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Murphy scores 24 as the Pelicans hand the Wizards their 8th straight loss, 138-118

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Trey Murphy III scored 24 points, Saddiq Bey added 23 against his former team and the New Orleans Pelicans defeated the reeling Wizards 138-118 on Sunday night to extend Washington’s losing streak to eight games.

Zion Williamson had 20 points and Dejounte Murray provided 19 for the Pelicans, who outscored Washington 72-44 in the paint.

Trae Young, playing his second game for the Wizards since being traded by Atlanta, had 17 points and eight assists in 18 minutes on the court. It was his 12th game all season.

Wizards rookie Tre Johnson scored 20 points — his fourth time reaching that total. Will Riley added 19.

New Orleans held a 67-65 lead after a tight first half, during which Washington made 10 3-pointers.

The Wizards trailed by four after Jaden Hardy’s driving floater made it 95-91. But the Pelicans pulled away from there, starting with a 12-4 surge capped by a 3 from rookie Jeremiah Fears.

Drafted seventh overall last summer, Fears finished with 18 points and seven assists in 24 minutes off the bench. Fellow rookie Derik Queen scored 13 points.

The Pelicans won for the sixth time in nine games and matched last season’s victory total of 21. Since starting 10-36, New Orleans has won 11 of 20.

Julian Reese, the brother of former LSU star Angel Reese, grabbed nine rebounds for the Wizards.

Up next

Wizards: Visit the Miami Heat on Tuesday night.

Pelicans: Host the Toronto Raptors on Wednesday night.

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This story has been corrected to show the Pelicans have won six of nine, not eight of 11.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Peterson, Dybantsa, Boozer and Wilson wait to see who goes first in the NBA draft

CHICAGO (AP) — Darryn Peterson and AJ Dybantsa had an epic showdown in high school, crossed paths in college and could be the top two picks in this year's NBA draft after starring at Kansas and BYU. That's if Duke's Cameron Boozer and North Carolina's Caleb Wilson don't have something to say about it. All four are considered potential stars and a clear cut above the rest in a loaded draft class. What remains to be seen is the order they will be taken. The Washington Wizards hold the No. 1 pick for the first time since they drafted John Wall in 2010. Utah, Memphis and Chicago round out the top four. “It would mean a lot,” Dybantsa said Wednesday at the NBA draft combine of being picked first. “It would just mean that all my hard work is paying off. All the countless hours and all the sacrifices I made have paid off.”
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