his salary—over $4 million per year—to charitable causes for 9/11 relief and youth programs. His playing tenure elevated attendance from under 10,000 per game pre-arrival to sellouts, injecting financial stability into the franchise, though on-court results remained middling; subsequently, owner removed him from basketball operations in May 2003, and Jordan sold his stake to in 2004.

Gilbert Arenas Era (2003-2010)

joined the Washington Wizards as a on July 17, 2003, signing a six-year, $43.2 million contract after two seasons with the . In the 2003–04 season, limited to 55 games due to a , Arenas averaged 18.6 points, 4.0 assists, and 3.6 rebounds per game, but the Wizards finished with a 17–38 record in his appearances and missed the . The team's overall 25–57 mark reflected ongoing struggles, though Arenas' scoring prowess began to elevate the franchise's profile. The 2004–05 season marked a turnaround, with Arenas earning All-NBA Third Team honors while averaging 25.5 points, 5.1 assists, and 4.9 rebounds across 80 games. Supported by forward Antawn Jamison's 29.0 points per game leadership, the Wizards achieved a 45–37 record, securing their first playoff berth since 1997. In the postseason, as the Eastern Conference's fifth seed, they upset the fourth-seeded 4–2 in the first round before falling 0–4 to the in the conference semifinals. Arenas contributed 23.2 points and 5.9 assists per game in the playoffs. Acquisitions like Caron Butler in December 2004 via trade from the Miami Heat formed the core "Big Three" with Arenas and Jamison, driving consistent contention. The 2005–06 Wizards posted a 42–40 record, returning to the playoffs where they lost 2–4 to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round despite Arenas' 28.4 points and 4.9 assists per game average. Arenas repeated as All-NBA Third Team, scoring a career-high 34.3 points per game in 2006–07 alongside All-NBA Second Team selection, though injuries limited him to 72 games; the team finished 41–41 and exited in the first round again, 2–4 to the Cavaliers. Recurring injuries derailed momentum, with Arenas missing the entire 2007–08 season after three surgeries on his left knee. The Wizards slipped to 43–39 but lost in the first round to the Cavaliers 4–2. Arenas returned in 2008–09, averaging 22.4 points in 58 games, yet the team managed only 19–63 amid front-office instability following owner Abe Pollin's death. The 2009–10 season imploded with a December 2009 locker-room incident where Arenas and teammate displayed unloaded firearms amid a dispute, leading to Arenas' indefinite suspension without pay on January 6, 2010, by NBA Commissioner . Both players received 50-game suspensions, effectively ending Arenas' Wizards tenure; the team finished 26–56. Arenas was waived in July 2010.

John Wall and Bradley Beal Ascendancy (2010-2019)

The Washington Wizards selected point guard John Wall with the first overall pick in the 2010 NBA Draft, marking the start of a franchise rebuild centered on his elite speed, playmaking, and scoring ability. Wall quickly established himself as the team's cornerstone, averaging 19.0 points and 9.2 assists per game over his decade with the Wizards, while earning five consecutive All-Star selections from 2014 to 2018. The early years post-draft were marked by poor performance, with records of 20–62 in 2010–11 and 20–46 in the lockout-shortened 2011–12 season, reflecting ongoing roster deficiencies and front-office challenges despite Wall's individual promise. In 2012, the Wizards drafted shooting guard Bradley Beal third overall, forming a dynamic backcourt duo that elevated the team's competitiveness through complementary skills—Wall's penetration and vision paired with Beal's perimeter shooting and scoring versatility. Beal developed into a reliable secondary option, averaging 25 games with Wall in their rookie overlap before injuries, and the pair's synergy contributed to defensive lapses but offensive firepower. Under head coach Randy Wittman, the team improved to 29–53 in 2012–13, then broke through in 2013–14 with a 44–38 record and Southeast Division playoff berth—the franchise's first postseason appearance since 2008. They swept the Charlotte Bobcats 4–0 in the first round before falling 2–4 to the Indiana Pacers in the conference semifinals, showcasing Wall's 18.0 points and 7.8 assists per playoff game alongside emerging contributions from Beal. The duo's ascendancy peaked in the mid-2010s, with the Wizards achieving back-to-back 40-plus win seasons in 2014–15 (46–36) and 2015–16 (41–41), though a first-round sweep by the in 2015 exposed matchup issues against athletic wings. 's All-Star caliber play, including career-high averages of 23.1 points and 10.7 assists in 2016–17, propelled a franchise-best 49–33 record and Southeast Division title since 1979. That postseason, they defeated the 4–2 before a hard-fought 3–4 loss to the in the semifinals, with posting 26.0 points and 10.4 assists. Beal's growth into a 50-point scorer and (first selection in 2018) sustained momentum, as evidenced by a 43–39 mark in 2017–18, another first-round win over (4–2), and a competitive 3–4 semifinal defeat to the .
SeasonRecordPlayoff Result
2010–1120–62Did not qualify
2011–1220–46Did not qualify
2012–1329–53Did not qualify
2013–1444–38Won First Round (4–0 vs. Bobcats); Lost Conf. Semis (2–4 vs. Pacers)
2014–1546–36Lost First Round (0–4 vs. Raptors)
2015–1641–41Did not qualify
2016–1749–33Won First Round (4–2 vs. Hawks); Lost Conf. Semis (3–4 vs. Celtics)
2017–1843–39Won First Round (4–2 vs. Raptors); Lost Conf. Semis (3–4 vs. Cavaliers)
2018–1932–50Did not qualify
By 2018–19, recurring injuries to — including Achilles issues that sidelined him for the entire —contributed to a regression to 32–50 and missed , underscoring the duo's reliance on health for contention despite four playoff appearances and no deeper than conference semifinals. The Wall-Beal partnership delivered 20–17 playoff record together but highlighted systemic issues like inconsistent supporting casts and defensive vulnerabilities, preventing sustained elite status in the Eastern Conference.

