The simple life: A day with Kings rookie Kevin Martin

LMM

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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12118085p-12988722c.html

The simple life: A day with Kings rookie Kevin Martin

[font=verdana,geneva,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]A small-town guy discovers the perks and pitfalls of the NBA

By Sam Amick -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Sunday, January 23, 2005

Kevin Martin feels at home.

Not so much in Sacramento, really. Like the Kings rookie himself, that's still a work in progress. The 500-plus miles from his hometown in Ohio to his college in North Carolina was an adjustment, but moving to California was like hopping planets.

No, Martin's comfort zone is in the fast lane on Interstate 80.

Point A is the Sacramento airport, where Martin has just picked up an old Western Carolina teammate who's in town for a week-long visit. Point B is Martin's downtown apartment, his temporary space before the new 3,200-square-foot house in Natomas becomes home. The space between is covered by his black Cadillac CTS that is streaking beneath a cloudy sky.

Of course, Martin's $50,000 ride is packed with all the goodies - a global position satellite system, the make-your-ears-bleed stereo, DVD players on the back of both front seats, a sunroof and a small basketball that hangs from the rear-view mirror.

Martin, a 21-year-old guard whose 6-foot-7, 185-pound frame is covered head to toe in red-and-black Air Jordan apparel, is doing his best Jeff Gordon impression behind the wheel. He sits way back in the leather seats, the local R&B radio station playing on his sound system. Eighty-five mph. No seatbelt. No fear.

Adventure to pleasure to sheer luxury.

He can only hope his NBA career takes the same route.

The day has just begun, not that Martin can remember what day it is, anyway. As problems go, he doesn't have many, but this has been one for a while. Martin has lost all sense of calendar and clock, remembering the times of Kings practices and games but not much else in his version of the simple life.

He thought a Thursday was a Monday on a recent East Coast road trip, and he will forget this is Wednesday three times before Thursday comes around. It has been that way since he became the Kings' first-round pick last June and signed a three-year contract for nearly $3 million, perhaps because he believed this time would never come.

Martin was, in truth, that 90-pound weakling people always hear about, at least as a freshman at Zanesville High School in Ohio. He "ballooned" into a 6-4, 150-pound slasher as a senior, right about the time the town of 25,586 began to wonder if Martin could be its first NBA product. His family didn't figure on Martin becoming a pro basketball player, considering there weren't athletes in their tree, and neither parent stands taller than 5-10.

When Martin came out of high school, his list of interested colleges was short, leaving him to choose from four small Division I programs. Western Carolina it was, its place in hoops history as obscure as the school: The Catamounts' all-time leading scorer, Henry Logan, was the first African American to play for a white school in the South, and Ronnie Carr made the first three-pointer in NCAA history.

Martin's three seasons were like nothing Western Carolina had seen. He averaged 23.3 points overall, finishing second in the nation as a junior at 24.9 points before leaving school early. His one-man show was the off-Broadway sort, with an average home crowd of 1,653 in Martin's final season in an arena built for 7,826. Western Carolina wins weren't abundant (the Southern Conference team was 34-50 during the Martin era), but Martin always came up big against top-flight opponents.

His signature effort came during a victory over Arkansas last season, when Martin had 26 of his 33 points in the second half and overtime. It was just the second time Western Carolina had defeated a Southeastern Conference team in its previous 30 tries.

"Every play we ran went through Kevin, and every team we played knew we went through Kevin, and they couldn't stop it," said Mike Cawoo, the Catamounts' assistant athletic director.

Said Terrence Woodyard, Martin's best friend and a senior on the current team: "We all agreed we had to get the ball in Kevin's hands. You get the ball in his hands, you get a bucket. Nobody had to be convinced."

The convincing came later, from the first day Martin joined the Kings and the rookie jumped on the purple-and-white roller coaster. Martin began his love affair with Sacramento fans during the preseason, when he started in six of eight games and the question of what to call him arose. "K-Mart," as he had been known, is the nickname of Denver Nuggets star Kenyon Martin, so Kevin Martin's new tag of "Special K" surfaced, as did a Web site in his honor.

Once the regular season began, Martin's minutes dwindled to minuscule levels for nearly two months until a season-ending wrist injury to Bobby Jackson reopened the door. And Martin has welcomed the opportunity, embracing his role as a jolt of energy and scoring ability off the bench.

Kings coach Rick Adelman said he is pleased with Martin but looking for even more.

"The only problem Kevin has is a tendency to float and not be aggressive in what he needs to do," Adelman said. "We knew we had a guy who is very alive, very athletic, but he just needs to learn how to play hard all the time."

