Holiday comes early for Kings

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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/11823993p-12711872c.html

Holiday comes early for Kings

As Chris Webber rests his sore knee, Sacramento romps against injury-riddled New Orleans.

By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Monday, December 20, 2004

933-peja.jpg


Peja Stojakovic, whose 21 points led the Kings, draws a foul from New Orleans' Lonny Baxter while shooting in the third quarter.

Here's the case of a veteran and a rookie.

Chris Webber's surgically repaired left knee knows exactly when to get sore. The Kings forward has missed two games this season because of it - against the expansion Charlotte Bobcats and Sunday night against the New Orleans Hornets.

His absence didn't make much difference because the injury-plagued Hornets were no match for the Kings, who put things together at the end of the first quarter and raced to a 107-71 victory at Arco Arena.



While Webber has good timing, Kevin Martin could use some. The first-round draft pick has been ill the past few days and was too weak to play against the 2-21 Hornets in a game in which he likely would have received considerable minutes.

The 36-point victory margin was the Kings' largest since a 118-82 road victory over the New Jersey Nets on Jan. 9, 2003. It was their biggest victory at home since a 118-82 triumph over the Denver Nuggets on March 21, 2002.

Simply winning, no matter the opponent or its condition, was satisfying to Kings coach Rick Adelman.

"After the other night (Thursday's 115-99 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers), it was good to get this win because now we have two tough games before Christmas (Tuesday against Washington and Thursday against Shaquille O'Neal and Miami)," Adelman said.

Even without Webber, the Kings were too much for the Hornets. Peja Stojakovic scored a game-high 21 points in 30 minutes, leading five Sacramento players in double figures.

Adelman said he had no idea Webber would not play until the coach arrived at the arena, where trainer Pete Youngman informed him of that possibility. But that wasn't all the discouraging news.

"Then he told me Darius (Songaila) wasn't feeling well, either," Adelman said. "Then I asked if there was anybody else."

Youngman had no more names for Adelman, and Songaila said he never thought about not actually playing.

"I knew I was going to play," said Songaila, who started in Webber's place and had a typically solid game with 13 points and a game-high 11 rebounds. "It's just I didn't know until about five minutes before warm-ups that Chris wasn't going to play. Then when I knew that, it was like, OK, we're not even talking about it. I'm playing."

Songaila played 38 minutes but did so at less than 100 percent.

"I'm drowsy, dizzy and weak, and everything is kind of blurry," he said. "In the beginning, it did affect me. Once I got going, I don't know what it was, I got hot or the body heat, and I was OK."

It wouldn't be surprising if Hornets coach Byron Scott was experiencing some of those same symptoms. His current roster has several players who likely would be in the National Basketball Development League or playing overseas if not for the abnormal amount of injuries New Orleans has suffered.

"Basically, you're trying to survive," Scott said after watching his team make 11 of 17 shots (64.7 percent) in the first quarter, then just 14 of 60 (23.3 percent) the rest of the game.

"Right now, we're just trying to get some guys back. I ripped into the guys at halftime because I really felt that we were not only not competing like we're used to, but we were just scared to take shots."

One reason the Hornets were reluctant to shoot was Kings backup center Greg Ostertag, who was a factor around the basket with a game-high four blocks and six rebounds. He also made all three of his shots and contributed four assists. "I've been known to drop a dime or two," Ostertag said after fouling out in 17 minutes. "Basically, I just tried to be active, rebound and block shots. This is what I do."
 
Do any of you find this a little disconserning. Each game that Chris Webber has sat out, the Kings and played very well and won easily. It's kind of like last year, The kings were great while Webber was out, when he came back the team lost its cemistry. I'm not saying anything negative about Webber. I'm just a little concerned about this. :confused:
 
KingsFan54 said:
Do any of you find this a little disconserning. Each game that Chris Webber has sat out, the Kings and played very well and won easily. It's kind of like last year, The kings were great while Webber was out, when he came back the team lost its cemistry. I'm not saying anything negative about Webber. I'm just a little concerned about this. :confused:
I don't understand why you would be concerened? Against the Bobcats and New Orleans, I would expect us to win w/o Webber. Last night game, it was good that Webber sat out and rest his knee.
 
