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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12013989p-12884382c.html
Arco game report: Handling bigger role is Evans' challenge
By Joe Davidson -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Maurice Evans brought the right jersey to work Tuesday night to place next to the familiar Kings garb waiting for him in his stall.
Evans sported a retro Walt Frazier No. 10, and although the first-year King isn't exactly a point guard never to be confused with the New York Knicks legend, he didn't become a turnover casualty during a sudden start against the Denver Nuggets.
Evans stepped in for the traded Doug Christie, just his second such assignment after starting the season opener while Christie was healing a tender foot. Tuesday, Evans delivered 14 points, four rebounds, two assists, only one turnover and a few snaps of the rim during a 109-100 Kings triumph.
Evans has skills galore, none better than the ability to jump and touch the rafters, but ballhandling remains a work in progress. Christie was very capable with the ball in his hands, and Evans was sure not to throw it all over the place.
"I'm confident with the ball, handling it and doing things with it," Evans said. "I'm not ever going to be Allen Iverson or Baron Davis with the killer cross-over, but I'm not going to turn it over six times. I tried to be smart with it." Imagine that lineup
Kings fans would have been wondering if someone had suggested immediately after last season that the team's lineup would include Eddie House, Matt Barnes and Kevin Martin in a tight game this season.
But those three players were on the floor at one point in the second quarter, and they helped the Kings build a 10-point lead. Martin, a first-round draft pick, scored a career-high 17 points in 18 energized minutes.
Cross-court reunion
T.R. Dunn played 10 years with the Nuggets and was an assistant coach with Denver the last two seasons before accepting a spot on Rick Adelman's Kings staff.Dunn wanted to remain with the Nuggets, although Tuesday he said, "I'm real comfortable here," adding the shuffling of coaches is part of the business.
Dunn made sure to embrace old pupils such as Nene and Carmelo Anthony.
"I do follow some of those guys when I can," Dunn said.
Not quite Olympian
Kings center Greg Ostertag blocked two shots, both in the first half at the expense of Anthony, who looked stunned each time. After one, a fan blurted, "That's a bronze-medal effort, Melo!"
QUESTION POSED
CAN THE KINGS CONTINUE TO WIN WITHOUT A TRUE BACKUP POINT GUARD? With Bobby Jackson out and Doug Christie bound for Orlando, the options against Denver included a ton of Mike Bibby and a little of newly signed Eddie House. Bibby was solid as always, gutting out the final eight minutes of his 40-minute night with a tender ankle and scoring 18 points with seven assists. But the Kings had only 17 assists, none on back-door cuts by Peja Stojakovic, who scored often on that play off Christie's passes. House, not a true point guard, had no points, one assist and one steal in 11 minutes.
- Joe Davidson
KING FOR A DAY
PEJA STOJAKOVIC - With the roster depleted, the forward carried the Kings in the fourth quarter, when they blew the game open. He had 27 points, including three three-pointers, in 40 minutes.
BIG NUMBER
6 - Kings players scoring in double figures, with only nine dressed.
TALKING POINTS RETURNS
Post your opinions about the Doug Christie deal and other Kings' topics with host Ron Wenig. Go to: http://forums.sacbee.com/ talkingpoints/
Arco game report: Handling bigger role is Evans' challenge
By Joe Davidson -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Maurice Evans brought the right jersey to work Tuesday night to place next to the familiar Kings garb waiting for him in his stall.
Evans sported a retro Walt Frazier No. 10, and although the first-year King isn't exactly a point guard never to be confused with the New York Knicks legend, he didn't become a turnover casualty during a sudden start against the Denver Nuggets.
Evans stepped in for the traded Doug Christie, just his second such assignment after starting the season opener while Christie was healing a tender foot. Tuesday, Evans delivered 14 points, four rebounds, two assists, only one turnover and a few snaps of the rim during a 109-100 Kings triumph.
Evans has skills galore, none better than the ability to jump and touch the rafters, but ballhandling remains a work in progress. Christie was very capable with the ball in his hands, and Evans was sure not to throw it all over the place.
"I'm confident with the ball, handling it and doing things with it," Evans said. "I'm not ever going to be Allen Iverson or Baron Davis with the killer cross-over, but I'm not going to turn it over six times. I tried to be smart with it." Imagine that lineup
Kings fans would have been wondering if someone had suggested immediately after last season that the team's lineup would include Eddie House, Matt Barnes and Kevin Martin in a tight game this season.
But those three players were on the floor at one point in the second quarter, and they helped the Kings build a 10-point lead. Martin, a first-round draft pick, scored a career-high 17 points in 18 energized minutes.
Cross-court reunion
T.R. Dunn played 10 years with the Nuggets and was an assistant coach with Denver the last two seasons before accepting a spot on Rick Adelman's Kings staff.Dunn wanted to remain with the Nuggets, although Tuesday he said, "I'm real comfortable here," adding the shuffling of coaches is part of the business.
Dunn made sure to embrace old pupils such as Nene and Carmelo Anthony.
"I do follow some of those guys when I can," Dunn said.
Not quite Olympian
Kings center Greg Ostertag blocked two shots, both in the first half at the expense of Anthony, who looked stunned each time. After one, a fan blurted, "That's a bronze-medal effort, Melo!"
QUESTION POSED
CAN THE KINGS CONTINUE TO WIN WITHOUT A TRUE BACKUP POINT GUARD? With Bobby Jackson out and Doug Christie bound for Orlando, the options against Denver included a ton of Mike Bibby and a little of newly signed Eddie House. Bibby was solid as always, gutting out the final eight minutes of his 40-minute night with a tender ankle and scoring 18 points with seven assists. But the Kings had only 17 assists, none on back-door cuts by Peja Stojakovic, who scored often on that play off Christie's passes. House, not a true point guard, had no points, one assist and one steal in 11 minutes.
- Joe Davidson
KING FOR A DAY
PEJA STOJAKOVIC - With the roster depleted, the forward carried the Kings in the fourth quarter, when they blew the game open. He had 27 points, including three three-pointers, in 40 minutes.
BIG NUMBER
6 - Kings players scoring in double figures, with only nine dressed.
TALKING POINTS RETURNS
Post your opinions about the Doug Christie deal and other Kings' topics with host Ron Wenig. Go to: http://forums.sacbee.com/ talkingpoints/