The Orlando Magic vs Sacramento Kings match player stats from February 19, 2026 tell a story of total domination. Orlando walked into Sacramento and put up 131 points while holding the Kings to just 94, a 37-point blowout that wasn’t even that close late in the game. Paolo Banchero led all scorers with 30 points, while Anthony Black came alive off the bench for 20, and Desmond Bane added 17 in what was one of Orlando’s most complete road performances of the season.
Table of Contents
Final Score Breakdown
Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Orlando Magic | 18 | 46 | 38 | 29 | 131 |
Sacramento Kings | 28 | 27 | 29 | 10 | 94 |
Orlando trailed after the first quarter, then went nuclear in the second with 46 points, the kind of quarter that breaks a team’s spirit. Sacramento scored just 10 in the fourth as the Magic coasted home.
Orlando Magic Player Stats
Starters
Player | POS | PTS | REB | AST | STL | BLK | FG | 3PT | FT | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paolo Banchero | F | 30 | 5 | 6 | 1 | 1 | 10/21 | 5/7 | 5/5 | +32 |
Anthony Black | G | 20 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 8/13 | 4/6 | 0/0 | +26 |
Jevon Carter | G | 14 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 5/8 | 3/5 | 1/1 | +34 |
Wendell Carter Jr. | C | 2 | 8 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 1/5 | 0/2 | 0/0 | +10 |
Jalen Suggs | G | 9 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 3/8 | 3/7 | 0/0 | -7 |
Bench
Player | POS | PTS | REB | AST | STL | BLK | FG | 3PT | FT | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Desmond Bane | F | 17 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 6/9 | 3/5 | 2/3 | +11 |
Jett Howard | G | 16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6/6 | 4/4 | 0/0 | +11 |
Moritz Wagner | F-C | 11 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 2/7 | 1/5 | 6/8 | +17 |
Jonathan Isaac | F | 0 | 7 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0/3 | 0/1 | 0/0 | +4 |
Jamal Cain | F | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0/3 | 0/1 | 0/0 | +10 |
Jase Richardson | G | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0/1 | 0/1 | 0/0 | +10 |
Bench points: 53. That number alone tells you what kind of night this was for Orlando.
Sacramento Kings Player Stats
Starters
Player | POS | PTS | REB | AST | STL | BLK | FG | 3PT | FT | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maxime Raynaud | C | 17 | 14 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 8/13 | 0/0 | 1/1 | -14 |
Keegan Murray | F | 15 | 8 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 6/13 | 3/7 | 0/0 | -18 |
Precious Achiuwa | F | 14 | 10 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 7/12 | 0/1 | 0/0 | -21 |
DeMar DeRozan | G | 13 | 3 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 3/11 | 0/0 | 7/8 | -8 |
Malik Monk | G | 14 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 5/8 | 3/6 | 1/3 | -15 |
Bench
Player | POS | PTS | REB | AST | STL | BLK | FG | 3PT | FT | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Devin Carter | G | 11 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 3/12 | 0/5 | 5/6 | -29 |
Nique Clifford | G | 5 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1/5 | 1/1 | 2/2 | -32 |
Russell Westbrook | G | 5 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2/8 | 1/6 | 0/0 | -14 |
Precious Achiuwa | F | 14 | 10 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 7/12 | 0/1 | 0/0 | -21 |
Drew Eubanks | F-C | 0 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0/2 | 0/0 | 0/0 | -19 |
Daeqwon Plowden | G-F | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0/2 | 0/1 | 0/0 | -15 |
Team Stats: Side by Side
Category | Orlando Magic | Sacramento Kings |
|---|---|---|
Points | 131 | 94 |
FG% | 50.0% | 40.7% |
3PT% | 54.0% | 29.6% |
FT% | 82.4% | 80.0% |
Total Rebounds | 49 | 54 |
Offensive Rebounds | 5 | 11 |
Assists | 28 | 22 |
Steals | 13 | 9 |
Blocks | 4 | 3 |
Turnovers | 10 | 19 |
Fast Break Points | 29 | 6 |
Points Off Turnovers | 24 | 14 |
Bench Points | 53 | 30 |
True Shooting % | 67.2% | 49.6% |
Effective FG% | 65.0% | 45.3% |
Assist to Turnover Ratio | 2.8 | 1.16 |
Biggest Lead | 37 | 12 |
Offensive Rating | 127.8 | 91.4 |
Defensive Rating | 91.4 | 127.8 |
Sacramento won the glass battle with 54 total rebounds to Orlando’s 49, but it didn’t matter. The Magic shot the lights out and turned the Kings’ 19 turnovers into 24 points. That right there is the game in two numbers.
