Bee: Adelman hopes rookie follows Martin's lead

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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/14161485p-14989366c.html

Adelman hopes rookie follows Martin's lead

Francisco García's game is beginning to come around after a rough start to the season.
By Sam Amick -- Bee Staff Writer


The true original returns to Arco Arena for the first time tonight.

His name is Bobby Jackson, a man known at another time as the provider of all things energetic and productive off the Kings' bench.

As coach Rick Adelman has mentioned a few dozen times since Jackson was traded to Memphis for Bonzi Wells last August, he always knew what Jackson would bring - namely an always-reliable output that took pressure off the bigger-name players.

The in-house prototype these days is Kevin Martin, the Kings' second-year shooting guard who has filled a variation of the role with a surge in the last 24 games worthy of boundless praise.

Next up, Adelman hopes, is Francisco García.

With the Kings' win over Utah on Sunday came a flash of García's potential that Adelman sees every day in practice. García burying shots. García blocking shots. García bringing a versatile attack like none other on the roster. His fourth-quarter outburst included three gap-widening three-pointers and four blocks.

"Once he made that first (three), he got some confidence," Adelman said. "I'm hoping what happened for Kevin is what happens for (García), because he's going to get on the floor. Both of those kids are going to play, and they just have to keep learning and getting better every game."
One down, one to go.

Martin was the first to make the leap to legitimacy, seizing the opportunity that came when Wells injured his groin on Dec. 19. Since Wells went down and Martin took his place, Martin has shot 52.4 percent from the field (100-191), 44.8 percent from three-point range (26-58) and averaged 13.4 points per game. In the season's first 19 games, Martin hit just 27 of 74 shots and 3 of 19 three-pointers.

Wells - who re-strained the groin against Utah on Friday - will miss his second consecutive game tonight, missing a chance to face his old team while Martin will make another start. García's challenge, though, is different. Among his improvements is a more efficient long-range game, as García has hit 16 of his last 45 three-pointers (35.6 percent) after missing 41 of his first 47 (12.8 percent).

"Francisco has to learn how to come in the game, and get involved in the game off the bench," Adelman said. "He's not going to play 35 minutes, but he still can be effective in 18 or 20."

And play like he practices.

It wasn't long ago that Martin faced the same crossroads. He was lauded for his offseason work and preseason practice routine, but his play didn't translate come game time. Adelman said it's an age-old process that not everyone survives.

"History says the second group always beats the first group (in practice)," Adelman said. "I remember Chet Walker, in Chicago, was an all-star every year he'd play. But every day in practice, a guy named Howard Porter would just kill him. Chet said, you know what, 'There are practice players and there are game players, and he's a practice player.' "

Which isn't how Adelman sees either of his young guns.

"If we're going to be a decent team the last 30 games, those guys have to be on the floor and they have to be progressing, because they're going to be good NBA players," he said. "We've always felt that way. But they've been thrown into the fire."

One García said he can handle.

"It's a learning experience," he said. "In the beginning, it was frustrating, but I've just got to keep working at it."

Walking wounded - Adelman held Ron Artest out of practice Monday to spare his small forward any more pain in his right hip. Artest, who suffered a hip pointer against Utah on Friday but played through the pain Sunday, will play tonight. Center Brad Miller (fractured thumb) is hoping to play, though he said he would test out his shooting and pass-catching ability today before deciding.
 
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garcia must learn how to perfect what he's good at. i wouldnt say i want him to follow martins lead, but i would want him to improve as much as kevin has. averaging over 9 points a game. started the season sluggish and looking like he's never been in an NBA game; but he woke up.
 
I think Cisco's actually a little ahead of Martin's pace at the same point in their careers. He got off to an absolutely horrendous start to the season, but he's already made some significant adjustments and is a contributor. The rest is really just about him smoothing things out, but the main shift from consciousless gunner trying to impress by shooting eveytime he had the ball into more in control roleplayer has already largely been made. Not sure that Cisco's ceiling is quite as high as Kevin's, but he actualy made the transition into "mature" NBA form faster and now with both guys you have an idea of what they are and how they can contribute in the NBA.
 
I believe that Garcia and Martin can be very good in this league. Like I have said in the past, they remind me of a young Rip/Prince combo in Detroit except with range. They can both do alot offensively and defensively.
 
CaminoChaos said:
I believe that Garcia and Martin can be very good in this league. Like I have said in the past, they remind me of a young Rip/Prince combo in Detroit except with range. They can both do alot offensively and defensively.

