Bee: Bonzi relives costly decision on eve of facing Kings

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http://www.sacbee.com/351/story/122627.html

Bonzi relives costly decision
On the eve of facing the Kings in Houston, he can't escape his free-agent flub.
By Scott Howard-Cooper - Bee Staff Writer
Last Updated 6:26 am PST Tuesday, February 13, 2007


HOUSTON -- This again?

Yep. This again.

Bonzi Wells long ago grew tired of questions about his monumentally bad decision last summer to reject a free-agent offer from the Kings, no doubt because it was painful enough to live the first time, but "What Could Have Been" reared again Monday.

His new team, the Houston Rockets, practiced and his old team jetted in from Sacramento for tonight's game at the Toyota Center, so he was back at the unfortunate intersection of his life and another round of questions.

In fairness, the story has been told countless times: The Kings offered five years and $36 million in July, their starting shooting guard said no, the market disappeared, and Wells ended up swallowing hard and taking two years and $4.5 million from the Rockets days before camp opened. The Kings instead signed John Salmons, who has played well, and gave Wells' job to Kevin Martin, who has played very well.

But Wells has not faced Sacramento since, having missed the Jan. 13 game at Arco Arena because of a sore lower back. That makes tonight significant, although hardly an emotional reunion with the perspective that, for all the focus on his summer decision, he had 52 appearances as a King.

"It doesn't matter, man," he said. "It doesn't matter what name is on the other jersey. It's just an opponent. You've got to prepare the same way. I'm friends with everybody. I'm going to see friends tomorrow, then I'm going to see friends when we play Dallas. So, no problem."

The Kings themselves are not a particularly antagonistic topic. Wells is the first to say he has no issue with the organization, understandably. Rarely has a franchise missed so wildly with a contract offer that, it would be proved, was the Kings negotiating against themselves to keep him.

No one else was going to come close to the $36 million. Wells painfully learned that.

"No, I never had a problem with the organization," he said. "It is what it is. Some days you're with a team, and the next day you may not be. So as long as I've got a job, I'm happy."

And does playing the Kings bring up bad memories of a bad decision?

"How many times do I got to tell you all?" Wells shot back to the reporters who circled him after practice. "No, man. It's nothing. Just another game."

If it isn't, the reason is Houston-based. Wells has missed the last three games because of a bruised lower back sustained Feb. 5, making tonight potentially noteworthy if only in trying to get back in the lineup. He said he expects to play.

There have been a series of setbacks that have turned his time as a Rocket from the planned one-year image rehabilitation before opting out and becoming a free agent again this summer to something closer to calamitous. He reported to camp in poor shape, stayed plump and on the wrong side of coach Jeff Van Gundy and spent 18 games on the inactive list the first five weeks without a reported injury.

Two stints with back problems followed, giving him just 19 appearances and zero starts for a 32-18 team. Wells is averaging 7.4 points and 4.1 rebounds in 20.5 minutes while shooting 41.8 percent.

About the writer: The Bee's Scott Howard-Cooper can be reached at showard-cooper@sacbee.com.
 
Why would someone ask Bonzi whether he has misgivings towards the Kings organization instead of asking him whether he has misgivings towards his (former) agent?
 
Good question... Why do reporters ask half the dumb questions they ask? My guess would be they honestly don't follow the stories and don't realize the questions have been asked ad nauseum before...
 
I guess I should clarify what I meant by what I said: I am not really interested in hearing any more about Bonzi's agent :rolleyes:. However, I find it annoying that whomever was asking the questions would ask about misgivings towards the Kings and not the agent...I see no reason to do that other than to stir another tempest in a teapot. Scott Howard-Cooper normally does a decent job imo, so I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and assume that someone else asked the questions. :p
 
He's still a flake and I'm not a huge fan of his but we need him for the stretch run and the playoffs. He's been on good behavior lately.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/bk/bkn/4548784.html

Wells has different drive
Playing again, not beating Kings, motivates Rocket

By JONATHAN FEIGEN
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle

Perhaps if this season had gone differently, Bonzi Wells could concern himself finally with playing against the Kings.

If he had been playing since leaving Sacramento, if the start to his season not been so rocky and his back so troublesome, he could have thought of tonight's game against his former team as different, special.

Instead, it is exceptional for a different reason, one that has nothing to do with the opponent. Wells expects to play.

"I feel better," Wells said. "I'm still sore. I think I'm definitely going to play (tonight). I actually tried to play last game but coach told me to take a couple more days and make sure I get the soreness out of my backside. Hopefully, I'll play tomorrow, and everything will be smooth sailing."

After missing the past three games with a bruised lower back and having spent so much of the season out for a variety of reasons, he said he was more concerned with being able to play at all, than playing against the Kings in particular.

Happy to have a job
"I don't think about it like that," Wells said. "It's just a game, another game. I'm friends with everybody around the league. I have friends with every team we play, so it doesn't matter.

"It's an opponent. You have to prepare the same way. I'm going to see friends (tonight). I'm going to see friends when we play Dallas. I never had a problem with the organization. Some days you might be with the team, the next day you might not be.

"As long as I have a job, I'm happy."

The season would seem enough reason to make just playing matter more than playing against the Kings. Since signing with the Rockets after turning down an offer Kings co-owner Joe Maloof said was worth $38.5 million over five years, a decision Wells called "a misunderstanding," Wells has been unable to create and keep a similar role with the Rockets.

He missed 17 games while struggling to get in shape and quarrelling with Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy. He missed 10 more, including the game in Sacramento last month, with a sore lower back. He has been out for the past three games after bruising his back in a hard fall against the Timberwolves.

"Right now, it's hard to know (what Wells brings the Rockets) because he's had infrequent stretches where he can get himself playing consecutively," Van Gundy said. "It's been a hard year so far for him."

It's been too difficult a season to worry about a reunion tonight. But last month, before the Rockets arrived in Sacramento, facing the Kings did seem different.

"I wanted to stay there," he said last month. "I wanted the money and to be there for a long time. It was a miscommunication, and I ended up getting the short end of the stick. I think about it every day. I miss being in Sacramento.

"Everything happens for a reason. That reason was bad for me, but now, hopefully, we have a chance to make a run for a championship here. Team-wise, I think I'm in a better place."

Can still fill need
The Rockets believe Wells can make things better. His role has generally been limited, but he had been finishing games before he was hurt.

Wells brings the Rockets a post-up option off the bench and a style different from guards Kirk Snyder and Luther Head.

"I think he's a really good cutter," Van Gundy said. "I think he has an intelligence about him. I think he can rebound the ball in traffic and has a nasty streak. Kirk has a streak we need, too, which is a quickness/athletic streak that obviously we need. Bonzi has more of a nasty streak we need."

Though Snyder, playing with Wells out, had a season-high 15 points Saturday, Van Gundy said there is not enough time off the bench for both.

Wells insisted he was just pleased to be healthy enough to play. Details, from his position, to his role, to the opponent no longer mattered.

"Everything's good," Wells said. "We're winning. That's all that matters. It's a team game. It's not about me."

In that case, it cannot be about the Kings, either.

jonathan.feigen@chron.com
 
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