Bee: Bad better than average?

gunks

Hall of Famer
Pretty much what we've been discussing on this site for months now. The media finally caught up to us foward thinkers at kingsfans.com! :p


Now maybe Petrie and the Maloofs will wise up.

http://www.sacbee.com/351/story/130265.html


Time had passed them by too, just like these Kings, some victims of unforeseen circumstance but most simply lost to the calendar.

Death and taxes and all that, NBA style.

Every successful roster that doesn't dissolve on its own has to be broken apart at some point. Rebuilding on the run is the third rail of sports, a risk few take and fewer survive when a more-proven route exists. It's just that grabbing a sledgehammer and swinging away from the inside is not pleasant.

The Kings of the 2000s know that. They tried to hold it together last season, trading Peja Stojakovic to Indiana for Ron Artest rather than finding a deal that would have brought a package of multiple prospects and/or draft picks and possibly expiring contracts. In other words, making the very trade management attempted to get this month in exchange for Mike Bibby.

Breaking up is hard to do. But try being the team stuck in the middle, good enough to reach the playoffs and lose in the first round every year, and not bad enough to clear salary cap space to rebuild and get a high lottery pick with the best chance of drafting an impact player.

"That's not a great place to be, for any team," said Memphis Grizzlies president Jerry West, who faced the predicament while running the Los Angeles Lakers. "And that's where we were. You cannot bring a Band-Aid to cover gaping wounds."

West wasn't referring specifically to the Kings, but to the dilemma: How long does a franchise hold on to being decent, with a chance to make the playoffs, and when is it time to swallow hard and begin tearing down from within?

"Those are very hard decisions to make for an organization that's used to winning because you know you're going to give up good players with a lot of experience, and you know they will still be good for someone else," West said. "It's painful and it takes a lot of intestinal fortitude to withstand the tough time.

"I don't know if there's a magic formula. But you at least have to have a plan. And (Kings basketball president) Geoff Petrie has been great, so I'm sure he has a plan."

Many in the same situation as the Kings have rebuilt rather than cling to the past.

The Milwaukee Bucks of the late 1980s had come off a run of seven consecutive division titles. Then they spent four seasons hanging on -- reaching the playoffs each time, losing in the first round three of the years and drafting in the teens all three years they had a first-round pick. Not good enough to be a real playoff threat, not bad enough to commit to rebuilding.

The Detroit Pistons of the mid-1990s were beyond the Bad Boys' championship generation. In six years they made the playoffs five times, losing in the first round each time and getting swept three times.

The change finally came in the summer of 2000. Joe Dumars took over as president of basketball operations and used the free agency of Grant Hill as the impetus for an overhaul. He dumped salaries by moving Hill to Orlando in a sign-and-trade that brought Ben Wallace, and got rid of more big money by trading Christian Laettner and Loy Vaught. Three years later -- after dipping to 32-50 and then replenishing with Chauncey Billups (free agent), Clifford Robinson and Corliss Williamson (trades) and Tayshaun Prince (draft) -- Detroit was back in the Eastern Conference final.

The Utah Jazz of the early 2000s were fading to black, with Jeff Hornacek retiring before John Stockton, and Karl Malone leaving as a free agent. Holding on beyond the ordinary timeline was by design -- Jazz owner Larry Miller had told Stockton and Malone that no serious youth movement would commence as long as the historic pair still wanted to be in Salt Lake City.

Utah's final two seasons with Stockton and Malone ended in first-round playoff losses to the Kings and no draft pick better than the teens. It continued after the breakup of the familiar Jazz, with a stretch of five of six years when the first-round selections were at 19, 19, 14, 16, 21 and 14. The exception was 2005, when it had No. 6, traded up to 3 and got Deron Williams, an emerging star.

The money that eventually became available with the notable departures was invested in two free agents, Carlos Boozer and Mehmet Okur. Two years later, the two signings, the development of Williams and retaining Andrei Kirilenko had become the cornerstone of the team that is running away with the 2006-07 Northwest Division

"Everyone says you have to face the inevitable," Jazz vice president of basketball operations Kevin O'Connor said of Malone and Stockton leaving on their schedule, in deference to the years of service. "We were handed the inevitable."

Indeed, it's not always by preferred plan. The Lakers were forced into rebuilding mode when Magic Johnson announced in 1991 that he had tested HIV-positive and would retire, some five months after L.A. had been in the Finals. It went through two losing seasons and a flurry of roster moves for an organization that had ordinarily known stability before the course of NBA history was changed in the summer of 1996, when Shaquille O'Neal was signed as a free agent and Vlade Divac was traded for Kobe Bryant.

