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Washington Wizards regular season record (1997–present) 937 1,369 .406 All-time regular season record 2,272 2,815.447; Baltimore Bullets post-season record (1963–1973) 19 34 .358 Capital / Washington Bullets post-season record (1973–1997) 50 63 .442 Washington Wizards post-season record (1997–present) 30 41 .423 All-time post-season ...
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.
The 2024–25 Washington Wizards season is the 64th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and 51st in the Washington, D.C. area. On May 29, 2024, the Washington Wizards hired Brian Keefe as their full-time head coach.
The new CBA incentivizes teams to call up their best prospects quicker, which end up as a positive for team, player, and fan interest, a rare alignment of all three.
Washington rookie Carlton Carrington was taken off the court in a wheelchair on Monday night after he went down with a scary head injury in the Wizards' game against the New York Knicks.
Jordan's return to the NBA also helped raise popularity, and media attention for the Wizards, as they finished second in the league in home-game attendance behind the San Antonio Spurs, with an attendance of 847,634; the team sold out all 41 of their home games at the MCI Center, and 38 of their road games during the regular season. [47] [48 ...
When Don Zminda was the statistician for ESPN's Sunday Night Baseball in the 1990s, he spent most of his Sundays calculating reams of data that were written onto a stack of note cards for ...
The following is a list of players of the 1997–present Washington Wizards professional American basketball team. Before the 1997–98 season the Wizards were known as the Chicago Packers (1961–1962), Chicago Zephyrs (1962–1963), Baltimore Bullets (1963–1973), Capital Bullets (1973–1974), and the Washington Bullets (1974–1997).