I get what you are saying but there are things that happened that lead to some of the rotation situation:
1) Keon’s emergence. No one expected him to get any minutes let alone crack the rotation but we are 14-4 in games he has played after that garbage time appearance in Houston.
2) Trey missed the first 13 games. He has been outstanding since the trade, pretty hard to not give him big minutes once he returned.
3) Keegan has graduated from the rookie mistake era and isn’t losing minutes unless he doesn’t shoot and that seems in the past as well. Shaves a few minutes off that might normally go to the bench.
most teams run 9 or 9 1/2 deep. We can’t give consistent minutes to 8 bench players so other than Monk and probably Ellis (until those advanced stats and record turn down) it is going to be difficult to give proper run to the other guys. Playing Javale only in VERY situational minutes could help for sure. Sasha is the hardest one for me to place in the proper role. I personally don’t know how to maximize his talents.
I think all of these players (Keon Ellis included) are dealing with variations of the same problem: the way the offense has evolved over the past few years, the only shots they are
allowed to take are 3pt shots. If you're coming off the bench cold and getting 3-4 shots per game and they're almost all 3pt shots, you're pretty much doomed from a shooting splits point of view.
Davion Mitchell (rookie season) took 11.2 shots per game and only 4.3 were 3pt shots.
Davion Mitchell (this season) has taken 3.9 shots per game and 2.1 were 3pt shots.
Chris Duarte (rookie season in Indiana) took 11.3 shots and only 4.6 were 3pt shots.
Chris Duarte (this season) has taken 3.4 shots per game and 2.0 were 3pt shots.
Trey Lyles (post-trade in 2022) took 7.4 shots per game and only 2.6 were 3pt shots.
Trey Lyles (this season) has taken 5.3 shots per game and 3.9 were 3pt shots.
Keon Ellis (this season) has taken 3.4 shots per game and 2,.9 are 3pt shots.
Sasha Vezenkov (this season) has taken 4.8 shots per game and 3.0 are 3pt shots.
If they're only shooting from deep they're not getting to the line, they're not getting any high percentage looks in the paint, and they have very little opportunity to find a rhythm on offense. So while someone like Keegan Murray can have games where he goes 1-7 or 1-8 from deep, he shoots enough volume over the course of the season to still keep his average in the respectable range. Conversely, if any of our (non-Monk) bench players go 1-8 in any stretch (which could take as many as 4 games) they're out of the rotation for weeks, their confidence is shot, and fans and coaches can point to their shooting splits as if they've brought this on themselves.
I don't expect the Coach to give consistent minutes to 8 bench players nor do I expect these guys to put up big numbers. That's not the point. Right now we have 6 players who know they will get into every game, that they will get a decent volume of looks from multiple levels, and that they have permission to make mistakes as long as they play hard and try to follow the roles Coach has marked out for them. That's just not enough players to make up a full rotation. We need 9 players who have consistent roles and that means including them in the offense and not just on a "go stand in the corner" basis.
How many times over the past few weeks have we complained that the Kings were missing their 3pt shots and falling further and further behind yet they refused to change the offense and kept firing away until there wasn't enough time left to catch up? This isn't just a Kings problem. A lot of the top teams are having games where they lose by 20+ on random nights because of shooting variance. All of these players are capable of more than just spot-up shooting. All of these players should earn their spot in the rotation with their defense
first and then get rewarded for their effort by having plays run for them occasionally -- not just for our big three.
What does that mean for Vezenkov specifically? He's shown that he can score on backdoor cuts, that he's above average on the offensive boards, that he can make smart passes, and that he can set screens. All of these tools should be part of the offense, not just his catch and shoot game. We're getting run off the line by defenders right now because they know we aren't going to hurt them on the inside. It's time we adjusted to those scouting reports and mixed up the offense.