Months after his arduous comeback from a severe knee injury, Moritz Wagner has unexpectedly fallen out of the Orlando Magic’s rotation. This article explores the reasons behind his recent demotion.
While his younger brother Franz Wagner is carefully being reintegrated and regaining form after his multi-week ankle injury, the situation for Moritz, three and a half years his senior, is moving in the opposite direction. The big man is increasingly losing significance in Head Coach Jamahl Mosley’s rotation.
This season, Moritz, like his brother Franz, battled a serious injury: an ACL tear – one of the most debilitating injuries in professional sports. He carried this injury over from the previous season, necessitating more than a year of recovery. His much-anticipated return finally occurred on January 11th in a victory against the New Orleans Pelicans, where he immediately impressed with eight points in just ten minutes.
In the subsequent weeks, Wagner’s primary focus was to rebuild trust in his body and rediscover his rhythm on the court. For a long time, it seemed he was returning to his former strength. However, the current impression is starkly different: the 2.11-meter (6’11») power forward/center now plays hardly any role for the Magic. Recently, he saw no action at all in games against the New Orleans Pelicans, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Lakers, and Dallas Mavericks – a completely novel situation for the 2023 World Champion. «I’m slowly realizing it, because it’s not easy for me to have a new role,» the 28-year-old revealed on his podcast Kannst du so nicht sagen. «I primarily want to score, that’s my identity, but we now have many guys who want to score. Of course, it’s annoying in a way. But you learn over the years not to take it personally.»
This new role is drastically reduced: even in the games where Wagner did play recently, he consistently received minimal minutes – eight minutes against Atlanta, four against Phoenix, five against Sacramento, and another five against Cleveland. The significant cutback happened in late March. Prior to that, Wagner had played fewer than ten minutes only three times in 29 appearances.
Is Moritz Wagner Hurting More Than Helping?

Wagner is known as an energizer off the bench, a mental game-changer who excels particularly with his offensive versatility and shooting prowess. However, his biggest weakness remains his defense. The Berlin native is not an exceptional athlete, struggles to protect the rim effectively, and is often targeted and identified as a weak point in pick-and-roll situations.
Statistics further underscore this problem: with Wagner on the court, Orlando’s offensive rating is 109.9; without him, it’s a much better 116.1. A similar pattern emerges defensively – with Wagner, the rating is 119.9; without him, it’s 115.
This is partly why Head Coach Jamahl Mosley has increasingly relied on Goga Bitadze, whose strengths are clearly in defense. Furthermore, Wagner’s offensive production has noticeably declined – a look at the numbers from February and March illustrates this. In eleven games in February, Wagner averaged a respectable 9.6 points in 13.7 minutes. In March, across 15 games, he managed only 5.5 points.
The drop in shooting percentages is particularly evident: in February, he shot a strong 54.4 percent from the field, but this figure plummeted to just 32.5 percent in March. From beyond the arc, his excellent 40.7 percent fell to a mere 20 percent.
Wagner’s performance in mid-March against Oklahoma City was emblematic of his current slump. Offensively, the big man was largely ineffective with five points (1/6 FG) and appeared overwhelmed defensively. In less than 13 minutes, he registered a catastrophic plus-minus of -28. In the final quarter, Mosley ultimately opted for Bitadze, leaving Wagner on the bench.
Orlando Magic’s Performance Since Wagner’s Demotion: Mediocre

Has the Magic’s performance improved since Wagner assumed a smaller role on the team? Hardly. Considering the game against the Cavaliers on March 25th as the starting point of Wagner’s demotion – his first real game with single-digit minutes, excluding those directly after his comeback – the record is modest: four wins against three losses. In these seven games, the defense consistently allowed many points. They conceded 136 points against Cleveland, 139 against Toronto, 130 against Atlanta, and 127 against the struggling Mavericks.
Throughout the season, the Magic have shown themselves to be unpredictable: victories against top teams like New York, Boston, Denver, or the Los Angeles Lakers are interspersed with losses against far-behind teams like Indiana, Milwaukee, or Memphis.
Mosley and his team don’t have much time left to find their rhythm: the playoffs begin in just two weeks. Whether Orlando will play a significant role remains to be seen. What is certain is that the Magic have secured a spot in the Play-In Tournament. As the current ninth seed in the Eastern Conference, their first opponent would be the Miami Heat, followed by the winner of the game between Charlotte and Toronto. There’s even still a chance for a direct playoff spot: they are just one win behind the sixth-seeded Philadelphia 76ers.
Moritz Wagner: His Statistics for the 2023-24 Season
| Games | PTS | REB | AST | FG% | 3PT% | FT% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 34 | 7.1 | 3.2 | 0.7 | 42.6 | 32.4 | 81.9 |

