Kings want Evans (latest news, tweets, etc.)

Kingster

Hall of Famer
#91
' Free agent guard Jose Calderon is meeting with the Kings in Sacramento today, agent Mark Bartelstein tells HoopsHype.'

Could this be a plan B, in case they don't resign Reke?
It could be Plan A. The plot thickens. The position of greatest need - the three - has not been insinuated into this plot as yet.
 
#92
Eh. I'd rather have Teague than Calderon. Calderon is a downright beautiful facilitator and shooter, but he's possibly the worst defender, ever. Teague isn't quite as polished as a floor general, but his defense is great, his shooting is decent and he brings athleticism that Jose's never even heard of.
 

Kingster

Hall of Famer
#93
Coming off the bench. A 2/3. And Dubin thinks it's a good move because Tyreke can play the 3. Koremenos thinks its good if Tyreke wants to play the three. Dubin and Koremenos should have watched a few games with Tyreke at the 3; it wasn't awe-inspiring. And they want to pay $11+ mill/year? Sorry, but in my book that's off the deep end. They are the classic outlier in the statistical bell curve (which means they aren't "the market"). Unless they think the Kings are dumb enough to give them cap relief and take Gordon off their hands. Then they get to have their cake and eat it too.
 

Kingster

Hall of Famer
#94
Eh. I'd rather have Teague than Calderon. Calderon is a downright beautiful facilitator and shooter, but he's possibly the worst defender, ever. Teague isn't quite as polished as a floor general, but his defense is great, his shooting is decent and he brings athleticism that Jose's never even heard of.
I agree with this. So far the Kings management has shown they aren't "religious" when it comes to their emphasis on defense. If they were, Calderon wouldn't even be in the mix.
 
#95
Won't miss Tyreke if he goes. He's not worth that kind of cash and I don't think his B-Ball IQ is going to improve. Dumbest player on the team.
 
#96
Yea but someone like Teague is going too command wayyyy more money then Jose would. I think Jose would be a good fit backing up Reke. His career ast/turnover ratio is nuts. 7.2 apg/ 1.73 topg, plus we need some vets on the team, hes only 31.
 
#97
Won't miss Tyreke if he goes. He's not worth that kind of cash and I don't think his B-Ball IQ is going to improve. Dumbest player on the team.
i love how devoid of evidence these kinds of posts always are...

evans' biggest detractors at kf.com like to believe that a great many of us overvalue evans because we're kings fans. well, here's a pelicans fan who understands just how valuable a player like tyreke can be:

Bee-Fense said:
The only number for Tyreke that has really slipped is his minutes. He played 37 minutes in his 2nd season, 34 in his 3rd, and 31 in his 4th. If we adjust his numbers for per 36 minutes, you will see that his points, rebounds, steals, blocks, and asst:to ratio has stayed about the same. You can check the numbers for yourself here:

http://www.basketball-reference.com/...evansty01.html

The one difference, however, is in scoring efficiency. Here is how his TS% has gone the past 3 years

Year 2: 48.2%
Year 3: 51.2%
Year 4: 55.8%

Now, to explain how he has become more efficient, we can look at hoopdata to see how he has adjusted his shot selection.

http://www.hoopdata.com/player.aspx?name=Tyreke Evans

The dumb zone is considered anywhere that isn't at the rim or the 3pt line, so that's 3-23 feet. Let's break down the number of shots he gets in the dumb zone per year

Year 2: 7.6
Year 3: 5.6
Year 4: 3.6

Meanwhile, shots at the rim and 3 point line have been pretty consistent

Year 2: 6.2 at the rim (59.8%), 2.6 3's (43.7 eFG%; 67.4% Assisted)
Year 3: 7.0 at the rim (64.6%), 1.6 3's (30.3 eFG%; 75.0% Assisted)
Year 4: 6.0 at the rim (63.2%), 2.0 3's (50.0 eFG%; 81.4% Assisted)

And one last thing, despite his FGA at the rim barely being the lowest of the 3 years, his free throw rate has continued to improve.

