http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/story/12162638p-13032750c.html
Ailene Voisin: Seat belt-free Kings rookie learns a lesson
By Ailene Voisin -- Bee Sports Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Friday, January 28, 2005
Kevin Martin is learning quickly, and along the way, he probably will learn to buckle up and slow down a little bit. We can only hope, but we will surely watch.
Life in a small market is an exercise under a microscope.
In a city where the Kings command both the community's affection and its attention, the lens misses little in its evolving portrayal of the players, of their passions, their pleasures. The houses they buy. The restaurants they frequent. The films they favor. The clubs they visit. The cars they drive. The way they drive.
Though only a few months on the job, the young rookie was rudely apprised of this after he drove around with two Bee staffers who were preparing a lengthy profile that was splashed across last Sunday's sports pages, and apparently, forgot where he was. In the NBA. In a city that never sleeps when it comes to its Kings. And in a very, very dangerous situation.
At various times in the course of an afternoon, Martin reportedly zipped along at 85 mph in his black Cadillac CTS, occasionally text-messaging his buddies, and doing all of this while failing to wear a seat belt.
Not surprisingly, the reaction to the photo and the story was swift and decisive, with contrasting perspectives dominating the calls and e-mail messages that have inundated The Bee: (1) author Sam Amick glorified the rookie's behavior by mentioning the details, or (2) Martin deserved to be gently spanked - very gently spanked - for engaging in the sort of reckless behavior that triggered painful memories of Bobby Hurley, the former Kings guard who almost died in an auto accident near Arco Arena a decade ago, as well as those of Drazen Petrovic (1993), Malik Sealy (2000) and Bobby Phills (2000), three NBA players who in fact perished in car wrecks.
Of the four athletes, only Phills was speeding and at fault. The former Charlotte Hornets guard was said to be racing teammate David Wesley and traveling at approximately 107 mph when he lost control of his Porsche and slammed into oncoming traffic mere blocks from the Charlotte Coliseum. He died instantly. Wesley died emotionally.
So consider this a cautionary tale, with recent statistics intensifying the concern. According to data provided by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, for instance, motor vehicle collisions are the leading cause of death for drivers between the ages of 15-20. Additionally, 42 percent of those killed in 2003 were of the same age group, with California trailing only Texas in fatality rate involving teens.
"Kids think they're immortal," said Tom Marshall, spokesman for the California Highway Patrol, "and while not wearing a seat belt does not cause a collision, it could be a reason you die. Driving a car is not the time to be speeding or multi-tasking, either. Hopefully he (Martin) learns from this. Kids look up to him. They see him not wearing a belt ... but he seems like such a nice kid."
He is a nice kid, a terrific kid, by all accounts. Since being drafted last summer by the Kings, The Bee has received numerous unsolicited notes from friends and relatives in his native Zanesville, Ohio, extolling the rookie's generous, humble nature. First impressions have been overwhelmingly favorable.
People look at the boyish rookie with the 6-foot-7 stick-figure frame, and they see their son, their sibling, their nephew. Fans are drawn to him in an almost intuitive, protective sense. He always looks like he could use a big hug, or a big meal; carbs and calories get a taste of his 185-pound physique and can't seem to get away fast enough.
Yet though an adult at 21, Martin remains on the cusp of the danger crowd, that 15-20 age bracket that causes insurance companies to pause, bosses to fret, and those who have been personally affected by traffic deaths to shudder. (Among others within the Kings' organization, Rick Adelman lost a sister-in-law to an auto accident, and only last week, a media relations intern lost his 19-year-old brother in a wreck.)
"When I read that (article), I pulled Kevin aside the next day and said, 'Wear your seat belt,' " offered Kings president Geoff Petrie, punctuating his comments with an audible sigh. "That's one thing you can't claim ignorance on. Maybe there is some youthful exuberance going on there. I wouldn't think it's fair to say that he's irresponsible. I haven't seen that. But he has to be more careful."
Asked about the matter the other day, Martin was mortified. "I am a responsible person, I really am," he insisted nervously, his voice trailing off.
Asked if he understood why his new community is so sensitive to a scenario involving one of the Kings in a precarious, potentially perilous position, he nodded.
"Yeah, I do."
Offered Marshall of the CHP, "He got busted. Hopefully he's seen the light. We're just trying to save lives here."
Reach Ailene Voisin at (916) 321-1208 or avoisin@sacbee.com.
