Bradley Beal missed three games after exiting the Wizards' win over Boston in early November with hamstring tightness. (Photo: AP)

The uniqueness of the injuries has resulted in questions, team sources say, about whether he could have toughed out a few more games. Or if he was afraid that not playing well could impact landing a maximum contract extension. That's an understandable concern, but it runs counter to what Wall did last season. Wall soldiered through 77 games despite knees that both required offseason surgery.

The perceived difference in grit is even reflected in their nicknames—Optimus Dime for Wall and Big Panda for Beal.

"I'm not mad. I can't control the CBA. All I'm saying is let him earn it. I didn't deserve it until I went out and made the All-Star Game. Let him earn it. I had to earn mine."

— John Wall on his expectations for Bradley Beal after he signed a $127 million contract over the summer

Wall didn't finish the game against the Celtics either. He was ejected in the fourth quarter after being called for a flagrant foul when he aggressively trapped Marcus Smart in the backcourt and knocked him down. Wall was still miffed that a foul had not been called minutes earlier as he tried to bring the ball up court and took his own revenge.

That need to respond to any slight is a weakness for Wall, evident in everything from clocking Smart on a random November night to commenting on Beal's five-year, $127 million extension signed last summer. Still stung that three years ago some critics suggested Wall was not worthy of his five-year, $85 million deal, Wall said Beal needed to prove he was worth it. That was interpreted—incorrectly Wall insists—as a sign of jealousy.

"People always assumed why we weren't connecting," Wall says now. "People asked, ‘Well, are you mad?' No, I'm not mad. I can't control the CBA. It's good timing for him. All I'm saying is let him earn it. I didn't deserve it until I went out and made the All-Star Game and then they said, 'All right, he earned it.' Let him earn it. I had to earn mine."

Big Panda agrees that he has to join Wall in testing his physical limits, and he addressed the issue prior to sitting out the Wizards' recent loss to the Cavaliers, the first of three games he missed with the strained hamstring.

"No matter how our bodies might feel, no matter what we did the night before, there are no nights off," Beal says. "We have to be ready to go each and every night, no matter who we're playing. We have to bring it out of ourselves."

While both Wall, 26, and Beal, 23, presumably have yet to enter their primes, the waning patience among Wizards' fans is palpable. Mike Wise, a former Washington Post columnist and D.C.-based columnist for ESPN's The Undefeated, tweeted out during an embarrassing loss to the Philadelphia 76ers: "Pitchforks are coming out for [GM] Ernie Grunfeld tonight like I haven't seen in a while…"

The problem facing Grunfeld and Brooks is that neither Wall nor Beal were fully healthy even before the Boston game. Last summer, Wall swung through Las Vegas to check in on the Wizards' summer league team and the weight gained during his convalescence from the surgeries prompted a few double takes. The hours that Wall spends in the gym are second to none, teammates say, and nearly all of the weight was shed by the start of the season, but he still isn't in peak condition. Wall did not play in the second game of the Wizards' first two back-to-back nights, both losses.

Now in their 14th season under GM Ernie Grunfeld, the Wizards have never won more than 46 games and have missed the playoffs in five of the previous seven years. (Photo: Ned Dishman/Getty Images)

"We haven't really had a period where I've seen how good can they be together," Brooks says. "I can count on maybe a total of 12 times where we had really good practices and I didn't have to worry about taking them out of a scrimmage."

Another point of contention is the matter of personal pride. Beal has chafed at how long it has taken to be accepted as Wall's equal. They've known each other since Wall, during his one season at Kentucky, caught one of Beal's AAU games with the St. Louis Eagles.

"It was a little bit of the big brother-little brother thing," Beal says. "He just took me up under. It was just a natural connection."

But after several years together as pros, Beal didn't want to look up anymore.

"Bradley just wanted some respect," says a team source. "As in, 'Hey, I'm good, too.'"

Markieff Morris, who joined the team midway through last season, had the impression before he arrived that Wall might be reluctant to give Beal that kind of respect.

"From the outside, it might've looked like John's way or no way," Morris says. "But now I'm in it, it's clear John wants Brad to step into that superstar role."

