Media reports that the Kings did not interview most potential lottery picks, but most importantly importantly no interview or contact with Ivey.
The Kings reportedly interviewed 33 prospects at the draft combine.
https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/k...interview-whopping-33-draft-prospects-combine
Not all were named in that article, but of the 10 that were, 4 went in the lottery and 2 went just outside the lottery. 3 of the interviewed prospects went well outside the lottery or undrafted (though in my eyes Moore probably should have gone in/near the lottery) and 1 pulled his name out of the draft. Then there were 23 guys that were interviewed whose names we don't know. Were they lottery guys? Second round picks? We don't know.
Ivey of course did say he hadn't met with or talked with the Kings. However, he also said that his agent/team was running all the draft process for him, and it's entirely possible, even likely, that Ivey's team steered him away from the Kings due to the fit issue. We've even got Givony making the somewhat silly claim that Ivey might not sign in Sac if they drafted him - doubtful but nonetheless a pretty strong indication that Ivey's team did not want him to land in Sac. It's hard to interview a guy who won't visit.
Listening to Sean Cunningham say that the Kings were visiting Keegan during the college season, well before the draft process.
So the Kings, who did their utmost NOT to tank, and who had to jump in the lottery to even get into position to draft Murray, were heavily scouting Murray at a time that they were not in position to draft him? That sounds like good preparation to me. Do you honestly think that during the college season they scouted ONE player? And then just got lucky enough to jump into #4 to get him?
For those who say Monte doesn't need to interview candidates, just watch film. Then why were they going to Murray's games, talking to him, having dinner with him, etc? The film should speak for itself like it did for the other candidates.
They interviewed 33 candidates at the combine. The scouting staff attended college games. Do you think that Murray's games were the only ones that they attended because they were the only ones they mentioned in the presser following drafting Murray? I mean, is Monte really going to sit down at Murray's presser and talk about how the scouting staff was spending lots of time at Banchero's and Holmgren's and Smith's games? Is he going to say, yeah we went to Ivey's games and watched Daniels in the G-League, and we scouted Eason and Sochan and Duren and Williams and Griffin and did our due diligence on Sharpe as best we could but those guys just didn't measure up?
That's not how these pressers go. You talk about your guy. You praise your guy. You say you were confident he was the best player available when you drafted. You don't talk about all the other guys you scouted because it's your guy's day. You don't go into details about the draft process. And the media and the public learn very little, except cutesy stuff like what Murray's favorite hamburgers are.
If you have hard facts to counter that the Kings were not locked in on Murray from the jump, then I'm all ears.
Well, outside of the above, we also brought in Sochan, didn't we?
Clearly the Kings had two preferred (likely) outcomes from this draft after moving up in the lottery. 1) Get Murray in the 4-6 range. 2) Trade down farther and get Sochan in the 8-11 range. That second outcome probably required a pretty substantial Godfather offer for us to move down so far. And it would appear that we were not confident that we could achieve the first outcome without taking Murray at #4.
Should the Kings have brought in Ivey? Yes, even if they were dead set on Murray - if only as smokescreen. But if Ivey's handlers said no (and given the situation and the things we've heard from Ivey, they probably did), what are you going to do? And yes, perhaps that took away some of the strategic advantage that the Kings would have had to leverage Detroit (if they had traded down to #6, Murray was gone by #5 anyway). So it goes.
But to somehow blame the franchise for being "locked in" on a guy who had one of the best statistical college seasons in the last 20+ years and is likely (at least very plausibly) BPA, is a high-character guy who is happy to be in Sac, and who fits a Kings need both positionally and timeline-wise, that seems silly. And keep in mind, the Kings did interview at least two other candidates in that 5-6 range in Sharpe and Daniels, and we don't know whether they interviewed Mathurin or not.
Anyway, the "locked in" accusation basically seems to suggest that the Kings scouting department just didn't do their jobs - just came into the '21-'22 college season saying "we're going to draft this kid from Iowa some way somehow, and just not do any other work" - and obviously that's not the case.