Ailene Voisin: Seat belt-free Kings rookie learns a lesson
By Ailene Voisin -- Bee Sports Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Friday, January 28, 2005
Kevin Martin is learning quickly, and along the way, he probably will learn to buckle up and slow down a little bit. We can only hope, but we will surely watch.
Life in a small market is an exercise under a microscope.
In a city where the Kings command both the community's affection and its attention, the lens misses little in its evolving portrayal of the players, of their passions, their pleasures. The houses they buy. The restaurants they frequent. The films they favor. The clubs they visit. The cars they drive. The way they drive.
Though only a few months on the job, the young rookie was rudely apprised of this after he drove around with two Bee staffers who were preparing a lengthy profile that was splashed across last Sunday's sports pages, and apparently, forgot where he was. In the NBA. In a city that never sleeps when it comes to its Kings. And in a very, very dangerous situation.
At various times in the course of an afternoon, Martin reportedly zipped along at 85 mph in his black Cadillac CTS, occasionally text-messaging his buddies, and doing all of this while failing to wear a seat belt.
Not surprisingly, the reaction to the photo and the story was swift and decisive, with contrasting perspectives dominating the calls and e-mail messages that have inundated The Bee: (1) author Sam Amick glorified the rookie's behavior by mentioning the details, or (2) Martin deserved to be gently spanked - very gently spanked - for engaging in the sort of reckless behavior that triggered painful memories of Bobby Hurley, the former Kings guard who almost died in an auto accident near Arco Arena a decade ago, as well as those of Drazen Petrovic (1993), Malik Sealy (2000) and Bobby Phills (2000), three NBA players who in fact perished in car wrecks.
Of the four athletes, only Phills was speeding and at fault. The former Charlotte Hornets guard was said to be racing teammate David Wesley and traveling at approximately 107 mph when he lost control of his Porsche and slammed into oncoming traffic mere blocks from the Charlotte Coliseum. He died instantly. Wesley died emotionally.
So consider this a cautionary tale, with recent statistics intensifying the concern. According to data provided by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, for instance, motor vehicle collisions are the leading cause of death for drivers between the ages of 15-20. Additionally, 42 percent of those killed in 2003 were of the same age group, with California trailing only Texas in fatality rate involving teens.
"Kids think they're immortal," said Tom Marshall, spokesman for the California Highway Patrol, "and while not wearing a seat belt does not cause a collision, it could be a reason you die. Driving a car is not the time to be speeding or multi-tasking, either. Hopefully he (Martin) learns from this. Kids look up to him. They see him not wearing a belt ... but he seems like such a nice kid."
He is a nice kid, a terrific kid, by all accounts. Since being drafted last summer by the Kings, The Bee has received numerous unsolicited notes from friends and relatives in his native Zanesville, Ohio, extolling the rookie's generous, humble nature. First impressions have been overwhelmingly favorable.
People look at the boyish rookie with the 6-foot-7 stick-figure frame, and they see their son, their sibling, their nephew. Fans are drawn to him in an almost intuitive, protective sense. He always looks like he could use a big hug, or a big meal; carbs and calories get a taste of his 185-pound physique and can't seem to get away fast enough.
Yet though an adult at 21, Martin remains on the cusp of the danger crowd, that 15-20 age bracket that causes insurance companies to pause, bosses to fret, and those who have been personally affected by traffic deaths to shudder. (Among others within the Kings' organization, Rick Adelman lost a sister-in-law to an auto accident, and only last week, a media relations intern lost his 19-year-old brother in a wreck.)
"When I read that (article), I pulled Kevin aside the next day and said, 'Wear your seat belt,' " offered Kings president Geoff Petrie, punctuating his comments with an audible sigh. "That's one thing you can't claim ignorance on. Maybe there is some youthful exuberance going on there. I wouldn't think it's fair to say that he's irresponsible. I haven't seen that. But he has to be more careful."
Asked about the matter the other day, Martin was mortified. "I am a responsible person, I really am," he insisted nervously, his voice trailing off.
Asked if he understood why his new community is so sensitive to a scenario involving one of the Kings in a precarious, potentially perilous position, he nodded.
"Yeah, I do."
Offered Marshall of the CHP, "He got busted. Hopefully he's seen the light. We're just trying to save lives here."
Reach Ailene Voisin at (916) 321-1208 or avoisin@sacbee.com.