I was born far after 1976 so I had to research some of this stuff to see how that stat 'grabbed' me. I'll start with the more recent ones and work my way back.
-The Bulls won 3 championships with Luc Longley and Wennington. Look at Longley's stats or read a bio of him. He was a soft-shooting big man with good touch and he was a good passer too. Sounds a little like Miller to me. Luc Longley never shot a great FG%, and that was because he was a jump shooter. Posting up was not a big part of his game.
-The Bulls won their first 3 championships with Scott Williams and Bill Cartwright. They were jump shooters as well. Especially, Scott Williams. I remember him being a very good mid-range jump shooter through out his career. Horace Grant was a good jump shooter at PF too. Here's a quote from Cartwright.
"I could always shoot," Cartwright said. "It's funny to me when people said things like he shoots well for a big man. You can either shoot or not, no matter what your size and I had the ability to shoot."
Don't you remember how low his release point was? That was always a shot that has stood out in my mind...
-Bill Laimbeer won two titles. He was a jump shooter too.
-Jack Sikma won a title with the Sonics. He was a jump shooter who was a good passer. He was comparable to Vlade Divac and Andrew Bogut.
-The Bullets won two titles with Elvin Hayes as their Center. He did post up, but his signature move was the turnaround jump shot. That's still a jump shot right?

Okay, so he's a question mark. I won't count him.
The other titles were won by Centers since 1976 were Hall of Famers. David Robinson, Shaq, Hakeem, Kareem, Chief (I don't think he was a hall of famer), Moses Malone, Elvin Hayes, Bill Walton, and Dave Cowens were all Centers that have won titles in Brad Miller's lifetime.
The only teams that did not have that type of Center who was Hall of fame material and didn't shoot jump shots was the Spurs with Nazr Mohammed (although the have a PF who plays like a C) and the Pistons with Ben Wallace. Ben Wallace is certainly better than Chandler or Dampier. Only Nazr Mohammed had similar skills to those two and won the title. That's right...one Center who sucked at offense, was a decent rebounder, and a decent shotblocker has won the title. His name was Nazr Mohammed.
To me, the best way to get an NBA title is to have a Hall of Fame Center on your team. Well, that isn't going to happen anytime soon with the Kings. The next bet is to try and win it with a highly-skilled Center like the '79 Sonics, the '89-90 Pistons, the '91-93 Bulls, or the '95-'98 Bulls. That's a total of 9 titles that have won the title with a jump-shooting Center.
It's one of the most tried and true strategies in the book and I'm surprised that so many people on this board have failed to recognize it. You take a C who can hit jump shots and put him out on the perimiter. That draws the opposing teams big man away from the hoop and allows the other players to drive or post up much easier. It's called creating space.
This is very important for the Kings because we have so many post players (Bonzi, Artest, SAR, even KT when he has the right matchup). Unfortunately, Brad Miller had a bad series, but what he does for us is very important for our other players. I say we sign a shot-blocking backup C, and trade KT for a better defensive PF. That will give us a better interior presence, yet still allows us to have proper spacing on the court. I don't see the need to clog the lane with a stiff like Dampier or Chandler while getting rid of Miller. Sign someone like Cato, he isn't a whole lot worse then either of those two anyways. IMO, having someone like Chandler or Dampier would creat the following: The benefits we would receive on defense would be far outweighed by the negative effects on our offense.
Oh man, I just realized that post took me
forever! Sheesh!