I'm glad we didn't move Barnes. I wish we could have moved Buddy, especially with the defensive upgrades on the wing. Most looking forward to draft day deals right now as well as seeing who the new coach is.
Agreed. I don't think I have ever seen so many people complain about a GM making moves to improve the overall talent of his team.
The one complaint that makes sense is by adding salary next year it only gives us 1 option to resign Holmes.
well at this point we better hope we can attract a good free agent. We are basically on track to be Portland with a great backcourt and a journeyman front court.
Fox and Hali are too good to not make the play-offs next year though the west could be loaded. This year was our chance to add a third piece. But Vivek was too impatient and arrogant.
The Lakers get "discounts" despite it being California but State taxes are no small thing. Compare income taxes or lack there of those in Texas, Tennessee and Florida with those of California. A dollar earned is not the same as a dollar earned elsewhere.We're the Kings - we're always going to have to overpay and just hope that the talent pans out for us, because the relative market value will never be equal. Buddy's won't be the last bad contract we have. Tyrese is likely going to get a max contract whether he deserves it or not.
The key here is that they appear to have strengthened their bench. The Kings' starting lineup has competed with almost everyone all season. Their bench has been one of the worst in the NBA. TH has been our only consistent contributor off the bench all season.Well the Kings will have to win some games with what they have. I'm not convinced they have enough talent to make the Playoffs. The Kings play in last seasons "Bubble" is still clear in my mind.
Monte did add some scrappy defenders to the bench. Silva is a nice story of a skinny kid coming out of Africa with a NBA dream. Wright, Harkless, Davis and Silva hopefully have a little "Dog" in them.
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=221415042953121
Yep. This death lineup has been one of the best in the league but the bench has been so horrible for most of the year that we’ve been too far behind for it to even matter.The key here is that they appear to have strengthened their bench. The Kings' starting lineup has competed with almost everyone all season. Their bench has been one of the worst in the NBA. TH has been our only consistent contributor off the bench all season.
The key here is that they appear to have strengthened their bench. The Kings' starting lineup has competed with almost everyone all season. Their bench has been one of the worst in the NBA. TH has been our only consistent contributor off the bench all season.
Yep. This death lineup has been one of the best in the league but the bench has been so horrible for most of the year that we’ve been too far behind for it to even matter.
Some grouping of
Whiteside/Metu/
Harkless/Metu/Woodard
James/DQJ/Woodard
Davis/James/Guy
Wright/Guy/
isnt exactly gonna blow the socks off of anyone but it’s also probably not going to get cooked so bad that your team goes down by ten in a brief two minute span.
Yeah- I think there are some good combinations off the bench depending on what you are looking for, and you will probably have 12 guys who need to be "ready" at any time and could be in the 9-10 man rotation for any given game.
For instance, if you are playing a big team, your bench guys might be Whiteside, Metu, Harkless, Davis, Wright.
For small ball games, you might run Metu, Harkless, Davis, Wright, Guy.
If Harkless is cooked, Davis isn't that good, or you want a different look you could run DQJ.
I don't think you are going to see much of Woodard, James, or Silva if we are truly trying to make the playoffs.
I don't think Luke is ever going to play more than 9-10 guys a night, but he will likely have 10-12 guys of at least decent NBA quality to choose from any given night, and I think some of the backend rotation guys (Whiteside, Guy, DQJ) might find themselves playing one game and not the next depending on matchup and need. That we have 10-12 guys who don't look lost on an NBA floor is itself an improvement. Prior to the deadline that number was closer to 6-7, given that James is not an NBA level player, DQJ shows only flashes, Belly was checked out, and CoJo was often net negative. That the core 5 won't have to play 38 minutes per night, and that we don't have to worry about trying to find time for Bagley to mess things up, should contribute to a record that is much closer to .500 in and of itself.
