Ron to the Rescue (Steve Kerr)

HumboldtKing

Prospect
Link: http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=sk-artest021106&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Ron to the Rescue
by Steve Kerr


When Ron Artest arrived in California's capital a couple of weeks ago, he announced that the Sacramento Kings "had gambled on me, and I want to make that gamble pay off."

Obviously, there's a long way to go and there's no telling whether or not Artest will behave himself and have a long, prosperous career in Sacramento. But the early returns are in and – so far – the trade has been a resounding success for the Kings. Artest has reenergized what had become a quiet Arco Arena crowd, and his defense and all-around game have helped Sacramento revive what looked like a lost season.

After two initial losses following the trade, the team has won four of its last six games. More important is the manner in which the Kings have been winning. In those six games, they have reinvented themselves, playing stingy defense, hitting the glass and playing with an edge. Their opponents have been held to just 41.5-percent shooting, thanks in large part to the attitude Artest has brought with him.

Overall, Sacramento has won seven consecutive games at home and has its sights set on the playoffs. Despite the fact that his new team is 12th in the Western Conference and 3½ games behind the Los Angeles Lakers for the eighth spot, Artest has guaranteed a postseason berth. His bravado – however misguided it can be at times – is just what the Kings needed.

Sacramento appeared to be headed nowhere just a few weeks ago. There was speculation about whether or not coach Rick Adelman would hang onto his job, and the future of the team seemed cloudy. Now that seems to be changing.

Adelman is talking about developing young players "for the future," the crowd at Arco senses that things are turning around and the team is playing with confidence. On Thursday night, the Kings harrassed the Chicago Bulls into a woeful shooting night, essentially ending the game by the second quarter. It was like old times in Sacramento with the Kings dominating on their home floor.

Sacramento's offense still revolves around Mike Bibby and Brad Miller, but a couple of young players are making huge strides and giving Kings' fans a glimpse of the future. Kevin Martin has emerged in his second season as a major force with his excellent shooting and efficient offensive game, and rookie Francisco Garcia is giving Adelman great minutes at the wing with his defense, ball handling and scoring ability. Both players would appear to be part of the blueprint for the future that general manager Geoff Petrie has put together.

The team has been entirely revamped in the past few years, with longtime stalwarts Vlade Divac, Chris Webber and Bobby Jackson all moving on. In fact, only Bibby remains from the team that lost in seven games to the Lakers in that epic series in the 2002 Western Conference finals.

The new Kings will be built around Bibby, Miller and Artest. As good as Peja Stojakovic was, he didn't provide the defense or interior threat that Artest posseses. Sacramento hasn't had a low-post presence in a long time, but now the Kings have the ability to put Artest on the low block and play off of him. They are inverting their offense, with big men like Miller and Kenny Thomas perched on the perimeter as shooters, while Artest uses his 260-pound frame to pound defenders inside.

The result is that defenses have something else to think about now with Sacramento. Artest is so strong that he draws a lot of double teams, freeing up the many shooters the Kings have for open looks.

The question, of course, is whether or not Artest can sustain his good behavior and simply do what he does best: play basketball. The Kings are crossing their fingers. But his play, which will only get better as he continues to work himself back into top form, has been intoxicating for Sacramento fans. Another couple of months of this, and it wouldn't be shocking to see the Kings where they've been for seven straight seasons – in the playoffs.
 
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While I understand why he didn't mention Bonzi there, that potentially (trade possibility) makes the new Kings (again) even more intriguing :). Ditto SAR aside from the trade talk.

As far as Artest's behavior goes, I think he'll be fine, indeed.

Nice piece.
 
I like the article. It is pretty much truthful and he talks about our bright future. Interesting he mentioned Bibby, Martin, Miller, Artest, Garcia, but didn't mention Rahim or Bonzi(like Kings113 said). Maybe they will be traded? I'm glad that Kevin played well on national TV, now everyone knows he has talent.
 
It's an interesting read.

People really need to try and NOT read too much into it, however, especially as far as who was and wasn't mentioned.

Sometimes a fish is just a fish...
 
isnt our record 4-4 with artest on the team? we really need a healthy roster right now....
 
4-4 with no bonzi, shareefs mouth wired shut, and ron comming off an idle period. once we're all healthy, i think we can steamroll our way into the 7th or 8th spots. just hope its not too late for that now
 
jon e said:
4-4 with no bonzi, shareefs mouth wired shut, and ron comming off an idle period. once we're all healthy, i think we can steamroll our way into the 7th or 8th spots. just hope its not too late for that now

That's the problem. With only 32 games left a "steamroll" for this crew might get them back to .500. Maybe. And is that enough? We're 6-17 on the road this year, and spend most of the rest of the season there.
 
18 of the Kings next 32 are on the road. With a back to back in Dallas and San Antonio, games at Memphis, New Jersey, and Cleveland. As well as 2 games in Los Angeles (Lakers),1 game against the Clippers and 1 in Milwaukee... The Kings would be lucky to go 4-5 in that stretch. Not to mention games at home against Phoenix, Dallas, and Houston at home. One huge stretch will be this upcoming 5 games road trip...

@Cleveland, @Atlanta, @Washington, (back to back)@New Jersey, @ Milwuakee... Then come home against Memphis, Dallas, and the Lakers... That 8 game stretch will be one of if not the most vital in the Kings season...
 
SacKings384 said:
18 of the Kings next 32 are on the road. With a back to back in Dallas and San Antonio, games at Memphis, New Jersey, and Cleveland. As well as 2 games in Los Angeles (Lakers),1 game against the Clippers and 1 in Milwaukee... The Kings would be lucky to go 4-5 in that stretch. Not to mention games at home against Phoenix, Dallas, and Houston at home. One huge stretch will be this upcoming 5 games road trip...

@Cleveland, @Atlanta, @Washington, (back to back)@New Jersey, @ Milwuakee... Then come home against Memphis, Dallas, and the Lakers... That 8 game stretch will be one of if not the most vital in the Kings season...

There's only 3 real good teams there. NJ, Dallas, maybe Cleveland. We've beaten Memphis before, we can beat the lakers, the hawks and wiz? We can definately beat them, same with Milwaukee. If we can't beat those teams we don't deserve to be in the playoffs anyways.
 
Carlisle on Ron so far:

"Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle on Sirius Satellite Radio's "Full Court Press" program about Ron Artest: "I have talked to him. I've wished him well. I think he's in a great situation out there (in Sacramento) with a great coach (in Rick Adelman). I do see their box scores, and I'm happy for his success when he does well. "The only thing that surprises me is not that he's playing well but that there weren't more people banging down the door to get him. I hope he does well and I look forward to seeing him here (March 17). It's going to be a very interesting night. It's one that is a little ways down the road, but I know people will be talking about it."

http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/story/14199171p-15025591c.html

3/17 will be fun, indeed.
 
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