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Mark Kreidler: Maloofs need to pay up for a piece that doesn't fit
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Columnist
Published 2:15 am PDT Sunday, July 3, 2005
Here, let me pour the elixir into some smaller cups. It isn't fatal; it just occasionally tastes cruddy.
There's no great case to be made for Cuttino Mobley staying with the Kings, especially not at his likely price. Oh, Mobley can get a shot, and he can initiate a possession. He can score. You could certainly make the argument that Rick Adelman's team is better offensively with him on the floor, especially as he learns Adelman's system. But Mobley doesn't play much defense, he doesn't naturally look to pass, doesn't necessarily make teammates better - doesn't do much on the floor, overall, that the Kings don't already get done. With Francisco García newly drafted and Kevin Martin in the fold, Mobley can't possibly be a top priority here.
And, of course, the Kings have to re-sign him.
You want to be Geoff Petrie for a day? Deal with that much first. If Petrie doesn't sign Mobley as an unrestricted free agent, he's looking at having given up Doug Christie for Mobley last season in a deal that ultimately nets the franchise nothing: No playoff bonus, no two-guard of the future, no financial relief. And no chess piece.
With a contract agreement, Mobley could wind up in a sign-and-trade deal that brings a decent frontline player or two for Adelman to toy with. Another possibility: Mobley begins the fall on the Kings' roster while Petrie sorts out potential in-season moves.
What cannot happen is for Mobley to just drift off, and that's considering everything. Look, the guy's going to be overpriced; he just opted out of a sure $6.37 million salary for the coming season. Expect him to be looking for something in, oh, let's say the four-year, $35 million range.
It's crazy, nutty money. And the Maloofs have to pay it.
This is the reality in 2005. The Kings are all done being the cute up-and-comers, and they're well past the Cinderella stage. Believe it or not, their time as Favored Contender already came and went. It gets too late awfully early in the Western Conference.
And so now Joe and Gavin Maloof look at this picture: A team in transition, with ticket prices among the highest in the league and an expectation of the product on the floor that, realistic or not, isn't being met. What to do?
Well, give Petrie some rope, to begin with.
It's so easy spending other people's cash that I wonder why I don't do it more often, but this much I'm sure of: If Mobley goes away as a free agent, the Kings get nothing. They're still over the salary cap even with his numbers off the books.
Mobley signing elsewhere doesn't give Petrie another penny to spend; the Kings' general manager is still stuck with one lonely mid-level salary exception, which this year will amount to something just north of $5 million. Petrie can spend that on restricted free agents Darius Songaila or Maurice Evans, or a combination of the two, or somebody else.
Petrie told me last week that the Maloofs' preference, made known during the annual Las Vegas organizational meeting, is to "not be a taxpaying team," meaning the owners would like to keep salary totals somewhere close to the league's cap, which was less than $44 million last season. (The Kings were more than $10 million beyond the cap going into the summer.)
In a related development, this is sports.
In sports, you spend when sometimes there's no immediately clear reason why. Spending on Mobley, with García and Martin in the wings, sounds ludicrous. But there's a worse eventuality, and that is Mobley walking away for nothing.
It was interesting to hear how Petrie explained the García draft last week. When I raised the issue of the Kings needing to improve defensively, he said, "The question becomes, where are you weakest defensively?"
Petrie also described the 6-foot-7 García as having "the length and versatility that we think you've got to have to be good," adding that he "wants to defend."
Sounds like the Kings have developed a fairly clear picture of Cuttino Mobley, and it doesn't include him in a Sacramento uniform.
There's no arguing against García with the No. 23 pick in the draft. He can bring the ball up the court a la Christie, and he should wind up spending time on the floor with Martin when the Kings need to go big in the backcourt. He played in a Kings-friendly program for Rick Pitino at Louisville, and has had enough personal hardship in his life - including the tragic slaying of his younger brother in 2003 - to suggest he can handle the "rigors" of NBA pressure.