Year 2: 0.283 free throws per shot
Year 3: 0.286 free throws per shot
Year 4: 0.350 free throws per shot

So not only is Tyreke taking less shots in the dumb zone and more in the efficient spots of the court, he is taking less 3's off the dribble as seen by the assisted% go up, and that is a good thing for Tyreke since the 3 is already hard enough for him. What we see is that a player is playing smarter and more within himself, lowering his TO%, shooting better shots, and drawing more free throws. I expect this trend to continue as he gets more experienced and his understanding of the game continues to grow.
http://www.pelicansreport.com/showt...s-been-made)&p=1113276&viewfull=1#post1113276

the bolded portion at the bottom does a good job of distilling the improvements that tyreke has made in the last four seasons, improvements that far too many kings fans either refuse to see or aren't aware enough to notice...
 
Last edited:
#98
I, too an a season ticket holder and I don't want a 15 team assists every game. I think the Kings were last or 2nd to the last in assists. Anyways, how many games did the Kings win WITHOUT Tyreke? Also show me the number to where Tyreke has improved in the last 4 years. Can he make a wide open 18 footer on a regular basis? I would like to see the numbers on these? Brick?

Look, just to get one thing straight, I am NOT against signing Tyreke (as said in a previous post).
What kills me is that you were "told" once already, clearly sensitive about it, but at the end of it you were shown exactly where the bodies are buried (hoopdata.com or basketball-reference.com). Yet you continue to spout off all of these questions about Tyreke's stats in an accusational tone, as if Brick were hiding these magic numbers behind some impenetrable vault, accessible only by members of the Sabermetrics Illuminati.

Why not inform yourself before you come on here trashing the player who is so clearly coveted by us and other teams around the league? You'd see that there is strong, factual, statistical basis for the support Tyreke garners around here.

Here, I'll even make it easy for you:

Basketball-reference (my favorite of the stats sites): http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/e/evansty01.html
Hoopdata: http://www.hoopdata.com/player.aspx?name=Tyreke%20Evans
 
#99
Don't mean to keep picking on your posts but I've tried to call this out the last few times you've made this claim:

Last year as a team we averaged 20.7 apg and 14.6 to's
In Reke's rookie year with him at pg 20.5 apg and 14.9 to's
The years in between were worse. Up until IT started it was something like 15apg/13to or something crazy like that. He doesn't turn the ball over much, but the team wasn't really passing a lot TO turn the ball over.
 
I honestly don't know where you get this from. First you exclaim that if owners pay Reek the the 11+ mill a year that the market is obviously bearing, and then can not sign a new SF the end is neigh. If you have any validity to your premiss that Reek is NOT worth that kind of money, then why would the current owners offer MORE to make a sign and trade work out unless they were getting MORE talent back? And if they do make the deal that leaves LESS money available for a TOP SF like Iggy or AK 47. Then you suggest that the acceptable trade would for a guard everyone including NO considers inferior to Reek, and the lesser Lopez giving us a 3rd Center... Congrats you just kept the log jam at Guard position, created one at the Center, and left the gaping hole at the 3 with LESS cap space to fill it with. Oh and you also diluted the talent in the starting 5.
I said I wouldn't offer him 11mil. I have a feeling though that the FO might go to 11mil though.
 
The years in between were worse. Up until IT started it was something like 15apg/13to or something crazy like that. He doesn't turn the ball over much, but the team wasn't really passing a lot TO turn the ball over.
you really need to break this habit of remembering things incorrectly without first checking the stats...

2010-2011: 20.1 apg, 15.6 topg
2011-2012: 19.3 apg, 13.8 topg

you'll notice a small spike in turnovers per game in '10-'11, but other than that, you're still looking at a general statistical insignificance with respect to the changing of the team's assist to turnover ratio each year of 'reke's career, despite the team bouncing him around between three different positions. the problem isn't tyreke, but rather who he has been paired with. 'reke happens to be the most efficient king on the court, with respect to his usage rate, and hardly deserves as much blame as he gets around these parts for the team's difficulty in moving the ball. that is often a systemic problem, and considering the insanity of both paul westphal's and keith smart's rotations, it should hardly be surprising that a young team had difficulty developing a consistency of ball movement...
 
