I thought maybe I would use this occasion to take a trip down memory lane, as a comparison between then and now. Different approaches for different times. The difference between having someone behind the wheel that knows what he's doing and someone that either doesn't, or doesn't care. So lets take a look at the Kings that arrived from Kansas City. We started the journey with a roster made up of these players.
Eddie Johnson: A 27 year old, 6'7" SF. Eddie was a great shooter. You did not want to leave him open.
Reggie Theus: A 29 year old, 6'6" PF/SG. Reggie was one of the better players in the NBA at the time.
Mke Woodson: A 28 year old, 6'5" SG. He was one of my favorites. Good all around player.
Larry Drew: A 28 year old 6'1" PG. Drew was comfortable starting or off the bench. He was a solid player.
LaSalle Thompson: A 25 year old, 6'10" C. LaSalle was a physcial player and a fan favorite.
Otis Thorpe: A 24 year old, 6'10" PF. Just about to emerge as one of the better PF's in the league.
Terry Tyler: A 30 year old, 6'7" SF. Tyler was athletic and a career journeyman.
Mark Olberding: A 30 year old, 6'8" PF. Another crowd favorite. Olberding was one of those glue guys.
Carl Henry: A 25 year old, 6'6" SG. Henry was a raw player at the time and was one and done with the Kings.
Joe Kleine: A 25 year old, 6'11" C. Kings 1st round pick that year. No doubt he was picked for need, as he was not the BPO.
Michael Adams: A 24 year old, 5'11" PG. Michael ended up being a pretty good player. Just not for the Kings.
This was the team that started our legacy here in Sacramento. It came with a newly appointed GM at the suggestion of the NBA front office. One Joe Axelson. The very man that traded Oscar Robertson just as he was entering his prime. This team went on to a 37/45 won/loss record that was good enough to make the playoffs. That was when the first round was best of 5. The team went 0 for 3 and out.
That next offseason the Kings traded Mike Woodson and his 15.6 PPG along with Larry Drew and his 11.9 PPG, and a future 1st round pick, to the Clippers for Derek Smith, who was taken in the second round if memory serves and had a breakout year two years earlier averaging 23 PPG. He picked up right where he left off the next season averaging 22 PPG for 11 games before tearing up his knee. Axelson apparently did little in the way of research about the knee. Smith, who relied heavily on his athleticism to score, was never the same player again. He played 3 seasons with the Kings before throwing in the towel on his career. 52 games the 1st year. 35 the 2nd and 29 the 3rd.
The following season Eddie Johnson and his 18.7 PPG went out the door in exchange for Ed Pickney and his 6.2 PPG. Two entirely different players in what they brought to the table. Clearly the Kings got the worse of this deal. Pickney's stay with the Kings was short lived. The probably should have put a revolving door on the clubhouse.
The next season the Kings traded their young PF, Otis Thorpe who had averaged 20.8 PPG along with 10.2 RPG the previous season. In return they aquired the great Jim Peterson (8.9 PPG, 6.3 RPG) and Ralph Sampson. Sampson arrived with two, count them, two bad knee's. Sampson had played in only 19 games the previous year in Houston. He played in 26 games that season, the 1989/90 season, and in 25 games the following year. One year later he was out of basketball. Otis went on to play 15 more seasons, 21 in all and ended up with a career average of 14 PPG and 8.2 RPG.
The same year they traded for Sampson the Kings also traded Reggie Theus and his 21.6 PPG along with 6.3 APG for Randy Wittman and his 3.8 PPG and 0.7 APG. Wittman was latter traded along with LaSalle Thompson to the Pacers for Wayman Tisdale.
By the 1990/91 season the Kings had gone from a promising and still fairly young team that had recorded a 37/45 won/loss record to a team that was very young and inexperienced, and with vetreans, except for a few exceptions, that were fringe NBA players. This team compiled a record of 25 wins and 57 losses. Here's the roster:
Wayman Tisdale: A 25 year old, 6'9" PF. Wayman was a good player who never quite
Lived up to expectations. He may have had the biggest butt in the NBA
Antoine Carr: A 29 year old, 6'9" PF. He was aquired from Atlanta in a trade for Kenny
Smith.