Beal-Centric Period and On-Court Disappointments (2019-2023)

Following John Wall's season-ending Achilles injury in February 2019 and his subsequent trade to the on December 2, 2020, in exchange for , emerged as the Washington Wizards' primary offensive engine. Beal, who averaged 30.5 points per game during the shortened 2019-20 season, led the league in scoring but could not elevate the team beyond a 25-47 record, missing the playoffs amid defensive lapses and inconsistent supporting play from roster pieces like and Thomas Bryant. In the 2020-21 campaign, bolstered by Westbrook's arrival—who posted 11.7 points, 11.0 rebounds, and 11.7 assists per game—the Wizards improved to 34-38 and secured the eighth seed via the play-in tournament, defeating the on May 18, 2021, before advancing past the . However, they were swept 4-0 by the in the first round, with Beal averaging 32.0 points but the team struggling with a minus-10.3 net rating in the series, highlighting systemic issues in perimeter defense and rebounding. Coach , hired in June 2019, oversaw this period but departed after the season. Wes Unseld Jr. assumed head coaching duties in August 2021, inheriting a squad featuring Beal, who signed a five-year, $251 million extension on June 29, 2021, committing to the franchise despite mounting frustrations. The 2021-22 season yielded a 35-47 mark, with Beal's 31.3 points per game undermined by injuries and the midseason trade of Westbrook to the on December 2, 2021, for , , and —moves that prioritized youth but failed to yield playoff contention. Defensive inefficiencies persisted, as the Wizards ranked 25th in defensive rating at 113.5. The 2022-23 season devolved further into mediocrity, finishing 35-47 without postseason qualification, as Beal's usage rate exceeded 34% but the team's offense stagnated without adequate spacing or secondary creation. Injuries limited Beal to 53 games, averaging 23.2 points, while roster instability—including the addition and quick departure of players like —exacerbated depth problems. Analysts noted the Wizards' stagnation around Beal, with poor relative to his output (team net rating minus-4.8) signaling a need for rebuild, culminating in Beal's trade to the on June 24, 2023, for , , and multiple draft assets.

Ongoing Rebuild and Youth Development (2023-Present)

In May 2023, the Washington Wizards appointed as president of Monumental Basketball, tasking him with leading a franchise-wide rebuild following years of playoff misses and roster stagnation. Winger, previously general manager of the , restructured the front office by promoting to general manager and emphasizing asset accumulation through trades and draft capital. This shift prioritized long-term youth development over short-term contention, with the team deliberately positioning for high lottery odds by trading veterans for picks and prospects. The 2023–24 season epitomized the early rebuild phase, as the Wizards finished with a 15–67 record, the second-worst in the NBA and securing the No. 2 pick in the . Wes Unseld Jr. was fired on January 24, 2024, after a 7–36 start, with assistant Brian Keefe promoted to interim and later permanent , overseeing an 8–31 finish while prioritizing evaluation of young talent like and . Key trades included moving to the on draft night 2024 for , the No. 14 pick (used on Carlton "Bub" Carrington), and additional assets, further stocking the roster with developmental pieces. In the 2024 NBA Draft, the Wizards selected French center Alexandre Sarr second overall for his defensive versatility and athleticism, addressing frontcourt needs amid a strategy of drafting high-upside international and college prospects. They added guard Carrington at No. 14 for playmaking potential and forward Kyshawn George at No. 24 for wing depth, resulting in three first-round selections focused on athleticism and skill projection rather than immediate production. The 2024–25 season yielded a marginally improved but still dismal 18–64 record under Keefe, with the front office continuing to trade expiring contracts and veterans—such as —for draft capital and role players like —to facilitate evaluation of the core. Entering the 2025–26 season in year three of the rebuild, the Wizards' youth movement centers on Sarr's rookie-scale development, Coulibaly's perimeter growth, Carrington's point guard progression, and 2025 lottery pick Tre Johnson as a scoring guard prospect, with no timeline for contention and expectations of sustained losses to target future drafts like 2027. Winger's approach has amassed nine first-round picks from the prior three drafts, emphasizing empirical evaluation of player efficiency and fit over win totals, though critics note risks in over-relying on unproven teenagers amid league-wide parity challenges. The franchise's commitment to this path persists, with Keefe tasked to accelerate skill acquisition in a controlled environment of high draft probability.

