MassachusettsKingsFan
All-Star
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXnE-dOMisI
A lot of interesting stuff here. It's also very frustrating. We need a new GM.
A lot of interesting stuff here. It's also very frustrating. We need a new GM.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXnE-dOMisI
A lot of interesting stuff here. It's also very frustrating. We need a new GM.
First question that comes to my mind: Why would any FO really like Patterson and apparently has had interest for a while? I can imagine a FO really liking say, Andre Drummond, but Patrick Patterson? I bet if you switch him with Darrell Arthur few people would notice.
First question that comes to my mind: Why would any FO really like Patterson and apparently has had interest for a while? I can imagine a FO really liking say, Andre Drummond, but Patrick Patterson? I bet if you switch him with Darrell Arthur few people would notice.
With time it becomes more and more clear that GP owes his career to Adelman.
People should stop blaming Maloofs alone. Petrie is a willing accomplice.
With time it becomes more and more clear that GP owes his career to Adelman.
People should stop blaming Maloofs alone. Petrie is a willing accomplice.
Patrick Patterson once had a big game against us while being guarded by Boogie. Either last year or year before I don't remember. Either way, does not matter -- that was no doubt why we really liked him. That is ALWAYS why we really like somebody. I don't think we actuially have a scouting department, or even a League Pass subscription, so Geoff has always just gone off of how guys do against us. I'm sure he's been in hot pursuit of Earl Watson for years too.
Kenny Thomas. Carl Landry. Shareef Abdur-Rahim.
And you wonder why Petrie has wanted Patterson for a while?
With time it becomes more and more clear that GP owes his career to Adelman.
People should stop blaming Maloofs alone. Petrie is a willing accomplice.
Petrie is a good drafter, but his vision of the game is very flawed. When he had a lot of resources, he built an all-around team, though defensive-minded guys were always bench players and nowhere close to elite - and Christie was skilled and a "ballhandler", he just happened to defend well. At the time it seemed natural as Webber and Divac were faces of the franchise. But then they leave who came to town when money became scarce? Kenny "flexible piece" Thomas, Abdul-Shareef, Carl Landry, even Hickson is 6'9" and is pretty skilled offensive player. We can also talk about his collection of mini-chuckers: Thornton looked great when he was one of a kind, but you throw three others into the pot and it gets crowded in a hurry.
P.S. As for Adelman, he was a pretty big part of personnel decision-making and then he made it work.
I've given Petrie a lot of flack the last few years, so it's only fair that I be straight-forward in my assessment of his career for once. I think Geoff Petrie at one point was one of the best GMs in the game because he was forward-thinking. He was able to assemble that playoff roster here in Sacramento because he targeted undervalued players, often players with off-the-court problems which overshadowed their on-the-court potential. He slipped some very good European players under the noses of the competition because not a lot of teams were even considering that market as a potential hotbed for basketball talent at the time. He was ahead of the curve in finding production out of chronically undervalued types of players -- undersized scoring guards, undersized PFs with atypical skill-sets, bench role-players who excelled in one or two facets of the game. He based his career on thinking a little bit differently than the rest of the league and it worked for awhile. Having a great basketball mind like Rick Adelman manning the sideline certainly helped. But the league adjusted, people saw the success he was having and adopted some of his best practices. And while everyone else caught up, Petrie didn't make the necessary adjustments. Basically the league changed and he didn't.
Now clearly the limited resources he's had to work with have had an impact, particularly the last few years after the financial crisis wiped out the Maloof's assets, but I think if you honestly look at his track record you'd see that the team's financial pinch only accelerated a trend which was already happening anyway. He started guessing wrong on players' talent. A lot of players. He started undervaluing his own asset acquisitions, trading off most of them for pennies on the dollar. Remember when he revived Jim Jackson's career then let him walk for nothing? Remember when he overpaid for Brad Miller, throwing then 23 year old Hedo Turkoglu into a sign-and-trade deal that Indiana couldn't match anyway? Geoff had a nice run as one of the best in the business but for whatever reason he hasn't been able to keep up. Maybe I'm wrong about him -- maybe he goes to another organization with considerably more resources and proves he hasn't lost his ability to judge talent. But what I've seen over the past 10 years is a GM who has sunk down to the bottom of the heap primarily by sticking to the same strategies that had once made him elite and stubbornly refusing to recognize that the league was changing quickly and those strategies were no longer effective.