Last edited:
I don't see you changing anybody's mind. I don't see anybody changing your mind. Nothing is changing. Just stop every argument you bring up is debunked by actual stats or common sense. for instance you argument here is the assist of a guy that didn't play pg and a on a team that for some reason was trying to highlight a 5'7 pg that controlled the ball in a backyard style offense.
O.M.G. I am NOT trying to change anyone's mind. I am NOT arguing at all. YOU are the only person that thinks I am arguing. I am simply trying to figure out the stats for Tyreke and asking questions.
 
you really need to break this habit of remembering things incorrectly without first checking the stats...

2010-2011: 20.1 apg, 15.6 topg
2011-2012: 19.3 apg, 13.8 topg

you'll notice a small spike in turnovers per game in '10-'11, but other than that, you're still looking at a general statistical insignificance with respect to the changing of the team's assist to turnover ratio each year of 'reke's career, despite the team bouncing him around between three different positions. the problem isn't tyreke, but rather who he has been paired with. 'reke happens to be the most efficient king on the court, with respect to his usage rate, and hardly deserves as much blame as he gets around these parts for the team's difficulty in moving the ball. that is often a systemic problem, and considering the insanity of both paul westphal's and keith smart's rotations, it should hardly be surprising that a young team had difficulty developing a consistency of ball movement...
It was pre/post all-star break from what I remember. It was basically when Smart took over. Hang on...

pre all-star
17apg and 14tos

post all-star (for the most part when IT started)
21apg and 13tos

That's what I was referring to. Not the whole season. Smart had put in IT in the middle of the year.
 
Last edited:
It was pre/post all-star break from what I remember. It was basically when Smart took over. Hang on...

pre all-star
17apg and 14tos

post all-star (for the most part when IT started)
21apg and 13tos

That's what I was referring to. Not the whole season. Smart had put in IT in the middle of the year.
You're reaching man. Out of four seasons, you're attempting to prove your point in about 30 games of a dysfunctional lockout shortened season while ignoring the most obvious comparison of a full season with Reke at point vs one with him off the ball.
 
In the sac bee, it said Tyreke averaged 15.2 points, 4.4 rebounds and 3.5 assists in 31 minutes. He dished 3.5 assists. Is this someone you want to pay 11 to 12 million??? Oh, yea, he did post a career high in field-goal 47.8 percentage.
Stephen curry got his similar extension after a season he only played 20ish games and averaged 14ppg, 3rpg and 5apg.
 
It was pre/post all-star break from what I remember. It was basically when Smart took over. Hang on...

pre all-star
17apg and 14tos

post all-star (for the most part when IT started)
21apg and 13tos

That's what I was referring to. Not the whole season. Smart had put in IT in the middle of the year.
well yeah, after dicking around with different combinations of thornton, fredette, brooks, and salmons, keith smart decided to start thomas. after recognizing that thomas' quickness could be an asset, despite his size and liability on defense, smart switched over to a run-and-gun style of play. the defense tanked, the points per game sky-rocketed, and the team was able to tack on a few extra assists per game, as well. we all know what went down, and the kings didn't exactly win any more games in the process. but your claim was that the years between tyreke's rookie season and his fourth year were worse, as far as team assist to turnover ratio was concerned, when they were, in fact, about the same, statistically speaking. it was an inaccurate claim...

at any rate, you're leaning on a woefully small sample size, all things considered, and i'd hardly call it a compelling argument that keith smart's issues with implementing a system reflect poorly on tyreke evans. that's on the coach, who never settled on a consistent rotation with consistent roles. consistent play cannot result under those erratic conditions. truth be told, isaiah thomas was just about the only benefactor of keith smart's insanity. he got a starting job, the ball was placed in his hands, and he had license to shoot whenever he wanted despite the fact that the team was an absolute failure on the defensive side of the ball and was losing the majority of its games with an undersized chucker of a PG...
 
