Grades v. Clippers 03/30

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Bricklayer

Don't Make Me Use The Bat
Twas boomerang night, when all of the incredible talents we have let slip down to L.A. rose up at once to kick our butts.

Given the way things seem inevitably trending now, theme tonight will be Great Moments in Kings Draft History:

Artest ( B+ ) -- in the first half gave us very little, and it was really his absence before half that got us in trourble. Mike early, and then Kevin later, got their points, but we were having to rely on Corliss as the #3 guy. But showed up bigtime in the second half -- unfortunately about the only one in the early third as neither Mike nor Kevin did much out of the break and Corliss was obviously on the bench. Harrassed Maggette on numerous occassions, in the second half was doing the overpower the other team to the rim thing, and hit several bit threes down the stretch, although they were in semi-desperation time when we were just flailing. Finished with another very nifty looking statline: 29pts on 10-19 shooting, 7 rebs 3ast, and with the defensive moments I was feeling almost obligated to bump it up to the A- here. But decided to hold the line at the B+: never felt that good, had an invisible first half, and was at 23 until about the :45 second mark after we'd already pretty much lost it. Best overall night for us probably, but lacking the spark an A type effort should have (as was this game).
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JOE KLEINE -- ah, the famous one that started it all back in 1985. Sacramento's very first NBA draft pick. We got the #6 overall pick in the draft, and with it we took a very large hick out of Arkansas. Great way to kick things off, unless you count that we drafted Joe over Chris Mullin (#7), Detlef Schrempf (#8), Charles Oakley (#9), Karl Malone (#13), Joe Dumars (#18), not to mention AC Green, Terry Porter, John "Hot Rod" Williams, Michael Adams...

Reef ( D- ) -- Reef played in this one. No, really, you could tell from the booing. Wonderful. Had one very nice early take...and that was pretty much completely it. Got himself booed in the third for throwing up brick after brick at the FT line. Booing a man for FT shooting pretty much should get you smacked alongside the head in my book, but in this case you have to hope/assume it was the overall non-show.
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HAROLD PRESSLEY -- and ironically just renewed his association with the Kings franchise. We went to the playoffs that first year, in much the same way we have been trying to go this year -- nicely bookended losing no hope entries. And so we got stuck with the #17 pick in the 1986 draft where we took Harold. I assume I'm not the only one who thinks we might have done a tad better with Arvydas Sabonis (#24), Mark Price (#25), Dennis Rodman (#27), Nate McMillan (#30), or for that matter Kevin Duckworth, Jeff Hornacek or Drazen Petrovic.

Miller ( C+ ) -- worked over by Kaman early as usual, but at least somehow won both of his first quarter tips against him. Yay. Began to get some little inside layups off of hustle plays as the half wore on. Played bigger in the third, but did not help things with a dumb error to close the third quarter where he fouled Tim Thomas shooting a jumper out near the 3pt line. Gave up an extra two points for a play you should just never see out of your center. Appears to have completely lost confidence in his formerly trademark jumper, and everything he made were little fugly layups off of loose ball situations, one drive, etc. Brad's overall 9 and 9 does not look terrible for him this year (was a time when we expected much more, but that is past), and seems to compare decently to Kaman's 10 and 12...until you look at the minutes. Kaman dominated the matchup, but just could not stay on the floor with the officials calling breathing fouls all night.
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KENNY SMITH -- long before The Jet's days of sparring with Sir Bowl Full of Jelly, Kenny was our own trifecta -- our answer to coming out of our first two drafts with Kleine and Pressley rather than Malone and Rodman. So in 1987 we draft Kenny at #6...ahead of Kevin Johnson (#7) Reggie Miller (#11) and even Mark Jackson (#18). We also shunned Horace Grant, Reggie Lewis and even Sarunas Marciulonis for a two year Kenny rental.