KingsFan54 said:
Do any of you find this a little disconserning. Each game that Chris Webber has sat out, the Kings and played very well and won easily. It's kind of like last year, The kings were great while Webber was out, when he came back the team lost its cemistry. I'm not saying anything negative about Webber. I'm just a little concerned about this. :confused:
I'm not too concerned. Both the teams were games we should have won easily. There have been many games with Webb in that we should have & did win easily. Pluls, by all accounts, team chemistry is doing well. I am much more concerned about our track record against the better teams in the NBA.
 
KingsFan54 said:
Do any of you find this a little disconserning. Each game that Chris Webber has sat out, the Kings and played very well and won easily. It's kind of like last year, The kings were great while Webber was out, when he came back the team lost its cemistry. I'm not saying anything negative about Webber. I'm just a little concerned about this. :confused:
Interesting first post -- look at the opponents.
 
KingsFan54 said:
Do any of you find this a little disconserning. Each game that Chris Webber has sat out, the Kings and played very well and won easily. It's kind of like last year, The kings were great while Webber was out, when he came back the team lost its cemistry. I'm not saying anything negative about Webber. I'm just a little concerned about this. :confused:
We have been there (topic) many times and we will go there again and again.
 
I agree that the bobcats and Hornets aren't the strongest teams in the league. The games against the Pacers, and the bucks. Those were games where the kings played very badly. The kings loss against the Lakers I think was a wake up call. They need to play much better defense and rebound better to beat the better teams. I'm just throwing some thoughts out there and see what people think. I"m probably the biggest Kings fan around, but I'm pretty had on them too. We will see how they play the next two games against Miami and Washington. :)
 
KingsFan54 said:
I agree that the bobcats and Hornets aren't the strongest teams in the league.
My humble opinion is that we could have rested any two starters and still blown out the Hornets. Its not inconceivable we could have rested ALL FIVE starters and still won that game. That's how bad they are. They have exactly two players in uniform right now who could be starting anywhere else but New Orleans, and they are both old and decrepit (Brown and Wesley), and hardly All-Stars.
 
KingsFan54 said:
Do any of you find this a little disconserning.
I'm guessing you meant disconcerting... My answer is, "Nope."

And BTW, I'm not gonna let you get away with claiming the title of "biggest Kings fan around." I think you'll discover once you've been here a while that we have a core of die-hard fans who've been with the team since 1985 and even a few who date back to pre-Sacramento days.

As far as being hard on the team or players, just keep it constructive and civil and you'll do fine.

:D
 
NO is a bad team sure, but this is still a team that put up 28 pts on us in the first quarter! That was a little disconcerting. Then the defensive strike came with Tag at the helm, the rest of the team stepped up too.
 
Class this is an example of which logical fallicy?
(a) ad hminum
(b) straw man argument
(c) hasty conclusion
(d) none of the above

Extra credit what are the OTHER possible explinations for the phenomena observed?
 
(c) hasty conclusion.

I don't think I can respond for extra credit without violating at least one of the guiding principles of this site.

;)
 
KingsFan54 said:
Do any of you find this a little disconserning. Each game that Chris Webber has sat out, the Kings and played very well and won easily. It's kind of like last year, The kings were great while Webber was out, when he came back the team lost its cemistry. I'm not saying anything negative about Webber. I'm just a little concerned about this. :confused:
OMG! I just looked at New Orleans OTHER 20 losses and Chris didn't play in those games either! Obviously it's some sort of trend.
 
i'm glad webber sat. i'd rather him use the knee on a team that does matter.

i hope he rests in the other game vs teh bobcats, and i hope he rests against the hawks as well. and if we play the hornets again, i hope he rests again then. seriously, the kings should be able to beat those teams soundly without him.

why not give him the rest?? it can only help the team. imagine if he got hurt vs one of those teams, we'd all be SCREAMING for rick's head for playing him against such mediocre teams.

give webber as much rest as possible!
 
Evenstar said:
...give webber as much rest as possible!
I think that's the plan, evenstar. And I think it's wise for a couple of reasons: it conserves Webber AND it gives Darius and Tag some more PT, which could prove to be very valuable in the playoffs.

:D
 
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