Wizards will finally grant Anthony Davis’ controversial wish the Mavericks denied

The Wizards can finally grant Anthony Davis his biggest request that Dallas couldn’t consistently grant.
Washington Wizards, Anthony Davis
Washington Wizards, Anthony Davis | Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

With the NBA now a few days removed from the trade deadline, teams and fans have had a few days to digest the recent movement from multiple star players. While it wasn't shocking to see superstar forward Anthony Davis get traded, it was a shock to fans to see him get packaged in a deal that would send him to the Washington Wizards: a historically bad franchise.

There's no doubt that over the last 10 seasons, Wizards fans haven't had much good basketball to watch, but there is one thing that Washington can offer Davis that the Dallas Mavericks couldn't guarantee regularly. Alongside a player like Alex Sarr, Davis can comfortably play the power forward position without any risk of injuries dictating his place on the floor.

Davis can freely play the four in Washington without risk of injuries

Ever since Davis was traded to the Mavericks in last year's shocking swap for Luka Doncic, the Mavericks' roster has been through the ringer in terms of injuries. Not only was Davis headlining most injury reports, but when he was healthy, a majority of the time, either Daniel Gafford or Dereck Lively II would be sidelined as well, forcing Davis to play the five.

Davis hasn't been shy about expressing his wants to play the power forward spot in the past, and with a healthy Mavericks rotation, Davis could have possibly played every minute he was on the floor at the four position, but unfourtantly that was never how things worked out in Dallas. Now with Washington in mind, Davis will have an opportunity to play around a young emerging center in Sarr, who has begun to come into his own this season.

Standing at seven foot, Sarr has the slightest height advantage over Davis, which makes him the likely candidate to be the center in the box sheet. With that being said, both players will have the opportunity to form one of the best defensive frontcourt tandems in the entire league, with both players being elite shot-blockers.

For Wizards fans, they won't be able to see Davis and Sarr share the floor together anytime soon, as Davis could get shut down for the remainder of the season due to his hand injury, but over the offseason, fans should have their fill of Davis and Sarr clips to watch.

In Washington, Davis will also have the opportunity to impact a young roster that has been deprived of veteran leadership for a long time, and with that, Davis can help influence Sarr at the perfect time in his young career.

Mavericks fans never truly understood why Davis wanted to play the four so badly when he would have some of his best performances as the lone five. In fact, because of Davis' dominance on the floor as the lone big, Jason Kidd and the Mavs' coaching staff would entirely scrap the double-big philosophy and go for a single center at a time approach, especially after the Lively II season-ending injury.

Without Davis in the picture, it now gives the Mavericks a clear approach for the next two months of basketball, and that's to develop players and lose games. There's no doubt that having Davis' contract hanging over the heads of the team's front office was a big weight lifted off when they finally decided to trade him and truly focus on Cooper Flagg's future.

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