Team Identity and Branding

Name Evolution and Associated Controversies

The franchise began as the Chicago Packers in 1961, named after the to leverage regional familiarity as an NBA . In 1962, it rebranded to the Chicago Zephyrs, reflecting a shift toward a more distinctive identity amid poor performance and low attendance. The team relocated to in 1963, adopting the Baltimore Bullets name to honor a prior local professional basketball team from the era, which had folded in 1954. Following another relocation to the , area in , the franchise briefly became the Capital Bullets for one season before settling on the Washington Bullets in , emphasizing its new geographic base while retaining the "Bullets" moniker tied to Baltimore's historical ammunition industry associations. This name persisted through the team's 1978 NBA championship and subsequent decades, becoming synonymous with franchise successes under players like and . In November 1995, owner announced plans to rename the team, citing the "violent overtones" of "Bullets" amid Washington, D.C.'s high crime rates and epidemic in the , a decision further influenced by the 1995 assassination of his friend, Israeli Prime Minister . After a public contest receiving over 10,000 submissions, "Wizards" was selected in 1996 for its non-violent, mystical connotation drawn from , with the change taking effect for the 1997–98 season. The sparked backlash from fans, players, and media, who argued it erased championship history and heritage without addressing root causes of urban violence, viewing Pollin's rationale as overly sentimental or ineffective symbolism given persistent D.C. rates exceeding 400 annually in the mid-1990s. Critics, including some franchise , contended the move prioritized personal discomfort over tradition, with "Wizards" derided as generic and disconnected from local identity, leading to merchandise boycotts and calls for reversal that continue among subsets of supporters. No earlier name changes elicited comparable , as they aligned with relocations or market adaptations rather than social signaling.

Logos, Uniforms, and Mascot

The franchise's logos have evolved alongside its name changes, beginning with the Chicago Packers' simple "Packers" script in 1961-62, followed by the Chicago Zephyrs' wind-themed emblem in 1962-63. Upon relocation to as the Bullets in 1963, the logo adopted a bullet-piercing-basketball design in red, white, and blue, which persisted through the team's move to Washington in 1974, with variations including an all-orange version from 1969 to 1971 featuring stylized "L" letters resembling firearms. The 1997 rebranding to the introduced a primary depicting a starry wizard's hat atop a resembling the , rendered in , red, white, and silver to evoke mysticism and local landmarks. This design, with minor tweaks for clarity in , remains in use, symbolizing the team's shift from a ballistic motif amid public concerns over imagery. Uniforms transitioned from the Bullets' red-dominated home jerseys with white road sets and blue piping (1974-1997) to the Wizards' primaries, red alternates, and white associations post-1997, incorporating silver accents and mystical patterns like stars and moons. A 2012 redesign refined the striping and lettering while retaining core colors, with Nike's 2017 partnership adding Statement editions in red and varied City Editions, including a 2025 gold alternate honoring the 2006-2009 alternates. The Wizards' mascot, , debuted in 1997 with the rebranding, portrayed as a blue, furry wizard figure donning a red hat with dark blue stars to align with the team's magical theme and engage arena crowds through performances and fan interactions. A secondary mascot, G-Man, joined around the same period, assisting in entertainment duties until phased out circa 2001, after which G-Wiz has served as the primary mascot for over 25 years. The franchise lacked a formal mascot during the Bullets era.

Facilities and Operations

Home Arenas and Venue History

The franchise began play as the Chicago Packers in the 1961–62 season at the in , , a multi-purpose venue with a basketball capacity of approximately 9,000 that primarily hosted livestock shows and other events. After relocating to Baltimore and becoming the Bullets in 1963, the team competed at the —later known as the —from the 1963–64 through 1972–73 seasons; this downtown arena seated about 10,000 for basketball and marked the franchise's first stable long-term venue. The Bullets shifted to the newly constructed Capital Centre in , for the 1973–74 season, with the arena opening on December 2, 1973, via a 98–96 victory over the ; boasting a capacity of 18,756 for NBA games, it hosted the team through the 1996–97 season, including the win, before demolition in 2002. Coinciding with the rebranding to Wizards ahead of the 1997–98 season, the franchise moved to the MCI Center in downtown Washington, D.C., which debuted on December 2, 1997—exactly 24 years after the Capital Centre's opening—with a Wizards win over the SuperSonics; initially seating 20,356, the arena was renamed Verizon Center in 2006 after Verizon acquired MCI and became Capital One Arena effective October 2018 under a sponsorship deal with Capital One Financial.

Training Facilities and Practice Sites

The Washington Wizards' primary training and practice facility is the MedStar Health Performance Center, a $65 million complex located in Ward 8 of Southeast Washington, D.C., on the St. Elizabeths East campus in Congress Heights. Opened in September 2018, it functions as the central hub for Monumental Basketball operations, supporting daily practices, player development, and conditioning for the Wizards alongside the WNBA's Washington Mystics and the NBA G League's Capital City Go-Go. The center includes multiple full-size basketball courts, hydrotherapy pools, cryotherapy chambers, weight training areas, and medical suites equipped for and rehabilitation, all integrated with MedStar Health's services following an expanded partnership announced on October 28, 2021. This setup replaced prior limitations where practices were largely confined to the team's home arena, now , which lacked dedicated off-site resources for year-round training and recovery. The facility's adjacency to the CareFirst Arena—home to —enables shared logistics while prioritizing Wizards' needs during the NBA season. Annual training camps, such as the 2025 edition starting September 30, are held at the Performance Center, underscoring its role in preseason preparation amid the Wizards' ongoing rebuild. For specialized events like , the team has utilized temporary venues, including a 14,000-square-foot ballroom at the Convention Center in in July 2024, but the D.C. site remains the core practice location.