Shooting Efficiency Breakdown
Player (ORL) | FG% | 3PT% | True Shooting % | EFG% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Jett Howard | 100% | 100% | 133.3% | 133.3% |
Jevon Carter | 62.5% | 60.0% | 82.9% | 81.3% |
Desmond Bane | 66.7% | 60.0% | 82.4% | 83.3% |
Anthony Black | 61.5% | 66.7% | 76.9% | 76.9% |
Paolo Banchero | 47.6% | 71.4% | 64.7% | 59.5% |
Jett Howard went a perfect 6 for 6 from the field including 4 for 4 from three. Perfect shooting night. He did not miss a single shot.
What Actually Happened in This Game
The Second Quarter Explosion
Orlando trailed 28-18 after one. Then the Magic scored 46 points in the second quarter. That is not a typo. 46. In one quarter.
Sacramento’s defense simply had no answer for the ball movement, the transition offense, or the hot shooting. The Magic went from 10 down to 36 up by halftime, a 56-37 second quarter that functionally ended the game before the third quarter even started.
Fast break points told a big part of the story:
- Orlando: 29 fast break points on 11/17 shooting in transition (64.7%)
- Sacramento: 6 fast break points
The Kings turned it over 19 times, and the Magic converted those into a 24-14 advantage in points off turnovers. Add in the 29-6 fast break gap and you’re looking at a 33-point swing from two categories alone.
Paolo Banchero: Game High Scorer
Banchero’s 30-point night was efficient, aggressive, and versatile. He shot 71.4% from three (5/7), went a perfect 5 for 5 from the free throw line, and finished with 6 assists against only 3 turnovers.
His 10 fast break points showed he was running with purpose, not just waiting in the halfcourt. The Kings had no individual capable of staying in front of him for 32 minutes.
Banchero Game Log | Stat |
|---|---|
Points | 30 |
FG | 10/21 (47.6%) |
3PT | 5/7 (71.4%) |
FT | 5/5 (100%) |
Rebounds | 5 |
Assists | 6 |
Turnovers | 3 |
Fast Break Points | 10 |
+/- | +32 |
Anthony Black’s Breakout Night
Black went 8 for 13 from the field including 4 for 6 from deep for 20 points. He added 3 assists, 3 steals, and a +26 plus/minus. This was not a quiet 20 either. He was aggressive, he was running the floor, and he racked up 9 fast break points, the most on the team outside Banchero.
For a full breakdown of individual performances across NBA games this season, Tophill Sports tracks all the player level stats you need.
Jett Howard: The Perfect Game Nobody Talked About
Six for six. Four for four from three. Sixteen points on zero misses.
Howard was the definition of an X factor. He played efficient, high-energy minutes off the bench, gave Orlando another shooting threat on top of Bane and Carter, and did not give Sacramento’s defense a single moment to exhale. A perfect shooting night is rare at any level. In an NBA game, it’s something worth noting.
Sacramento’s Decent Performances in a Bad Loss
Maxime Raynaud
The Kings’ best player on the night by efficiency. Raynaud went 8 for 13 for 17 points with 14 rebounds and 4 assists. A double-double in a blowout loss still counts, and Raynaud showed he can produce at this level consistently.
Raynaud Stat | Total |
|---|---|
Points | 17 |
Rebounds | 14 |
Assists | 4 |
FG | 8/13 (61.5%) |
Double-Double | Yes |
Precious Achiuwa
14 points and 10 rebounds on 7 for 12 shooting, also a double-double. Four steals and 2 blocks. Sacramento got solid frontcourt production, just not enough of it and not in the right moments.
