I'm not sure why Oscar is considered a Sacramento King here. Kings came to town in 85, he played for the Royals. I'm surprised Boogie wasn't on this list, he scored a lot of points in his seven years.
I'm not sure why Oscar is considered a Sacramento King here. Kings came to town in 85, he played for the Royals. I'm surprised Boogie wasn't on this list, he scored a lot of points in his seven years.
I guessing that you didn't actually watch the video. It starts with the first year of the franchise and chronicles the scoring leaders as the change each year. Cousins shows up at the end.
I guessing that you didn't actually watch the video. It starts with the first year of the franchise and chronicles the scoring leaders as the change each year. Cousins shows up at the end.
Ahh I remember it like it was yesterday. On that day in March '51 when they won the championship, I wasn't born yet, so my Mother held the radio up to her stomach so I could hear it. She was just like that ...
Oops I think I took the wrong pills ... Never Mind.
The franchise history started in Rochester, NY, with stops in Cincinnati and Omaha-Kansas City before they landed in Sacramento. The whole series by Alex Kennedy about "top scorers" talks about each franchise. Would you have been happier if he had said "These are the top scorers for the Rochester Royals/Cincinnati Royals/Omaha-Kansas City Kings/Sacramento Kings"? You're attempting to point out a distinction without a difference.
I'm not sure why Oscar is considered a Sacramento King here. Kings came to town in 85, he played for the Royals. I'm surprised Boogie wasn't on this list, he scored a lot of points in his seven years.
Looks like Tisdale barely missed being on that graphic. He was just shy of 7,000 its with Sac and was injured 2 years that had he not, would have put him in the top 10.