Ownership, Management, and Personnel

Ownership History and Ted Leonsis Era

Abe Pollin, along with partners Earl Foreman and Arnold Heft, acquired the Baltimore Bullets franchise on November 23, 1964, for $1.1 million, marking the beginning of a 46-year tenure that shaped much of the team's modern history. Pollin assumed primary control shortly thereafter, relocating the team from Baltimore to the Washington area in 1973 by constructing the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, and later moving to downtown Washington, D.C., in 1997 with the opening of the MCI Center (renamed Verizon Center in 2006 and Capital One Arena in 2018). Under Pollin's ownership, the franchise achieved its lone NBA championship in 1978 and experienced periods of competitiveness, though financial constraints and conservative spending often limited roster depth and free-agent pursuits. Pollin retained ownership until his death on December 24, 2009, after which the estate managed the team amid a 26-56 record in the 2009-10 season. Ted Leonsis, previously the principal owner of the NHL's , completed the acquisition of the Wizards and associated assets from Pollin's estate on June 10, 2010, for approximately $310 million, establishing Monumental Sports & Entertainment as the overseeing entity. This purchase granted Leonsis majority control (44% initial stake), with him buying out remaining partners in June 2018 for $170 million to secure sole ownership of the team and arena, then valued at around $550 million combined. Leonsis's approach emphasized integrated sports and entertainment operations, including arena upgrades and media ventures, though on-court results have lagged, with no playoff series wins since 2008 and persistent rebuild cycles. In early 2024, amid negotiations over potential relocation to , Leonsis finalized a March 28 agreement with D.C. Mayor to retain the teams in the city through 2050, backed by $515 million in public incentives for renovations. This deal resolved prior tensions but drew scrutiny over taxpayer funding for private sports facilities.

General Managers and Front Office Decisions

Bob Ferry served as general manager from 1974 to 1990, the longest tenure in franchise history, during which he assembled the core roster—including trades for in 1972 (prior to his full GM role but under his scouting influence) and key drafts like —that led to the Washington Bullets' 1978 NBA championship victory over the , their only title to date. Ferry's decisions emphasized defensive-minded players and balanced scoring, contributing to four appearances in the , though the team struggled post-championship with aging talent and inconsistent drafts, finishing below .500 in nine of his final ten seasons. Following Michael Jordan's presidency of basketball operations from 2000 to 2003—which yielded a 26-56 record in 2000-01 and no playoff berths amid controversial drafts like at No. 1 overall in 2001—owner appointed as president and general manager in 2003. Grunfeld's 16-year stint (2003-2019) featured successes such as signing as a in 2003, drafting No. 1 overall in 2010 and No. 3 in 2012, and acquiring role players like Nene and via trades leveraging cap space, enabling six playoff appearances from 2014 to 2020 with -Beal as the foundation. However, failures included trading the No. 5 pick in the 2009 draft (which became via ) for Mike Miller and , both flipped after one season; extending to a five-year, $170 million max contract in 2017 that hampered flexibility due to his injuries; and missing on high-upside drafts like (No. 18, 2008) and Jan Vesely (No. 6, 2011), contributing to zero conference finals and Grunfeld's firing in April 2019 after a 32-38 start to the lockout-shortened season. Tommy Sheppard, Grunfeld's assistant since 2009, was promoted to interim GM in 2019 and full president/GM shortly after, overseeing a shift toward Beal-centric builds but yielding three sub-.500 seasons and one play-in miss in four years. Key decisions included the December 2020 trade of Wall, a 2021 first-round pick, and others to Houston for Russell Westbrook—a high-risk move for immediate contention that backfired as Westbrook averaged 11.7 assists but led to a first-round sweep and his trade the next year—while drafts like Deni Avdija (No. 9, 2020) showed promise but Corey Kispert (No. 15, 2021) underperformed relative to peers. Sheppard emphasized accountability in roster construction but was fired in April 2023 after a 35-47 record, amid criticism for failing to pivot from veteran contracts sooner. In May 2023, Monumental Sports & Entertainment hired from the as president of Monumental Basketball, granting him oversight of the Wizards' operations and initiating a full rebuild. Winger's marquee move was the June 2023 sign-and-trade of Beal to Phoenix for six unprotected first-round picks (including swaps), , and draft capital, shedding a $251 million extension and accelerating asset accumulation for youth development. Subsequent actions included trading (acquired mid-2023) for additional picks, drafting (No. 7, 2023) and Alex Sarr (No. 2, 2024), and promoting to GM, with the front office prioritizing high-character, versatile prospects over win-now veterans despite a 15-67 record in 2023-24. As of October 2025, Winger's regime has emphasized data-driven scouting and cap flexibility, though early results remain unproven with the team projected for another lottery finish.

