That is some revisionist history there - first, Greene was talked about as the next Rashard Lewis. When it became apparent that he can't shoot, he was branded as an awesome defensive specialist. Casspi was envisioned as a good stop-gap until Greene get his act together but was viewed favorably as eventually developing into a very good sixth man type, even drawing Hedo comparison. No one here ever said Casspi is not NBA material. No one ever said Greene is not NBA worthy. In fact, a lot of posters thought Greene is immensely talented (not true) but a bit lazy (true). Greene and Casspi (to a lesser extend) was overrated just like some of the players now are being overrated.
Jackson/Jeter or Hayes/IT? That's like asking Geo Metro or Yugo? How about we have better standard? I admit Hayes/It is less garbage than Jackson/Jeter but it is nothing to brag about.
Donte Greene started more than 50% of the games in 10-11. Started another 20+ games in 11-12 before falling off the earth least season. What do you call a guy who started that many games? Not a "core" player? Strange.
Noc never averaged more than 30 mins before he arrived in Sac and he never averaged more than 30 min after he left Sac. He was by far the best SF we had post Artest (which is sad) and his stellar play at the beginning of 09-10 (at one point was shutting down Kevin Durrant no less) was a big reason the Kings got off to a great start. But then was benched in favor of the player you said is not part of the core. He only spend 1.5 season in Sac, it not like he aged 10 years here. The point is he was a natural bench player asked to carry the load of a starter and to his credit occasionally succeeded but was asked to do too much nonetheless.
Jesus, how old do you think Casspi, Greene, Landry, Noc, Beno are? 40? Those guys are still in their productive years. If anything, getting older should make them better players (especially true for the youngsters) but somehow they are less productive after they left Sacramento. That's a fact. They are less production or got demoted to lessor roles after Sacramento.
It's just one game and it's not like they actually beat the Heat. Obviously the Spurs cannot win consistently with that lineup. Last season, the Kings beat the Lakers, Spurs, and Thunder. Doesn't matter, they still sucked.
It goes beyond just the coach and the SF position. The Kings need:
1. A real coach
2. A starting caliber PG
3. A starting caliber SF
4. A shot-blocker (move JT to backup)
5. Deeper bench
6. Less selfishness from their two best players
We are a long way from winning consistently.
You are missing my point. You claim that we keep blaming the coach without reason, when it is the talent level that causes us to suck this much. Through your own analysis of guys like Donte, Omri and my added examples of Jeter/Jackson, it is shown that we are a deeper team now than we were in Evans' rookie year and Cuz's rookie year. In that time, we've replaced these guys with more talented people while essentially only losing a "backup PG" in Beno and Dalembert who is a "17 min a game player". So we haven't lost much. In the meantime, Cousins and Evans have also improved their games. So here's the question - why are we not winning more than we were when we had these less talented players? You say that the claim that the coaches are holding the team back is not the cause of our struggles. Well, we've improved on the talent front, so why haven't we improved then?
There is a difference between what we hope a player becomes and what actually happens. Donte showed that he did have the talent to fill what we needed at the SF spot. He had very good size too. No one in his right mind is here claiming that we have Steve Nash on our bench in Jimmer. But the talent gap alone is not so huge as to explain why we are one of the worst teams in the league.
Another question is whether our guys are truly less talented, or whether other teams' bench players appear more talented because of the coaching and system.
Let's compare ourselves with the Spurs, taking Ginobili and MT as starters.
Splitter - Hayes
Gary Neal - Brooks
Patty Mills - IT
Stephen Jackson - JJ
Matt Bonner - TRob
Is the gap in talent really that huge? Sure, when you include the starters we lose out, but does it amount to us being bottom 5 year after year while the Spurs make the conference semis/WCFs? Keep in mind that our guys are also much younger.
Are Danny Green and Leonard really that great? Or do they just fill a very important role for them by playing good D and hitting open shots? Is that really a talent thing?
Therein lies the biggest difference IMO. We keep seeking players who can create their own shots, who can handle the ball. Remember - 3 guys in the lineup who can handle the ball (Westphal and Smart said that). But here's how all winning teams structure their teams: they get a few offensive stars, and tell everyone else to just play good D and hit open shots created by those 2 or 3 guys. But not us, no, we want James Johnson, Thomas Robinson, John Salmons to run the break and create shots for others.
Also: you're just acting stupid if you took my ageing comment to refer to guys like Greene and Omri. I trust you have a little more common sense than that. Here's a funny thing - how come all those guys (Landry, Noc, Dalembert) performed better with their previous teams than with us? Beno is about the only one who came over and became a very good player for us. In Thornton's case he wasn't getting many minutes with the Hornets before coming over.
There's just some logical loophole or something in your argument that is causing me to not fully understand you. You say that the coaching is not the problem, because untalented guys came here and played better than wherever they are now. But these untalented guys were playing pretty well too prior to coming here ... So it's either they are talented and our coaches suck, or they aren't talented and our coaches suck more than their old coaches... Either way it seems like our coaches suck if you ask me.