http://www.sacbee.com/kings/story/457845.html
Ailene Voisin: Time to lay down this hand
By Ailene Voisin - avoisin@sacbee.com
Published 12:00 am PDT Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Story appeared in PROJECTS section, Page KINGS TIPOFF3
These Kings were never going to win the 2007-08 NBA championship anyway. They were a stretch even to sniff the postseason. And with Mike Bibby expected to miss two months following thumb surgery, joining Ron Artest and Spencer Hawes on the sidelines for Wednesday's regular-season tipoff, this sure looks like a good time to punt, to officially kick off a new campaign.
The dreaded "R" word – for rebuilding – swirls around the palate more smoothly these days, like one of those Amador County zinfandels. Or perhaps the more prudent approach is to let the Kings breathe on their own for a while.
For about a month.
Maybe Artest will re-emerge as the league's premier defender, Hawes will enjoy an auspicious debut, Kevin Martin will continue expanding his game, Brad Miller will remain lean and mean, and Francisco García and Quincy Douby will develop into consistent contributors. Maybe someone on the roster will imitate a starting power forward. Maybe Geoff Petrie will obtain a quality point guard to provide perimeter shooting – easily Bibby's greatest asset – and of equal importance, to handle the ball and initiate the offense. Maybe Reggie Theus will avoid the usual assortment of rookie coaching blunders.
But probably not. The first month more realistically will ensure that subsequent months are dominated by the salary cap clearing measures that allow for a long-anticipated roster overhaul. No one would quibble, say, with a 2007-08 Kings game plan that preceded another spectacular 1998 offseason.
The celebrity life span is agonizingly brief, and everyone eventually pays dues. The Kings are no more immune to the cycle of sports – successful seasons followed by slumps – than any other franchise.
"At some point, you start to re-evaluate the situation," a subdued Petrie said Saturday. "We were moving into that (rebuilding) mode anyway. But you go into the season with an open mind."
After these last 72 hours? After Bibby's surgery? It's open season on the Kings.
Give them a month and then get on with the auditions and positioning for a future free-agent haul. Ice packs and aspirin will ease the pain. Though neither Petrie nor any of the other Kings officials would admit it publicly, if the season progresses as expected – and most preseason projections penciled the Kings into the lottery before Bibby's injury – the next key date will be the February trade deadline. Current Kings with bloated salaries (Bibby and Miller) could find themselves swapped for draft picks. Artest, who can opt out of his contract in the offseason, could be gone as well, exchanged for a younger, less troubled player, and preferably with Kenny Thomas or Shareef Abdur-Rahim along for the trip.
With the pretense of making the playoffs no longer an issue, maneuvers would be pursued for the obvious reason: to significantly improve the talent level while responsibly managing the team cap situation. No more adding overpaid role players to a hopelessly flawed roster for the sole purpose of evading the lottery. The organization's attempt to remain competitive while moving beyond the Chris Webber era led to an unwieldy cap situation, ill-advised veteran free-agent signings, and the assembling of non-complementary players and personalities.
The time is near to have some fun. Keep the curfew, but let the youngsters get out and run. The Kings and their fans can grow together, maybe even grow to like each other again.
"When people come up to me and Gavin, the first thing they want to know is, 'Are we getting a (new) arena?' " Kings co-owner Joe Maloof said. "They used to ask us about the team. The (arena) uncertainty really bothers people. But it's like people are finally starting to believe that we're not going anywhere. You can feel the change. These last two weeks, we've gotten a little bit of a run on season-ticket sales. This Bibby injury is a setback, but (laugh) Geoff will figure something out."
No, this season was always going to be about the Kings' ability to distance themselves from every painful development since Webber's fateful tumble in Dallas in 2003. Nothing is guaranteed. Not health, not championships, and these days in Arco Arena, not even sellouts.
"Regardless of whether we make the playoffs," added Theus, "the guys want a chance to regain some credibility with the fans. They'll give effort and play with energy. They want to (win) the crowd back. I don't think there is anything wrong with that."
That would be a start.
About the writer: Call The Bee's Ailene Voisin, (916) 321-1208.
