WASHINGTON – It was mid-November when Wizards center Marcin Gortat said his team
had “one of the worst benches in the league.”
Though you might have questioned his tact, Gortat wasn’t wrong. Through the
All-Star break, Washington had the league’s third worst bench NetRtg, just
behind the 27th-ranked bench of the 9-47 Brooklyn Nets.
Upgrades came in February. The Wizards got Ian Mahinmi back from injury, traded
for Bojan Bogdanovic, and signed Brandon Jennings. After the break, they had the
league’s 10th best bench NetRtg.
John Wall and Bradley Beal are stars. The biggest reason the Wizards finished
with a top-four record in the Eastern Conference is that their stars stayed
healthy. But those stars can’t be on the floor for 48 minutes, even in the
playoffs. Though Russell Westbrook doesn’t want to talk about it, the minutes
that a team plays without its best player(s) can be the difference between a win
and a loss. Every possession is critical.
In these playoffs, the Washington bench has again had its issues. Through the
first four games of their first-round series with the Atlanta Hawks, the Wizards
had been outscored by 35 points in 81 minutes with at least two reserves on the
floor. Mahinmi (calf strain) has been unavailable, Bogdanovic missed 11 of his
first 12 3-point attempts of the series, and Jennings got outplayed by Jose
Calderon in Game 4.
The Wizards’ starting lineup, which played 467 more minutes than any other
lineup in the regular season, has led the playoffs in minutes played. It’s a
very good lineup and the Wizards have the ability to keep either Wall or Beal on
the floor for the entire game. They can win some games with a bad bench. In
fact, they did just that in Games 1 and 2 of this series.
That wasn’t the case in Game 5 on Wednesday, though. With the series tied 2-2,
Game 5 had multiple swings and went down to the wire. The Wizards held on late
for a 103-99 victory, having done just enough defensively against Paul Millsap
(8-for-19 shooting) and having made just enough mid-range jumpers and floaters
against a sagging Atlanta defense.
And they couldn’t have done it without critical contributions from their bench.
In a game of runs, an 8-2 Wizards’ run early in the fourth quarter was huge, and
it was driven by the energy of Jennings and Bogdanovic.
With the Wizards up three, Bogdanovic grabbed an offensive rebound between two
Hawks and got to the free throw line. Less than a minute later, Jennings
stripped Calderon and took the ball the other way for a layup. And on the
Wizards’ next possession, he shook Calderon, got into the paint, and dropped the
ball off for a cutting Bogdanovic, who tossed in a circus shot on the other side
of the basket.
That bucket produced the loudest ovation of the night in the Verizon Center and
helped fuel the Wizards’ best defensive stretch of Game 5, which led to a
nine-point lead with eight minutes to go. The Hawks climbed back to within two,
but never had another chance to tie or take the lead. In fact, the last
offensive possession on which Atlanta could have tied the game was the one where
Jennings stripped Calderon with just over 10 minutes left.
“We got a couple of defensive stops,” Jennings said. “That kind of changed the
game. With John and Bradley logging so many minutes, when we are out there, we
have to take advantage. And that’s what we did tonight.”
“That’s what we have to do from the bench,” Bogdanovic added. “Brandon did a
great job of putting pressure on their point guard and we had a couple of
steals, a couple of easy buckets.”
Bogdanovic finished 14 points on just seven shots from the field, Jennings had
three assists, and the Wizards played the Hawks even in 19 minutes with at least
two reserves on the floor. They even survived a few possessions of Bogdanovic
playing the four against Millsap.
It wasn’t a convincing performance in any way or in any category for the
Wizards. But it was enough to get an important playoff win.
Every East playoff team has been flaky in its own way. Even the defending
champion Cleveland Cavaliers haven’t played anything close to 48 minutes of good
basketball. The performance of the Wizards’ bench could be the difference
between a team that struggles in the first round and one that could follow up
its first division title in 38 years with its first run to the conference finals
in the same span.
Maybe Wednesday’s performance was something to build on.
“They were all ready to play much better,” Wizards coach Scott Brooks said of
his reserves. “The defensive spark they gave us inspired our guys. When you play
hard and play for your teammates, that’s how you inspire them. And it’s
contagious.”
Stars who can carry an offense are the most important thing in today’s NBA. But
Wall and Beal can’t carry a bench that’s dead weight. On Wednesday, the load was
light enough to get the Wizards one step closer to the conference semifinals.
John Schuhmann is a staff writer for NBA.com. You can e-mail him here, find his
archive here and follow him on Twitter.
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