Getting Outlaw was a "best available at the time" scenario. His SF skill set in the right mix was a need filled on paper at the time. Hickson was a desire early and a good trade for Omri. He is an above-the-basket rebouder, has a good mid-range jumper and can run the court, all needs for the Kings prior to the season.
Both played-started major minutes in the past couple of years. Coming in to a rebuilding effort with the youngest team in the league is tough for any vet. Their rolls have changed, minutes lost to a new system, a new chemistry (or not), on and on. Hickson can work, Outlaw just may not "fit". Salmons is the mystey man. Brought in for defense and vet leadership in the back court. He has started most of his career but now not and in a hard to define role. Very tough situation for him.
Then there is Whiteside, all the project they were afraid he might be. Talent but a headless horseman. And where is Honeycutt? As someone else suggested is he being held back so as not to decrease Salmons minutes further? I tnink he, more than any other non-starter, has talent to play in the NBA. So why not?
And lets stop bopping Hayes. Listening to the Clippers broadcast on Direct TV, they raved about Hayes as the player they worried about most based on his shutting down Griffin consistently the past two years. And he did it again last night. The shooter-scorers killed the Kimgs. Should be a message there.