Last edited:
You're reaching man. Out of four seasons, you're attempting to prove your point in about 30 games of a dysfunctional lockout shortened season while ignoring the most obvious comparison of a full season with Reke at point vs one with him off the ball.
I am not trying to prove any point. I just said it was crappy and boring basketball to watch and that I was only going to about 1 game a week and giving the other tickets away.
 
Just thinking aloud here.

I find it funny how a few fans clamored for us not to overpay Tyreke. They said (when we didn't offer him an extension): let the market (other teams) dictate Tyreke's worth so that we won't overpay. Now the Pelicans have offered Tyreke a fairly big contract, and to these same few it is still considered "overpaying". Of course maybe it truly is overpaying, but what if Detroit and Atlanta make similar or close offers? I'm beginning to wonder if these fans truly meant it when they said let the market dictate Tyreke's value, or whether they have had their minds made up all along that Tyreke isn't worth anything more than what Thornton is getting, and so a cent over 8mil is overpaying. Heck, it's 7mil to some!
 
I am not trying to prove any point. I just said it was crappy and boring basketball to watch and that I was only going to about 1 game a week and giving the other tickets away.
I don't disagree but I think you could say that about the last four years plus. I just think it had to do with the overall collection of talent and coaching rather than Reke at point. Last year was as painful with him off the ball.
 
What kills me is that you were "told" once already, clearly sensitive about it, but at the end of it you were shown exactly where the bodies are buried (hoopdata.com or basketball-reference.com). Yet you continue to spout off all of these questions about Tyreke's stats in an accusational tone, as if Brick were hiding these magic numbers behind some impenetrable vault, accessible only by members of the Sabermetrics Illuminati.

Why not inform yourself before you come on here trashing the player who is so clearly coveted by us and other teams around the league? You'd see that there is strong, factual, statistical basis for the support Tyreke garners around here.

Here, I'll even make it easy for you:

Basketball-reference (my favorite of the stats sites): http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/e/evansty01.html
Hoopdata: http://www.hoopdata.com/player.aspx?name=Tyreke%20Evans
Show me where I have "trashed" him? So if I ask a question, then I am "trashing" a player.
 
well yeah, after dicking around with different combinations of thornton, fredette, brooks, and salmons, keith smart decided to start thomas. after recognizing that thomas' quickness could be an asset, despite his size and liability on defense, smart switched over to a run-and-gun style of play. the defense tanked, the points per game sky-rocketed, and the team was able to tack on a few extra assists per game, as well. we all know what went down, and the kings didn't exactly win any more games in the process. but your claim was that the years between tyreke's rookie season and his fourth year were worse, as far as team assist to turnover ratio was concerned, when they were, in fact, about the same, statistically speaking. it was an inaccurate claim...

at any rate, you're leaning on a woefully small sample size, all things considered, and i'd hardly call it a compelling argument that keith smart's issues with implementing a system reflect poorly on tyreke evans. that's on the coach, who never settled on a consistent rotation with consistent roles. consistent play cannot result under those erratic conditions. truth be told, isaiah thomas was just about the only benefactor of keith smart's insanity. he got a starting job, the ball was placed in his hands, and he had license to shoot whenever he wanted despite the fact that the team was an absolute failure on the defensive side of the ball and was losing the majority of its games with an undersized chucker of a PG...
First off, when hasn't the team been a failure defensively? We are in last no matter what lineup we throw out there. Second, the only thing I was trying to say is that I didn't go to a lot of the games because at that time the team was just so boring to watch. That was the initial post on the subject. I bought season tickets again this year and I didn't want to see the team go back to crap again with Reke being the ONLY ball handler on the floor. Which of course we can debate until the cows come home.
 
I am not trying to prove any point. I just said it was crappy and boring basketball to watch and that I was only going to about 1 game a week and giving the other tickets away.
It's only crappy when the team isn't winning. OKC averaged 18 apg. And the reasons for the team not winning go far and beyond Tyreke Evans at PG or otherwise.