Yeah, I want to see what these 2 can do together in a couple years. Exciting to contemplate. :)
 
Cisco's ceiling is much higher than most give him credit for. He can play 3 positions, he can defend, he can pass, and he can shoot (still learning what is a good shot in the league). In addition to those skills, he has the intangible--heart/desire. You can't teach that, and you either have it or you don't. Don't forget, 4 years ago, Cisco was an unknown in HS bball, and he has hardly even been playing a decade.
 
As frustrating as it is when he turns the ball over, it is very exciting to watch Cisco play. I know many are in Ron Artest craze, but what makes me excited about the rest of the season and our future, is watching Cisco and Kevin progress and develop their game!!!
 
Agreed, watching them change right before our eye's is exciting, they have great potential, and its great to see what the future of the Kings is going to look like...
 
In comparing the progress of Cisco vs Martin it would be interesting to know how much pt Kevin had at this time last year. My gut tells me that Cisco has gotten more pt in his 1st year than Kevin did. If that is the case it may account for his (Cisco) being further along at this point.
 
Salmondave said:
In comparing the progress of Cisco vs Martin it would be interesting to know how much pt Kevin had at this time last year. My gut tells me that Cisco has gotten more pt in his 1st year than Kevin did. If that is the case it may account for his (Cisco) being further along at this point.

You are exactly right.
 
i was going to say that.... last year we had barnes and evans with mobley in front of both of them.... martin was damn near exclusively a garbage time player.... garcia has most likely gotten more minutes so far this season than martin had all last season....
 
We need them both on the floor to develop. The more I see these two young players the more I think that Bonzi is not going to be here next year. We need to give them time on the court and I can not see them getting enough time with a healthy Ron and Bonzi in the lineup. I say time to trade Bonzi for a big man.
 
Bricklayer said:
I think Cisco's actually a little ahead of Martin's pace at the same point in their careers. He got off to an absolutely horrendous start to the season, but he's already made some significant adjustments and is a contributor. The rest is really just about him smoothing things out, but the main shift from consciousless gunner trying to impress by shooting eveytime he had the ball into more in control roleplayer has already largely been made. Not sure that Cisco's ceiling is quite as high as Kevin's, but he actualy made the transition into "mature" NBA form faster and now with both guys you have an idea of what they are and how they can contribute in the NBA.
I think that after Cisco's last few games, that you can really tell how much he has progressed in his defensive focus, alone.
 
alot of things i've observed here lately. several threads and several depressing weeks ago we've talked about how our bench was causing us games. now it's a different story. everyone wants to see martin and garcia on the floor MORE. maybe i guess they were never included in the sad mix of players that stunk for us off the bench this year. maybe they were, but all i know now is that martin has shown some life and we know that he and garcia both belong in this league. AleksandarN made a statement that caught my attention while reading. martin is already progressing, and if he can excel his game a little more we should give him a starting job and ship bonzi for a big man. this is the nba, and martin isnt actually among the strongest of players; but he has to get in the weight room and put on some pounds.
 
Unlike some, I'm not ready to ship/forget Bonzi off yet at all. I love the guys play, and want the Artest/Bonzi combo. It would depend on the quality of acquisition(s) we get in return.
 
I think Cisco's actually a little ahead of Martin's pace at the same point in their careers.

In comparing the progress of Cisco vs Martin it would be interesting to know how much pt Kevin had at this time last year. My gut tells me that Cisco has gotten more pt in his 1st year than Kevin did. If that is the case it may account for his (Cisco) being further along at this point.

On the 2nd post...exactly.

Minutes for KMart in entire 04-05 season = 455 :)

Minutes for Cisco SO FAR this 05-06 season = 895 (and counting) :eek:

Cisco has already "lived" TWO full seasons like what Kevin had in 04-05.

That might have a little something to do with on-court progress... :rolleyes:

It's ALL about the minutes for both these guys. Getting significant, meaningful time on the floor is the only way for a young player to truly develop.
 
Bricklayer said:
I think Cisco's actually a little ahead of Martin's pace at the same point in their careers. He got off to an absolutely horrendous start to the season, but he's already made some significant adjustments and is a contributor. The rest is really just about him smoothing things out, but the main shift from consciousless gunner trying to impress by shooting eveytime he had the ball into more in control roleplayer has already largely been made. Not sure that Cisco's ceiling is quite as high as Kevin's, but he actualy made the transition into "mature" NBA form faster and now with both guys you have an idea of what they are and how they can contribute in the NBA.
I agree but you also have to take other factors into the account.

Martin is younger than Garcia and on top of that Garcia has come into the NBA more experieced. He has played against men at an international level so one could expect his transition to be a bit quicker than Martin's.

Martin has greater potential but I think Garcia has more versatility to his game than Martin.

Very happy to have both though :)
 
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