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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/11186419p-12102415c.html
With Webber, Peja at home, Kings jolted
By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PDT Saturday, October 23, 2004
SALT LAKE CITY - Coach Rick Adelman is trying to prepare for the worst: that neither starting shooting guard Doug Christie nor backup center Greg Ostertag will be ready when the Kings open the regular season in Dallas on Nov. 2.
Before an announced crowd of 18,523 Friday night, an assortment of free agents and rookies showed the good and the bad during a 101-88 exhibition loss to the Utah Jazz at the Delta Center.
The Kings (1-4), who host New Orleans tonight after losing their second straight road game, left starting All-Star forwards Chris Webber and Peja Stojakovic in Sacramento.
Adelman started David Bluthenthal at Stojakovic's small-forward spot and second-year forward Darius Songaila at Webber's power-forward position. Brad Miller was at center, with Mike Bibby and Bobby Jackson at the guards.
Leaving Stojakovic and Webber at home created playing opportunities for free-agent forwards Erik Daniels, Matt Barnes and Bluthenthal and viewing opportunities for Adelman, his assistant coaches and the basketball operations staff.
Because the competition included forwards Matt Harpring, Andrei Kirilenko and newcomer Carlos Boozer, the Kings' brass had ample opportunities to judge the reserves against quality opposition.
Besides, Utah was coming off a 108-67 loss Wednesday night at Phoenix, so the Jazz figured to be motivated.
"I needed to play those young guys," Adelman said. "I plan on playing Peja and Webb quite a bit (tonight), 30 to 35 minutes. I think Brad and Mike played 30 minutes (Friday night), and I'll try to get them the same amount of minutes (tonight). There's no other way to do it."
Friday night, Adelman showed no reluctance to put his young guys on Front Street.
Then again, he said he had few options. He began the second quarter with no returning veterans on the court, and the fourth with only Songaila in the mix.
That strategy worked in the former situation and not in the latter.
"It's a Catch-22 because we don't have a lot of our main guys," Adelman said. "We only had four of them. So you want those guys to play together, so they get into some type of rhythm and feel. If you play them together, you've got no other choice but to play the other guys together.
"Other than the five guys I started, everybody else was a free agent or a rookie. You put them out there and see how they react. I tried to play Kevin (Martin) with the main guys, and I've tried to play Maurice (Evans) with them, too. I wanted Bobby to play with the main guys, and I'll probably do it (tonight), too."
Sacramento hung tough with the new version of the Jazz, which is young and talented, for the first three quarters. Then the bottom dropped out like a boulder into a canyon.
Miller's lay-in at the buzzer gave the Kings a 75-73 lead entering the fourth. But Songaila fouled out of a foul-plagued game just 1:10 into the final period. And Sacramento opened the quarter by committing five early turnovers and missing nine straight shots before Martin took a pass from Barnes and dunked on Mehmet Okur with two hands at the 4:36 mark.
"I have no idea when we're going to get Doug or Greg," Adelman said, referring to Christie's foot injury and Ostertag's broken hand. "I don't think we're going to have Greg (for the season opener). And even if Doug is going to play, how much will he really be able to play? So there is some concern because we are really disjointed, as you saw in the fourth quarter. I didn't know if we were going to score." The Kings were 3 of 17 in the fourth, when they were outscored 28-13.
With Webber, Peja at home, Kings jolted
By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PDT Saturday, October 23, 2004
SALT LAKE CITY - Coach Rick Adelman is trying to prepare for the worst: that neither starting shooting guard Doug Christie nor backup center Greg Ostertag will be ready when the Kings open the regular season in Dallas on Nov. 2.
Before an announced crowd of 18,523 Friday night, an assortment of free agents and rookies showed the good and the bad during a 101-88 exhibition loss to the Utah Jazz at the Delta Center.
The Kings (1-4), who host New Orleans tonight after losing their second straight road game, left starting All-Star forwards Chris Webber and Peja Stojakovic in Sacramento.
Adelman started David Bluthenthal at Stojakovic's small-forward spot and second-year forward Darius Songaila at Webber's power-forward position. Brad Miller was at center, with Mike Bibby and Bobby Jackson at the guards.
Leaving Stojakovic and Webber at home created playing opportunities for free-agent forwards Erik Daniels, Matt Barnes and Bluthenthal and viewing opportunities for Adelman, his assistant coaches and the basketball operations staff.
Because the competition included forwards Matt Harpring, Andrei Kirilenko and newcomer Carlos Boozer, the Kings' brass had ample opportunities to judge the reserves against quality opposition.
Besides, Utah was coming off a 108-67 loss Wednesday night at Phoenix, so the Jazz figured to be motivated.
"I needed to play those young guys," Adelman said. "I plan on playing Peja and Webb quite a bit (tonight), 30 to 35 minutes. I think Brad and Mike played 30 minutes (Friday night), and I'll try to get them the same amount of minutes (tonight). There's no other way to do it."
Friday night, Adelman showed no reluctance to put his young guys on Front Street.
Then again, he said he had few options. He began the second quarter with no returning veterans on the court, and the fourth with only Songaila in the mix.
That strategy worked in the former situation and not in the latter.
"It's a Catch-22 because we don't have a lot of our main guys," Adelman said. "We only had four of them. So you want those guys to play together, so they get into some type of rhythm and feel. If you play them together, you've got no other choice but to play the other guys together.
"Other than the five guys I started, everybody else was a free agent or a rookie. You put them out there and see how they react. I tried to play Kevin (Martin) with the main guys, and I've tried to play Maurice (Evans) with them, too. I wanted Bobby to play with the main guys, and I'll probably do it (tonight), too."
Sacramento hung tough with the new version of the Jazz, which is young and talented, for the first three quarters. Then the bottom dropped out like a boulder into a canyon.
Miller's lay-in at the buzzer gave the Kings a 75-73 lead entering the fourth. But Songaila fouled out of a foul-plagued game just 1:10 into the final period. And Sacramento opened the quarter by committing five early turnovers and missing nine straight shots before Martin took a pass from Barnes and dunked on Mehmet Okur with two hands at the 4:36 mark.
"I have no idea when we're going to get Doug or Greg," Adelman said, referring to Christie's foot injury and Ostertag's broken hand. "I don't think we're going to have Greg (for the season opener). And even if Doug is going to play, how much will he really be able to play? So there is some concern because we are really disjointed, as you saw in the fourth quarter. I didn't know if we were going to score." The Kings were 3 of 17 in the fourth, when they were outscored 28-13.