Ailene Voisin: Time to lay down this hand
By Ailene Voisin - avoisin@sacbee.com
Published 12:00 am PDT Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Story appeared in PROJECTS section, Page KINGS TIPOFF3
These Kings were never going to win the 2007-08 NBA championship anyway. They were a stretch even to sniff the postseason. And with Mike Bibby expected to miss two months following thumb surgery, joining Ron Artest and Spencer Hawes on the sidelines for Wednesday's regular-season tipoff, this sure looks like a good time to punt, to officially kick off a new campaign.
The dreaded "R" word – for rebuilding – swirls around the palate more smoothly these days, like one of those Amador County zinfandels. Or perhaps the more prudent approach is to let the Kings breathe on their own for a while.
For about a month.
Maybe Artest will re-emerge as the league's premier defender, Hawes will enjoy an auspicious debut, Kevin Martin will continue expanding his game, Brad Miller will remain lean and mean, and Francisco García and Quincy Douby will develop into consistent contributors. Maybe someone on the roster will imitate a starting power forward. Maybe Geoff Petrie will obtain a quality point guard to provide perimeter shooting – easily Bibby's greatest asset – and of equal importance, to handle the ball and initiate the offense. Maybe Reggie Theus will avoid the usual assortment of rookie coaching blunders.
But probably not. The first month more realistically will ensure that subsequent months are dominated by the salary cap clearing measures that allow for a long-anticipated roster overhaul. No one would quibble, say, with a 2007-08 Kings game plan that preceded another spectacular 1998 offseason.
The celebrity life span is agonizingly brief, and everyone eventually pays dues. The Kings are no more immune to the cycle of sports – successful seasons followed by slumps – than any other franchise.
"At some point, you start to re-evaluate the situation," a subdued Petrie said Saturday. "We were moving into that (rebuilding) mode anyway. But you go into the season with an open mind."
After these last 72 hours? After Bibby's surgery? It's open season on the Kings.
Give them a month and then get on with the auditions and positioning for a future free-agent haul. Ice packs and aspirin will ease the pain. Though neither Petrie nor any of the other Kings officials would admit it publicly, if the season progresses as expected – and most preseason projections penciled the Kings into the lottery before Bibby's injury – the next key date will be the February trade deadline. Current Kings with bloated salaries (Bibby and Miller) could find themselves swapped for draft picks. Artest, who can opt out of his contract in the offseason, could be gone as well, exchanged for a younger, less troubled player, and preferably with Kenny Thomas or Shareef Abdur-Rahim along for the trip.
With the pretense of making the playoffs no longer an issue, maneuvers would be pursued for the obvious reason: to significantly improve the talent level while responsibly managing the team cap situation. No more adding overpaid role players to a hopelessly flawed roster for the sole purpose of evading the lottery. The organization's attempt to remain competitive while moving beyond the Chris Webber era led to an unwieldy cap situation, ill-advised veteran free-agent signings, and the assembling of non-complementary players and personalities.
The time is near to have some fun. Keep the curfew, but let the youngsters get out and run. The Kings and their fans can grow together, maybe even grow to like each other again.
"When people come up to me and Gavin, the first thing they want to know is, 'Are we getting a (new) arena?' " Kings co-owner Joe Maloof said. "They used to ask us about the team. The (arena) uncertainty really bothers people. But it's like people are finally starting to believe that we're not going anywhere. You can feel the change. These last two weeks, we've gotten a little bit of a run on season-ticket sales. This Bibby injury is a setback, but (laugh) Geoff will figure something out."
No, this season was always going to be about the Kings' ability to distance themselves from every painful development since Webber's fateful tumble in Dallas in 2003. Nothing is guaranteed. Not health, not championships, and these days in Arco Arena, not even sellouts.
"Regardless of whether we make the playoffs," added Theus, "the guys want a chance to regain some credibility with the fans. They'll give effort and play with energy. They want to (win) the crowd back. I don't think there is anything wrong with that."
That would be a start.
About the writer: Call The Bee's Ailene Voisin, (916) 321-1208.