Martin ( B ) -- started off stinking up the place once again and was 0-4 from the field and really looking out of it in the early going. Missing the open ones, the easy ones, as well as the tougher ones. Got 1 pt in the first quarter, on the ultimate gimme -- a technical FT which he barely rattled in. But he came alive in the second quarter, and what actually started getting him going had nothing to do with offense, but was rather him getting his negligible butt back to help out our midget frontline on the glass. Grabbed 3 or 4 defensive rebounds, and then finally started to show up on the offensive end. In fact one of those games where for a while Kevin tried to disguise our awful rebounding by leading us before half. Took a while to gt going after half, but eventually settled into a solid rhtyhm and spotted us point and shots here and there, including a back to back three with Cisco that brought us back from the brink of blowout and let us stage another of our famous almost wins. There was a "+" to add to this B, but like Ron, it was right on the border, and in such a drab little game the flat B sounded closer to it. Played the better rounded game than Cat Mobley, but never did get control of him on the defensive side of the ball and lost the scoring battle. But a pretty good showing to close up what otherwise has been an ugly month for him: Kevin's March numbers: 18.4ppg on .411 FG%, .286 3pt%.
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PERVIS ELLISON -- this pick, the Kings last and only #1 overall, is sometimes defended as being ok because it was generally a weak draft. Not THAT weak. IN 1989 instead of Pervis we could have had Glen Rice (#4), Tim Hardaway (#14) Shawn Kemp (#18), or even just skipped his whole objectionable Lakers phase and nabbed a young Euro named Vlade Divac (#26).
 
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Bibby ( D ) -- came out firing in his first two shots, but then got blocked by Jason Hart, and then scored back against by Jason, and the battle fo titns was on. Int he first quarter Mike qas indeed the only thing keeping us in it...if you can call being 30-19 after the first quarter "in it". But it was kind of a selfish performance. No assists. Forcing the offense himself. And it just disappeared after the fast start. Just kept on heaving up long bombs, and maybe this is where having the freak night last time out hurt him, because he wanted to duplicate it and that's jsut not how it works. In any case, one game after outdueling reigning MVP Steve Nash, Mike found himself in another duel with the immortal Jason Hart. And this time he lost. Badly missed a couple of threes in the final two minutes to earn his cherry here.
1990 DRAFT -- and this one makes it just for the sheer volume discount. We went balls to the wall in this draft, loaded up with 4 #1 picks as well as a #2 (which we traded). Five picks in all. And with the exception of Lionel Simmons, who's career was ruined by knee problems, we flubbed them all. So instead of Lionel Simmons (#7) , Travis Mays (#14), Duane Causewell #18, Anthony Bonner (#23), Bimbo Coles (#40) (traded for the ageless one, Rory Sparrow), how would this have struck you for a draft day haul?: Jayson Williams, Elden Campbell, Toni Kukoc, Antonio Davis and Cedric Ceballos. Think we might have won a few more games with that frontcourt collection?

Corliss ( B+ ) -- entered the game in the first quarter for Brad...at center? Ahead of Kenny in the rotation anyway. And yet steady ole Corliss turned out to be our best player of the first half. Played smart, and at a faster gear than any other King. Began to force a bit near the end of his stint though, and he's not gettign any taller on defense. Was involved in a final freakish play going into half as a full court pass just thrown in desperation fell into his hands for a layup with 1.5 seconds to go. And yet after that very strong first half, what happened in the second? We got 13pts out of Corliss befrore the break...and I think it was still 13 to end the game. Late in the game did combine with Ron to deliver a little of that Bonzi/Ron thick body havoc we had going at this time last year, and fought on the glass in there with a Clippers team that was smallish itself once Kaman was rendered ineffective by foul trouble.
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BOBBY HURLEY -- and people sometimes like to say "oh if it wasn't for that car crash" or whatnot about our #7 pick in the 1993 draft. But that wasn't it or all. Bobby sucked as a pro, was too small and weak, couldn't shoot or finish in traffic, and was never going to be much. However Vin Baker (pre-blimping), Allan Houston (pre-knee), Sam Cassel and Nick Van Exel all certainly were. Sam's still going in fact.