Head Coaches and Coaching Changes

The Washington Wizards franchise, originally founded as the Chicago Packers in 1961, has had 26 head coaches through the 2024-25 season, reflecting frequent turnover amid inconsistent performance and only one NBA in 1978. Early coaches navigated expansion challenges and relocations, while later tenures emphasized player development and pushes, though the team has qualified for the in just 24 of 64 seasons. Gene holds the record for most games coached (1,027) and wins (522) in franchise history, spanning multiple stints from 1966 to 1986.
CoachYearsRegular Season (W-L)Win %Playoff (W-L)
196218-62.225-
Jack McMahon196312-26.316-
Slick Leonard1963-196444-78.361-
1965-196740-56.4175-5
Paul Seymour196638-42.4750-3
Mike Farmer19671-8.111-
1967-1986522-505.50819-36
K.C. Jones1974-1976155-91.63014-17
1977-1980185-143.56427-24
1986-198857-65.4672-6
1988-1994202-345.3692-3
1995-199782-128.390-
1997-199977-72.5170-3
Jim Brovelli19995-13.278-
200014-30.318-
200015-23.395-
200119-63.232-
Doug Collins2002-200374-90.451-
2004-2009197-224.4688-18
Ed Tapscott200918-53.254-
2010-201251-130.282-
Randy Wittman2012-2016178-199.47212-9
2017-2021183-207.46910-14
Wes Unseld Jr.2022-202477-130.372-
Brian Keefe2024-Present27-96.220-
Records compiled from franchise history; interim and partial-season coaches included where applicable. Notable coaching changes often followed poor records or strategic shifts. was hired on May 28, 1976, succeeding and leading the Bullets to the victory over the , the franchise's sole title, before resigning on May 27, 1980, amid reported internal tensions. was dismissed on January 30, 2000, after a 14-30 start in his first full season, part of early efforts under Michael Jordan's executive oversight to overhaul a perennial loser. In the 2020s rebuild, Wes Unseld Jr. transitioned from head coach to a front-office role on January 25, 2024, after a 7-36 record, with assistant Brian Keefe promoted to interim; Keefe's contract was made permanent on May 29, 2024, emphasizing youth development over immediate wins in a 15-67 finish that season. , hired in 2017, departed after the 2020-21 season without a formal firing, as the team prioritized roster retooling amid Bradley Beal's tenure. These shifts highlight a pattern of mid-season or post-season adjustments tied to win-loss thresholds below .400, though long tenures like Shue's provided stability during relocation eras from Chicago to Baltimore to Washington.

Current Roster and Key Prospects

The Washington Wizards entered the 2025-26 NBA season with a 18-player opening night roster, including three two-way contracts, emphasizing a blend of acquired via trades and a core of young players drafted in recent years. Key acquisitions during the 2025 offseason and trade deadline included guards and forwards and , traded from other teams to provide scoring and mentorship amid the rebuild. The roster's youth movement features second-year players from the 2024 draft class, such as center Alex Sarr (selected second overall), alongside holdovers like forward and guard Bub Carrington.
PositionKey PlayersExperienceNotable Details
PGBub Carrington, AJ Johnson, 1-0 yearsCarrington, a 2024 second-round pick, is projected to handle primary ball-handling duties in the rebuild.
SGTre Johnson, , Rookie-13 yearsRookie Johnson, a former standout, scored 16 points in his debut, signaling early offensive potential. adds veteran scoring after a multi-player .
SF, , Kyshawn George2-4 yearsGeorge has emerged as a breakout sophomore with strong defensive and shooting contributions in preseason.
PF, , 2-13 years, acquired via , is forecasted to lead the team in scoring based on his athleticism and prior NBA flashes. provides expiring-contract leadership.
CAlex Sarr, Tristan Vukcevic1-2 yearsSarr, the 2024 No. 2 pick, anchors the frontcourt with his 7-foot frame and defensive versatility entering his second season.
Key prospects driving the Wizards' long-term outlook include Alex Sarr, whose 7-foot-0 stature and shot-blocking ability (averaging over 1.5 blocks per game as a rookie) position him as a potential franchise cornerstone, though his offensive efficiency remains a developmental focus. Bilal Coulibaly, entering his third year, offers two-way wing potential with improved perimeter defense, evidenced by his 1.2 steals per game in limited 2024-25 minutes. Bub Carrington and Kyshawn George represent backcourt and wing upside, with George's sophomore preseason performances highlighting 3-and-D skills that exceeded initial projections. Rookies like Tre Johnson and AJ Johnson add depth to the guard prospects pool, though their impact depends on minutes allocation in a loss-heavy season projected to prioritize development over wins. Cam Whitmore, despite prior inconsistency with his former team, brings athletic scoring bursts that could accelerate if harnessed in Washington's youth-centric system.

Draft History: Successes, Failures, and Strategic Shifts

The Baltimore Bullets franchise, predecessor to the Wizards, achieved early draft success with the selection of second overall in the ; Unseld immediately transformed the team, winning Rookie of the Year, MVP, and leading the Bullets to four division titles in his first five seasons. Similarly, the 1967 draft yielded Hall of Famer at second overall, whose scoring prowess contributed to back-to-back division titles before his trade after two seasons. These picks exemplified a strategy of targeting dominant big men and scorers to build around established cores, enabling a 1978 NBA championship under Unseld's leadership. Subsequent decades featured mixed results, with successes like (12th overall, 1987), who provided elite playmaking despite his stature, and (fifth overall, 1994), an All-Star forward who anchored lineups in the mid-1990s. However, failures mounted, including the 2001 selection of first overall—the first high school player ever taken at that spot—who underperformed with career averages of 6.6 points and 5.5 rebounds, exemplifying risks in unproven prospects. Another low point came in 2011 with Jan Vesely (sixth overall), whose limited athleticism and shooting led to a quick exit after averaging 3.0 points in 66 games. Trades exacerbated issues, such as swapping the 2009 fifth overall pick (later ) for veteran , prioritizing short-term contention over foundational talent. The 2010s marked a pivot toward guard-centric rebuilding, yielding franchise cornerstones John Wall (first overall, 2010), a five-time who averaged 19.0 points and 9.0 assists to guide playoff appearances from 2014 to 2018, and (third overall, 2012), who emerged as a scoring machine with multiple 30-point seasons. This approach stabilized the franchise temporarily but faltered amid injuries and supporting cast deficiencies. Recent strategic shifts emphasize prolonged tanking for lottery odds, as seen in the post-2023 Beal trade era; the Wizards secured Alex Sarr second overall in 2024 and Tre Johnson sixth overall in 2025, focusing on high-upside wings and international prospects like (seventh overall, 2023) to cultivate a youth pipeline amid a deliberate bottom-out phase targeting sustained high picks. This contrasts earlier win-now trades, reflecting a data-driven emphasis on draft over veteran acquisitions.
YearPickPlayerOutcome
19682Success: MVP, Champion
20011Failure: Major bust
20101Success: Multiple All-Star
20116Jan VeselyFailure: Quick flop
20123Success: Scoring star
20242Alex SarrEmerging high-upside pick

