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Posts Tagged ‘Omri Casspi’

Kings’ final play against the Mavericks was not a bad play

December 6th, 2010 7 comments

Immediately after the Kings’ final possession against the Dallas Mavericks failed, Paul Westphal was under scrutiny from those who watched the Kings lose at home in probably their best game of the young season.

But after watching it a couple of times, I have to say there was nothing wrong with the play call. It was actually a very good play with tons of options to score. The ball was put in the hands of DeMarcus Cousins and he ended up failing. It wasn’t Westphal’s fault. Cousins just made a mistake.

Let’s break this down Sebastian Pruiti style and pretend we’re NBA Playbook for a day.

Play starts with a clutter of Kings between the elbow and the 3-point line with Francisco Garcia down by the baseline. Omri jets to the near corner, Landry flashes to the far corner and Garcia moves to the far sideline above the 3-point line. Cousins flashes towards Tyreke to receive the pass.

As soon as Tyreke inbounds the ball, he cuts through the lane behind Jason Kidd after he fakes towards Cousins for the hand-off. At this point, Cousins should have hit Reke with a good pass over the top. This is where the play begins to fall apart.

Once Cousins misses the opportunity, Chandler’s wingspan takes away the passing lane and closes off that option for DeMarcus. This gives Cousins the lane to drive, which he does.

Cousins has one more chance to pass to Reke once Chandler has to cut off the drive, but Kidd drops down. As DMC gets into the lane, Dirk helps off of Carl Landry. This is another misses scoring opportunity because Cousins did have a slight window to drop the pass down to Reke. He also could have just tried to score the ball himself.

Cousins opts to kick out to Landry at the 3-point line, probably out of nervousness. Dirk tips the pass and it gets Landry farther away from the basket but actually gives Carl a better driving lane on the baseline.

Landry drives the baseline but instead of just going into Chandler and trying to score over him or draw the contact, he goes deeper towards the baseline and gets caught behind the backboard.

Landry really has nowhere to go with the ball or the pass at this point. He forces one out to Garcia about 35 feet from the basket. Jason Terry cuts over to intercept the pass and seal the win for the Mavericks.

Sad Panda. Terry steals the ball and the Kings lose the game.

Here is the play in real time.

Overall, I think Westphal is unfairly taking heat for this final play. The play in theory was brilliant. It gave the Kings multiple opportunities to score and tie the game. Maybe you can rip him for putting the ball in the hands of a rookie, but that happened a few times last season and worked out fine.

Good play but poor execution.

Bulls 96, Kings 85: Kings were so good until they weren’t anymore

November 28th, 2010 No comments

How We Feeling?
Totally awesome and then SOOOO the total opposite of awesome.

The Kings came out with energy. Evans came out destroying the Bulls and their staunch defensive efforts after he frustratingly missed his first two layups of the game. Samuel Dalembert and Jason Thompson controlled the paint. Donté Greene was the right kind of aggressive on offense. Omri Casspi was the right kind of shooter to swing the ball to. The Kings were taking care of the ball with their only two first half turnovers coming on offensive fouls.

Then the second half happened.

While the third quarter wasn’t killer for the Kings, it showed an outline of how the rest of the game was going to go for the Kings. While the Kings still shot the ball and scored relatively efficiently in the third quarter, they had turnover issues and it all started with the Bulls defense. It would be nice to say the Kings just got sloppy with the ball but the Bulls defense crippled everything the Kings wanted to do. They started by swarming Tyreke with double teams and traps whenever he got the ball in the half court. They pushed him away from the basket, forced him to give up the ball and then retreated defensively to get back to taking away passing and driving lanes.

Watching the Bulls work on defense was pretty special. With the Kings, it’s not hard to get them out of their offensive flow – usually because they don’t often have an offensive flow. Get Tyreke to have to go left and you’ve already stalled the offense. His passes over the top are slow and looping; they give the defense time to recover. But overall, the Bulls match up well with teams like the Kings. Rose is good enough athletically to stay with guys like Beno and Head defensively. Deng can stay with slow small forwards that aren’t strong at dribbling. Taj Gibson is just a damn good defender that can guard quicker 4s or be big enough to handle more massive power forwards inside. And Noah is just all over the place in a good way. He can guard just about anybody while still helping everywhere on the floor.