I say this as someone who loved watching the Spurs (lead the league in assists) play. I would love nothing more than for our team to play like the Spurs, but there's a reason Pop has 4 rings and Keith Smart will only ever be known for one shot (and maybe 50 years from now for being the man who led to my having HBP). At the end of the day, we fans just want to see our team win. I believe that can happen with Tyreke at PG, and I respect your opinion if you don't. Like I have maintained, neither of us have a reliable sample to base our judgment on going forward. We may play boring ball, but I'm just hoping it won't be crappy.
 
I don't disagree but I think you could say that about the last four years plus. I just think it had to do with the overall collection of talent and coaching rather than Reke at point. Last year was as painful with him off the ball.
It's a matter of perspective, but two years ago in the first half of the season I always looked for someone to take my ticket from me. The second half of the season got exciting again. Even if we were losing we were still at least competing.

I have had season tickets for a lot of years off and on, and I had never wanted to give away tickets like I did that one half of the season. Now, some people might like that slow style of basketball? Not sure who though :) We were getting whooped on every night it seemed.
 
Just thinking aloud here.

I find it funny how a few fans clamored for us not to overpay Tyreke. They said (when we didn't offer him an extension): let the market (other teams) dictate Tyreke's worth so that we won't overpay. Now the Pelicans have offered Tyreke a fairly big contract, and to these same few it is still considered "overpaying". Of course maybe it truly is overpaying, but what if Detroit and Atlanta make similar or close offers? I'm beginning to wonder if these fans truly meant it when they said let the market dictate Tyreke's value, or whether they have had their minds made up all along that Tyreke isn't worth anything more than what Thornton is getting, and so a cent over 8mil is overpaying. Heck, it's 7mil to some!
most of them don't understand how the market actually functions in the nba. or they don't care, and prefer to assume that a team that refuses to overpay, that stands on principle alone, will be able to build a winning team. but it doesn't work that way, particularly if you're a small market franchise coming off seven straight losing seasons in the basement of the western conference...

in my view, you do not bleed young talent. ever. simple as that. you lock up that talent at reasonable cost per the market. so, in tyreke's case, that boils down to about $11 million per season. then you develop that talent, or you determine that it's not in your long term plans, and you trade it down the road. but you don't let talent walk out the door for nothing, unless you're attempting to save cap space for a truly splashy free agent signing...

of course, lebron james isn't coming to sacramento--likely fresh off its eighth straight losing season--in 2014. none of that top tier, superstar level talent is going to sign in sacramento. if you're a small market franchise in the kings' particular position, you bury those pipe dreams, because you're wasting time in the process. home grow what you've already got. cousins/evans/mclemore can be a winning trio, especially if you surround them with veteran, defensive talent...
 
First off, when hasn't the team been a failure defensively? We are in last no matter what lineup we throw out there. Second, the only thing I was trying to say is that I didn't go to a lot of the games because at that time the team was just so boring to watch. That was the initial post on the subject. I bought season tickets again this year and I didn't want to see the team go back to crap again with Reke being the ONLY ball handler on the floor. Which of course we can debate until the cows come home.
during the first 10 or so games of this last season, the kings were in the top half of the league in all major defensive categories except rebounding. they weren't world-beaters, but it was immensely encouraging, and myself and a few others were celebrating while everybody else was mourning how ugly the offense was. but i don't give a **** about how ugly an offense is. give a starting unit time to build chemistry, and the offense will come, especially if the defense is clicking. but because the offense wasn't pretty, keith smart panicked and abandoned all hope for further improvement on the defensive end, resulting in just another season of top-ranked offense, bottom-ranked defense, and less than 30 wins...
 

Kingster

Hall of Famer
Just thinking aloud here.