Retired Numbers and Hall of Fame Contributors

The Washington Wizards franchise has retired five jersey numbers, all recognizing players from its Bullets and Washington Bullets eras, with ceremonies held at various points from 1981 to 2018. These honors reflect sustained excellence in rebounding, scoring, and defensive impact during the team's most successful periods, including its lone NBA championship in 1978.
No.PlayerPositionPrimary Years with FranchiseRetirement Date
10G1967–1971December 1, 1997
11F/C1972–1981Prior to 1997
25Gus JohnsonF1963–1972December 13, 1986
41C/F1968–1981November 3, 1981
45G1971–1979March 23, 2018
Four of these players—Monroe, Hayes, Johnson, and Unseld—have been inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, primarily for their franchise-defining performances: Unseld as the 1969 NBA MVP and 1978 Finals MVP who led the Bullets to their championship; Hayes as the all-time franchise scoring leader with 15,318 points over nine seasons; Monroe for his rookie-year scoring prowess (averaging 25.0 points per game in 1967–68); and Johnson for his rebounding (12.9 per game career with the team) and defensive tenacity. Additional Hall of Fame inductees associated with the franchise include Walt Bellamy (inducted 1993), who averaged 20.0 points and 17.0 rebounds across five early Bullets seasons from 1961–1965, and Bailey Howell (1997), a key reserve during the 1960s. Coach Dick Motta, who guided the Bullets to the 1978 title, entered as a contributor in 2014. The league-wide retirement of Bill Russell's No. 6 in 2022 also applies to the Wizards, though Russell never played for the team. No numbers from the Wizards era (post-1997 name change) have been retired, reflecting the franchise's lack of comparable sustained success since.

Records, Achievements, and Statistics

Season-by-Season Performance Records

The Washington Wizards franchise, tracing its origins to the 1961 establishment of the Chicago Packers as an NBA , has experienced varied success across its history, including one NBA championship in 1977–78 and multiple playoff appearances, though marked by prolonged periods of sub-.500 performance and rebuilds. records reflect early struggles, a competitive 1970s peak under the Baltimore and Washington Bullets names, 1980s mediocrity, 1990s decline, sporadic 2000s contention, and consistent lottery positioning since the mid-2010s amid roster turnover and injuries. Detailed records, derived from official NBA game logs and verified statistical compilations, are presented below.
SeasonTeam NameWLW/L%Division FinishConference FinishPlayoff Result
1961–62Chicago Packers1862.2255th of 5Did not qualify
1962–63Chicago Zephyrs2555.3135th of 5Did not qualify
1963–64Baltimore Bullets3149.3884th of 5Did not qualify
1964–65Baltimore Bullets3743.4633rd of 5Lost Western Division Finals
1965–66Baltimore Bullets3842.4752nd of 5Lost Western Division Semifinals
1966–67Baltimore Bullets2061.2475th of 5Did not qualify
1967–68Baltimore Bullets3646.4396th of 6Did not qualify
1968–69Baltimore Bullets5725.6951st of 7Lost Eastern Division Semifinals
1969–70Baltimore Bullets5032.6103rd of 7Lost Eastern Division Semifinals
1970–71Baltimore Bullets4240.5121st of 4Lost NBA Finals
1971–72Baltimore Bullets3844.4631st of 4Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
1972–73Baltimore Bullets5230.6341st of 4Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
1973–74Capital Bullets4735.5731st of 4Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
1974–75Washington Bullets6022.7321st of 5Lost NBA Finals
1975–76Washington Bullets4834.5852nd of 5Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
1976–77Washington Bullets4834.5852nd of 6Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
1977–78Washington Bullets4438.5372nd of 6Won NBA Finals
1978–79Washington Bullets5428.6591st of 5Lost NBA Finals
1979–80Washington Bullets3943.4763rd of 5Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1980–81Washington Bullets3943.4764th of 5Did not qualify
1981–82Washington Bullets4339.5244th of 5Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
1982–83Washington Bullets4240.5125th of 5Did not qualify
1983–84Washington Bullets3547.4275th of 5Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1984–85Washington Bullets4042.4884th of 5Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1985–86Washington Bullets3943.4763rd of 5Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1986–87Washington Bullets4240.5123rd of 5Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1987–88Washington Bullets3844.4632nd of 5Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1988–89Washington Bullets4042.4884th of 6Did not qualify
1989–90Washington Bullets3151.3784th of 6Did not qualify
1990–91Washington Bullets3052.3664th of 6Did not qualify
1991–92Washington Bullets2557.3056th of 7Did not qualify
1992–93Washington Bullets2260.2687th of 7Did not qualify
1993–94Washington Bullets2458.2937th of 7Did not qualify
1994–95Washington Bullets2161.2567th of 7Did not qualify
1995–96Washington Bullets3547.4276th of 7Did not qualify
1996–97Washington Bullets3349.4026th of 7Did not qualify
1997–98Washington Wizards4339.5244th of 7Lost Eastern Conference First Round
1998–99*Washington Wizards1832.3605th of 7Did not qualify
1999–00Washington Wizards2953.3546th of 7Did not qualify
2000–01Washington Wizards1963.2327th of 7Did not qualify
2001–02Washington Wizards3745.4515th of 7Did not qualify
2002–03Washington Wizards3745.4515th of 7Did not qualify
2003–04Washington Wizards2557.3057th of 7Did not qualify
2004–05Washington Wizards4537.5493rd of 76th of 15Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
2005–06Washington Wizards4240.5124th of 76th of 15Lost Eastern Conference First Round
2006–07Washington Wizards4141.5005th of 77th of 15Did not qualify
2007–08Washington Wizards4339.5243rd of 75th of 15Lost Eastern Conference First Round
2008–09Washington Wizards1963.2327th of 7Did not qualify
2009–10Washington Wizards2656.3177th of 7Did not qualify
2010–11Washington Wizards2062.2447th of 7Did not qualify
2011–12Washington Wizards1864.2207th of 7Did not qualify
2012–13Washington Wizards2953.3546th of 7Did not qualify
2013–14Washington Wizards4438.5372nd of 54th of 8Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
2014–15Washington Wizards4636.5611st of 54th of 8Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
2015–16Washington Wizards4141.5004th of 57th of 8Lost Eastern Conference First Round
2016–17Washington Wizards4933.5982nd of 54th of 8Lost Eastern Conference Semifinals
2017–18Washington Wizards4438.5373rd of 56th of 8Lost Eastern Conference First Round
2018–19Washington Wizards3250.3905th of 510th of 8Did not qualify
2019–20**Washington Wizards2440.3755th of 59th of 8Did not qualify
2020–21Washington Wizards3438.4724th of 58th of 8Lost Eastern Conference First Round
2021–22Washington Wizards3547.4275th of 510th of 8Did not qualify
2022–23Washington Wizards3547.4275th of 511th of 8Did not qualify
2023–24Washington Wizards1567.1835th of 513th of 8Did not qualify
*1998–99: Lockout-shortened season (50 games).
**2019–20: Season suspended March 11, 2020, due to ; record reflects games through suspension.

