What's interesting is that Kings fans and national pundits alike all measured the western conference correctly heading into this season. It was going to be healthier, deeper, and tougher than last season.
Given their modest offseason moves, many on this very site said that the Kings could end up with a worse record than last year and still be an improved postseason team because of the gauntlet they'd have to get through to make the playoffs in 2024. Would it be nice if we saw greater improvement in the standings or a more stable net rating? Of course it would. But everything is pretty much panning out exactly like most of us thought. The Kings are a good team. They're a winning team. They're performing at about last year's pace in a more brutal version of the west. But they're not in the upper echelon of the conference yet. They're a middle of the pack playoff team that remains a piece or two away from true contention.
The sky isn't falling. They need to get the job done, stay above the play-in line, reach for a second round appearance, and head into the offseason with two years of success to show for the McNair/Brown program. Hopefully Monte can be opportunistic about acquiring the pieces that may help push this team up another level, but honestly, much of the Kings' future success is going to be on the shoulders of Keegan Murray. He's already exceeding expectations, and my guess is, the league had better watch out during the '24-'25 season. If he keeps developing like a young Kawhi Leonard, Fox/Sabonis/Murray may be a very special core. We just need to be patient.