Away from Arco Arena, sans the white jersey and flashing bulbs, Martin doesn't have a shortage of playing time. He plays video games on his PlayStation 2 and sleeps until long after sunrise - just as he did in college, when he swears that's how he grew three more inches. Sometimes, Martin will brave the adoring crowds of Kings fans at Arden Fair mall, joining teammates Maurice Evans and Erik Daniels on a shopping excursion.

Martin's addictions are harmless, mainly card games and cell phones. And while he can't wait to visit the Palms Casino in Las Vegas with the Maloof brothers during the offseason, a partying playboy he isn't, going to bars and clubs only occasionally.

At least one of Martin's three cell phones is always in hand, a telling sign that Cell Phones Anonymous might be calling next. But Martin rarely answers his phone, preferring to text message his way through the day as he dares all distractions. He plays a prank on his cousin at Western Carolina while weaving through traffic, sending an anonymous message intended to spook him: "I've seen you around campus with my girl, and I'm going to find you."

"He's just like any other rookie: young, having fun and living out his dreams right now," said Daniels, a fellow rookie. "We watch a lot of TV, listen to music, go out a little bit, just try to find our way around Sacramento."

Right now, however, Martin - who spent the morning and night shooting on his own at the Kings' practice facility - is looking to challenge his visitor on a cyber court. [/font]
 
continuation..

Inside his modest apartment, where the only wall decorations are a 60-inch flat-screen television and a leftover Christmas tree, Martin and 24-year-old Willie Freeman face off for a game of NBA Live 2005.

It's the Kings vs. the Memphis Grizzlies, and Martin has put himself in Sacramento's starting lineup because, well, Doug Christie was traded and Cuttino Mobley isn't on the team yet.

"Don't let that Arco crowd get to you," Martin warns Freeman. "That's what they do."

Martin - who has done a wardrobe change into a white-and-blue Air Jordan getup - finishes with a game-high 18 points, but former King Jason Williams hits a game-winning three-pointer for Memphis. It's no small victory for Freeman, who only wishes he could play himself in a video game.

The 6-6 Chris Webber lookalike, as Martin describes Freeman, spent last year playing basketball in Argentina, learning loneliness as even Martin hasn't. Freeman says it was akin to being in jail, because being outgoing doesn't help when you don't speak the language and you're half a world away from family.

To a lesser extent, Martin knows the feeling. He has been homesick in brief moments in Sacramento, a city he had never seen before he was drafted 26th overall. In fact, Martin had never been to California, coming no closer than Las Vegas.

This past Christmas with loved ones was better than his Thanksgiving alone. Martin's father, a landscaper also named Kevin, and his cousin, Brody, came to visit during the holidays. Martin's 20-year-old brother, Jonathan, also has been out once, taking time away from his Navy schooling in Florida. Jonathan flew out, leaving behind the 2002 Nissan Sentra that belonged to Martin before he upgraded to the Cadillac.

"I haven't been really homesick, not like when I went off to college and I was driving seven hours home every weekend," said Martin, who wears a dog-tag style necklace with Jonathan's name and picture on it. "Right now, I'm fine."

But perspective is just one couch away in Freeman, who will join a team in Mexico in February and hopes to earn between $5,000 and $6,000 per month. That's approximately eight percent of Martin's salary.

"What he's doing is motivation for me," Freeman says.

With money, as Martin knew coming in, comes fame. And being one of the Kings, as Sacramentans know, brings a feverish kind of fame.

As lunchtime nears, Martin vetoes the idea of eating in Old Sacramento, the city's tourist epicenter, for a trip to Roseville's Macaroni Grill, then acts surprised when he's recognized by Kings fans.

"See, even 25 miles away it happens," he says while making a brief stop at a cell-phone store in Roseville.

On the topic of celebrity, Martin seems torn about his newfound notoriety, as if he's enjoying the experience but only able to handle it in small doses. Throughout this day, he manages to avoid an overdose.

Before Martin finalizes the purchase of a $449 super phone that has the Internet, a video camera and mini-keyboard all in one, the cell-phone store manager approaches Martin with an outstretched hand.

"Hi Kevin, I'm the manager, and I just wanted to shake your hand," he says in a nervous tone.

While Martin eats his lasagna and sips a Coke at lunch, several young early drinkers at the bar are clearly excited by their star sighting despite their attempts to stay subtle. Martin was tight-lipped about his love life but said he has had his share of attention from women since he became a King, too, but mostly the younger ones "because I look like I'm 15 or 16."

