Kreidler: Maloof has two messes on hands

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Mark Kreidler: Maloof has two messes on hands
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Sports Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Thursday, November 10, 2005

On Wednesday afternoon, Joe Maloof was a man with at least two NBA problems on his hands. Only for the one was there a semi-quick fix.

That videoboard gaffe from the home opener Tuesday, the stereotype-strewn dissing of Detroit - Maloof had a shot at massaging that. He called Pistons owner Bill Davidson to apologize. He called Pistons coach Flip Saunders to apologize. He directed that ads be placed in newspapers in both Sacramento and Detroit to ... well, you get the idea.

"The whole organization's sick about it," Maloof said by cell phone from Las Vegas, where he was attending a business meeting. "You've got to be careful. Comedy is not a laughing matter, as they say."

Still, Maloof knows the truth, which is that the Detroit deal will fade fairly quickly. A guy in the Sacramento organization tried to get cute with the pregame introduction of the Pistons, and what he thought was funny came off as trashy and mean. Embarrassing, but hardly fatal - and, significantly, preventable in the future.

The Kings, on the other hand, stood at 1-3 at the start of a virtual unknown of a season, and hours away from beginning a two-game set with Denver.

About that, Maloof could do nothing but wait and worry. There's no quick fix for this one.

"Sure, we're concerned. You have to be concerned," Maloof said. "I'm a little surprised, I really am. Not a little - I'm very surprised.

"I thought that our starting five was one of the best in the Western Conference. I don't know, maybe I - I don't know. It's a lot of new players, a lot of young guys. ... We've gotta be patient ... "

Normally, Joe Maloof does not equivocate, and even less often does he ramble. But these are not normal times in the life of the Maloof ownership of the franchise, and even something as seemingly dismissible as a slow start to the season bears closer scrutiny than ever.

To get to where the Maloofs want the Kings to go, which is all the way to approved plans for a new arena and the increased revenue streams that might accompany it, an organization needs two things above all else: a winning product on the floor and a glowing public image surrounding that product.

For a bunch of years in a row, you could almost assume both would be true. The early winning years of this decade brought to a national light Arco Arena's great reputation as a home-court advantage, and the area repeatedly was invoked as this sort of folksy version of how things should be in the NBA.

But you'd be surprised how little it takes to turn around a reputation. Let me throw into the air some disparate mental images: A Lakers jersey lit on fire. Dozens of glow-sticks raining down out of the crowd and onto the Arco floor, delaying a playoff game. A Shaquille O'Neal milestone basketball defaced with an epithet. The Detroit video.

No casual onlooker is going to take the time to parse out the details of each event or separate fan behavior from organizational intent. Far more likely, somebody is just going to connect the dots and say, "Gee, didn't the Kings used to be classy?"

Thus, Joe Maloof's quick action Wednesday, doing the damage control, contacting people personally. Maloof is at his best when he's on task, with something to be accomplished. He was candid in assessing the video, humane in not wanting to fire a good employee for a single mistake, focused on preventing a reoccurrence in the future.

But when it comes to the basketball team he owns, Maloof can do only so much. He understood the breakup of the best Kings teams ever - Chris Webber, Vlade Divac, Doug Christie, Bobby Jackson et al. - as necessary and difficult, but it's another thing entirely to have to watch a new group struggle to find an identity.

"They know we're concerned," Maloof said of coach Rick Adelman and team president Geoff Petrie. "We don't need to say anything to them yet. It's early."

Is there comfort to be had here? Well, last year's team began 1-4 and finished with 50 wins. The year before that, a 4-4 start ended at 55-27. The year before, 3-3 became 59-23.

"We've had a wonderful winning tradition for seven years," Maloof said.
"We've just got to find our way again - which we will."

Maloof sounded enthused. It is a glowing thought, the part about winning.

Ask around: It solves things.

About the writer: Reach Mark Kreidler at (916) 321-1149 or mkreidler@sacbee.com.
 
But you'd be surprised how little it takes to turn around a reputation. Let me throw into the air some disparate mental images: A Lakers jersey lit on fire. Dozens of glow-sticks raining down out of the crowd and onto the Arco floor, delaying a playoff game. A Shaquille O'Neal milestone basketball defaced with an epithet. The Detroit video.

Incidentally I was at all of those games except the Detroit one. The glowsticks thing was an embarrasment although as I remember the calls that game were way out of line (not that that excuses it). The Shaq ball thing was funny, but also ridiculous. The bottom line on that one is it shouldn't have been allowed to happen in the first place, but frankly I find the fact that it did kind of amusing. Still, not good for the organization.

Finally, the Lakers jersey burning- I gotta be honest that was freakin' awesome. It was literally one of the coolest (non-basketball) things that I've ever seen at a Kings game. I guess that's not classy but damn that was cool. Sometimes I guess you can't be squeeky clean.
 
QueensFan said:
Incidentally I was at all of those games except the Detroit one. The glowsticks thing was an embarrasment although as I remember the calls that game were way out of line (not that that excuses it). The Shaq ball thing was funny, but also ridiculous. The bottom line on that one is it shouldn't have been allowed to happen in the first place, but frankly I find the fact that it did kind of amusing. Still, not good for the organization.

Finally, the Lakers jersey burning- I gotta be honest that was freakin' awesome. It was literally one of the coolest (non-basketball) things that I've ever seen at a Kings game. I guess that's not classy but damn that was cool. Sometimes I guess you can't be squeeky clean.

Glowsticks and video were classless. The other ones...let's just say Kreidler is revealing himself as a bit of a wussy. :p (heck I would have been all for it if somebody had taken a dump on Shaq's ball :D ).
 
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Yah, classless.

The burning was classless, and the picture thing a few nights ago was the same.

Also the Shaq ball. WTF? That was dumb.
 
I guess if comforts me knowing that the owners of the team want to win more than the fans. I think we are pretty lucky in that regard.
 
Shaq made his milestone 15,000th point at Arco. They saved the ball for him on the sidelines - when, after the game, he went to retrieve it, someone had written: "Shaq is an a$$****" on it.

Shaq wasn't happy. It was narrowed down to someone on the Kings staff that most likely had done it but no one - to my knowledge - ever took responsibility.
 
...

And I laughed until I cried. Served the big tub of rendered animal fat right.

;)
 
VF21 said:
...

And I laughed until I cried. Served the big tub of rendered animal fat right.

;)
Damn right. Shaq IS an a-hole:).

The thing about the jersey burning is that it is against league rules to defile another teams logo or mascot. That little bit aside, however, it was really incredible how it pumped up the crowd. Everyone was going freaking nuts in there. It was one of the most exciting crowd moments I've ever seen. You could really feel the hatred. At that time it was the best rivalry in sports.
 
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