Bee: After rocky beginning, Artest again is a force

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http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/118546.html

After rocky beginning, Artest again is a force

His high-energy play is giving the Kings a lift.

By Sam Amick - Bee Staff Writer

Last Updated 6:42 am PST Monday, February 5, 2007


It wasn't the Mohawk, because the revival began long before then.
It certainly wasn't the results, since the count for the Kings in January was five wins in 16 tries.
What was it, then, that turned around Ron Artest and has him producing on the floor while finally keeping the peace off it?

"At the end of the day," Artest said, "it's just basketball."

He's sticking with that for now, which is no guarantee that reason will win out every time but as good a sign as any for the Kings that maybe they can count on him again. Although the outcome of this season remains in question, Artest unmistakably has taken his offense to a higher level while defending with renewed energy and -- lo and behold -- disrupting opponents instead of the Kings.

Artest shot 50.4 percent from the field in January after shooting 37.6 percent through November and December. His long-range looks finally fell, too, as Artest hit 22 of 52 from beyond the three-point arc (42.3 percent) after hitting just 19 of his first 80 threes (23.8 percent). On the other end, he leads the league with 2.26 steals per game, and his average of 6.6 rebounds is second on the team.

"I'm just trying to not worry about (the losing)," Artest said. "I don't like to lose, but I just can't handle taking a beating. You keep getting beat up and taking a beating, but sometimes you've got to do it."
As in, deal with it as best you can.

"That's how I've been lately," he said. "I come in, do a job, and at the end of the day it's just basketball. Even when it's not going your way, if you just stay focused and stable and straight, things will go your way."
It worked Saturday, when Artest held Denver star Carmelo Anthony to a season-worst 7-for-25 shooting. Artest, meanwhile, had 21 points on 8-for-18 shooting, including 1 for 2 on three-pointers.

"Carmelo's a great player," said stand-in Kings coach Scott Brooks, who was a Nuggets assistant the past three seasons. "But what Ron did -- I mean I've seen (Anthony) in 250 games, a thousand practices, and he does not go 7 for 25 often."

While Artest already had been playing better midway through January, the fading issues of the past were, literally, being trimmed away. Days before facing Detroit in his first return to the Motor City since the brawl in 2004, he had the strange haircut courtesy of wannabe barber and one-time feuding teammate Mike Bibby. Artest said putting the Detroit visit behind him removed some pressure as well.

Health, interestingly, has had little to do with his improved play. Artest, who missed six games earlier this season with knee and back injuries, said he's not 100 percent. He played a part in two gruesome plays recently, too. An elbow from Dallas' Dirk Nowitzki on Jan. 27 jarred loose his front tooth and required a dental fix-up. Against Denver, Artest delivered an inadvertent forearm that split the lip of Nuggets point guard Steve Blake and left blood on the floor. Healthy or not, Artest clearly is going full speed again.

"I'm a little better (health-wise)," Artest said. "My back is still very sore. I was about to come out (against Denver) when I had a little spasm. But I can't really move like I want to. Hopefully my body will come back to life."
Just like his game.

"Sometimes you worry about things in the past, and then it just carries over into the next day," Artest said. "I'm trying not to let things carry over, but at the same time, if we lose too many games I can get pretty fed up pretty fast. Like (the Nuggets game). I'm not satisfied at all. We can do much better."
 
I have to admit to being pretty content with Artest at this point in time. He's looking sharper on defense, he seems to have gotten over the "ME" take on offense, and he's an excellent mentor for some of the young guns on how to actually play defense.

If he can maintain his composure on a team that is clearly about to do some major rebuilding, then I wouldn't mind keeping him around as part of the new core.
 
I have to admit to being pretty content with Artest at this point in time. He's looking sharper on defense, he seems to have gotten over the "ME" take on offense, and he's an excellent mentor for some of the young guns on how to actually play defense.

If he can maintain his composure on a team that is clearly about to do some major rebuilding, then I wouldn't mind keeping him around as part of the new core.

I agree with all that, VF21. He's got talent, that's for sure.
 
I don't know why people are so quick to get rid of Artest. The guy wants to win and is coming to realize that you cannot always do it. I think he is a great mentor to the young kids and should be the new core of the Kings with KMart.
 
Two Words: Leather Basketball.

I've been saying that since Jan. 1st.

But Im happy the whole "Ron missed a few games and isn't playing great, so he is very obviously in the process of exploding, and tearing our team apart at the seams" kick so many people had is over.
 
I don't know why people are so quick to get rid of Artest. The guy wants to win and is coming to realize that you cannot always do it. I think he is a great mentor to the young kids and should be the new core of the Kings with KMart.
Wow, and I thought I was the only one who thinks this way. Keep Artest and Martin...everyone else can go, I've always said.
 
I am very happy with the way Artest has played recently. I'm not sure who wouldn't be. I do, however, have my doubts that Artest will want to stay here when his contract's up. Having said that, its nothing to worry about for a while.

EDIT: I do subscribe to the theory that no one is untouchable however, if a move will make us better in the long run
 
I believe Ron-Ron is a MOST keep along with K-Mart and believe it or not Shareef. Artest, and Shareef are both great mentors for younger players, but not just that they are good players that are relatively cheap. Ron and shareef have great work ethic and hardly miss practice and games. They take pride in their job. Shareef is known as a good locker room guy with CLASS , but he can also come OFF the bench and produce points and an occasional rebound. K-Mart of course is a must keep I hope I dont need to explain myself there. As a coach Im a believer on having good guys on the team that hustle and have pride in what they do, which rubs off to younger guys and also to someone who may lack that. My example, is the easy case with Webber and Vlade. I know Webber got hurt, BUT I still saw many differences in Webber once Vlade left. Vlade had that inspiration to make people play harder, and yes I believe Ron Artest does the same.
 
