Ailene Voisin: Webber debuts in unfamiliar supporting role

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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12474347p-13330218c.html


Ailene Voisin: Webber debuts in unfamiliar supporting role


He realizes he will be working behind Iverson

By Ailene Voisin -- Bee Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Sunday, February 27, 2005




PHILADELPHIA - Chris Webber's powerful presence fills a room, and for the first time this season, he filled this building. Yet his much-anticipated opening act with the 76ers was so bizarre, the ending so improbable, that the former Kings star must have envisioned Geoff Petrie's palm prints smeared all over the script. This was Webber's perfect storm, a debut that demands a do-over.

This was his misery.

http://ads.sacbee.com/RealMedia/ads...l/64313865323634663432323230623630?_RM_EMPTY_ On a night when two teams could have crooned along to "Getting to know you, getting to know all about you," with six players having swapped jerseys within the previous 72 hours, Webber, the best player in the history of the Sacramento franchise, endured an exhausting, emotional, altogether unfulfilling experience. His jump shots didn't fall. His passing skills were seldom displayed. His long rebound resulted in a half-hook that could have forced an overtime, instead rimmed short, enabling the Kings to steal out of here with a victory.

Webber afterward was crestfallen, and certainly unsettled. Not only is he in new surroundings, but based on the opening scenes and the infrequency with which he touched the ball, he also has been thrust into an unfamiliar role - that of the designated second option behind the diminutive, equally dynamic Allen Iverson.

No doubt about it. This is Iverson's town, Iverson's team, and apparently that isn't going to change. In a stunning postgame concession, Webber even seemed to concede as much.

"I need to make the adjustments to the team," he said, his tone subdued. "The team doesn't need to make the adjustments to me."

Geez.

Where was that spin last spring?

Webber, who turns 32 Tuesday, was victimized by the type of ensemble effort that characterized the Kings' performances throughout the first 58 games a year ago. Those were the Kings at their best, embodying their share-the-ball, share-the-spotlight philosophy. Those were the Kings again Saturday night, with Kenny Thomas, Brian Skinner, Cuttino Mobley and an ecstatic Corliss Williamson subbing nicely for the departed Doug Christie and Vlade Divac.

"The guys we've got now will do the dirty work," offered Mobley, who erupted for several significant field goals and one very timely steal in the final minutes. "On this team, that's what we needed. We have plenty of guys that can score."

The consensus around the country is that the 76ers pulled one over on the wily Petrie, but if these types of performances persist, the man deserves yet another raise. Thomas and Skinner provide much-needed frontcourt depth, defense and rebounding.

Williamson adds a low-post presence. And though Mike Bibby seemed to struggle emotionally in his first meeting against his close friend, he too discerned a method to Petrie's alleged madness.

"All these guys can play," said Bibby, nodding. "We're deeper. We'll be all right. But it was so weird out there. ... I can't even describe what I was feeling."

The building teemed with energy, electricity long before tipoff, with Sixers fans embracing the Webber acquisition en masse.

They cheered, called his name, produced signs welcoming him to town. Seen as a late-in-life superstar, as Iverson's prolific sidekick, Webber is projected as a sort of savior, as the transplant who will make the difference.

Should he fail to meet expectations? Should his jump shots, his effectiveness on the pick-and-pops, his defensive limitations not be sufficiently negated by the protective presence of lanky center Samuel Dalembert? Should the balky knee cause him to miss games?

This is Philly, an unforgiving place of impatient, at times brutal, intolerant fans. Should Webber falter, that would be an unfortunate twist of fate, no way to augment his six-plus seasons in Sacramento.

Indeed, his contributions to the Kings' franchise should not be minimized. Before he sustained that career-altering knee injury in May 2003, Webber was an elegant, often spectacular 6-foot-10 superstar, a big-game player who evolved into a legitimate MVP candidate.

On a team that featured Divac, Christie, Peja Stojakovic, Bobby Jackson and Bibby, he was the premier performer, the expressive player with the all-around game. That all changed, of course, when he returned following a 58-game absence, when he refused to accept that he would never again be a young, healthy Chris Webber, that he could still be a terrific player, but not always the leading player.

Some nights, the shots still fall.

Some nights, it's best to move on.

Wishing him the best.


About the writer:



 
Some things, like the tide, the sun rising in the east, the donut falling glazed side down AND Ailene Voisin's hatred of Chris Webber, simply will never change. As KG told me, she's going to have to find a new target. After all, we only play the 76ers twice a year - whatever is she going to use for fodder for her hatred mill?

Luckily for her, she'll still have Rick Adelman, at least for one additional year. Had RA not been given the extension, we would most likely be holding a wake for the late, non-lamented AV, who would most likely have died with the realization she would have no targets left at which to shoot her arrows of outrage and frustration.
 
