Kings: A soothsayer's nightmare

Rockmeister

All-Star
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/story/11997784p-12868116c.html

Analysis: Kings: A soothsayer's nightmare
By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Monday, January 10, 2005

The Kings have defeated the first-place teams in three of the NBA's six divisions.

The Kings have been defeated by the last-place teams in three of the league's divisions.

The Kings are great. They are so darned average. They are straight terrible.
It depends upon which five-minute portion of a game you witness or hear.
If you don't have much time, the Kings are quite capable of displaying the qualities that earn each of those descriptions during any given five-minute stretch.

These guys are so unpredictable that a palm-reading analysis from one of those nut cases on Bourbon Street might have done them better in the long run than putting forth that half-hearted performance in Saturday night's 121-117 overtime loss to the New Orleans Hornets.

(A disclaimer: Those suggesting the meeting of the flaky Kings and the nut cases might not be held responsible for any toll taken on Bourbon Street wackos. Treating this team could be hazardous to anyone's psyche.)
Only five teams will have fewer losses than the Kings (21-11) when they host the Denver Nuggets on Tuesday night. Yet, there's nary a soul out here who can say exactly what we have with the Kings.

They defeated the only team (New York Knicks) that then had a winning record on this recently completed four-game road trip, then they lost two out of the three remaining games to the Toronto Raptors (13-22) and New Orleans Hornets (3-29).

Just after defeating the San Antonio Spurs at Arco Arena on Jan. 2, coach Rick Adelman was asked about having a road swing against teams the Kings "should" beat.

Adelman said then, and again after the loss to the Hornets, that there aren't automatic victories in the NBA.

"We were .500," Adelman said when asked about his impressions of the road trip. "We split it. Obviously, we had a good chance to win three out of four. I learned a long time ago, people can say this win is a gimme win and that win is a gimme win. There are no gimme wins in this league.

"If you'd said we were going to go 2-2 at the start of this trip, I wouldn't have picked (the New Orleans) game to be one we'd lose."

However, it wouldn't have been a game Adelman said he couldn't have lost.
That's because he doesn't have a clue about the effort his team might put forth in a given game.

Unquestionably, the Kings have shown they can play with the league's best - as victories over San Antonio at home and over the Phoenix Suns on the road have exhibited.

Along with the struggling Minnesota Timberwolves, the Kings are one of two teams to win at Phoenix's America West Arena this season.

They are also one of the three teams the Golden State Warriors have defeated on the road, and one of two the Hornets have defeated at home.
The Kings' offensive capabilities are well-documented. They can be a machine when they play the game as they know they should, sharing the ball, running their offense patiently and moving themselves.

But that defense is so shaky, so soft, so inconsistent; they allow so many easy shot opportunities that few teams are incapable of playing with, especially on the road. And since the Kings just recently lost three of five games at Arco, there isn't a comfort zone just because they will play seven of their next eight at home.

In their loss to the Hornets on Saturday night, the Kings' performance epitomized the manner in which they've approached many games this season.

In many ways, the Kings played the percentages and lost. They played soft defensively, as they often do early in games, and, in effect, provided their opposition (team-wise and individually) a veritable telepathic dosage of confidence. Then the Kings couldn't believe Dan Dickau, J.R. Smith and the like were making the wide-open shots they permitted much of the night.

It appears the Kings, as a team, think challenging shots is making that last desperate run from 10 feet away and getting a hand up near the shooter's face just after the ball is released. That's not a challenge; that's a "Maybe I'll look like I was on time on the film."

That's fake hustle and, as of now, faking it isn't getting it done.
 
Rockmeister said:
It appears the Kings, as a team, think challenging shots is making that last desperate run from 10 feet away and getting a hand up near the shooter's face just after the ball is released. That's not a challenge; that's a "Maybe I'll look like I was on time on the film."

That's fake hustle and, as of now, faking it isn't getting it done.

Bibby, are you reading this????

Our perimeter defense is horrid and when you let a team like NO hit 13 of 26 from 3 point range you are pathetic.
 
My thoughts about our defense (key players):

1. Webber
Best defense: San Antonio, opponent Tim Duncan (2nd game)
Worst defense: LA, opponent Lamar Odom
2. Peja:
Best defense: Boston, opponent Paul Pierce
Worst defense: Miami, opponent Edie Jones
3. Biby
Best defense:???????
Worst defense: Miami, opponent Damon Jones!!!!!
 
Ryle said:
Bibby, are you reading this????

Our perimeter defense is horrid and when you let a team like NO hit 13 of 26 from 3 point range you are pathetic.

I don't think you should lay it all on Bibby. He did save us against the Hawks the night before. And our perimeter defense might be horrid but our interior defense isn't really any better. They are all accountable for the NO loss. Let's just move on to the next game shall we?
 
KingKong said:
I don't think you should lay it all on Bibby. He did save us against the Hawks the night before. And our perimeter defense might be horrid but our interior defense isn't really any better. They are all accountable for the NO loss. Let's just move on to the next game shall we?

Although our interior defense is not very good it doesn't help that Bibby can't stay in front of anyone and this breaks down any form of defense that we have. His offense is great but he's almost giving up as many points as he is scoring and he doesn't seem to care.
 
But that defense is so shaky, so soft, so inconsistent; they allow so many easy shot opportunities that few teams are incapable of playing with, especially on the road.

I would like to see this in BIG BOLD PRINT on each wall in the practice facility. And it's not like they don't KNOW how to play defense. The Spurs game proved they do have the knowledge and the ability to get the job done. Why don't they use it on a consistent basis?

The sarcastic part of me wants to reply that "Good defense doesn't get on the high-light reels." But I know that's not the case, because the Kings aren't about the high-light reels. They never have been. Yes, they make shots that make it to the Top 3 of ESPN, SportsCenter, NBA whatever, but that's not the team focus.

It's a mystery to me, and I know I'm not alone. I just hope they have a Sherlock Holmes at hand who can solve the mystery before I get any MORE gray hairs and the Kings give away any more games they simply should not have lost.

GO KINGS!!!
 
P.S. And Mike is a very REAL part of the problem. He has to find some defense somewhere...
 
Glad to see Marty McNeal really ticked at what some of us have been trying to say for a few weeks. No more "giving them time". We're more than a 1/3 thru the whole season. But is it entirely the starters fault? No. When the Maloofs had enough of the luxury tax last year and nothing to show they got below (or nearly so) the salary cap. Then no players like (I said like) JJackson, Keon or Damon Jones or .... (there was one more guard we had who now plays against us pretty well) and the veteran salaries they are due.

No BJax and his defense and the hole is pretty clear. Even my brain starts to think about trades: CWebb to NY in a 3-way with denver to get Nene, argghh....

Something has to change. Not a subtle change either.

Thought, how well we did last year with CWebb out then he came back and we have not been the same since. He holds on to the ball too long and has no quickness anymore to fool very many. How long since we have seen double coverage on him? Ball movement: it happens every few minutes then stops or is it that it goes to CWebb while he tries to shake and bake? That's what I think I'm seeing this year.
 
Well, if rumors are true we're going to have a trade alright. And we're trading away the ONLY true defensive presence on the team. The explanation had better be REALLY good!

boese080.gif
 
VF21 said:
Well, if rumors are true we're going to have a trade alright. And we're trading away the ONLY true defensive presence on the team. The explanation had better be REALLY good!

boese080.gif

Are you listening to 1140.? Lets see what Petries explanation is.
 
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