I find it funny how a few fans clamored for us not to overpay Tyreke. They said (when we didn't offer him an extension): let the market (other teams) dictate Tyreke's worth so that we won't overpay. Now the Pelicans have offered Tyreke a fairly big contract, and to these same few it is still considered "overpaying". Of course maybe it truly is overpaying, but what if Detroit and Atlanta make similar or close offers? I'm beginning to wonder if these fans truly meant it when they said let the market dictate Tyreke's value, or whether they have had their minds made up all along that Tyreke isn't worth anything more than what Thornton is getting, and so a cent over 8mil is overpaying. Heck, it's 7mil to some!
If they do offer similar numbers, then yes, I'd say that is Tyreke's "market value". We will see on that. Until then, Tyreke's got an offer of $11+ mill/yr from a team that wants to play him at the three and coming off the bench. Now if I told you six months ago that a team was going to offer Tyreke $11 mill/yr for playing the three and coming off the bench, what would you think?
 
during the first 10 or so games of this last season, the kings were in the top half of the league in all major defensive categories except rebounding. they weren't world-beaters, but it was immensely encouraging, and myself and a few others were celebrating while everybody else was mourning how ugly the offense was. but i don't give a **** about how ugly an offense is. give a starting unit time to build chemistry, and the offense will come, especially if the defense is clicking. but because the offense wasn't pretty, keith smart panicked and abandoned all hope for further improvement on the defensive end, resulting in just another season of top-ranked offense, bottom-ranked defense, and less than 30 wins...
Hey hey now.. You can't say my using a half of a season is a small sample size when you are using 10 games ;)

I agree though.. The coaching sucked, the players didn't want to play, but I still think some of the blame falls on the players, and I still think that Evans needs another ball handler with him (like Beno) in order to succeed.
 
Hey hey now.. You can't say my using a half of a season is a small sample size when you are using 10 games ;)

I agree though.. The coaching sucked, the players didn't want to play, but I still think some of the blame falls on the players, and I still think that Evans needs another ball handler with him (like Beno) in order to succeed.
it is, indeed, a small sample size, which is why i labeled it as "encouraging," rather than as evidence that the kings were destined to become a great defensive team. they weren't. they didn't have the personnel for it. but i always take my chances with a team that commits to defense over one that loves to run up the score. some of the blame certainly falls on the players, but when you have an ownership group failing its franchise, a front office failing its job to build a balanced roster, and a coaching staff failing to maximize the talents of its best players, there's a whole helluvalot more wrong with that team than one talented young combo guard with an elite rim attack can shoulder...

tyreke evans is a more than adequate ball handler and passer. andre iguodala and matt barnes are both SF's who can handle the ball and move it effectively without requiring very many shots of their own. they're also both excellent defenders on the wing. a trio of evans/mclemore/iguodala (or barnes) would go a terribly long way toward shutting down penetration, which would help cover up some of demarcus cousins' defensive weaknesses when he's not having to help on every player who had previously managed to slice into the paint (a regular occurrence under keith smart, and with isaiah thomas getting caught up on just about every screen). that's a team that can win some games, regardless of all the "tyreke is not a PG" hand-wringing...
 

Bricklayer

Don't Make Me Use The Bat
i love how devoid of evidence these kinds of posts always are...

evans' biggest detractors at kf.com like to believe that a great many of us overvalue evans because we're kings fans. well, here's a pelicans fan who understands just how valuable a player like tyreke can be:



http://www.pelicansreport.com/showt...s-been-made)&p=1113276&viewfull=1#post1113276

the bolded portion at the bottom does a good job of distilling the improvements that tyreke has made in the last four seasons, improvements that far too many kings fans either refuse to see or aren't aware enough to notice...
Hey, I like this Bee-Fense guy. Can we sign him to this board after we reup Reke?
 

Kingster

Hall of Famer
during the first 10 or so games of this last season, the kings were in the top half of the league in all major defensive categories except rebounding. they weren't world-beaters, but it was immensely encouraging, and myself and a few others were celebrating while everybody else was mourning how ugly the offense was. but i don't give a **** about how ugly an offense is. give a starting unit time to build chemistry, and the offense will come, especially if the defense is clicking. but because the offense wasn't pretty, keith smart panicked and abandoned all hope for further improvement on the defensive end, resulting in just another season of top-ranked offense, bottom-ranked defense, and less than 30 wins...
FYI, the first 10 games of last season, the Kings were 2-8. They gave up an average of 100 points per game; the lowest pts allowed during the 10 games was 92; the highest was 112. This occurred, by the way, when James Johnson, the defensive specialist/lousy offensive player was playing between 20 - 30 minutes a game or therabouts.