Darth Divac
Bench

The Kings are the oldest existing professional basketball franchise, tracing their origins to the Rochester Seagrams who existed in the 1920s. Although not the most recognizable team, they have had some of the all time great players of this league come through. Big and small, from the long-gone days of the '50s to the revolutionary 2000's, here is the King's all-time dream team.
Starting Point Guard: Oscar Robertson, Number 14
Years with the Royals: 10
Awards and honors: 1X NBA champion, 1X NBA MVP, 12X All-Star, 3X All-Star game MVP, 9X All-NBA first team, 2X All-NBA second team, 7X assists leader, 10th all-time in scoring, Kings all-time leader in scoring, Kings all-time leader in assists, Kings all-time leader in minutes played, 3rd all-time in rebounds for Kings, 6th in all-time in assists, league all-time leader in triple doubles, only player to average a triple double for a full 82 game season
Career stats: 25.7 ppg, 9.5 apg, 7.5 rpg
Undoubtedly the greatest player in franchise history, The Big O has a case as the greatest NBA player of all time. Their was literally nothing he couldn't do on the basketball court. That he only ever got one NBA MVP award is among the greatest mysteries in NBA history. With a ridiculously overqualified resume, anyone else here would be a sin worthy of Maloof.
Starting Shooting Guard: Mitch Richmond, Number 2
Years with the Kings: 7
Awards and Honors: 6X All-Star, 1X All-Star game MVP, 3X All-NBA Second team, 2X All-NBA Third team
Career Stats: 21.0 PPG, 1.2 SPG
The greatest player of the Sacramento Era, Richmond never got the attention he deserved. He could have gotten the heck out of here, gone somewhere that had newspapers. But he didn't, he stayed and wallowed in small-market, non-playoff Sacramento Kings misery, and that is what makes him one of the most beloved players in franchise history.
Starting Small Forward: Jack Twyman, Number 27
Years with the Royals: 11
Awards and Honors: 6X All-Star, 2X All-NBA second team
Career Stats: 19.2 PPG, 6.6 RPG
He wasn't the flashiest player, and his stats won't pop out at you. But whenever the Cincinnati Royals really needed a bucket, whenever they had to get that rebound, whenever it was clear that they MUST to get this stop, Jack Twyman was there. A teammate with unswerving loyalty, the NBA's award for leadership takes it's name from him. He passed away on May 30, 2012.
Starting Power Forward: Jerry Lucas, Number 16
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Staring Center: Chris Webber, Number 4
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Sixth Man: Nate "Tiny" Archibald, Number 10
Backup G: Bobby Wanzer
Backup F: Peja Stojakovic, Number 16
Backup F: Maurice Stokes, Number 12
Backup C: Sam Lacey, Number 44
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