Familiarity breeds success

Evenstar

Starter
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/writers/kelly_dwyer/01/25/kings/index.html

There is nothing shocking about the two versions of the 2004-05 Sacramento Kings that we've seen this month -- and the Kings know it. No matter if they win six straight or lose by 30 at home to the Spurs, this squad rarely boasts a sense of pie-eyed optimism, nor does it function under a dark cloud of despair. They're designed this way.

The Kings are 27-12, which projects to a 56-win season, and they're battling the Dallas Mavericks for the fourth seed (and home-court advantage) in the Western Conference playoffs. As has been the case since the truncated '99 campaign, the Kings are doing their damage offensively, averaging 101.8 points per game and leading the NBA with 24.7 assists per game. Though the offensive attack has changed a bit since last season -- more cuts off the high post and fewer 3-pointers -- the result is still an aesthetically pleasing brand of throwback basketball.

Apparently this is what the Sacramento brain trust prefers to an all-out championship blitz. In an era in which teams rebuild on the fly and perennial All-Stars are shopped like their names were "Kevin Ollie," the Kings maintain their entertaining core, even without a championship pedigree to stand upon.

General Manager Geoff Petrie more often than not has been on top of things. Even his now regrettable blockbuster deal with oft-injured Chris Webber in the summer of '01 was lauded by friend and foe alike at the time. His only significant move heading into this season was passing on signing ancient center Vlade Divac, long the oarsman for coach Rick Adelman's offense. Divac was the man who made it cool to be a King back in '99, before Predrag Stojakovic was "Peja," and well before Webber wanted anything to do with Sacramento.

Though Divac's locker-room counsel has been sorely missed, the Kings are again sailing through the regular season. Webber and All-Star center Brad Miller run a bewitching high-post system that continually confuses opponents who've grown up guarding a steady diet of screen-and-rolls. And keeping everything humming on the same note is Adelman, whose teams won't overachieve, but rarely fall apart (at least in the regular season).

Webber's return to form after missing 59 games last season has cut into the production of Stojakovic and, to a lesser extent, Miller. Peja's shooting from the floor (44 percent this season -- down from 48 percent last season) and behind the arc (39 percent from 43 percent) has suffered a bit, he's averaging four fewer points a game and pulling down fewer rebounds. Miller's decline is less severe, but his assists are down a bit as Webber assumes more responsibility at the high post.

Stojakovic's regression is a little troubling. Although he remains a catch-and-shoot guarantee, with the ability to face-up or cut to the rim, he could be more potent if he would develop a step-back shot or a post game. Petrie's reluctance to accede to Peja's preseason trade demand is understandable considering the offensive force Stojakovic is. But it leaves the Kings at the mercy of others, hoping for the same sort of lucky breaks the Los Angeles Lakers benefited from in their '04 run to the Finals. Be it an opponent's series-long cold snap or unfortunate injury, the Kings are left hoping this group of familiar faces can string something together if they hold onto that fourth seed. The Kings would have seven games to make things happen, and from what we saw last spring, anything can happen.

Opponents know what the Kings are up to, that much is certain. But stopping the open lay-ups and mid-range jumpers is another story altogether. Petrie and the Kings are playing the hand they have, and in an NBA that seems bent on winning at whatever cost, that approach is beyond admirable.
 
Evenstar - Thank you so much!

That gave me goosebumps. It is rare that anything that complimentary is written about our Kings.

wow.
 
Generally complimnetary perhaps, but hardly roundly so, and also bringing up the huge question -- does this Kings squad have an extra gear? Or are we just one of 5 or 6 teams which COULD pull it off if everything breaks right?
 
Bricklayer said:
Generally complimnetary perhaps, but hardly roundly so, and also bringing up the huge question -- does this Kings squad have an extra gear? Or are we just one of 5 or 6 teams which COULD pull it off if everything breaks right?
Like he said in the article^^ after last years Finals, "Everyone" is one of those 5 or 6 teams I think. I mean maybe our margin for error is a little less than some teams, but look at 2004... anything can happen just ask the lakers and the Yankees...
icon12.gif
 
KP said:
Like he said in the article^^ after last years Finals, "Everyone" is one of those 5 or 6 teams I think. I mean maybe our margin for error is a little less than some teams, but look at 2004... anything can happen just ask the lakers and the Yankees...
icon12.gif

Yes, that's nice. But it places our chances of winning the title at some rather low percentage, and really out of our control. The question would be, do we have another gear that will let us SEIZE the title barring misfortune of our own? Or are we passive spectators hoping that the fates will smile on tus this year and ALLOW us to sneak on in there? Do we have that extra championship gear where we separate ourselves?
 