García's addition also makes it clear that Mobley's time in Sacramento is short. It's the right call. Now the Maloofs have to make the hard one and shell out the money to sign the guy they need to move. Only in sports does that make perfect sense.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/13172192p-14015608c.html
By Mark Kreidler -- Bee Columnist
Published 2:15 am PDT Sunday, July 3, 2005
Here, let me pour the elixir into some smaller cups. It isn't fatal; it just occasionally tastes cruddy.
There's no great case to be made for Cuttino Mobley staying with the Kings, especially not at his likely price. Oh, Mobley can get a shot, and he can initiate a possession. He can score. You could certainly make the argument that Rick Adelman's team is better offensively with him on the floor, especially as he learns Adelman's system. But Mobley doesn't play much defense, he doesn't naturally look to pass, doesn't necessarily make teammates better - doesn't do much on the floor, overall, that the Kings don't already get done. With Francisco García newly drafted and Kevin Martin in the fold, Mobley can't possibly be a top priority here.
And, of course, the Kings have to re-sign him.
You want to be Geoff Petrie for a day? Deal with that much first. If Petrie doesn't sign Mobley as an unrestricted free agent, he's looking at having given up Doug Christie for Mobley last season in a deal that ultimately nets the franchise nothing: No playoff bonus, no two-guard of the future, no financial relief. And no chess piece.
With a contract agreement, Mobley could wind up in a sign-and-trade deal that brings a decent frontline player or two for Adelman to toy with. Another possibility: Mobley begins the fall on the Kings' roster while Petrie sorts out potential in-season moves.
What cannot happen is for Mobley to just drift off, and that's considering everything. Look, the guy's going to be overpriced; he just opted out of a sure $6.37 million salary for the coming season. Expect him to be looking for something in, oh, let's say the four-year, $35 million range.
It's crazy, nutty money. And the Maloofs have to pay it.
This is the reality in 2005. The Kings are all done being the cute up-and-comers, and they're well past the Cinderella stage. Believe it or not, their time as Favored Contender already came and went. It gets too late awfully early in the Western Conference.
And so now Joe and Gavin Maloof look at this picture: A team in transition, with ticket prices among the highest in the league and an expectation of the product on the floor that, realistic or not, isn't being met. What to do?
Well, give Petrie some rope, to begin with.
It's so easy spending other people's cash that I wonder why I don't do it more often, but this much I'm sure of: If Mobley goes away as a free agent, the Kings get nothing. They're still over the salary cap even with his numbers off the books.
Mobley signing elsewhere doesn't give Petrie another penny to spend; the Kings' general manager is still stuck with one lonely mid-level salary exception, which this year will amount to something just north of $5 million. Petrie can spend that on restricted free agents Darius Songaila or Maurice Evans, or a combination of the two, or somebody else.
Petrie told me last week that the Maloofs' preference, made known during the annual Las Vegas organizational meeting, is to "not be a taxpaying team," meaning the owners would like to keep salary totals somewhere close to the league's cap, which was less than $44 million last season. (The Kings were more than $10 million beyond the cap going into the summer.)
In a related development, this is sports.
In sports, you spend when sometimes there's no immediately clear reason why. Spending on Mobley, with García and Martin in the wings, sounds ludicrous. But there's a worse eventuality, and that is Mobley walking away for nothing.
It was interesting to hear how Petrie explained the García draft last week. When I raised the issue of the Kings needing to improve defensively, he said, "The question becomes, where are you weakest defensively?"
Petrie also described the 6-foot-7 García as having "the length and versatility that we think you've got to have to be good," adding that he "wants to defend."
Sounds like the Kings have developed a fairly clear picture of Cuttino Mobley, and it doesn't include him in a Sacramento uniform.
There's no arguing against García with the No. 23 pick in the draft. He can bring the ball up the court a la Christie, and he should wind up spending time on the floor with Martin when the Kings need to go big in the backcourt. He played in a Kings-friendly program for Rick Pitino at Louisville, and has had enough personal hardship in his life - including the tragic slaying of his younger brother in 2003 - to suggest he can handle the "rigors" of NBA pressure.
García's addition also makes it clear that Mobley's time in Sacramento is short. It's the right call. Now the Maloofs have to make the hard one and shell out the money to sign the guy they need to move. Only in sports does that make perfect sense.
http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/13172192p-14015608c.html