LMM
Starter
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/11803469p-12691236c.html
Kings' impatient 'O' hurts the 'D'
By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Saturday, December 18, 2004
Talent, skill or confidence can be a plus or a curse, depending upon how it is used.
Those traits at the offensive end of the floor have helped the Kings to one of the league's top records this season. An abundance of confidence also contributed to that 115-99 whipping the Kings were handed Thursday night by the Los Angeles Lakers.
The film of that contest, Kings coach Rick Adelman said, is an invaluable teaching tool. And it was the offense the Kings' coaching staff showed the team Friday morning with two days off before returning to Arco Arena on Sunday evening to face the New Orleans Hornets.
Adelman insists his team's offense strongly affects its defense. Of course, that can work both ways. When the Kings play as poorly on defense as they did against the Lakers, that can promote the quick-shot, get-back, impatient mentality that scuttles offensive teamwork.
Center Brad Miller admits the same confidence that allows shooters such as himself, Peja Stojakovic, Chris Webber, Mike Bibby, Doug Christie and Bobby Jackson to eschew the offensive framework that can turn them into a juggernaut can also be a detriment.
"We've got to get that timing down," said Miller, who scored just six points and made 3 of only 8 field-goal attempts during a team-high 38 minutes against the Lakers. "But when we're rolling, no one says a damned thing about (how) we shot the ball with just five seconds into the (24-second) shot clock. When we're going bad, everybody asks these questions and talks about it.
"So we've just got to play together, and when we play bad, it's not selfish, it's just guys taking quick, early shots, and you have two guys touching it and not all five."
Miller often is the beneficiary of the Kings' most patient ball-movement possessions.
At their best, the Kings allow their offense to flow. Their movement and resulting ball movement will move a defense out of position. They usually can take advantage of their collective offensive intelligence to exploit defenses.
But when each player continues to believe his next shot will be good despite previous misfires, Miller said it's time for a change in attack.
"We've got to make the adjustment instead of just keep jacking 15-18 foot jump shots. We've got to go to the hole and try and do other things. We think the next one is going in, and it's a (messed up) situation. It's hard," he said. --oh brad hehe
Adelman's team shot 45.6 percent (after averaging 44.7 entering the game) and scored 99 points on a night when only nine NBA teams, including the Kings at 101.8, began the evening averaging at least that many points. In Adelman's view, his team was terribly impatient, a characteristic it has displayed during its worst moments this season.
"The Lakers couldn't guard us early in that game," he said. "We were getting layups. But then it was just one pass and shoot. ... We can play that game, but when it's not working, you have to recognize which team is on the roll and move the ball and make the (opposition) guard you. We never did that."
And the Lakers gave the Kings their worst home loss since March 1998. For the second consecutive day, Adelman said he hoped the game served as a wake-up call. The Kings have four games left on a homestand that will be followed by a six-game stretch beginning on New Year's Eve in Salt Lake City. Five of those games will be on the road. The home game is against San Antonio, 3-1 in its last four games at Arco Arena.
Kings' impatient 'O' hurts the 'D'
By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Saturday, December 18, 2004
Talent, skill or confidence can be a plus or a curse, depending upon how it is used.
Those traits at the offensive end of the floor have helped the Kings to one of the league's top records this season. An abundance of confidence also contributed to that 115-99 whipping the Kings were handed Thursday night by the Los Angeles Lakers.
The film of that contest, Kings coach Rick Adelman said, is an invaluable teaching tool. And it was the offense the Kings' coaching staff showed the team Friday morning with two days off before returning to Arco Arena on Sunday evening to face the New Orleans Hornets.
Adelman insists his team's offense strongly affects its defense. Of course, that can work both ways. When the Kings play as poorly on defense as they did against the Lakers, that can promote the quick-shot, get-back, impatient mentality that scuttles offensive teamwork.
Center Brad Miller admits the same confidence that allows shooters such as himself, Peja Stojakovic, Chris Webber, Mike Bibby, Doug Christie and Bobby Jackson to eschew the offensive framework that can turn them into a juggernaut can also be a detriment.
"We've got to get that timing down," said Miller, who scored just six points and made 3 of only 8 field-goal attempts during a team-high 38 minutes against the Lakers. "But when we're rolling, no one says a damned thing about (how) we shot the ball with just five seconds into the (24-second) shot clock. When we're going bad, everybody asks these questions and talks about it.
"So we've just got to play together, and when we play bad, it's not selfish, it's just guys taking quick, early shots, and you have two guys touching it and not all five."
Miller often is the beneficiary of the Kings' most patient ball-movement possessions.
At their best, the Kings allow their offense to flow. Their movement and resulting ball movement will move a defense out of position. They usually can take advantage of their collective offensive intelligence to exploit defenses.
But when each player continues to believe his next shot will be good despite previous misfires, Miller said it's time for a change in attack.
"We've got to make the adjustment instead of just keep jacking 15-18 foot jump shots. We've got to go to the hole and try and do other things. We think the next one is going in, and it's a (messed up) situation. It's hard," he said. --oh brad hehe
Adelman's team shot 45.6 percent (after averaging 44.7 entering the game) and scored 99 points on a night when only nine NBA teams, including the Kings at 101.8, began the evening averaging at least that many points. In Adelman's view, his team was terribly impatient, a characteristic it has displayed during its worst moments this season.
"The Lakers couldn't guard us early in that game," he said. "We were getting layups. But then it was just one pass and shoot. ... We can play that game, but when it's not working, you have to recognize which team is on the roll and move the ball and make the (opposition) guard you. We never did that."
And the Lakers gave the Kings their worst home loss since March 1998. For the second consecutive day, Adelman said he hoped the game served as a wake-up call. The Kings have four games left on a homestand that will be followed by a six-game stretch beginning on New Year's Eve in Salt Lake City. Five of those games will be on the road. The home game is against San Antonio, 3-1 in its last four games at Arco Arena.
Last edited: