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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/14057536p-14888684c.html
Mark Kreidler: Geoff Petrie says ...
'If you're going to choose a poison ... I'm going to choose patience'
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Sports Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Tuesday, January 10, 2006
Geoff Petrie was speaking Monday about the relative merits of toxins. In related news, he came to the conversation fresh from reviewing the first-half game video of Sunday night's Kings-Pacers guffaw-a-thon.
"If you're going to choose a poison," Petrie said, "and one of them is patience and one of them is impatience, I'm going to choose patience."
Great news! Oh, wait: Horrible news.
The denizens of Kings World awoke Monday morning wondering if it is possible to eat all of their knuckles before this season ends. They awoke dispirited, confused, frustrated - broke, most likely, if they're of the see-the-games-in-person variety.
Mostly, though, they awoke demanding something be done. Fire somebody. Bench somebody. Trade somebody. Scream at somebody, for the love of J-Will.
Petrie, who built these Kings and thus is ultimately on the hook for their performance, won't answer any of these demands directly, other than to state the obvious, which is that there isn't a 10-day contract player out there who is going to suddenly put Sacramento on a plane of consistency.
Beyond that, he's going to take the deliberate route. Don't everybody set their hair on fire at once.
What Petrie won't do, no matter how loud it gets, is give in to the blood lust. Rick Adelman's job probably is safe, in other words. Firing Adelman in the middle of the season, with two starters sitting on the sideline and a bench as thin as a Kings fan's wallet (did I mention the cost of the games?), makes no sense unless there's a superior being out there just waiting to take over.
I had to go to a Web site Monday to remind myself Adelman's career coaching record is 721-462, including five straight 50-win editions in Sacramento. Wiping away the gunk on the windshield after Sunday night's mud-bog and scanning the local columnist's inbox, it was that easy to forget Adelman ever coached a winning team in his life.
For that matter, you'd never know for all the screeching the Kings' defense, pockmarked and pingpong-netted though it is, actually is allowing fewer points per game than last season's 50-32 model. Is that even possible?
It is. But it's not good. Numbers deceive all the time, and in this case what you see is more significant than what's on the stat sheet. This is a team that richly deserves its current standing. And it is Geoff Petrie's hairball to handle.
Petrie won't hide his disappointment in 13-19, including the part about ultra-uncompetitive efforts like Sunday night's. The man who spends the Maloofs' money and invests their emotional capital laid out a significant amount of both to produce the Mike Bibby/Peja Stojakovic/Brad Miller "core" he planned to build around.
Each of those players has come up small, Stojakovic in his overall fragility, Miller in his continued defensive indifference, and Bibby in his inability to take over a team he wanted to claim for himself. As Petrie said, "When you're 13-19, it raises some questions" about the core's ability to drive a winning product.
But the larger truth is tougher still: The trade value of these players is down, not up. Besides, who makes a move right now, with Bonzi Wells and Shareef Abdur-Rahim on the shelf?
Petrie's only chance for a major deal will come closer to the trade deadline in February, but it's clear he would feel much more comfortable dismantling the roster had he seen it play together for more than the 25 games it did before Wells' groin injury officially kicked off the hurtin' season.
"If we don't start playing better, obviously you've got to broaden your horizons (regarding trades)," Petrie said. "But when you start talking about major issues, they (the Maloofs) really want things to be well thought out, and for a reason and a purpose, and something that has value."
Petrie speaks regularly with Joe and Gavin Maloof, who haven't been seen much around Arco Arena lately, possibly because they fear emotional whiplash from going though a two-game set like Clippers-Pacers (good win, soul-sapping defeat). Petrie describes them as "OK. They're concerned. Nobody likes being under water like we are."
Incredibly, the Kings hit Monday exactly 3 1/2 games out of a playoff spot in the Western Conference; were they in the East, it'd be a half-game.
It's still possible, that is, to be interesting. What it isn't - even in the slightest - is a season descended from any of those 50-win Petrie-Adelman forebears. This is a retooling on the fly, which usually includes significant pain. Petrie says, "We're trying to circumvent the law of inevitability - or at least diminish it," and the result is what you see here. Choose your poison.