Lion Simmons: A 22 year old, 6'7" SF. The Kings 1st or four 1st round picks that year.
Travis Mays: A 22 year old, 6'2" PG/SG. The Kings 2nd, 1st round pick that year.
Duane Causwell: A 22 year old, 7'0" C. The Kings 3rd, 1st round pick that year.
Anthony Bonner: A 22 year old, 6'8" PF. The Kings 4th, 1st round pick that year.
Roy Sparrow: A 32 year old, 6'2" PG. Career journeyman. Brought in to tutor Mays.
Jim Les: A 27 year old, 5'11" PG. 4th sting player at best. Still lives in Sacramento I
believe.
Leon Woods: A 28 year old, 6'3" SG. Retired at seasons end. Now an NBA referee.
Bob Hanson: A 30 year old, 6'6" SG. Played in 38 games. Retired at seasons end.
Bill Wennington: A 27 year old, 7'0" C. Played one season and was traded to the Bulls
for Dennis Hopson, who retired after one season with the Kings.
Ralph Sampson: A 30 year old, 7'4" C. He retired after one more season.
Eric Leckner: A 24 year old, 6'11" C. I believe he was lost in the expansion draft to the
then Charlotte Hornets in the offseason.
Anthony Fredrick: A 26 year old, 6'7" SF. He played 3 more seasons.
Rick Calloway: A 24 year old, 6'6" SG. His one and only season.
After 5 years of wheeling and dealing, by three different GM's, Joe Axelson, Bill Russell, and Dick Motta, this is what we had left. So the next time your upset with Petrie, remember, it could be worse. I think I can safely say he would have done a better job. All three GM's went for the quick fix. Motta had the best chance to make an impact with the draft, having four 1st round picks. He managed to strike gold on only one, Simmons, who unfortunately ended up being plagued with injuries that ultimately ended his career. Lets take a quick look at the drafts those five years. Who was drafted, and who they passed on.
1985/86: Joe Kleine. Sixth pick in the draft. Could have had: Chris Mullin, Detlef Schremp, Charles Oakley, Karl Malone, A.C. Green, and Terry Porter.
1986/87: Harold Pressley. Could have had: Scott Skiles, Arvidas Sabonis, Mark Price, Dennis Rodman, and Nate McMillan.
1987/88: Kenny Smith. Could have had: Kevin Johnson, Reggie Miller, Horace Grant, Mark Jackson, and Derick Mckey
1988/89: Rickey Berry. I don't believe that anyone picked after him was a better player. Berry commited sucide after his first season.
1889/90: Pervis Ellison. Terrible draft. But, could have had: Sean Elliott, Glen Rice, Tim Hardaway, Vlade Divac, and Cliff Robinson.
1990/91: Lionel Simmons: Played only 7 seasons in his career due to injury.
Travis Mays: Lasted only 3 seasons in the NBA.
Duane Causwell: 11 seasons. Averaged 4.9 PPG and 4.2 RPG for his career.
Anthony Bonner: Lasted only 6 seasons and was out of the league.
This was a weak draft, but we could have had: Terry Mills, Tyrone Hill, Dee Brown, Elden Campbell, Toni Kukoc, and the notorius Jayson Williams. Ironicaly the Kings second round pick that year was Bimbo Coles who was traded to another team on draft day. Coles ended up playing 14 seasons in the NBA.
Most of this is from some research and my flawed memory, so I'm sure I've left some things out, or possibly have some times wrong. But the essence of what happened in those five years is there. It didn't improve, and we didn't get to the playoffs until Petrie arrived in the 1994/95 season. That year we drafted Brian Grant, Michael Smith and Lawrence Funderburke. The following season, the 1995/96 season we made the playoffs.
The old days wern't much fun, but they are insightful when compared to todays process.