So lets take a little trip down memory lane. Players that were drafted prior to Adelmans arrival were:
Brian Grant
Lawrence Funderburke
Michael (the animal) Smith
Olivier St. Jean
Anthony Johnson
Corliss Williamson
Peja
Jason Williams
Adelman came in the lockout shortened season, and the Webber trade was already done that year, and I seriously doubt Adelman had anything to do with the signing of Vlade. So in fact, Webber, Vlade, Pollard, Vernon (mad max) Maxwell, and Jon Barry were already on the team. Christie was to come later in the Corliss trade. And yes, anyone who knew his salt, knew that Christie was a very good defensive player. Your trying to paint a picture where everything that Petrie did wrong was because he was an idiot, and everything he did right, was pure luck. The problem is, he was also very successful in Portland prior to arriving in sacramento.
No, my view of Petrie is that of a GM with flawed view of the game who got lucky as a few others that propelled him from above average GM that he is to status of elite, undisputed top-3 of the league. When luck evened out, Kings got a streak without POs. I can guarantee that in 1998, if it was Mitch for Kemp, that wouldn't happen. That's actually a bad example since Kemp returned after lockout out of shape and never got back on track, but you get an idea. Skill over athleticism - that's his mantra. I have to admit where he got hit is having to hire coaches for pennies but if he knew as the whole league that Thibodeau is a very good coach, wouldn't it make sense to advise Maloofs to pay only a couple more millions (probably less since he was an assistant at the time) to raise the value of players. That way Kings probably would've got all 3 million allowed in Robinson trade.So lets take a little trip down memory lane. Players that were drafted prior to Adelmans arrival were:
Brian Grant
Lawrence Funderburke
Michael (the animal) Smith
Olivier St. Jean
Anthony Johnson
Corliss Williamson
Peja
Jason Williams
Adelman came in the lockout shortened season, and the Webber trade was already done that year, and I seriously doubt Adelman had anything to do with the signing of Vlade. So in fact, Webber, Vlade, Pollard, Vernon (mad max) Maxwell, and Jon Barry were already on the team. Christie was to come later in the Corliss trade. And yes, anyone who knew his salt, knew that Christie was a very good defensive player. Your trying to paint a picture where everything that Petrie did wrong was because he was an idiot, and everything he did right, was pure luck. The problem is, he was also very successful in Portland prior to arriving in sacramento.
You said he did well when he had the resources. Well duh! Its a lot easier to be a good GM when you have a rich owner thats willing to spend the money. When you don't, your options are extremely limited. When you have a penny pinching owner, its hard to make a trade and get equal value, when the owner doesn't want to take back any salary. As matter of fact, he wants to take back less salary. To be honest, your probably better off not making any trades if you can. So if your GM with those restrictions on you, you either don't make a trade, or you work around the edges and try and steal young talent that hasn't proven itself yet. That appears to be what Petrie has been doing. And not very well, as it turns out. Hickson was a bust. Going cheap and signing Brooks didn't turn out so well. The deal for James Johnson appears to be a bad one. Hopefully the Patterson deal will work out.
I'm almost positive that drafting Fredette was a Maloof deal. After going to summer league that offseason and seeing Gavin Maloof almost having sex with Jimmer on the court, it was obvious that the Maloofs were in love with him. Why? I have no idea unless they thought he could sell tickets. Look, as I said, whether Petrie was pulling all the strings or not, he has the title, so he has to take the heat. But he built a team that almost won the title, and he deserves credit for that. He even said once, that chemistry is almost impossible to build on a team by design. He said you can put all the right pieces together and either have it, or not. When you have it, you don't know how you got it, and when you don't, you have no idea to aquire it. So he was admitting, that at least to that extent, there is some luck involved.
No, my view of Petrie is that of a GM with flawed view of the game who got lucky as a few others that propelled him from above average GM that he is to status of elite, undisputed top-3 of the league. When luck evened out, Kings got a streak without POs. I can guarantee that in 1998, if it was Mitch for Kemp, that wouldn't happen. That's actually a bad example since Kemp returned after lockout out of shape and never got back on track, but you get an idea. Skill over athleticism - that's his mantra. I have to admit where he got hit is having to hire coaches for pennies but if he knew as the whole league that Thibodeau is a very good coach, wouldn't it make sense to advise Maloofs to pay only a couple more millions (probably less since he was an assistant at the time) to raise the value of players. That way Kings probably would've got all 3 million allowed in Robinson trade.
As I mentioned Petrie is an above average executive with a feel for the draft. There are still a lot worse out there, but he should be gone if for the only fact that he is the face of current regime and nothing should remind of that to Cousins and Evans come this July.
P.S. I don't ge worshiping of Presti either. Guy got lucky to not have to draft the other guy between Oden and Durant. Take Durant out and that team is playing box-and-1 since you can pack the paint and pressure Harden outside to drive to the basket through the packed paint without Durant drawing attention to perimeter. But he was in a position to get lucky, right? Well, he got #2, #4 and #3 in consecutive years, when Kings got #4 out of the last place in the standings.