No trade winds blowing for Kings
By Sam Amick -- Bee Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
It is, to be sure, a cell phone world, with global communication easier than ever and no need to be in the office to get work done.
With that said, Geoff Petrie's presence on the other side of the globe held no special significance in relation to the hottest trading period of the NBA season.
Still, the Kings president of basketball operations returned Sunday from a week of scouting in Spain, meaning he was hardly standing by in Sacramento, waiting for offers or making calls with hopes of improving his team.
And as the trade deadline looms Thursday at noon, Petrie said his best work - and only work - will likely begin and end with the Ron Artest trade that has surely changed his team's season.
"You're always open to looking at (trade possibilities), or what not," Petrie said Wednesday. "It's obviously a period of increased chatter, but if you're looking for the chatter box, you're going to have to go elsewhere.... With us sitting here today, it's very, very unlikely that we'll do anything."
The only bit of Kings chatter came last week in the Denver Post, which reported a trade rumor that had the Kings sending guard Bonzi Wells to the Nuggets for point guard Earl Watson and shooting guard Voshon Lenard. The Kings have been using rookie Francisco García in a quasi-backup point guard role of late, while he's also run the point with Mike Bibby on the floor at times. Meanwhile, Jason Hart, who was brought here from Charlotte in the offseason to fill the same role, has played in just 10 of the last 15 games, averaging 8.3 minutes per outing.
"You have conversations with teams," Petrie said when asked if there was any truth to the report. "To the extent that you have conversations, that has nothing to do with whether anything got beyond that.... The trade winds for us right now are blowing us out to sea, not up on shore."
Still, Kings history says anything can happen. Before Chris Webber, Matt Barnes and Michael Bradley were traded one year ago today to Philadelphia for Kenny Thomas, Brian Skinner and Corliss Williamson, Petrie was quoted by The Bee that there would be no last-minute deals.
"There are some calls you make and some calls you take," Petrie said the night before the trade. "I think for us, we've made one major acquisition (Doug Christie for Orlando's Cuttino Mobley and Bradley) already, and my sense is we're going to go with the guys we have."
Hours later, Webber was traded. If he stands pat this year, Petrie will have done more than enough to revive his squad's season. The Kings' 7-5 record since Artest arrived could just as easily be 9-3, as they gave games away late in Utah and Memphis. Their defense is among the best in the league in that stretch, and the current nine-game home winning streak (six with Artest) has restored the old tradition of dominance at Arco Arena.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/14218056p-15043902c.html
I'm still not believing it till 3:01pm tomorrow.
