"You can't get there from here" has always been one of my favorite expressions. Obviously, you can always get from one place to another, but often there's no direct route between them. That's where the Kings find themselves now. There's no direct path from this mediocre team (the latest in a long line of iterations) to actually being a consistent playoff team or even a contender.
There was a chance. The Suns showed that. Their rebuild from the remnants of the Stoudamire/Marion/Nash team really started in 2012 when they traded Nash to the Lakers. Like the Kings they blew a lot of draft picks. Between 2011 and 2017 they had 11 first rounders. They packaged three of them (2 picks plus Bogdanovic's rights) to the Kings for Marquese Chriss. They used lottery picks on Markieff Morris, Kendall Marshall, Alex Len, Dragan Bender, and Josh Jackson. But in the middle of it they hit on Devin Booker. Not too dissimilar from the Kings hitting on Demarcus Cousins and then later De'Aaron Fox.
But the Suns did three things the Kings have failed to do.
1. They hit on another high pick to compliment their star. Ayton will never be Doncic, but he's a great complimentary piece and has come on strong to show he was a worthy #1 pick in a strong draft.
2. They hired the right coach. The Kings actually did that with Malone before he was run out of town. And possibly Joerger though he seemingly ran himself out of town. They certainly didn't do that with Walton. But Monty Williams has shown he's the right man for Phoenix and they've let him do his job.
3. They traded for the veteran piece they needed and surrounded their core with the wings you need to win in today's NBA. CP3 was by far the biggest difference maker for the Suns. He transformed that team. But Bridges, Crowder, Johnson etc are the type of role players you need around Paul, Booker, and Ayton.
Now they are coming off a finals appearance and just won 17 straight, including last night's victory over the resurgent Warriors.
The Kings could have been a few breaks from a similar tranformation. Hali is a good player but maybe not a great fit with Fox and Mitchell at least looks like a long time NBA player, but neither is the compliment the Kings really need for De'Aaron. Bagley certainly isn't. And instead of balancing the roster with trades the Kings have a glut of guards and bigs and almost no true wings. Which is especially frustrating when it's clear that guys like Hield and Bagley don't have a long term future with the team. Even Barnes is probably gone after next year.
But most of all, the player that they hoped to build around has regressed. We all hoped for Fox to take his game to a higher level this season and instead we're left wondering what's wrong or if he was never the guy we thought he was. It's depressing honestly.
The Kings can't get there from here.
There isn't a piece they can add or a reasonable trade they can make that will turn this roster into a contender. With Fox not looking like a star you can build around and not enough value left in the rest of the roster to trade for a second star there's no path forward.
It's hard to stomach the idea of a full rebuild after so many years of losing but the reality is that it's because this team should have gone that route a long time before.
Tanking last year could have got the Kings Evan Mobley who looks like a transformative player. Or Cade Cunningham or Scottie Barnes. Even Wagner would have been a much better fit for the current team. I like Mitchell, but he's not moving the needle so far.
The Kings have one decent trade chip and a bunch of mediocre ones with no real path for true improvement. It's definitely time to blow it up.
Deal Fox. Deal Barnes. Deal Hield and Bagley if anyone will actually offer anything of value. I love Holmes for his play, his efficiency and his contract, but you deal him if the offer is right too. Hold on to Haliburton and Mitchell (who play well together) and see what you have in low cost flyers like King, Queta, Ramsey, Davis, and Woodard. Maybe nothing. Maybe something. But this team has never allowed itself to be all the way bad. And that's probably the only path to eventually being good.
There was a chance. The Suns showed that. Their rebuild from the remnants of the Stoudamire/Marion/Nash team really started in 2012 when they traded Nash to the Lakers. Like the Kings they blew a lot of draft picks. Between 2011 and 2017 they had 11 first rounders. They packaged three of them (2 picks plus Bogdanovic's rights) to the Kings for Marquese Chriss. They used lottery picks on Markieff Morris, Kendall Marshall, Alex Len, Dragan Bender, and Josh Jackson. But in the middle of it they hit on Devin Booker. Not too dissimilar from the Kings hitting on Demarcus Cousins and then later De'Aaron Fox.
But the Suns did three things the Kings have failed to do.
1. They hit on another high pick to compliment their star. Ayton will never be Doncic, but he's a great complimentary piece and has come on strong to show he was a worthy #1 pick in a strong draft.
2. They hired the right coach. The Kings actually did that with Malone before he was run out of town. And possibly Joerger though he seemingly ran himself out of town. They certainly didn't do that with Walton. But Monty Williams has shown he's the right man for Phoenix and they've let him do his job.
3. They traded for the veteran piece they needed and surrounded their core with the wings you need to win in today's NBA. CP3 was by far the biggest difference maker for the Suns. He transformed that team. But Bridges, Crowder, Johnson etc are the type of role players you need around Paul, Booker, and Ayton.
Now they are coming off a finals appearance and just won 17 straight, including last night's victory over the resurgent Warriors.
The Kings could have been a few breaks from a similar tranformation. Hali is a good player but maybe not a great fit with Fox and Mitchell at least looks like a long time NBA player, but neither is the compliment the Kings really need for De'Aaron. Bagley certainly isn't. And instead of balancing the roster with trades the Kings have a glut of guards and bigs and almost no true wings. Which is especially frustrating when it's clear that guys like Hield and Bagley don't have a long term future with the team. Even Barnes is probably gone after next year.
But most of all, the player that they hoped to build around has regressed. We all hoped for Fox to take his game to a higher level this season and instead we're left wondering what's wrong or if he was never the guy we thought he was. It's depressing honestly.
The Kings can't get there from here.
There isn't a piece they can add or a reasonable trade they can make that will turn this roster into a contender. With Fox not looking like a star you can build around and not enough value left in the rest of the roster to trade for a second star there's no path forward.
It's hard to stomach the idea of a full rebuild after so many years of losing but the reality is that it's because this team should have gone that route a long time before.
Tanking last year could have got the Kings Evan Mobley who looks like a transformative player. Or Cade Cunningham or Scottie Barnes. Even Wagner would have been a much better fit for the current team. I like Mitchell, but he's not moving the needle so far.
The Kings have one decent trade chip and a bunch of mediocre ones with no real path for true improvement. It's definitely time to blow it up.
Deal Fox. Deal Barnes. Deal Hield and Bagley if anyone will actually offer anything of value. I love Holmes for his play, his efficiency and his contract, but you deal him if the offer is right too. Hold on to Haliburton and Mitchell (who play well together) and see what you have in low cost flyers like King, Queta, Ramsey, Davis, and Woodard. Maybe nothing. Maybe something. But this team has never allowed itself to be all the way bad. And that's probably the only path to eventually being good.
I (and likely many others) agree with you.
Given his obvious on the court chemistry with Haliburton, Holmes is the only veteran I would love to keep if possible but the FO needs to strongly consider every reasonable trade option..
The Kings have gotten themselves into this basketball purgatory through serial misfeasance, and now it’s time for the organization to fully commit to the sacrificial process of rebuilding.