Sacramento-era Kings Draft picks: is Fox the best ever? (split from the [Game] thread)

Who is the best Sacramento-era Kings draft pick?


  • Total voters
    28
The 2003-2004 Detroit Pistons would like to say a few words to you regarding the part of your statement that is in bold text.
That was not the same team. LAL fell back to fifth in 2003 leaving the door wide open. That 2003/4 team brought in Malone and Payton in their first failed attempt at star collecting. Pretty sure at that point Shaq and Kobe hated each other.
 
Last edited:
I'm going to zag here. I don't really feel like ranking them, but there is a case to be made that Jason Williams was our best draft pick. His energy and play changed the entire dynamic of this franchise.
See I hate to go here because we'd reinvent franchise history. He was not the best pick at 7, but he was the right pick for us because we picked a SF instead of a PG the draft before. I think we passed on two hall of famers.
 
See I hate to go here because we'd reinvent franchise history. He was not the best pick at 7, but he was the right pick for us because we picked a SF instead of a PG the draft before. I think we passed on two hall of famers.

3 picks after were Larry Hughes, Nowitzki and Paul Pierce. He was the right pick for that short term spark but we definitely missed out on the HOF players.

I don't remember why the Grizz traded us Bibby for JWill? Bibby was clearly the superior player. A lot more boring but was no doubt better.
 
3 picks after were Larry Hughes, Nowitzki and Paul Pierce. He was the right pick for that short term spark but we definitely missed out on the HOF players.

I don't remember why the Grizz traded us Bibby for JWill? Bibby was clearly the superior player. A lot more boring but was no doubt better.
I think Nash was picked right after Peja, so had we done that and Webber and Vlade already on board (don't recall exact timeline though?) you pick Pierce who I was really confused why he kept falling, and that team is contending until 2010 at least.

I would trade nothing from 1999 up until that one night at AAC in 03 though. But it is a thought exercise.
 
That was not the same team. LAL fell back to fifth in 2003 leaving the door wide open. That 2003/4 team brought in Malone and Payton in their first failed attempt at star collecting. Pretty sure at that point Shaq and Kobe hated each other.

Larry Brown certainly thought so:

 
The 2003-2004 Detroit Pistons would like to say a few words to you regarding the part of your statement that is in bold text.

Re-read the last 9 words of my prior post.

Had the tension between Shaq and Kobe not become a huge problem, that LAL team would have rolled the Pistons. The chemistry problems were evident all series long.

That wasn’t near the case from 2000-2003. Although I did forget that the Spurs beat them in 2002-2003, before the distractions and additions of Karl Malone and Gary Payton.

So I owe Tim Duncan and Co. an apology.
 
"Best pick" is clearly Peja. Midfirst international pick at a time when international players weren't getting much attention. Key part of our best teams and one-time MVP candidate

Keegan could eventually reach that level given the pure hysteria when we picked him. Ballsy move that no one in the NBA world believed in. Obviously too early but easily can be up there

Cuz and Fox were top of the board picks so unless the question is best player drafted by Sac it's hardest to put them there

I don’t see Peja and I’m old enough to have watched them all as an adult. Peja was a great shooter but when Don Nelson put a short guard on him defensively Peja was unable to exploit the match-up. As an offensive player Fox has limitations. But when Fox focuses on defense and plays defense the question should be Fox versus Weber.
 
IMO comparing players from different Era's, Teams and Coaches is like comparing apples and oranges:)

The Team Petrie assembled and Adelman coached was an incredible Team. C.Webb, Bibby, Peja, Vlade, Doug, etc. played beautiful basketball together along with a great supporting cast. Peja should be on this list.

DMC was the central figure on a whole era of Kings teams. I loved to watch him play. His lack of composure with the Refs and sometimes other players held him back IMO. None the less he should be on the list.

Swipa, after the season he is having is on this list. All Star, Mr. 4th Quarter and improved defense and free throw shooting......yes, he belongs here.

I will let others compare them. As a Kings Fan, I liked them all:)
 
See I hate to go here because we'd reinvent franchise history. He was not the best pick at 7, but he was the right pick for us because we picked a SF instead of a PG the draft before. I think we passed on two hall of famers.