I think we just might have that extra gear, if we can get the starters in sync at the same time. When they're playing their best, I can't think of a team - even the close to God Spurs - that could beat them.

The question isn't do we have another gear but, rather, can we shift into it when it's needed?
 
Nice to see a positive article, but I have to take issue with one passage:

Evenstar said:
And keeping everything humming on the same note is Adelman, whose teams won't overachieve, but rarely fall apart (at least in the regular season).

Apparently, taking a team who's favored to crush you to an elimination game (as the Kings have done five of the last six postseasons) qualifies as "falling apart."
:rolleyes:
~~
 
Bricklayer said:
Yes, that's nice. But it places our chances of winning the title at some rather low percentage, and really out of our control. The question would be, do we have another gear that will let us SEIZE the title barring misfortune of our own? Or are we passive spectators hoping that the fates will smile on tus this year and ALLOW us to sneak on in there? Do we have that extra championship gear where we separate ourselves?

Well, some things really are a bit out of our control, injuries for instance. I don't know about you, but I'd take fate smiling on us in a heartbeat. I know they do have that extra play off gear, the question is, will it be enough?
 
I like the overall tone of the article, but one of the author's set-up paragraphs bothers me:

"General Manager Geoff Petrie more often than not has been on top of things. Even his now regrettable blockbuster deal with oft-injured Chris Webber in the summer of '01 was lauded by friend and foe alike at the time. His only significant move heading into this season was passing on signing ancient center Vlade Divac, long the oarsman for coach Rick Adelman's offense. Divac was the man who made it cool to be a King back in '99, before Predrag Stojakovic was "Peja," and well before Webber wanted anything to do with Sacramento."

1) Is the deal with CWebb really "now regrettable"? Would the Kings be the Kings had Petrie not brought in CWebb, and is CWebb disappointing this year?

2) Unless I'm mistaken, Divac and CWebb arrived in Sactown at the same time, and even though CWebb initially didn't want to be here, I'm relatively certain he found his game quite quickly in a Kings' uniform, and not "well [after]" Divac made it fun to be a King.
 
Bricklayer said:
Generally complimnetary perhaps, but hardly roundly so, and also bringing up the huge question -- does this Kings squad have an extra gear? Or are we just one of 5 or 6 teams which COULD pull it off if everything breaks right?

But things always have to go right in order to go right. In past seasons I knew without a doubt that the Kings were no only the more talented bunch, but the more talented team, however I don't see any rings on the fingers. This season, I wouldn't dare say that they are the most talented group of players or team, though I can say that they aren't that much far off. I said earlier this season that the NBA is becoming like the NFL and MLB, lots of mediocrity, a lot of teams who are good and can win it all, but no real clear cut head and shoulders above everyone else favorite to win it all, at least right now. Look at Detroit last year and you saw a team that was "just one of 5 or 6 teams which could pull it off if everything breaks right."

I don't know if the Kings are capable of winning a championship this season any more than I know if they aren't. The only thing that I do know is that its January.
 
Bricklayer said:
Or are we just one of 5 or 6 teams which COULD pull it off if everything breaks right?

I don't think more than that can be said about any team at this point, other than arguably the Spurs, and even there, not with much certainty.
 
Bricklayer said:
Yes, that's nice. But it places our chances of winning the title at some rather low percentage, and really out of our control. The question would be, do we have another gear that will let us SEIZE the title barring misfortune of our own? Or are we passive spectators hoping that the fates will smile on tus this year and ALLOW us to sneak on in there? Do we have that extra championship gear where we separate ourselves?

yes, but like the article said, "Petrie and the Kings are playing the hand they have." we're bunched up with several other quality teams, but considering the amount of major players actually added to our roster thus far this season, i have to say that i'm mightily impressed with that 28-12 record, and i like our chances of winning a title. let me put it this way, i don't like our chances of winning a title with an aging and hobbled vlade divac, or a progressively less productive doug christie. the kings have done well for themselves this season.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top