Bee: Miller has new position?

VF21

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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/story/13870250p-14709631c.html

Miller has a new position?
He should be 'point-center,' jokes teammate Bonzi Wells.
By Joe Davidson -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Thursday, November 17, 2005


Bonzi Wells sized up his sizable teammate and came to this conclusion.
"Brad Miller," the Kings guard said, "is our point-center. Never heard of that before, but that's what he is for us."

What it means is Miller, all 7 feet of him with the ability to peer down on the defense, mans the high post and seeks the cutters and movers. And through eight games and three victories, it has become clear to the Kings' success: Miller is effective only when his teammates are cutting and moving. No movement means no Miller moments, with the Kings transformed into a grinding, halting mess. Bumper cars clogging the arcade.

Miller leads the team with 5.3 assists a game, a rare figure for centers, but not necessarily for the Kings over the years in coach Rick Adelman's scheme. The quick math shows that when Miller's assists are up - and when he's dropping in 16-foot jumpers when defenders cheat down on the moving parts - the Kings are dangerous. In a 118-117 triumph over Phoenix, Miller produced 17 points and eight assists. In a 101-85 rout of Denver, 12 and 10. In Tuesday's 119-83 drubbing of Utah, 14 and six.

And the reverse: In a 93-67 loss to New Orleans/Oklahoma City, Miller managed four points and two assists. In a 102-88 setback to Detroit, eight and three. In a 105-95 loss to New York, 11 and three. In a 107-91 defeat to Denver, 16 and three. Sense a trend?

"We run a lot of things through him," Adelman said of his veteran. "He sees the court really well. When he's involved, when we're moving, we're pretty good. He's not going to be able to do much unless we're moving.

"He's going to see the plays (as long as teammates move and cut). We walk around the floor like we did against New York, and no one's going to look good."

Miller said growing up in hoops-mad Indiana, he learned to dribble, shoot and pass before he hit a major growth spurt in his late teens. His skills granted him a chance in the NBA after going undrafted out of Purdue.

He was acquired from the Indiana Pacers in a 2003 trade by the Kings, who provided him with the ideal passing mentor in Vlade Divac, one of the top passing centers in history.

Miller came into the season averaging 14.8 points and 4.1 assists in two seasons with the Kings, and the team winning nearly 70 percent of its games (76-33). And in a preseason NBA general manager's poll, Miller was voted as the player who gets the "most out of least." That's a nice way of saying he's not at all athletic. Miller knows it's true, that if he tries to move too swiftly laterally, he's liable to tip over like timber.

"I take pride in being able to do a lot of things," Miller said. "It's fun when it works, when the passes work. I want to get people involved."

And Miller offers a lifetime assist to Divac.

"I learned a lot from Vlade," he said. "He made it unbelievably easy to see and understand the reads, what he was looking for, how he got passes in there. He was by far the best passing big man I've ever seen, and maybe a top three guy all time ... very, very crafty.

"I wish I could've played with him for three years and learned his whole bag of tricks and repertoire. I can still learn and get better."

About the writer: The Bee's Joe Davidson can be reached at (916) 321-1280 or jdavidson@sacbee.com.
 
great post VF21. running the offense through miller is what the kings were always supposed to do. otherwise the princeton offense would not work. in alot of game situations we look like the knicks. eveyrone standing around, not cutting to the basket.
 
Funny, people were ready to kill him because he was getting TOs and not doing much.

Amazing what having a great game against NO does to the fanbase.

This is no bash on Miller. I really like Miller. I like what he brings. I'm kind of goofing on reporters and the "fans".
 
the quandry with the kings right now is that brad miller is seemingly the only guy on the team who can run the offense. when he goes to the bench, things fall apart as the offense stagnates. in the past, we had divac, webber, and miller with who you could run the offense through. now, its just miller and bibby. i hope bibby continues to play well. he's at his best when he just lets the game come to him. he gets his shots, and he gets the ball to others. hopefully rahim will continue to integrate into the offense well, because we need guys who can at least initiate things. where its gonna come from off the bench, though...i have no idea.
 
I am hoping that it is not only Bonzi who is realizing this. And I know it is a big hope. But, perhaps with more time together, and the realization by other players just how it is that this offense runs. They will be able to get past the "getting to know you "phase of the Kings offense learning curve.
If only......If only...........
I have come to the realization that since I am still going to be a Kings fan for the rest of my life. I might as well keep hope alive...And perhaps there will be a process of not only Kings getting to learn each other better, but of fans such as myself re-learning how to be Kings fans.
I heard Bonzi say in an after game interview last night that he knows that if the fans are feeling down then the team is too, "because we are all family". I really liked that quote and it was then that I decided to just go with the flow. That statemant was enough to give me that old time feeling about our "new Kings" Heres hoping that these boys do well!
KD
 
playmaker0017 said:
Funny, people were ready to kill him because he was getting TOs and not doing much.

Amazing what having a great game against NO does to the fanbase.

This is no bash on Miller. I really like Miller. I like what he brings. I'm kind of goofing on reporters and the "fans".

Don't you hate it when you go to all the trouble to make a semi-sarcastic comment and then realize, too late, you've made a pretty significant mistake?

;)

(Not bashing...just thought it was funny, since I've done the same thing.)
 
VF21 said:
Don't you hate it when you go to all the trouble to make a semi-sarcastic comment and then realize, too late, you've made a pretty significant mistake?
Oopsie.

I guess Utah's bench IS significantly worse than New Orleans. Heh.
 
Miller is the most important player on the team, you can't replace him with another C and make the offense work well. I wish we could have brad back at PF, he dominated playing PF.
 
Bricklayer said:
All fine and good. Now if he would just quit REBOUNDING like a PG I would be fine. ;)

Ditto. He does the point part just fine, but he need to starts doing the center part more often :)
 
Yeah, Bonzi is a power forward guard. Haha, the Kings just have too many players playing out of their position.
 
SacTownKid said:
And quit defending the paint like one too. ;)

Amen, he can play so soft sometimes, hell more times than not. Does he even have toughness in him? It sure seemed like it when he played for the Bulls and Indiana.
 
GoGoGadget said:
Quite an interesting team we have.

Point centers.

Power guards.

Matadors.

And green plastic army men cleverly camoflagued in gold...

;)
 
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