You're comparing the Kings with the Spurs and the Suns. We are NOT a contending team. We do NOT need a player like John Salmons. I don't have anything against him; I don't think he's necessarily overpaid for what he does/can do. But he doesn't make us any better, and he doesn't fill a hole.
If we were right there on the brink and wanted some depth at the position, or weren't comfortable making a push for a title with Garcia logging 30 minutes a night, then Salmons would make sense. You're likening him to Hedo Turkoglu and Michael Finley, when they play for teams that are far better than the Kings. Teams that are ready to compete for championships sign players like John Salmons to give them depth. Not the Kings.
Bad teams don't sign middling players to long-term contracts, especially not when they have to use their MLE to do so. It just doesn't make sense. I'm not saying that Petrie should be fired because of this contract, but I disagree with the notion that it was a good signing simply because the guy can put up 22 points in a win at home. I loved seeing him do it, but it doesn't make me feel like this team is headed in the right direction when we're still $8 million above the cap and saddled with bad contracts for the next three years (SAR, Thomas, Moore, arguably Miller/Bibby).
Reading what you say makes me think that we just signed Salmons yesterday or something. We signed him right after Bonzi declined the generous offer we made to him. Apparantly, Petrie wanted to have another SG/SF swingman on the team. Just because Bonzi didn't sign doesn't mean he should have just dropped the thought. He certainly could have chosen a worse signing.
I hate repeating myself but here goes. At that time, Kevin was coming off of his first "breakout" year when he averaged under 11 PPG. At that time Garcia was coming off of an underwhelming rookie season. Seeing Garcia's up-and-down nature at the time didn't exactly instill much confidence in me, and I have still liked Garcia from day 1. Also at the time we signed Salmons, the perception of Artest was that he was still a ticking time-bomb.
There are three sound reasons why the Salmons signing as a backup to the Bonzi offer was well justified. Here's another one. Salmons was a guy that had not yet reached his potential, and Petrie should be commended for picking him up for a relatively cheap contract.
I understand and agree with the idea that we had more pertinent needs at the time, and therefore should have spent that money elsewhere. But who was available at the time that would have filled a need in our frontcourt? I don't remember missing out on any big names that could've been had for the MLE. Furthermore, at the time, we had SAR, Williamson, Miller, Thomas, Williams, Maurice frickin' Taylor, and "the beast himself" Potapenko. Making the same complaint about Mo Taylor is fully acceptable IMO, but it just doesn't make sense with Salmons. And even if we could've found/had the right guy for our frontcourt with our MLE we are just going to throw him into
that mix? We would've had 8 guys on the roster to fill two positions and only Justin Williams and Mo Taylor would've been paid under $3M. Ridiculous.
Hindsight certainly is 20/20. If Kevin had never taken that next step and become the budding superstar he is today, then Salmons would be one of the most glorified players on the team. But Kevin did bud, and now people are upset that we signed Salmons, a guy who is becoming a true asset to this team. I just don't get it, and maybe I never will.
And I love the argument about Udrih. Just because we had Douby means that we shouldn't have signed Udrih? Udrih had untapped value and now that value is being realized in a Kings uni. And much quicker than expected. At first people were thinking
Udrih? And after just a few games the tune became
UDRIH! Now imagine if we had signed Udrih to a 3 yr/$3M contract. That would be similar to the Salmons signing IMO. Locking an underrated player in for cheaper than their actual value.
If this team was truly in a rebuild/play for the future mode, then we should be playing our younger studs
across the board. Garcia isn't the only one who's growth is being stunted by someone ahead of him. Douby, Garcia, Williams and Hawes all should be getting significant development minutes by the same rationale. But that is not the way things are working under our new coach. Theus has maintained that players have to earn their minutes by their play on the court. And Salmons has certainly done that. If people want to complain about youth development, complain about Bibby, Moore and Miller blocking Douby, Williams and Hawes. Do that before complaining aobut Salmons blocking Garcia because Salmons is more of a late-developing player than a veteran.