For the love of God woman, leave the poor guy alone! You got your wish, he's gone, he's now someone else's problem, why do you continue to flagellate this expired equine?
 
has anyone ever noticed that all her articles always are titled with her name - its as if the bee heralds her as their best writer or something...disgusting
 
acisking said:
has anyone ever noticed that all her articles always are titled with her name - its as if the bee heralds her as their best writer or something...disgusting

Or maybe they are just posting a warning. ;)
 
Bricklayer said:
Or maybe they are just posting a warning. ;)


It is a new label for

toxic waste
hazardous waste
nuclear waste
chemical waste
biological waste
human waste
dog poop
 
PixelPusher said:
Ten Four, yeah, we have a level 3 Ailene Voisin here, please advise, over?

Target is highly dangerous team nine. Approach with extreme caution and terminate with extreme prejudice. The words "Webber" and "Adelman" will send said subject into a murderous rage so do not, I repeat, DO NOT mention said words. Best weapons to use on this target are "objective journalism" and "fair and balanced coverage" since the target has no experience with these things. It is rumored that a certain substance called Stojacovicite will send target into a blissful state, so be sure to stock up on it before hunting target.

Godspeed soldier!
 
Since she continually feels the need to take cheap shots at Webber, perhaps she should stop omitting the facts. Perhaps she should mention that Miller and Bobby Jackson both got hurt last year to contribute the team's struggles when Webber came back last year instead of conveniently leaving it out.

For all the bashing Webber gets for being "too selfish to adapt" (the guy did average about 5 assists a game) she rarely mentions how much Peja struggled when it mattered in the playoffs while Webber produced on one leg.

She really is a joke of a sportswriter.
 
NJKingsFan said:
Since she continually feels the need to take cheap shots at Webber, perhaps she should stop omitting the facts. Perhaps she should mention that Miller and Bobby Jackson both got hurt last year to contribute the team's struggles when Webber came back last year instead of conveniently leaving it out.

For all the bashing Webber gets for being "too selfish to adapt" (the guy did average about 5 assists a game) she rarely mentions how much Peja struggled when it mattered in the playoffs while Webber produced on one leg.

She really is a joke of a sportswriter.

As posters have pointed out on this forum for years, AV feels no need to sprinkle in facts which don't conveniently fit with her view of "the truth".
 
Great article. As usual - she voices what the majority of basketball fans in Sacramento believe, and she does it very well. Excellent take.
 
No, he wasn't banned and yes, the Webber trade is apparently a direct cause for his return.
 
a joke of a sports writer

>>>For all the bashing Webber gets for being "too selfish to adapt" ... she rarely mentions how much Peja struggled when it mattered in the playoffs while Webber produced on one leg.

She really is a joke of a sports writer.>>>

The worst thing about AV is that she is so bad, you have to root AGAINST all her predictions so she will be proved the wrong-headed, biased no-nothing she is. Then, you are psychotically disassociated, rooting against the team you love!

Help!!! :eek:
 
it's funny how the article was suppossed to be about c-webb adjusting to a new role, but instead she bashes him for not making an adjustment to last year's team.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
hey ailene:

let it go. he's gone. show some respect at least for everything c-webb did for this franchise.
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he's gone and she still takes jabs at him. she has no class. this article makes me want to puke:mad: .

on a side note: its not just her articles about the kings that aren't right. come to think of it, i've never enjoyed an article by av.:(
 
Ailene Voisin can write really good articles and she has. She has a lot of insight about the arena situation, she is pretty good about Mike Bibby, etc. She does, unfortunately, have two areas about which she has gone totally nuts. One is Chris Webber, the other is Rick Adelman.

If you know her biases ahead of time, you can read the articles and decide for youself whether it's wheat or chaff.
 
Sheesh! I have been avoiding her stupidity almost since she arrived here and was elevated to her own column in the Bee. I have been a Kings fan since THEY got here, too, and it seems so unfair (a little cheese with my whine please) that her know=it=all=ness haunts the sports section just about every day!

But, VF21, thanks for the advice. I will go back to not reading her, and will get my C-Webb fix from Philly.com.
 
VF21 said:
Ailene Voisin can write really good articles and she has. She has a lot of insight about the arena situation, she is pretty good about Mike Bibby, etc. She does, unfortunately, have two areas about which she has gone totally nuts. One is Chris Webber, the other is Rick Adelman.

If you know her biases ahead of time, you can read the articles and decide for youself whether it's wheat or chaff.

word. i'm just angry about this snowboard/skier article she wrote and of course, webber. and on second look i guess her title is about how webber is unfamiliar with taking a "supporting role." i still think it's unneccesary for her to take shots at chris after he is gone.
 
Bricklayer said:
The remarkable thing is that if you knew the poster you'd realize he wasn't trying to be sarcastic. :eek:

sadly true. But if I really thought that Voisin represented what most Sacramento fans thought I would be willing to bet that all arena talks would be long gone, because the Maloofs would WANT to move this team.
 
AV with a torch and pitch fork running the kings out of town. That would make an awesome poster.

AV needs to be let go, and the bee needs to revamp just like the Kings did.
 
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