The DeRozan Problem
DeMar DeRozan finished with 13 points and 6 assists but shot just 3 for 11 from the field. He drew fouls and went 7 for 8 from the line, which kept his point total respectable, but his shooting was cold all night. Westbrook was even worse at 2 for 8 overall, 5 points, and 3 turnovers in limited minutes.
Key Reasons Orlando Won by 37
1. The Three-Point Shooting
54% from three on 50 attempts. That number is absurd. The league average for three-point percentage hovers around 36%. Orlando shot 18 points better than league average from deep on a high volume. That gap alone is worth 20-plus points.
2. Turnover Battle
19 to 10. Sacramento nearly doubled Orlando’s turnover count. The Magic turned those mistakes into 24 points. That is a 10 to 20 point swing depending on how you calculate it, but either way it’s massive.
3. The Bench
53 bench points from Orlando against 30 from Sacramento. Bane, Howard, Wagner, and Richardson all contributed. The Kings’ second unit, particularly Westbrook and Clifford, combined for 10 points on 3 for 13 shooting with 8 turnovers between them.
4. Transition Defense Collapse
Sacramento gave up 29 fast break points. That means Orlando was converting 64.7% of their fast break opportunities. The Kings could not get back consistently, could not protect the rim, and paid for every mistake with a layup or open three on the other end.
Advanced Stats Context
Metric | Orlando | Sacramento |
|---|---|---|
Offensive Rating | 127.8 | 91.4 |
Defensive Rating | 91.4 | 127.8 |
Possessions | 102.48 | 102.8 |
Off. Points Per Possession | 1.28 | 0.91 |
Def. Points Per Possession | 0.92 | 1.27 |
At the pace both teams played, this was a high possession game around 102 possessions each. Orlando maximized every single one of those. Sacramento wasted nearly a third of theirs on turnovers or poor shot selection.
The 36-point rating differential (127.8 vs 91.4) on both ends is the kind of number you see when a team is locked in defensively, clicking offensively, and running their gameplan to near-perfection.
What This Win Means for the Magic
Orlando has been one of the more consistent teams in the East all season, and this type of road blowout adds real weight to their playoff seeding. Blowing out a Western Conference team by 37 points on the road, while getting 53 points off the bench, shows depth that few teams in the East can match right now.
The fact that it was their bench doing much of the damage is particularly important. Teams that rely solely on their starters run into trouble in playoff series. Orlando getting 17 from Bane, 16 from Howard, and 11 from Wagner in a game Banchero also dropped 30 in sends a message about roster construction.
What This Means for Sacramento
The Kings fell to Sacramento’s pattern of competitive but not quite good enough. Their starters produced decent individual numbers. Three players hit double figures. Raynaud nearly had a monster night. But the bench fell apart, the turnovers were ugly, and they had no answer for Orlando’s shooting.
Sacramento gave up a 37-point deficit and allowed 131 points at home. Those are the kind of numbers that raise real questions about defensive scheme and defensive communication, particularly in transition.
Player Stat Leaders at a Glance
Category | Leader | Total |
|---|---|---|
Points | Paolo Banchero (ORL) | 30 |
Rebounds | Maxime Raynaud (SAC) | 14 |
Assists | Paolo Banchero (ORL) | 6 |
Steals | Orlando Magic (Team) | 13 |
Blocks | Tied (4 each) | 4 |
Best FG% | Jett Howard (ORL) | 100% |
Best 3PT% | Jett Howard (ORL) | 100% |
Best +/- | Jevon Carter (ORL) | +34 |
Worst +/- | Nique Clifford (SAC) | -32 |
Final Word
The Orlando Magic vs Sacramento Kings match player stats from February 19, 2026 were as lopsided as the final score suggests. Sacramento simply could not contain Banchero, could not stop the transition offense, and could not overcome 19 turnovers against a Magic team that converts every mistake into points. Orlando’s 131-94 road win was a statement, and the box score backs every word of it.

