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Magic asserting themselves as serious contender with NBA Cup win
Orlando Magic guard Desmond Bane. Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Magic asserting themselves as serious contender with NBA Cup win

Playing without the injured Franz Wagner, the Orlando Magic continued their winning ways in the NBA Cup. The Magic are showing they don't need their stars — as long as they have Desmond Bane.

Bane scored 37 points in the Magic's 117-108 win over the Miami
Heat, earning a berth in the semifinal of the NBA cup in Las Vegas Saturday, Dec. 13. His emergence has helped the Magic win 11 of their last 15 games and become a top-10 offense in the NBA.

Desmond Bane corrected the Magic's biggest offensive weakness

Last season, the Magic had the NBA's fourth-worst offense, thanks to being the worst three-point shooting team at 31.8 percent and finishing last in assists with 23 per game. Bane struggled with his outside shot for his first 10 games with Orlando, but he's averaging 2.2 per game since then and making 38.4 percent of his attempts. As a team, Orlando is up to 34.5 percent on threes and 25.6 assists, a sizable improvement.

Tuesday, Bane shot 6-of-9 from behind the arc, driving a second-quarter Magic surge where they scored 39 points behind Bane's 4-of-5 shooting and three assists. His passing is helping the Magic run a more egalitarian offense this season, after they generally ran things through Wagner or Paolo Banchero last season. The two forwards are very good at scoring and going to the hoop, but they're not the shooter or passers that Bane is.

Orlando has really thrived with their third star, after long-term injuries to Wagner and Banchero derailed their 2024-25 season. When Banchero missed 10 games last month, the Magic managed to go 7-3, largely thanks to Bane stepping up, plus a strong third season from guard Anthony Black. Last season, there were four Magic players averaging double digits in scoring. This season, there are seven.

Desmond Bane has extra incentive to win the NBA Cup

NBA players care about winning the NBA Cup, but Bane has some extra financial motivation: He was fined $35K for throwing a ball hard at OG Anunoby of the New York Knicks during on an out-of-bounds play.

After the game, Bane told reporters, "I just lost $35,000. I've got to get it back somehow." He's going to have to win two more games to get the NBA Cup's big prize of $500K per player.

And he'll have to do it against Anunoby and the Knicks, who beat the Toronto Raptors to advance to the semifinal themselves. If Bane remains money from three-point range, he and his teammates are all going to cash in.

Sean Keane

Sean Keane is a sportswriter and a comedian based in Oakland, California, with experience covering the NBA, MLB, NFL and Ice Cube’s three-on-three basketball league, The Big 3. He’s written for Comedy Central’s “Another Period,” ESPN the Magazine, and Audible. com

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