I believe Ron-Ron is a MOST keep along with K-Mart and believe it or not Shareef. Artest, and Shareef are both great mentors for younger players, but not just that they are good players that are relatively cheap. Ron and shareef have great work ethic and hardly miss practice and games. They take pride in their job. Shareef is known as a good locker room guy with CLASS , but he can also come OFF the bench and produce points and an occasional rebound. K-Mart of course is a must keep I hope I dont need to explain myself there. As a coach Im a believer on having good guys on the team that hustle and have pride in what they do, which rubs off to younger guys and also to someone who may lack that. My example, is the easy case with Webber and Vlade. I know Webber got hurt, BUT I still saw many differences in Webber once Vlade left. Vlade had that inspiration to make people play harder, and yes I believe Ron Artest does the same.

While I have no problem with any of your comments, I do hope you realize you're stepping right into a mine field with your hope that the Kings keep SAR. Just a bit of a warning - you might want to make sure you have a helmet on.

;)
 
While I have no problem with any of your comments, I do hope you realize you're stepping right into a mine field with your hope that the Kings keep SAR. Just a bit of a warning - you might want to make sure you have a helmet on.

;)
...and a knee brace.:D
 
I agree SAR is a great veteran PF coming off the bench not a C and not a starter we just have to find that starting PF that we need.
 
I agree SAR is a great veteran PF coming off the bench not a C and not a starter we just have to find that starting PF that we need.
I think we'll probably find that in the draft, because unless Petrie pulls something royally crooked in our favor out of his other end, then I dont see us getting a PF that fits our needs via free agency or trade.
 
thats also a point i was going to bring up in another thread. Alot of ppl are talking about salary dumps. But why no pg in FA is better than Bibby. Now unless you get a lottery pick along with it then you don't get as much back as you lose. Also there is not garuntee we get the FA we want.
 
thats also a point i was going to bring up in another thread. Alot of ppl are talking about salary dumps. But why no pg in FA is better than Bibby. Now unless you get a lottery pick along with it then you don't get as much back as you lose. Also there is not garuntee we get the FA we want.



Billups is better than Bibby and Mo Williams will be better than Bibby in the future.
 
I doubt if Billups will be available.


Detroit doesn't have expiring contracts, their owner has never gone over the luxury tax(read this on the Detroit board at RealGM) and doesn't plan to, and Billups will be a FA. Combine that with the fact that Chauncey's contract right now is pretty small, dude will be looking to get paid. Especially if they don't make it to the finals.
 
Detroit doesn't have expiring contracts, their owner has never gone over the luxury tax(read this on the Detroit board at RealGM) and doesn't plan to, and Billups will be a FA. Combine that with the fact that Chauncey's contract right now is pretty small, dude will be looking to get paid. Especially if they don't make it to the finals.

I think there are a lot of assumptions there. And if you buy into the idea that Billups is gonna be looking to get paid, then you also have to accept the possibility his price tag might well be too high for the Maloofs.
 
I think there are a lot of assumptions there. And if you buy into the idea that Billups is gonna be looking to get paid, then you also have to accept the possibility his price tag might well be too high for the Maloofs.


If we have cap room than it's not an issue IMO. A lot of the Pistons fans there seem to be worried that Chauncey won't get paid and he'll leave, that's also exactly what happened with Big Ben.
 
And a lot of Kings fans were worried that Webber wouldn't get paid and he'd leave. I'm just pointing out that fans posting on a realGM message board - or any other board - aren't necessarily posting something you should be taking for fact.
 
And a lot of Kings fans were worried that Webber wouldn't get paid and he'd leave. I'm just pointing out that fans posting on a realGM message board - or any other board - aren't necessarily posting something you should be taking for fact.


Yeah but there wasn't history proving that the Maloofs were cheap right? It's a possibility anyway. All we're looking at right now is what we have which isn't good enough and a bunch of possiblities that may or may not pan out(not sure if I said this correctly or if it made sense).

The cap room could also be used in a trade. I'll use a fictional golden state situation as an example:

Monte Ellis is the Warrior's PG of the future. Nellie and Baron Davis don't really get along. The Warriors will want money to re-sign their young guys like Biedrins and Ellis. So we make a deal for Davis where we send some players for him and filler but we don't need to make the salaries match.
 
I don't think bringing Billups in will solve our problems. We're still the great abyss at the 4... You look for a solution to THAT particular problem first, IMHO. But we're all just guessing pretty much. We'll have to wait and see what happens...

I hate waiting.

;)
 
I don't think bringing Billups in will solve our problems. We're still the great abyss at the 4... You look for a solution to THAT particular problem first, IMHO. But we're all just guessing pretty much. We'll have to wait and see what happens...

*cough, cough, draft, cough cough*

:)
 
I have to admit to being pretty content with Artest at this point in time. He's looking sharper on defense, he seems to have gotten over the "ME" take on offense, and he's an excellent mentor for some of the young guns on how to actually play defense.

If he can maintain his composure on a team that is clearly about to do some major rebuilding, then I wouldn't mind keeping him around as part of the new core.

I'm in complete agreement with you on this one, VF. He's been much, much better since January 1st, a force to be reckoned with. (much better still since I posted his mid-season review)

This is why I get so agitated when people suggest trading him for nothing more than garbage.
 
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