Salmons ( D ) -- and the teflon man again avoids an F just because, well, he always does something. Those claims of any sort of consistency are long since past, and I can't even count the numebr of times I have pondered the F for John, but somehow he always avoids it. really did nothin out there for us. Could not hit a shot, had little impact defensively, was largely invisible in our "big game" (lots of those involving 30-41 teams playing 35-37 teams I have noted). And yet barely registered with a couple of steals, made a good pass or two, and just did enoguh for me to just shrug and give him the D again. No help at all, but always avoids the throw stuff at your TV godawful game.
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CORLISS WILLIAMSON -- I like Corliss, he's a good pro who's had a solid career. Picking him #13 in the 1995 draft was not at all a bad pick, even if it was just kind of a "had to" sort of deal like the one we passed on when Marcus Williams fell into our lap this year. Just too accomplished, and slip sliding down the board, so we took him. Had a good career. However, think we might have been a tad better off if we had drafted Michael Finley (#22) instead.

Cisco ( B ) -- in the first half came in with much needed energy and immediately grabbed a hustle board, but missed one of the FTs, fouled Cat, and got a 3 second violation for a typical mixed Cisco package. Had several of our biggest moments in the 4th including hitting a big three in the mid 4th, followed by one from Kevin, to pull us back within 10 so we could make the score look not so bad by the end. Continues to compete.
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PEJA STOJAKOVIC -- You may be thinking Peja? Fallen in stature in Kings land to be sure, but still a very good player for a long time and part of our golden era. How does he fit here? Despite the draft day boos, Peja at #14 was not at all a bad pick after Kobe went #13. Unless of course you look at the alternatives: Steve Nash went #15, Jermaine O'Neal #17. Besides, I just love to torture people with this pic.
 
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Thomas ( INC ) -- first action in a long time. Looked like it. Contributed a traveling call, sat down. Welcome back Kenny!
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JASON WILLIAMS -- and here is another one, an important draft pick for us, helped set the tone for an entire era, provided many exciting memories. Yet somehow I am thinkiing that if we had the #7 pick in the 1998 draft to do all over again we might just go for a couple of scrubs like Dirk Nowitzki (#9) or Paul Pierce (#10) instead. Heck Rashard Lewis was out there too.


Muss ( ) -- coming...

Refs ( F ) -- Note to refs: there is not one sane human being who would pay $200 or whatever to watch a free throw shooting contest. Not one. Ranks right up there with "competitive eating" (always wonder how the starving masses in Africa view that particular phenomenon). Swallow your damn whistles and realize this is a contact sport.
 
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Now THIS is the grade thread I've been anxiously awaiting!!!

JOE KLEINE -- ah, the famous one that started it all back in 1985. Sacramento's very first NBA draft pick. We got the #6 overall pick in the draft, and with it we took a very large hick out of Arkansas. Great way to kick things off, unless you count that we drafted Joe over Chris Mullin (#7), Detlef Schrempf (#8), Charles Oakley (#9), Karl Malone (#13), Joe Dumars (#18), not to mention AC Green, Terry Porter, John "Hot Rod" Williams, Michael Adams...

And quite frankly, Joe Kleine is the reason I never get too excited about potential draft picks.

;)
 
Joe Klien once came to my high school for an assembly in the gym to talk to the kids. One of the kids asked him to dunk. He's 7'1". He declined. We were a little disappointed.

(Were you there for that Brick? Rio?)
 
Joe Klien once came to my high school for an assembly in the gym to talk to the kids. One of the kids asked him to dunk. He's 7'1". He declined. We were a little disappointed.

He was probably afraid he'd miss or he'd trip over his own feet on the way and hurt himself...

;)
 
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