Bee: Rookie proves himself in post

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Rookie proves himself in post
Justin Williams records his second double double in a row in a loss to the Spurs.
By Sam Amick - Bee Staff Writer
Last Updated 12:17 am PDT Thursday, April 12, 2007


SAN ANTONIO -- Justin Williams went down, and every eyebrow on the Kings' bench went up.

He soared for the late fourth-quarter rebound and hobbled after the landing, pulling up lame because of a leg cramp but looking far more injured at the time.

The Kings' players, coaches and trainers looked on in concern as if it were Chris Webber hitting the floor in the 2003 Western Conference semifinals. And that, in its own interesting way, might have been Williams' official welcoming moment.

The Kings' 109-100 loss to San Antonio at the AT&T Center on Wednesday night began drenched in the past and ended with nothing but promise for the future. Williams not only posted his second consecutive double double but seemed to represent the reality that is a roster with more than its share of serviceable youth.

Williams, strange as it sounds, brought impact above any of his teammates, forcing the sizzling Spurs to worry their playoff-bound selves with his presence on the glass and changing shots in the paint as if this were Keon Clark redux. Williams left the game after his third foul with the Kings up 84-82 early in the fourth quarter and returned nearly six minutes later with the Spurs up 96-89.

Second-year swingman Francisco García started for the second consecutive game and posted his second season high in a row in scoring (22), hitting 8 of 16 from the field and showing once again that he can handle a heavier load. Williams finished with 15 points on 7-for-9 shooting and 10 rebounds in 28 minutes, his only transgression no different from most of his NBA colleagues in his inability to stop Tim Duncan.

The Spurs forward scored 13 of his 26 points in a fourth quarter in which San Antonio pulled away after trailing 80-79 entering the fourth quarter.

"Duncan had a great game, was 11 of 14 (shooting), and he's won MVPs, but so did a guy named Justin Williams," Kings coach Eric Musselman said.

The player who spent much of this season in the minor leagues of Bismarck, N.D., appears to be turning into a major piece of what's to come. Past the part of going from training camp casualty to NBA Development League player back to the Kings, there is the indisputable evidence that Williams' rebounds-per-48-minutes average now stands at 17.7 per game. This, of course, is a too-little, too-late revelation for a team that is better only than Golden State in terms of rebounding differential.

"We have found out that Justin Williams can rebound at this level, and that's a good thing for our organization going forward," Musselman said.

For Williams, though, it's simply more momentum for an offseason of free agency in which he plans to play for the Kings' July summer-league team in Las Vegas with the hopes of a contract bringing him back.

"Just wanted to show it wasn't a fluke and just keep getting better," Williams said.

Looking ahead kept the Kings from looking back on last season's playoffs, those memories of the first-round series against the Spurs that now marks the eighth and final berth of an impressive postseason streak. The Spurs' usual suspects were at it again, with Michael Finley's 19 points and key bench contributions from Manu Ginobili and Brent Barry burying the Kings.

There were the familiar Kings faces, too, but Ron Artest was in a suit because his left hamstring was sore, and Brad Miller lasted just nine minutes before his left foot flared up again. Kevin Martin played despite a respiratory infection and struggled in scoring just 12 points on 4-for-14 shooting.

"The way we played shows character of the guys on the team," point guard Ronnie Price said. "Guys are going to keep playing and playing hard. It's fun. Not fun to lose, but fun to see that spirit." And ponder the future.

About the writer: The Bee's Sam Amick can be reached at samick@sacbee.com.
 
"The way we played shows character of the guys on the team," point guard Ronnie Price said. "Guys are going to keep playing and playing hard. It's fun. Not fun to lose, but fun to see that spirit."

Isn't that pretty much what we've wanted all year?
 
If the Kings don't resign Justin Williams and Ronnie Price this summer I am going to be one mad Kings fan. Both show alot of promise and can be key reserves on this team going forward. I think these last few games Price,Williams, and Garcia have all proved they belong on this team next year along with Martin of course. Now the rest of the guys who knows, but as far as those four go they deserve and belong on this team next year in the rotation somewhere.
 
If the Kings don't resign Justin Williams and Ronnie Price this summer I am going to be one mad Kings fan. Both show alot of promise and can be key reserves on this team going forward. I think these last few games Price,Williams, and Garcia have all proved they belong on this team next year along with Martin of course. Now the rest of the guys who knows, but as far as those four go they deserve and belong on this team next year in the rotation somewhere.

One thing I want to know is why do we have guys like Salmons, SAR, and Williamson off the bench instead of Garcia, Williams, and Price? In our playoff run I think we shoudl have gone with those guys. Well Salmons too, because he still is a dynamite defender.. But dang.. We should have been playing the other guys much sooner.
 
If the Kings don't resign Justin Williams and Ronnie Price this summer I am going to be one mad Kings fan. Both show alot of promise and can be key reserves on this team going forward. I think these last few games Price,Williams, and Garcia have all proved they belong on this team next year along with Martin of course. Now the rest of the guys who knows, but as far as those four go they deserve and belong on this team next year in the rotation somewhere.

Totally agree. Those are two guys who've EARNED it.
 
"We have found out that Justin Williams can rebound at this level, and that's a good thing for our organization going forward," Musselman said.


Too bad he didn't figure that out months ago. But we couldn't take away any minutes from our quality big men.
 
BTW, the thing about Ronnie Price's comments have linked to what I've been saying for a while now. When he was talking about spirit. I have no problem with the Kings losing, or even having a losing season as long as they show heart and spirit. It's why I was so disappointed before because they were showing none. It wasn't the losing that bothered me, but the lack of energy and passion to win.
 