In the late afternoon, the only woman in "Ace of Fades," an Oak Park barbershop, is sitting on the couch. She can't wait to tell her 14-year-old son how she hung out with a King today, and she'd like Martin to know general manager Geoff Petrie should add Denver's Carmelo Anthony to their team. Sitting in the chair, Martin is having his mini curls cleaned up, texting on his phone while Freeman plays dominoes with a barber on break at a small table by the wall.

For Martin, the mood is welcoming without being overwhelming, something straight out of the movie "Barbershop." And you can't beat the late-afternoon TV programming.

A replay of the Kings' victory over the Portland Trail Blazers the previous night is on, bringing cheers from the crowd of four with every Martin highlight. An ESPN replay of last year's NFL draft follows, and Martin watches closely during the show's emotional peak. South Carolina defensive back Dunta Robinson starts to cry as he's picked 10th overall by the Houston Texans - a moment to which only Martin can truly relate.

"Those are tears of green, right there," Martin says before reflecting on his own draft day.

"There ain't no other feeling like that," he says. "I was eating dinner on a Tampa (Fla.) beach when I found out. My agent called me, and I just said, 'Quit lyin', quit lyin'.' I was ready to go jump into that ocean."

Martin wound up jumping into something bigger, a life in the fast lane on what he hopes is a long road. "A lot of people have high expectations for me, including myself," Martin says. "I want to be one of the best two-guards in the world."
 
ProudGrannie--could you please tell Kevin to wear his seatbelt? we don't want to lose our Special K.

Nice to see they got his nickname in the article.
Thanks. LMM for posting it.
 
Prophetess said:
ProudGrannie--could you please tell Kevin to wear his seatbelt? we don't want to lose our Special K.

Nice to see they got his nickname in the article.
Thanks. LMM for posting it.

Exactly. I hope that was an exaggeration to prove the writer's point. We don't want another Bobby Hurley. The rest of the article was good though.
 
LMM said:
With money, as Martin knew coming in, comes fame. And being one of the Kings, as Sacramentans know, brings a feverish kind of fame.

As lunchtime nears, Martin vetoes the idea of eating in Old Sacramento, the city's tourist epicenter, for a trip to Roseville's Macaroni Grill, then acts surprised when he's recognized by Kings fans.

"See, even 25 miles away it happens," he says while making a brief stop at a cell-phone store in Roseville.

On the topic of celebrity, Martin seems torn about his newfound notoriety, as if he's enjoying the experience but only able to handle it in small doses. Throughout this day, he manages to avoid an overdose.

Before Martin finalizes the purchase of a $449 super phone that has the Internet, a video camera and mini-keyboard all in one, the cell-phone store manager approaches Martin with an outstretched hand.

"Hi Kevin, I'm the manager, and I just wanted to shake your hand," he says in a nervous tone.

While Martin eats his lasagna and sips a Coke at lunch, several young early drinkers at the bar are clearly excited by their star sighting despite their attempts to stay subtle. Martin was tight-lipped about his love life but said he has had his share of attention from women since he became a King, too, but mostly the younger ones "because I look like I'm 15 or 16."

I saw him at a downtown restaurant I believe about a week or so ago. I don't know if he was there the whole time and I just didn't notice him or he was there and then left shortly there after. No one seemed to bother him. Like I said I didn't even know he was there until I happened to look over to the direction he was sitting.
 
KMart.gif

Go kevin martin!
 
Sac, that is a cool video!!!

I had to make myself stop watching it to post.

You know, KG called to tell me about the article and mentioned the seatbelt charge. I hope the writer was just blowing the article up b/c I have never been in a car with him when he wasn't. It's automatic! but, the speed thing...it's a family trait! A curse you might say. We all drive that way, but noone knows who we are or more importantly has the description of our cars. Only thing missing is the plate # so here it is.... [now really, did you think..naw!] And, just for the record, he is always told by many, to SLOW DOWN. Guess he isn't listening.

Here's one who hopes that for as much as he has already done/will do,,, he never loses himself. "Special K' is a very fitting nickname for him in a lot of ways. I have 13 wonderful!! grandchildren. He just happens to be the oldest.
 
I mentioned that because it worried me;) I have a lead foot myself, but he really needs to wear that seat belt! I even got an e-mail from someone asking me to pass that info on to you;)
Personally, I thought Amick could have done a much better job on the article, it didn't seem to really capture Kevin as I might have hoped. You get a much better 'feel' of who he is just from the letter he sent in to the ZVille paper, although I did enjoy reading it. I just hoped for a bit more depth.
 