Franchise Statistical Leaders

The Washington Wizards franchise maintains statistical records spanning its history from the 1961–62 Chicago Packers through its rebranding as the Wizards in 1997. These leaders reflect cumulative regular-season totals achieved while playing for the franchise, with establishing dominance in scoring and blocking during his tenure with the Bullets from 1968 to 1972. Modern-era contributors like and have challenged historical marks in points and assists, respectively, amid the team's relocation and name changes. Wes Unseld's rebounding supremacy underscores the franchise's early championship pedigree in the .
RankPlayerPoints
115,551
215,391
311,083
410,879
510,624
RankPlayerRebounds
113,769
29,305
3Gus Johnson7,243
45,438
54,094
RankPlayerAssists
15,282
23,822
32,972
42,712
5Kevin Porter2,593
RankPlayerBlocks
11,558
2Charles Jones1,051
3908
4865
5557

Individual Awards and All-Star Recognitions

The Washington Wizards franchise has secured four NBA Rookie of the Year awards: in 1961–62 with the Chicago Packers, in 1962–63 with the Chicago Zephyrs, in 1967–68 with the Baltimore Bullets, and in 1968–69 with the Baltimore Bullets. Unseld stands alone as the franchise's sole NBA , earning the honor in 1969 alongside his Rookie of the Year award, a rare dual achievement matched only by in league history. He further distinguished himself with the NBA Finals award in 1978 after leading the Bullets to their only . Players from the franchise have earned All-NBA First Team selections five times: in 1975, 1977, and 1979; in 1969; and in 1969. Additional All-NBA honors include Second Team nods for (1974–75, 1976–77), (1974–75), and (2004–05, 2005–06), among others, reflecting sporadic elite individual performances amid inconsistent team success. All-Star recognitions number over 60 appearances by franchise players during their tenure with the team, underscoring periodic standout contributions from key figures. recorded the most with eight selections as a . and each earned five, Gus Johnson four, while , , and garnered three apiece; made one in 2002. These selections highlight eras of talent like the frontcourt dominance and brief 2000s and 2010s guard-led peaks, though rarely translating to sustained contention.

Controversies and Criticisms

Gilbert Arenas Gun Incident and Fallout

The incident originated on a Washington Wizards team flight in mid-December 2009, when guard and teammate argued over a from a , escalating to Arenas threatening to throw gasoline on Crittenton's car. Two days after 2009, during a team practice at the Verizon Center, Arenas brought four unloaded into the locker room and placed them on chairs in front of Crittenton's locker with a sign reading "pick one," intending it as a prank amid ongoing tension. Crittenton responded by producing his own loaded handgun, racking it, and pointing it at Arenas, prompting teammates including to intervene and de-escalate before any shots were fired. The matter surfaced publicly on January 1, 2010, after reports of the locker room confrontation reached the NBA, with D.C. police investigating potential weapons violations given the city's strict gun laws. On January 5, 2010, during a game against the , Arenas mimicked firing guns toward the Wizards' bench, drawing widespread criticism and prompting NBA Commissioner to suspend him indefinitely without pay the following day. Stern escalated the punishment on January 27, 2010, suspending both Arenas and Crittenton for the remainder of the 2009-10 season—50 games for Arenas, who had already missed time—and barring them from the playoffs, citing conduct detrimental to the league. Legally, Arenas pleaded guilty on January 25, 2010, to a charge of carrying a without a in D.C., but received a agreement avoiding jail time beyond 30 days in a served in March 2010, plus three years of and 400 hours of . Crittenton faced similar charges and was also suspended by the NBA, though his career derailed further due to subsequent legal issues unrelated to the Wizards incident. Arenas attempted to downplay as a misunderstanding over unloaded firearms stored insecurely due to licensing issues, but federal prosecutors emphasized the gravity of bringing weapons into a like the Verizon Center. For the Wizards, the amplified perceptions of organizational dysfunction, as Arenas was the franchise's highest-paid player under a six-year, $111 million contract signed in 2008, and the team was already mired in a 14-58 record that season. The NBA imposed no direct fine on the franchise beyond the players' suspensions, but the incident fueled fan disillusionment and media scrutiny, contributing to a toxic team environment that prompted further roster upheaval. Arenas returned for 17 games in the 2010-11 season before being traded to the on December 18, 2010, effectively ending his tenure as a Wizards cornerstone and marking a low point in the franchise's post-playoff era.

