The only way to .500 or better ball this season is with an incredibly creative offensive approach. This team's defense is going to be
bad. I don't care what the training camp emphasis has been, nor do I care about "culture" and "94 feet" and whatever else the coaching staff may be preaching. Your roster is your roster, and with big minutes going to the likes of Schroder, LaVine, DeRozan, Sabonis, and Monk, and with spot minutes likely going to guys like Raynaud and Eubanks and McDermott (who is barely hanging on as an NBA player in 2025) and Saric (who is frankly not an NBA player in 2025), and with Keegan out for the first few weeks of the season or longer... the defense is just going to be
bad.
Ellis will try his damndest in his minutes, of course, and Nique and Carter will play hard on defense in any court time they might get, and hopefully Keegan returns from injury as the team's Swiss Army Knife on that end, but it's not going to be enough to offset the defensive futility everywhere else on the roster, especially since I don't see Christie benching his "stars" for poor defensive effort/skill. So offense is where they'll have to hang their hat if they want to win games. And on top of my skepticism that the coaching staff will hold their starters accountable for playing bad defense, I also don't really trust this coaching staff to trot out an innovative, modern offensive system that somehow leverages all of these ill-fitting players.
That said, I have not watched any preseason action, so I don't know if there's a path to a top-5 offense hiding somewhere on this roster and within this gameplan. Maybe my skepticism of Christie and co. is poorly founded. Maybe they'll figure out how to recapture some of that Beam Team magic with Sabonis orchestrating a masterclass in offensive efficiency, and maybe they'll somehow hover in the bad-but-not-as-bad-as-I-thought range of 16th-18th worst defense in the league, and maybe together that'll be enough to finish with 42 wins... but man, in this insanely competitive version of the Western Conference, with Keegan out for an indeterminate amount of time to start the season, I just don't see it.
I genuinely hope that Scott Perry recognizes when to pull the ejection handle on this season. There will be plenty of nights when the team looks competitive out there, because they're not without talent, but I honestly think this season will be far more of a struggle than many (myself included) thought it might be as we headed into the off-season. "Gap year" or not, there is so little about this roster that makes any kind of sense, and there's not a lot of hope for the future, given the knowables of today. I remain astonished that Perry didn't try to move off of DeRozan in any meaningful way this summer, and I remain utterly nonplussed at the Schroder acquisition (and the necessity of the Valanciunas trade in order to make it happen), as well as the front office's apparent interest in Russell Westbrook.
Bad signs, all of this, but hopefully the trade deadline next year will offer a bit of relief and clarity of vision. I'm not optimistic, but I'm going to give Perry his "gap year" and see what he does in the next 10 months. I understand training camp and pre-season are the time when fans tend to get excited about all of the "what ifs", wondering if their team might just get lucky and prove the doubters wrong, but it's pretty difficult for me to have any faith as a Kings fan right now. At present, I don't have confidence in either the coaching staff nor the front office, and that's before we even broach the subject of ownership, and whether or not Vivek would ever sign off on a legitimate rebuild if things do, indeed, go south as quickly as I think they might with this roster. Somebody needs to prove me wrong. Preferably all of them.
Edit: Holy sh*t. And
right after I post this, the front office decides to really stick it to me and announce that they have, indeed, signed Russell Westbrook. It just... I don't even have the words. The mind reels.