Reach Mark Kreidler at (916) 321-1149 or mkreidler@sacbee.com
Mark Kreidler: Geoff Petrie says ...
'If you're going to choose a poison ... I'm going to choose patience'
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Sports Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Tuesday, January 10, 2006
Geoff Petrie was speaking Monday about the relative merits of toxins. In related news, he came to the conversation fresh from reviewing the first-half game video of Sunday night's Kings-Pacers guffaw-a-thon.
"If you're going to choose a poison," Petrie said, "and one of them is patience and one of them is impatience, I'm going to choose patience."
Great news! Oh, wait: Horrible news.
The denizens of Kings World awoke Monday morning wondering if it is possible to eat all of their knuckles before this season ends. They awoke dispirited, confused, frustrated - broke, most likely, if they're of the see-the-games-in-person variety.
Mostly, though, they awoke demanding something be done. Fire somebody. Bench somebody. Trade somebody. Scream at somebody, for the love of J-Will.
Petrie, who built these Kings and thus is ultimately on the hook for their performance, won't answer any of these demands directly, other than to state the obvious, which is that there isn't a 10-day contract player out there who is going to suddenly put Sacramento on a plane of consistency.
Beyond that, he's going to take the deliberate route. Don't everybody set their hair on fire at once.
What Petrie won't do, no matter how loud it gets, is give in to the blood lust. Rick Adelman's job probably is safe, in other words. Firing Adelman in the middle of the season, with two starters sitting on the sideline and a bench as thin as a Kings fan's wallet (did I mention the cost of the games?), makes no sense unless there's a superior being out there just waiting to take over.
I had to go to a Web site Monday to remind myself Adelman's career coaching record is 721-462, including five straight 50-win editions in Sacramento. Wiping away the gunk on the windshield after Sunday night's mud-bog and scanning the local columnist's inbox, it was that easy to forget Adelman ever coached a winning team in his life.
For that matter, you'd never know for all the screeching the Kings' defense, pockmarked and pingpong-netted though it is, actually is allowing fewer points per game than last season's 50-32 model. Is that even possible?
It is. But it's not good. Numbers deceive all the time, and in this case what you see is more significant than what's on the stat sheet. This is a team that richly deserves its current standing. And it is Geoff Petrie's hairball to handle.
Petrie won't hide his disappointment in 13-19, including the part about ultra-uncompetitive efforts like Sunday night's. The man who spends the Maloofs' money and invests their emotional capital laid out a significant amount of both to produce the Mike Bibby/Peja Stojakovic/Brad Miller "core" he planned to build around.
Each of those players has come up small, Stojakovic in his overall fragility, Miller in his continued defensive indifference, and Bibby in his inability to take over a team he wanted to claim for himself. As Petrie said, "When you're 13-19, it raises some questions" about the core's ability to drive a winning product.
But the larger truth is tougher still: The trade value of these players is down, not up. Besides, who makes a move right now, with Bonzi Wells and Shareef Abdur-Rahim on the shelf?
Petrie's only chance for a major deal will come closer to the trade deadline in February, but it's clear he would feel much more comfortable dismantling the roster had he seen it play together for more than the 25 games it did before Wells' groin injury officially kicked off the hurtin' season.
"If we don't start playing better, obviously you've got to broaden your horizons (regarding trades)," Petrie said. "But when you start talking about major issues, they (the Maloofs) really want things to be well thought out, and for a reason and a purpose, and something that has value."
Petrie speaks regularly with Joe and Gavin Maloof, who haven't been seen much around Arco Arena lately, possibly because they fear emotional whiplash from going though a two-game set like Clippers-Pacers (good win, soul-sapping defeat). Petrie describes them as "OK. They're concerned. Nobody likes being under water like we are."
Incredibly, the Kings hit Monday exactly 3 1/2 games out of a playoff spot in the Western Conference; were they in the East, it'd be a half-game.
It's still possible, that is, to be interesting. What it isn't - even in the slightest - is a season descended from any of those 50-win Petrie-Adelman forebears. This is a retooling on the fly, which usually includes significant pain. Petrie says, "We're trying to circumvent the law of inevitability - or at least diminish it," and the result is what you see here. Choose your poison.
Reach Mark Kreidler at (916) 321-1149 or mkreidler@sacbee.com
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