Management Missteps: Trades, Drafts, and Contracts

The Washington Wizards' front office has faced persistent criticism for draft selections that failed to yield foundational talent, exemplified by the when the team selected Kwame Brown as the first overall pick on June 26, 2001; Brown, a high school prospect endorsed by , averaged just 6.6 points per game over his career and provided no long-term value to the franchise. Similarly, in the , the Wizards used the sixth overall pick on Jan Vesely, who appeared in only 58 games over two seasons before returning to , and the 18th pick on Chris Singleton, whose defensive limitations and injury issues limited him to 97 games with the team. More recently, the 2022 selection of Johnny Davis at 10th overall has underperformed, with Davis averaging 3.4 points per game in limited minutes during his rookie season and struggling to secure rotation minutes thereafter. In trades, a notorious example occurred on December 3, 1998, when the Wizards sent to the in exchange for ; Webber developed into a five-time and 2001 co-MVP with the Kings, while Richmond, already 33 and declining, averaged 17.5 points per game in two injury-plagued seasons before departing. Another misstep came during Ernie Grunfeld's tenure, as the 2009 trade of and to the for and draft picks yielded minimal returns, with Howard playing just 13 games due to injuries and off-court issues before being waived. The 2023 trade of to the , which brought back , , and draft assets, has been scrutinized for absorbing Poole's inefficient production on a lucrative deal amid the Wizards' rebuild. Contract extensions have compounded these issues, notably the Wizards' commitment to with a four-year, $170 million extension in July 2017, which ballooned into a burdensome deal after Wall's Achilles injury sidelined him indefinitely and hampered trade value until its eventual buyout in 2023. The 2016 signing of Ian Mahinmi to a four-year, $64 million contract proved disastrous, as he averaged 5.2 points per game and missed significant time due to injuries, tying up cap space during a competitive window. Most critically, Bradley Beal's five-year, $251 million supermax extension signed on June 29, 2022—the NBA's first of its kind—included a no-trade that limited leverage, forcing the Wizards to accept suboptimal return in his subsequent trade and accelerating a full teardown without commensurate assets. These decisions under executives like Grunfeld (2003–2019) and Tommy Sheppard (2019–2023) contributed to a pattern of squandered opportunities, with the franchise posting a 35% win rate during Grunfeld's 16-year run.

Perceptions of Organizational Ineptitude and Rebuild Skepticism

The Washington Wizards' has faced persistent accusations of organizational ineptitude from fans and media, often summarized under the fan-generated "#SoWizards" label that critiques a pattern of self-inflicted underachievement spanning decades. This view arises from of subpar , including a of squandered draft capital and stalled development paths for prospects, which has entrenched a cycle of mediocrity rather than contention. A February 2023 analysis on Reddit highlighted the franchise's "drafting incompetence" as a core failing, pointing to repeated misses on transformative talents despite high picks, fostering a belief that management lacks the acumen to identify and nurture elite players. Skepticism toward the Wizards' latest rebuild, initiated after the June 2023 trade of and subsequent front-office overhaul, stems from prior aborted efforts that prioritized short-term patches over foundational resets, leading to consecutive seasons without playoff qualification. Owner publicly conceded these shortcomings in a June 2023 interview, noting the organization's failure to adapt and resulting in the dismissal of Tommy Sheppard after the 2022-23 campaign's disappointments. Under new team president and Will Dawkins, the emphasis on youth—via picks like (2023, No. 7 overall) and Alex Sarr (2024, No. 2 overall)—has yielded a 2024-25 record of 15-67, deemed "colossally bad" yet marginally developmental, but fans accustomed to such narratives express doubt over sustained progress. Dawkins' September 2025 admission that the rebuild remains in its "early stages" amplified fan frustration, as it dashed hopes for acceleration amid a roster averaging under 22 years old and projected to contend for the league's worst record in 2025-26. Media commentary, including an October 2025 piece, underscores this wariness, attributing it to "decades of mediocrity" and questioning whether Monumental Sports & Entertainment's approach—marked by past negligence in asset maximization—can overcome ingrained dysfunction without deeper structural reforms. Brian Keefe echoed this in October 2025, describing the rebuild's "harsh reality" as prolonged due to historical delays in committing to tanking and value extraction from veterans. While a June 2023 fan poll showed initial confidence in Winger's vision, subsequent poor on-court translation has revived doubts, with analysts forecasting ongoing Eastern Conference basement dwelling unless scouting and player evaluation improve markedly.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.