The Orlando Magic fought their way back from a big deficit to make it a close game with the Washington Wizards. It was just too little too late as the Magic ran out of gas.
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | T | |
Wizards | 26 | 22 | 24 | 22 | 94 |
Magic | 14 | 24 | 30 | 23 | 91 |
As shoppers were flooding the stores on Black Friday looking for steals on holiday gifts, the Orlando Magic were unable to steal a victory from the Washington Wizards as they lost 94-91 at the Amway Center on Friday.
Ugly, sloppy and unattractive are all adjectives that can describe a Magic game. At times, it could be a good thing for the Magic as they have been able to grind out wins that way. Other times, not so much.
This style of play leaves the Magic in big deficits that are insurmountable. Friday may have been one of those nights.
Yes, the Magic were able to come back and take the lead, but the team had a lot of work to do from the poor start to the game.
The game looked like it was going to be a long one for the Magic. They were down 26-7 early and looked absolutely terrible. Somehow, the Magic were able to climb back into the basketball game. Orlando was in it until the very end and eventually took its 10th loss of the season thanks to John Wall‘s playmaking brilliance and blinding speed in the final two minutes.
Slow starts have been a trend for the Magic so far this season. Time and time again the Magic have failed to put up points in the first quarter. When up against a team with John Wall and Bradley Beal, things are going to get ugly.
That is exactly what happened. Wall and company were able to take advantage of Orlando’s turnovers and missed shots for a ton of fast break points. Defensively, the Magic were not much better. The team seemed uninterested and disengaged through the first quarter and it led to Washington taking an early 26-14 lead.
Funny enough, things would change for the Magic, at least on the defensive end. The Magic were able to force more stops and it let Orlando run in transition. The team was still a problem on the offensive side. The Magic only managed 38 first-half points along with 15 turnovers. The Magic would enter the locker room down 10.
Yet again, the Magic defense was great in the third quarter. Orlando strung together stops as they slowly clawed their way back into the game. A strong quarter from Elfrid Payton and Serge Ibaka helped put the Magic in a position to win the basketball game.
Down four, as the fourth quarter opened up, it felt like the Magic could steal a win from the division rival Wizards.
The fourth quarter was full of excitement. The Magic were able to hang with the Wizards until the final minute as the Wizards were able to take a four-point lead they never gave up. Orlando almost stole one, but the team ran out of gas.