Wizards Look to Surpass Previous No. 1 Pick Success Story

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No one would ever call the Washington Wizards a particularly-lucky performer in the NBA Draft lottery reveal process, with a few recent tragedies scarring a fan base that didn't know what to do with itself when their odds finally carried them to a successful, pick-leading finish this past weekend.
Their routine lottery-draw flops go hand-in-hand with Washington's lack of franchise success over the past half-century, but those regular middling-to-unimpressive regular season finishes have no propelled the Wizards to more accumulated draft order success than any peer. This will be the seventh time they'll walk away with their choice prospect if we're lumping the Baltimore Bullets and the Chicago Zephyrs into the franchise's flexible history, and their third overall victory at the random hands of the lottery process.
And finally, the Wizards luck broke at the perfect time. Unlike the complicated 2001 class and the Kwame Brown experience that it directly led to, or even the profitable John Wall era that 2010 opened the door for, Washington has the chance to surpass any of their previous heights of the 21st century in making the right call next month.
Clearing the Benchmark
Wall, for the record, shouldn't ever be compared to Brown in any circumstances outside of the opposite ways in which this franchise could possibly handle such a gift of a pick.

He wasn't the worst player ever, contributing a decade of serviceable defense in an era defined by its bigs, but Brown's well-traveled career pales in comparison to draft classmates in Pau Gasol, Tony Parker and even former Wizards All-Star Gilbert Arenas.
Wall, meanwhile, lived up to the No. 1 pick billing as arguably the most iconic DC athlete of the past 25 years, and that was without any playoff experience beyond the postseason's second round to speak of. He notched five All-Star appearances over nine seasons in D.C., demonstrating one of the most prolific packages of athleticism, passing, defense and franchise player-caliber scoring in a 2010s decade loaded with Hall of Fame talent.
He remained a crowd favorite in Washington during his final injury-plagued years spent wandering the foreign Western Conference, eventually coming back home to represent the franchise he revitalized in this past weekend's lottery unveiling. And in a true passing-of-the-torch moment, he got to usher in yet another swing at an organization-altering draft opportunity in accepting the top slot in this summer's cycle.

Setting a New Standard
As good as Wall was, pushing the squad to three Eastern Conference semifinals appearances over four playoff berths while regularly empowering the rest of his weapons, the Wizards have a good chance to find an even better franchise face over the next month.
2026's class is loaded with potential, with AJ Dybantsa and Darryn Peterson sitting right there as the sort of go-to scorers who Washington's missed over the recent years. They already have the deferential pieces on offense and defense that Wall needed years to accumulate while rostering better veterans than the ones who the decorated point guard was exposed to as a youngster. Those blue-chippers, as well as Cameron Boozer and Caleb Wilson, could each realistically translate into routine All-Stars with all-time peaks of their own.

Finding someone to match Wall's production, let alone his promise, would be a meteoric win for a Wizards team who's spent more time away from positive relevance than just any league-wide peer. That sort of influence is who this front office is looking for, and if they're listening to the right scouts, all-new heights could await eager Washington fans.

Henry covers the Washington Wizards with prior experience as a sports reporter with The Baltimore Sun, the Capital Gazette and The Lead. A Bowie, MD native, he earned his Journalism degree at the University of Maryland.
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