I actually think that is what McNair is thinking. He looks at his core 5 and thinks he is got something. If you get reasonable growth from Fox and Hali next season, and resign Holmes you have a good core. Barnes is a nice piece. If you can find a way to upgrade Buddy (and get off is salary) you are starting to really have something. Add in some role players on the bench (I think we will really like Wright), and let everyone grow together, and you may have something.
The toughest part of that is upgrading Buddy. I know some people think that is through the draft, but maybe Monte thinks there is a trade out there when we get deeper into Buddy's contract. Maybe you can package him with Bagley when Bagley is an expiring. If you want to keep Barnes and Holmes to build around Fox and Hali (which I think is reasonable) then this team was too good to tank to the bottom 5. There is just too much talent. I think any effort to soft tank (but holding Barnes and Holmes) is probably no better than 8th or 9th pick territory. So Monte probably looks at it and says "why not got for it?" If we are already likely picking 8-10, why not try for the playoffs? if you get it, awesome, and if not, you are picking 10-12 instead of 8-10. The core you have (Fox, Hali, Barnes, and Holmes) is already too good to just waste the season. So let them play. Let Fox and Hali learn how to play and lead. Let them experience a playoff run or even play in meaningful late season games that have consequence. That is the only way we will get good.
I'm actually struck by how "bad" some of those old Lakers players are at "winning basketball." The Pellies have so much talent, but guys like Ingram are just not winners. You let a guy play meaningless basketball for too many years and he starts to develop bad habits and apathy, no matter how talented he is.
I am not suggesting this is the approach I would have taken. But I see the direction Monte is looking to go. Your chances of tanking to the bottom are small given the existing talent on the roster. So add some guys who will help you be more competitive this year, try to make a run that will probably only cost you 2-3 pick spots, pick up a guy (Wright) who might be part of your core, but otherwise keep your powder dry until a better opportunity presents itself.
As terrible as Buddy has been for most of the season, his numbers are now pretty darn near identical to supposed "having a great career year" Barnes. Yeah there are differences on defense and so on, but it's not like Harrison was single handedly stopping us from being the worst defensive team in the league. There's nothing in their historical career averages that suggests their production is suddenly going to diverge either, so I find it very strange that people are more than ready to suggest that Barnes is fine remaining as part of the core but Buddy is a must-move, when their salaries are only $2MM different per year and Barnes is a year older. Both guys are hard workers who at times can take over games, but aren't consistent stars and should ideally be at best the third or fourth-best player on the team.
actually while Vlade couldn’t draft better than throwing darts at a board his trades were pretty good. Both the Bogi trade and the Barnes trade were pretty good.
Did the team improve? Marginally. Wright was an upgrade because Detroit wanted to improve their tank so we took him. Meanwhile we traded picks for players both Toronto and Miami gave up on. Given those are two of the better talent evaluators in the league we shall see.
But marginally only gets us to a worse draft pick so the strategy seems confused. What little hope I have left (very little), I would rather blame Vivek than McNair. I guess the Kings are lucky they are and will remain (thanks to Burkle) the only game in town.
I think for me, it's just the way they play the game that is different. Barnes rarely does something that gets you screaming at the TV. He pretty much stays within himself and his capabilities and helps the team in a few different ways. How many times a game does Buddy do something just completely stupid and uncessessary? He doesn't make anybody around him better. He just dribbles and chucks, dribbles and turns it over, or dribbles and passes it off to a teammate with 3 seconds left on the shot clock so that they can chuck. There is just nothing inspiring about him, other than when he gets on a roll and makes 3's.
I wish he'd just realize he needs to be a spot up shooter and stop trying to create all the time. I have no idea why Walton continues to let him do this game after game.
As terrible as Buddy has been for most of the season, his numbers are now pretty darn near identical to supposed "having a great career year" Barnes. Yeah there are differences on defense and so on, but it's not like Harrison was single handedly stopping us from being the worst defensive team in the league. There's nothing in their historical career averages that suggests their production is suddenly going to diverge either, so I find it very strange that people are more than ready to suggest that Barnes is fine remaining as part of the core but Buddy is a must-move, when their salaries are only $2MM different per year and Barnes is a year older. Both guys are hard workers who at times can take over games, but aren't consistent stars and should ideally be at best the third or fourth-best player on the team.
