the nba took the appropriate action, but it's a shame that they ignored james harden's dirty play, if only because demarcus doesn't need any more fuel to throw on the fire of his victimization complex. cousins is a difficult personality. he's not neat and tidy. he's not easily pigeon-holed. he is young and immature. he is also compassionate and intelligent. he has shown a capacity for utter and complete dumbassery. he has also shown a capacity for leadership. but does this mean he should be the team's undisputed "leader"? no, not necessarily. i've never considered that to be the most desirable pathway for cousins...
chris webber was the centerpiece of the golden era kings, but vlade divac was the cagey veteran who stepped in as the team's emotional leader and respected lockerroom presence. he held the whole damn thing together. point is, the success of any demarcus cousins experiment has long been predicated on the leadership abilities of those around him. and, frankly, the sacramento kings were the worst franchise that could draft him. there was simply no support structure in place right from the beginning. the maloofs couldn't give a f*** about the development of their team, geoff petrie was sleepwalking through his job, and a carousel of pi$$ poor coaches had no idea how to manage a manchild like DMC. instability at the top breeds instability everywhere below, and cousins arrived in the nba about as unstable as they come...
i mean, any talented rookie requires a few people on his side to find success: coaches, teammates, whatever. but with an exceedingly volatile personality like cousins, you really need an organization-wide effort to help shape his professional attitudes and habits, and to help guide him through his growing pains. for three years, cousins had nothing of the sort, and we got exactly what we should have expected: a few ups accompanied by a helluvalot more downs. this is the first season in which a structure actually exists that will support cousins, a structure that will [hopefully] stimulate his maturation...
that said, it was never going to be a linear process for demarcus. there were going to be moments of superstardom during the highs, and there were going to be moments of embarrassing backsliding during the lows. the key has always been in how both he and the kings responded to those moments of backsliding. cousins' response to this recent backslide was disappointing, to say the least. he did not fully accept responsibility for his actions, and he deflected when he should have taken it on the chin. this is not an uncommon reaction for a young man grappling with his own immaturity. but how does a young man learn to be a man, except by example?
this kings team has been woefully absent the kind of veteran players who can channel their experience and success into mentoring opportunities for cousins, but ranadive, coach malone, shaq, rudy, the newly-arrived reggie evans, somebody needs to sit DMC down one-on-one, in private, away from the cameras and soundbytes and interviews and twitter posts, and allow him to vent his frustration while also telling him what's what. for all i know, it's already happening. for all i know, it's been happening all season. but it's been an uphill battle for cousins, often as a result of his penchant for getting in his own way. i think it's fair to say that most of us want him to succeed, so i hope this new regime continues to reshape the roster in a way that will breed eventual stability, because such an environment is what's best for cousins and, ultimately, what's best for the team...