I read the article and, while I'm very glad to see Kevin get some of the attention he deserves (and thought the Special K reference was nice), I didn't really feel like Amick captured the spirit and joy of life that I feel is Kevin. The seat-belt thing jumped out at me, too.

But it's a start...and I, for one, am keeping a copy of this article for the future.

:D
 
Thanks for posting the article, LMM! Good read. I like reading features like these.

And yeah, like all of you, I do hope the seatbelt bit was just an unnecessary exaggeration... Go Special K!

sactownsfinest, cool video!
 
Be sure to click the sacbee link to see the photo gallery that accompanied the article. :)

Nice article and I'm sure there will be better in the future.

Like everyone else, the seatbelt thing jumped out at me as well as the Bobby Hurley fear. It's not always your OWN driving you have to worry about!

Congrats to the family!

P.S. One of the photos is of Kevin driving and um well...he sure doesn't look like he's wearing his seatbelt! Go get him, Grannie! :D
 
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kingskings! said:
Be sure to click the sacbee link to see the photo gallery that accompanied the article. :)

Thanks for the heads-up. I hadn't even noticed that. There are some cute pictures there.
 
Great article! Nice pics!

The other dayI saw on the News, they asked Cuttino where he's been hanging out at...he said at Arden Fair Mall and Cheesecake Factory! :D
 
Well guys, mom and I talked about the seatbelt thing today. We think that he may have been excited with Amick in the car and just forgot. However, we have all been calling him and considering no one in the family has been successful in reaching him [voicemail intervention] ...I think he's getting the message. Know what I mean??? That kind of thing may be on the top of the list with a lot of players, but that's not Kev's style. I can only imagine how nervous he was. Glad Willie was there to help him go through it. Thanks Willie and good luck with your career!!! This is one great guy!
 
Next time you speak with Kevin, tell him we just want to make sure he's around for us for a long time!!!

And tell him to really watch out for the California Highway Patrol and other law enforcement. Now that the thing about the seat belt has been in the paper, they'll be watching. More than a few Kings (*Jason Williams and Chris Webber*) have had run-ins with the law because of lead foot tendencies.
 
VF21 said:
Next time you speak with Kevin, tell him we just want to make sure he's around for us for a long time!!!

And tell him to really watch out for the California Highway Patrol and other law enforcement. Now that the thing about the seat belt has been in the paper, they'll be watching. More than a few Kings (*Jason Williams and Chris Webber*) have had run-ins with the law because of lead foot tendencies.

If he gets a ticket from my dad, I'll tell him to waive it off on one condition, next time he sees Tony Massenburg, he has to dunk on him. :p But by all means..please tell him to wear a belt.

So many people from our school died because they were ejected from the car. :(
 
I have a few sac bee articles on my wall, and this is now officially taped on ;) kevin martin is so cool, he freakin had 5 pts in 1 minute... I wish i was that good
 
The Freak said:
If he gets a ticket from my dad, I'll tell him to waive it off on one condition, next time he sees Tony Massenburg, he has to dunk on him. :p

If I get a ticket from your Dad, can I get it waived off with a secret Kingsfans.com callsign? ;)
 
Proud Grannie said:
Glad Willie was there to help him go through it. Thanks Willie and good luck with your career!!! This is one great guy!


Meet suave Willie :D

p-WillieFreemanMug.jpg



and Willie in action!

80un8ucw.jpg


Good luck to both Willie and Kevin in their chosen careers!
 
Seatbelt passage was fine to me. Tells you that the guy feels indestructible.
 
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Really? First off, what does driving without a seatbelt reveal about your character? That your wild, reckless? My boyfriend drives without his seat belt ALL the time. He is one of the most careful, meticulous, orderly people I know otherwise. That's just a crock. Compare that article with the one Joe Davidson wrote about Mo today. Davidson's was insightful and gave you a peek into the REAL life of Maurice Evans. reading it, you felt you knew a little bit more about Mo. Amick's was more of 'what I did on my summer vacation' article. A lot about what happened, with very little depth. I've met Kevin several times, talked at length with his family. I got very little feel of that Kevin in Amick's article.
 
Kingsgurl, if your boyfriend drives without a seatbelt, he ain't being that careful.
 
I agree with Kingsgurl. Amick's piece wasn't anywhere near as refreshing to read as Davidson's IMHO.
 
Some people just feel like seatbelts are a prenuptial agreement between you and the automobile; they give you just enough sense of security to induce a crash. :eek:
 
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