In hindsight, it wasn’t the right pick. Paul Pierce would have been the right pick.

I’ve often wondered what might have been had Pierce been the pick. PP was very good right out of the gate and by the time the KINGS championship window hit — he was among the best 2-way players in the league and a certified ”go to” type of player.

Sure, the KINGS initially would have had a big hole at PG, but think about a lineup consisting of Vlade, CWebb, Peja Stojakovic, and Paul Pierce.

And they very likely still could have and perhaps would have landed Bobby Jackson via FA.

A starting lineup of Vlade, Webber, Peja, Pierce and BoJax may have been an even greater threat to LAL and the rest of the league.

They still could have traded Corliss for Christie for more depth. Or for some other complimentary player.

Under the above scenario there’s no JWill and eventually Mike Bibby, but so what? That team would have been straight fire.

I know someone could argue that Dirk was the right pick, but he took much longer to develop than Pierce and wasn’t the same level of 2-way player as Pierce. PP would have been the best fit right away and for the immediate future.
 
IMO comparing players from different Era's, Teams and Coaches is like comparing apples and oranges:)

You do realize that apples and oranges are both fruits (and food) thus are comparable on some levels. ;)

In all seriousness, I say the same regarding an orange and a steak. They’re both food.

While there isn’t an exact comparison between them, there are comparisons to be made. Just sayin.
 
Last edited:
DA says Shaq isn't in the GOAT conversation because he doesn't have 5 rings but LeBron doesn't have 5 rings...

The goalposts are constantly on the move.

First of all, the idea of GOAT has always been silly to me. Not only is it super subjective and impossible to prove, it’s just a lame acronym people have adopted because they think it sounds “cool”.

But a more proper and fitting term should be something like “greatest to date”. Because the former doesn’t allow for the future, as at some point others come along to take that title away. But I digress.

One of the things that always irks me WRT a “greatest” discussion is that most don’t apply consistent logic to it.

For example, the mainstream media bestows the “GOAT” monicker to Tom Brady in football because he’s the QB that’s been on the most championship teams. However that same logic doesn’t seem to apply to basketball where Bill Russell was on nearly twice as many championship teams as the guys most often referred to as “GOAT” in Michael Jordan. And now you have some fools lobbying for a player with 7 less titles than Russell’s Celtics and 2 less titles than Jordan’s Bulls.

How does that make any sense?

Furthermore, in the case of basketball, one or two players have a FAR greater impact on team success than in football.

Circling back to what you quoted, it’s just more of the same flawed and inconsistent logic.
If anything, it should be basketball where “most titles” carries more weight, not football.

Instead, the mainstream media and fans alike treat championships in team sports like they’re singles tennis or golf. They are anything but.

**EDIT: Lastly, before anyone hits back with “LBJ and Brady are career leaders in scoring, wins, or whatever other categories which also adds to their claim for GOAT”. Let me state this.

Had Jim Brown or Barry Sanders not retired early, they’d likely be the all-time leaders in various stats too. But they didn’t and therefore career stats aren’t the best gauge because the number of games played aren’t the same. While players like Brady, Jabbar, and LBJ can be applauded for playing so long and for being productive for so long, it doesn’t tell the entire story.

For example, with eras being drastically different in many ways, a player like Joe Montana didn’t have the opportunity to play 20+ years due to the physicality that was permitted during his time. Some NBA players played during a time when there wasn’t even a 3pt line. And others played with a 3pt line but during an era where taking a quick 28 foot three in transition would get them benched by their coach (who had much more power over players at the time).

Things aren’t close to equal. Players today are able to play longer and be more productive for longer. Player safety is one reason, fitness and technology is another. We even see it in tennis where men and women are able to compete and win championships at ages when their predecessors were long retired because it used to be a “young persons sport”.

IMO, it’s actually more amazing that Abdul-Jabbar accomplished his scoring feat in essentially the same amount of time as LBJ but with only ONE 3 point FG made. Don’t even get me started on Wilt’s greatness.

One day the NBA may very well institute a 4-point line and someone will break the current scoring record and we’ll be saying the same thing.

Things are just drastically different when it comes to career production.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top