Emma
Starter
Little time for Thomas – The inevitable part about being part of a logjam? Someone's going to wind up in the woodchipper.
With the Kings overloaded with big men but underwhelmed by their production, forward Kenny Thomas held his starting job for just two games to begin this season. He was the first option long enough to mostly watch blowout losses at New Orleans and San Antonio (15 and 12 minutes, respectively), then fade into a minimal role off the bench that has left him reaching for the rose-colored glasses.
"Just having an opportunity to play in the NBA is great," said Thomas, who missed three games with a right shin contusion. "There's not too much I can say. I just have to wait for my opportunity, just basically leave it in God's hands. When I go out there, I just have to go get all the rebounds I can and focus on every aspect out there on the floor."
Not that playing here and there – when at all – does much for Thomas' rhythm. He entered Friday's game averaging 16.4 minutes and 4.1 rebounds, career lows by a long shot if the nine-year veteran's season ended then.
"Coach is playing people, and you just have to be professional and accept it," Thomas said. "Of course I want to play. Who doesn't want to play? I feel like I could help. The way that I am going to help if I'm not in is cheering on the sideline, helping my teammates, just being a positive person around everybody else."
http://www.sacbee.com/kings/story/516267.html
This is interesting because, in years past He would have become a cancer. Maybe this is proof that Theus' presence is a stabilizer.
With the Kings overloaded with big men but underwhelmed by their production, forward Kenny Thomas held his starting job for just two games to begin this season. He was the first option long enough to mostly watch blowout losses at New Orleans and San Antonio (15 and 12 minutes, respectively), then fade into a minimal role off the bench that has left him reaching for the rose-colored glasses.
"Just having an opportunity to play in the NBA is great," said Thomas, who missed three games with a right shin contusion. "There's not too much I can say. I just have to wait for my opportunity, just basically leave it in God's hands. When I go out there, I just have to go get all the rebounds I can and focus on every aspect out there on the floor."
Not that playing here and there – when at all – does much for Thomas' rhythm. He entered Friday's game averaging 16.4 minutes and 4.1 rebounds, career lows by a long shot if the nine-year veteran's season ended then.
"Coach is playing people, and you just have to be professional and accept it," Thomas said. "Of course I want to play. Who doesn't want to play? I feel like I could help. The way that I am going to help if I'm not in is cheering on the sideline, helping my teammates, just being a positive person around everybody else."
http://www.sacbee.com/kings/story/516267.html
This is interesting because, in years past He would have become a cancer. Maybe this is proof that Theus' presence is a stabilizer.