Yea. But who cares what any of us think. There were a ton of confirmed rumors of teams wanting Barnes, but none for Buddy. Wonder why that is so?!?
So I guess I can assume that because we traded Belli we gave up on him?
As terrible as Buddy has been for most of the season, his numbers are now pretty darn near identical to supposed "having a great career year" Barnes. Yeah there are differences on defense and so on, but it's not like Harrison was single handedly stopping us from being the worst defensive team in the league. There's nothing in their historical career averages that suggests their production is suddenly going to diverge either, so I find it very strange that people are more than ready to suggest that Barnes is fine remaining as part of the core but Buddy is a must-move, when their salaries are only $2MM different per year and Barnes is a year older. Both guys are hard workers who at times can take over games, but aren't consistent stars and should ideally be at best the third or fourth-best player on the team.
Buddy Hield in March:
36.4 MPG
19.5 PPG
5.3 RPG
4.0 APG (14.5% AST)
61% TS
42% 3pt (11.3 3PT/Game!!!)
120.1 ORtg
20.3% USG
This is the player we thought we were getting with the big contract and it's a drastic difference for him compared to the rest of the season where he was legitimately bad on both ends of the court. Changes quite a bit if the Kings get this version of something close going forward.
certainly this board did![]()
The big difference for me is how they impact the game. When the offense is struggling, Barnes will often get in the post and stop the bleeding. He is also smart about getting to the foul line.As terrible as Buddy has been for most of the season, his numbers are now pretty darn near identical to supposed "having a great career year" Barnes. Yeah there are differences on defense and so on, but it's not like Harrison was single handedly stopping us from being the worst defensive team in the league. There's nothing in their historical career averages that suggests their production is suddenly going to diverge either, so I find it very strange that people are more than ready to suggest that Barnes is fine remaining as part of the core but Buddy is a must-move, when their salaries are only $2MM different per year and Barnes is a year older. Both guys are hard workers who at times can take over games, but aren't consistent stars and should ideally be at best the third or fourth-best player on the team.
As terrible as Buddy has been for most of the season, his numbers are now pretty darn near identical to supposed "having a great career year" Barnes. Yeah there are differences on defense and so on, but it's not like Harrison was single handedly stopping us from being the worst defensive team in the league. There's nothing in their historical career averages that suggests their production is suddenly going to diverge either, so I find it very strange that people are more than ready to suggest that Barnes is fine remaining as part of the core but Buddy is a must-move, when their salaries are only $2MM different per year and Barnes is a year older. Both guys are hard workers who at times can take over games, but aren't consistent stars and should ideally be at best the third or fourth-best player on the team.
The big difference for me is how they impact the game. When the offense is struggling, Barnes will often get in the post and stop the bleeding. He is also smart about getting to the foul line.
Nice attack off the dribble for Wright @ 3:15.
I think for me, it's just the way they play the game that is different. Barnes rarely does something that gets you screaming at the TV. He pretty much stays within himself and his capabilities and helps the team in a few different ways. How many times a game does Buddy do something just completely stupid and uncessessary? He doesn't make anybody around him better. He just dribbles and chucks, dribbles and turns it over, or dribbles and passes it off to a teammate with 3 seconds left on the shot clock so that they can chuck. There is just nothing inspiring about him, other than when he gets on a roll and makes 3's.
I wish he'd just realize he needs to be a spot up shooter and stop trying to create all the time. I have no idea why Walton continues to let him do this game after game.
Indeed. Another fact we might *wonder* about: HB has led his teams in minutes played 5 years in a row. Hmmmm....
Add it all up, and it's almost as if coaches understand something about HB's value, value not altogether reflected in the box score, that some fans don't.