The leading scorer role as well.

"Brad is probably the best scorer on the team, so that's who we have to try to get going," Wall says. "My job is to be the second guy, average around 20 points and get my teammates involved. Lead us on defense. That's my role."

But Wall also wants Beal to pay it forward.

"He's been doing a better job of coming off pick-and-rolls and making passes to other guys," Wall says. "That's what is going to expand his game, because when you're getting 20 shots a game and getting five assists, then guys know they can't help and double Brad. I had to go through the same thing. Sometimes when you want to take the shot and be the hero, you have to make the extra pass instead."

Randy Wittman, Brooks' predecessor, led the team to consecutive second-round playoff appearances in 2014 and '15 with his trusted, standard three-out, two-in motion offense. But he switched last season to a more uptempo, perimeter-oriented approach (aka pace-and-space) and the team missed the playoffs.

With three-out, two-in being more reliant on a team's post players, the idea behind the change, presumably, was to tilt the offense more toward Wall and Beal. Team sources insist the coaching staff made the change of its own volition, not because of an attempt by management or owner Ted Leonsis—as a former Wizards player speculated—to fashion the same success from Wall and Beal that the Warriors have with Curry and Thompson.

Whatever inspired the switch, it didn't produce the desired result. Wittman, after 4 1/2 seasons, was let go. Enter Brooks, who believes the same formula that made Durant and Westbrook perennial All-Stars and resulted in four conference finals appearances and one trip to the Finals for the Thunder, can work in Washington.

An expert on dynamic duos, Brooks believes Wall and Beal could be one of the top three in the NBA. That's not partisanship palaver; opposing coaches and executives around the NBA agree. As do Wall and Beal.

With Scott Brooks on the bench, John Wall is averaging a career-high 24.0 points per game while shooting at career-best marks from the floor and from behind the three-point arc. (Photo: Ned Dishman/Getty Images)

The first step is putting aside all the personal aspirations. That may be easier said than done. Wall still talks of proving wrong those who refuse to recognize him as a top-five point guard. Beal still talks of joining Wall on the Eastern Conference's All-Star team.

"If Kyrie Irving is going for 40 and John's having a bad shooting game, is he going to worry about the game or…? We'll see."

— Wizards coach Scott Brooks

"When you have two young players, you have to create a selfless attitude toward one another," Brooks says. "That's hard to do, because everybody is searching for a bigger piece of the pie. Talking to both of them, I think we can get there. John has the ability to impact the game without scoring, by just defending and passing."

Will he remain happy doing that?

"I can't answer that with 100 percent certainty," Brooks admits. "If Kyrie Irving is going for 40 and he's having a bad shooting game, is he going to worry about the game or…? We'll see. If you're going to be a leader, it's about doing the things to lead your team and moving on to the next game."

Wall's willingness to stake his value upon his defense already has been tested. In the team's first film session after its home-opening loss to the Raptors, Brooks pointed out several times where Wall either didn't sprint back on defense or failed to sit down in a defensive stance. He underscored it all by calling Wall the worst defender on the team "by far."

Wall's response?

"I'm like, ‘Damn, I do look like the worst defender. I can't say nothing back.' It's going to make me a better player and a better person."

The loopiest part about where the Wizards find themselves, searching for answers as to why their talented backcourt has yet to fully click, is that the two of them are taking extra measures to create better chemistry throughout the team.

For the second summer in a row, they organized a voluntary three-day gathering of players and coaches in Los Angeles' Marina del Rey to play some ball at Loyola Marymount University and just hang out together. Wall's interview in which he made his comments about Beal, conducted back in July, was aired the last day of coaches and players lifting and stretching together, chilling by the pool and grabbing dinner at Hollywood's Katana, among other places.

"I thought I must be like Mr. Magoo here," Brooks recalls when asked his reaction to Wall's remarks. "I've been here three days and I didn't see any of this. We're having the time of our lives. But when you have two young players, they're not always going to see eye to eye. Any team that sees eye to eye all the time doesn't really care about winning games. Because how you get good is challenging each other. And your best players have to push each other. Otherwise it becomes your best two players and everybody else."