The part that makes me feel most fuzzy is the part about the King's concern. If you have heard the before game interviews with Musselman on 1140 he seemed to want to talk down Justin's hype (the interviews before this game anyway). Saying he hasn't developed a pre-eminent skill and is not worthy of extended minutes. :mad: The boy can flat out play.

I think 6 Mil over 3 years is a good deal for him. Ain't that just about rookie money?
 
Seriously...All the lazy bums (starters) on our team should be moved this summer.

And Muss downplaying Justin is just him trying to cover up the fact that he screwed up on that one too and shoulda been playing Williams from the start.
 
Seriously...All the lazy bums (starters) on our team should be moved this summer.

You know, that's not quite fair. Our players had enthusiasm at the beginning of the season, until it was sucked out of them by abysmal coaching, too much drama, etc. When you add in some nagging injuries, a whole lot of negative media coverage, AND some pretty nasty fan comments along the way, I don't blame them for slowing down. They knew we weren't going to get anywhere, especially once they'd been forced to drink the kool-aid a few times.

This group of players just doesn't fit together to make a cohesive team. That doesn't make them lazy bums.

Sorry, but I get a bit defensive.
 
I don't know if price and williams are THE reserves we are looking for, but I think we will keep them simply because the money is right. The two have showed they play at the level we pay them, and have recently been a value.......do to some of our monster contracts not showing it on the court, I think it would be a wise decision to keep price and williams at a decent price for 3-4 years and see how it pans out. If not they are gone as our monster contracts start coming off the books and if they do we will be able to up their pay due to guys like kenny, bibby, miller coming off the books at their respective times. I've enjoyed the few games I've gotten here out in the mid east by simply chuckling at some of the rawness of williams, but I am impressed with him. We are right around the luxury tax so from a financial standpoint I say keep em because in a risk vs. reward scenario, there is alot more reward than risk at their price.
 
You know, that's not quite fair. Our players had enthusiasm at the beginning of the season, until it was sucked out of them by abysmal coaching, too much drama, etc. When you add in some nagging injuries, a whole lot of negative media coverage, AND some pretty nasty fan comments along the way, I don't blame them for slowing down. They knew we weren't going to get anywhere, especially once they'd been forced to drink the kool-aid a few times.

This group of players just doesn't fit together to make a cohesive team. That doesn't make them lazy bums.

Sorry, but I get a bit defensive.

I can definately see their lack of enthusiasm when they are yelled at by their coach constantly when they are playing. But for a league that only employs 450 players max, you need to be the best you can be. I'm really tired of the free rides and players only going through the motions to collect their paychecks. Also players who don't play and are put on injured reserve with no intentions of playing like Potapenko who made $3.6M this year is pathetic in the least. I really wish Basketball was more like Football where players didn't have guanteed $ and need to show and up and fight for their jobs. With only 2 rounds in each year's draft and 450 players maximum in the NBA possible (15 players max on 30 teams), you really need to see the passion and energy and hunger like Williams and Price have because they both were undrafted guys fighting for their lives and it's great to see on the court.
 
You know, that's not quite fair. Our players had enthusiasm at the beginning of the season, until it was sucked out of them by abysmal coaching, too much drama, etc. When you add in some nagging injuries, a whole lot of negative media coverage, AND some pretty nasty fan comments along the way, I don't blame them for slowing down. They knew we weren't going to get anywhere, especially once they'd been forced to drink the kool-aid a few times.

This group of players just doesn't fit together to make a cohesive team. That doesn't make them lazy bums.

Sorry, but I get a bit defensive.

Yep. Agreed. You go with who should have gotten you into the playoffs and coach around the injuries. But bottom line is this group just does not mesh together. They may get along personally but they don't mesh on the court.

Which makes me wonder wouldn't it be nice to get a high first round pick for Ron Ron plus a couple of bodies to choose from???? Then a rebounding PF who can get 10 & 10 every night for Bibby?
 
Yep. Agreed. You go with who should have gotten you into the playoffs and coach around the injuries. But bottom line is this group just does not mesh together. They may get along personally but they don't mesh on the court.

Which makes me wonder wouldn't it be nice to get a high first round pick for Ron Ron plus a couple of bodies to choose from???? Then a rebounding PF who can get 10 & 10 every night for Bibby?

I don't think we can get that for Bibby. Not unless we can package him with KT or Reef, and then we have to worry about salaries matching. Plus, both those guys have 3 years left on their contracts (!!!), so nobody will touch them. And besides that, I'd prefer to have a guy like Shareef stick around for what he's making (just a little bit more than the MLE salary); he could play a nice Antonio McDyess role for us, off the bench, of course.
 
Which makes me wonder wouldn't it be nice to get a high first round pick for Ron Ron plus a couple of bodies to choose from???? Then a rebounding PF who can get 10 & 10 every night for Bibby?

I think we have a 10/10 rebounding PF, but he only gets minutes when Brad, KT and Corliss are all injured at once, and SAR isn't getting the job done. Sometimes even Salmons gets minutes at PF ahead of him! Seems like it would be a waste to throw yet another guy into that mix when there's no sign that he would be utilized well. Although we could use some roster changes, in a way I was relieved when the deadline passed without any trades, because it would have been a pity to bring in a good player and promptly destroy his morale.

Let's replace the coach first and go from there.
 
BTW, the thing about Ronnie Price's comments have linked to what I've been saying for a while now. When he was talking about spirit. I have no problem with the Kings losing, or even having a losing season as long as they show heart and spirit. It's why I was so disappointed before because they were showing none. It wasn't the losing that bothered me, but the lack of energy and passion to win.

you couldn't have said that any better
 
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