AJ Dybantsa is a Washington Wizard, and to a greater extent than we’ve seen in years, it feels like the Wizards’ core is set.
Unlike many No. 1 picks, Dybantsa is not walking into a blank slate. He is joining a core of touted young players and a pair of expensive former All-Stars. The tricky thing is that, for all the talent here, there is no winning history or proof of concept with this core. It needed another piece.
Dybantsa, as a prototypical do-it-all wing scorer, is the kind of player that profiles
as a missing piece. He joins Trae Young, newly signed to a four-year, near-max contract, as the Wizards front office expected to take this team from brief, shimmering glimpses to a real, consistent, winning NBA outfit.
This is, of course, not an easy transition. The Wizards played a chaotic, ball-flies-everywhere style last season, which only faintly resembled winning basketball. Young will be expected to settle things down and run a coherent offense. Dybantsa will be told to plug as many gaps as he can — making possible both big and small lineups, defending good players, taking bail-out fallaway jumpers.
Asked ad nauseum after the draft about what he brings to the team, he seemed to recognize this. He said often that his best quality is his “ability to be versatile” and “play multiple positions, guard multiple positions.” During one interview session, he made a point of emphasizing his occasionally maligned defense.
“I’m taking pride in defense, a lot,” he said. “It was kinda nice just to be a scorer at BYU, but being 6’9” with a long wingspan, being able to switch, on ball [and] off ball, I can be a pest.” He said that Wizards brass had told him during pre-draft meetings that he should be pressing full court.
Sometimes, when a guy gets taken No. 1, the surrounding roster context is an after-thought, especially when the team just went 17-65. The Wizards are coming at this from years of lottery picks and high-profile midseason trades for Young and Anthony Davis. Dybantsa repeatedly name-dropped Young and AD and acknowledged the young core in place.
He now has the opportunity to help elevate a team that is under real pressure to figure out how to win. As it stands, this is a collection of promising raw pieces, many of which fit smoothly on paper, that mostly got caved in last season by other NBA teams.
Questions remain over how they can organize their pieces. There are a lot of oversized wings here, in Dybantsa, Kyshawn George, and Bilal Coulibaly, and there is the ongoing likelihood that Alex Sarr starts the season playing in a twin towers set-up next to AD. That means they could lack dribbling and sharp passing around Young, even if they are flush with size and shotmaking.
Dybantsa takes a high volume of difficult shots, and he’s coming from a situation at BYU that required hero-ball. For maximum immediate impact, he will have to tap into a more complementary off-ball game (something he acknowledged on draft night). He should be a frequent screen-setter for Young and an active cutter and slasher. He’ll have to learn to move the ball quickly and make snappy decisions.
Their best lineups, though, are likely to include Dybantsa. He is blindingly athletic and he will be the one guy on the team — so far! — who can reliably create his own shot at will from the perimeter. Even if he is raw and spacey defensively, the tools are off the charts.
The hope is real, and the pressure is on to get this team back to relevance. Dybantsa, for all the other talent on this team, is the guy who is most capable of getting them there.

















