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The Magic delivered a commanding performance against the Hornets, raising questions about their season's trajectory. Fans are eager to see how they will fare against the Pistons next.
(Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/TNS)
They didnât just survive Friday night â they made a statement.
A loud one. A decisive one. The kind that makes you stop and rewind the entire season in your head and ask a simple question:
Where in the hell has this team been?
Because the Orlando Magic didnât just beat the red-hot Charlotte Hornets in a do-or-die play-in game at Kia Center. They ran them off the floor.
Magic 121, Hornets 90.
Isnât it amazing and beautiful what happens when the Magic actually play hard.
And now, instead of limping into the playoffs, Orlando is charging into them.
And after what we saw on this fantabulous Friday night, dare we say âŠ
Bring on the No. 1-seeded Detroit Pistons!
And as much as this ultra-important victory over Charlotte belonged to Paolo Banchero; as much as it was about survival, advancement and finally playing up to expectations; there was something deeper that defined this performance.
The Magicâs defense came back.
Not just showed up. Came back. Like a long, lost friend walking through the doors of Kia Center and reminding everyone what this team used to be; and what it could be again.
âThis is the moment where we did what were supposed to,â Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said. â⊠There was a sense of desperation. We knew we had a choice: Either end our season or start a new one.â
From the opening tip, you could feel it. The pressure. The physicality. The edge. The blocked shots. The shot-clock violations. Passing lanes closed quickly, drives were cut off before they developed and every shot Charlotte took felt contested with intent, not just effort. This wasnât the soft, inconsistent group weâve seen far too often this season. This was the old Magic â the nasty, physical, suffocating defensive team that made every possession feel like work.
The specific score of the game is not provided, but the Magic's performance was described as dominant.
The decisive win prompted fans to reconsider the team's potential and consistency throughout the season.
The Magic are set to face the Pistons next.
The Magic made a strong statement about their capabilities, suggesting they can compete effectively this season.

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And at the center of it all was Banchero; the version of Paolo the Magic have been waiting on for much of the season. Not the frustrated or inefficient Paolo; not the Paolo searching for answers, but the star. The guy. The franchise cornerstone.
Banchero dominated from the start, imposing his will in a way we havenât consistently seen this season. He attacked the rim with purpose, controlled the tempo, got to his spots and, most importantly, finished. He didnât just play well â he took over early in the game.
He finished with 25 points on 9-of-17 shooting and led the team in assists in a win-or-go-home game. Thatâs what stars do and what the Magic need Banchero to do on a more consistent basis. When he plays passively and comes up small, the Magic lose. When he plays passionately and comes up big, the Magic can beat anybody.
And it wasnât just Paolo.
Desmond Bane dove on the floor for loose balls, he body-blocked Miles Bridges to get to another loose ball. Center Wendell Carter Jr. hit two clutch 3s in the first half to stake the Magic to a 68-37 halftime lead. Backup center Goga Bitadze swatted away four shots and altered several others. Jalen Suggs and Anthony Black played elite perimeter defense. Franz Wagner, who missed 48 games this year with that mystifying ankle injury, finally started looking like his old self with 18 points, seven rebounds and six assists.
Thatâs what made this more than just a win. It felt like a reminder of what this team looks like when it actually commits to who it is. The ball moved offensively, players fed off each otherâs energy and the building came alive, but it all started on the defensive end â the way it always used to.
Which is why this result is equal parts fascinating and frustrating. It doesnât erase the season. It doesnât wipe away the inconsistency, the lack of urgency, the baffling losses or the stretches where this team looked completely disconnected. But it does change the conversation.
Because, now, the Magic arenât just sneaking into the back entrance of the playoffs; theyâre bursting through the front door. And the matchup ahead might be exactly what they needed
Instead of facing the second-seeded Boston Celtics â a team that would have exposed every flaw and punished every mistake â the Magic now draw the top-seeded Detroit Pistons. Yes, the No. 1 seed. And no, thatâs not as daunting as it sounds; not if this version of Orlando shows up.
On paper, the Magic can play with Detroit. They have the size, the talent and the versatility. And now, maybe most importantly, they have their identity again. The Pistons have built their success on toughness, grit and defense â the same qualities that once defined the Magic. The difference is Detroit has lived in that identity all season, while Orlando has only visited it sporadically.
The question now is whether Friday night was a one-off or a reintroduction.
Because if the Magic defend like that â if they bring this level of physicality, urgency and pride â this isnât some overmatched 8 seed walking into a first-round series. This is a team capable of making things uncomfortable, of turning the series into a fight.
Letâs not forget how quickly this flipped. On Wednesday night in Philadelphia, the Magic looked lost, disconnected and flat. Now, they head into the playoffs with a full head of steam, riding their most complete performance of the season; fueled by a defense that finally looked like it cared again.
Thatâs the NBA. Thatâs this team. Unpredictable, frustrating and suddenly ⊠dangerous.
Letâs not forget, if you had told anyone before the season that there would be a 1-versus-8 matchup between the Magic and the Pistons, most people would have assumed Orlando would be the 1 seed. Instead, itâs flipped because Detroit has overachieved and Orlando has underachieved.
But standing there Friday night, watching Banchero dominate and the defense suffocate, it didnât feel like an 8 seed. It felt like a team that finally remembered who itâs supposed to be.
The excuses are gone now. Franz is back. The core is intact. The roster is whole. And the identity â at least for one night â was back where it belongs.
Now weâll see if itâs here to stay.
Because if it is, this season isnât over.
Itâs just getting started.
Email me at mbianchi@orlandosentinel.com. Hit me up on social media @BianchiWrites and listen to my radio show âGame Onâ every weekday from 3 to 6 p.m. on FM 96.9, AM 740 and 969TheGame.com/listen