Now there are the Kings, once good enough to be minutes, if not seconds, away from a trip to the Finals and a probable victory against overmatched New Jersey, but within years unable to get out of the first round and now struggling for a ninth consecutive playoff spot. They have conceded the roster renovation needs to begin.

Getting there has become the hard part. All they need to do next is survive it and come out on the other side.

About the writer:
The Bee's Scott Howard-Cooper can be reached at showard- cooper@sacbee.com.
 
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i liked that jerry brought up intestinal fortitude, something this kings org. doesn't have anywhere in it.
 
Yep. Reality, as in rebuilding, hurts but is inevitable. Everyone does it at some time or other. Now it's the Kings turn. The fact that the Bibby trade did not go thru to the Cavs due to lack of expiring contracts in return was the icing on the rebuilding cake. Now it is evident the Petrie and the Maloofs want to clear as much cap space as possible and for only one reason: to rebuild and get some FA's and hopefully an additional first round pick.

As I look in the paper this morning the Kings are 24-32 with 4 other teams above the Kings within 4 games in the lost column. That is 5 teams shooting for the 7th and 8th slots in the playoffs. This presents a dilemma: go for playoffs and be assured of drafting somewhere 15-20 in first round, or..... don't make playoffs when possibly using bench a lot more and maybe get 8-10th spot and maybe get lucky with the ping-pong balls and move up a bit more.

I'd rather see them get into playoffs by knowing who will help next year and clarifiy the need for athleticism, rebounding and defense at the 4 and 5.
 
Yep. Reality, as in rebuilding, hurts but is inevitable. Everyone does it at some time or other. Now it's the Kings turn. The fact that the Bibby trade did not go thru to the Cavs due to lack of expiring contracts in return was the icing on the rebuilding cake. Now it is evident the Petrie and the Maloofs want to clear as much cap space as possible and for only one reason: to rebuild and get some FA's and hopefully an additional first round pick.

As I look in the paper this morning the Kings are 24-32 with 4 other teams above the Kings within 4 games in the lost column. That is 5 teams shooting for the 7th and 8th slots in the playoffs. This presents a dilemma: go for playoffs and be assured of drafting somewhere 15-20 in first round, or..... don't make playoffs when possibly using bench a lot more and maybe get 8-10th spot and maybe get lucky with the ping-pong balls and move up a bit more.

I'd rather see them get into playoffs by knowing who will help next year and clarifiy the need for athleticism, rebounding and defense at the 4 and 5.

this needs no further clarification. it hasn't for several years now.
 
In my mind, there is no dilemma. I do not want nor expect to see this current group of Kings playing after April 18. I do NOT want to face the Dallas Mavericks in the first round of the playoffs. Period. End of discussion, at least in my mind...

We NEED to rebuild. We need to let go of the "consecutive playoff appearance" string as though it's something worth giving up our future for.

They have conceded the roster renovation needs to begin.

I hope so...

I don't want to see another episode of NBA Trading Spaces. I want to see Extreme Makeover: Sacramento Kings edition.
 
In my mind, there is no dilemma. I do not want nor expect to see this current group of Kings playing after April 18. I do NOT want to face the Dallas Mavericks in the first round of the playoffs. Period. End of discussion, at least in my mind...

We NEED to rebuild. We need to let go of the "consecutive playoff appearance" string as though it's something worth giving up our future for.



I hope so...

I don't want to see another episode of NBA Trading Spaces. I want to see Extreme Makeover: Sacramento Kings edition.

a nice short 4 game series
 
It is better in the long run if the Kings don't make the playoffs , cuz they will probably play the mavs in first round and lose at most 5 games. Mavs are looking like one of the best teams in Nba's history. It is time to rebuild around Kevin Martin and the other young guys we have.
 
It is better in the long run if the Kings don't make the playoffs , cuz they will probably play the mavs in first round and lose at most 5 games. Mavs are looking like one of the best teams in Nba's history. It is time to rebuild around Kevin Martin and the other young guys we have.

Luckily for the Kings, if they do face the Mavericks in the first round they'll only have to lose four games.

;)
 
Mavs are looking like one of the best teams in Nba's history.

After being our whipping boy for pretty much 2 years straight. They then knew they needed to upgrade in the middle and they did something about it and it got them to the finals and now possibly a championship. In our case, we have just buried our heads in the ground and refused to acknowledge our weakness at the 4-5 spot.
 
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