The Kings just don’t have anything to battle a defensive team like that with the current lineups they’re running. Cousins played way too much in this game, considering how ineffective he is on his right now and how ineffectively they’re using him (elbow jumpers instead of planting him on the block). I understand that Luther Head gives them so much defensively right now but they’re basically playing 4-on-5 out there on offense, and Dalembert isn’t always a viable offensive option either.

The Kings really gave this game away with their atrocious fourth quarter. Great starts by Tyreke Evans and Omri Casspi, and a great overall performance by the combo of Jason Thompson and Samuel Dalembert just couldn’t correct all the wrong that happened in the final 12 minutes of the game. The Kings broke down offensively and allowed themselves to be taken out of this game.

Key Sequence in the Game
Can the entire fourth quarter be considered a sequence of the game? It can? Awesome. Let’s go with that then.

Kings made three shots in the entire fourth quarter and turned the ball over seven times. I’m not basketball expert but I do know that you put your team at an extreme disadvantage when you have more turnovers than field goals made. If the Kings looked stagnant, it would have been a big upgrade from how they played offense in the fourth quarter.

Donté Greene made two of the Kings three baskets and Cousins made the other one. Outside of that, not a single player made a bucket. Evans got to the free throw line for two attempts, but those were the only attempts of the quarter. It was a lot of one shot and done. Kings scored just nine points in the quarter. NINE!!

The Kings had no space to operate on the floor. After the Bulls tied it up in the fourth at 76-76, Tyreke finally found some room to operate. The Bulls stopped trying to force the ball out of his hands and Evans had spacing on the floor. He ended up getting to the free throw line and then on the next time down the floor, he found Donté for a wide-open 3-pointer that he knocked down. Those were five of the Kings’ nine points in the quarter in a span of about 39 seconds. They’d only score four points in the remaining 7:39 of the game.

A Big Concern
The comments coming out of the Kings locker room after the game are actually a big concern to me. This isn’t just a team that is trying to figure out how to get over the hump. This is a team that is embarrassing themselves and having a hard time getting their collective games together to be a team right now.

Here are some of the quotes (via Jimmy Spencer of NBA.com):

- Westphal on team’s inability to stay focused: “… it could be selfishness … it could be not trusting your teammates”

- “We’re going to have to watch the tape. Coaches are going to have to watch the tape and figure out things.” – Omri Casspi on 1st vs 2nd half

- “We were down and it looked like I was supposed to make a play every time.” – Tyreke Evans after home loss to Chicago

The coach is saying trust and selfishness could be issues. Omri is saying the players and the coaches have to watch tape and the coaches need to figure it out. Tyreke sounds frustrated that he’s the only creator. These are not good things to hear 15 games into the season.

Advanced Stuff

The weird thing about this game is Tyreke was pretty neutralized in the second half (after a great first half of 13 points and six assists) and yet still ended up with the only positive plus/minus for the Kings in this game. He was +2 for the game and everybody else not named Pooh Jeter (who was an even 0) had a negative plus/minus.

A lot of people like to discount the idea of plus/minus but I’d like to offer up that it means just as much as how many points a player scored in this game. You can’t take everything from this statistics but you also can’t take everything from just how many points were scored in a game (just look at how Monta Ellis racked up points while poisoning his team last year).

Tyreke was so bad in the second half and yet still remained a positive overall. And keep in mind that Tyreke was on the court when the Bulls pulled away during this game with a 16-2 run.

Player of the Game
Jason Thompson is easily the player of the game for the Kings.

Carl Landry overslept and it opened the door for Jason Thompson who should be in the starting lineup anyway. JT isn’t the consistent scoring option that Landry is advertised to be, but he’s also not the ball-stopping force that Landry has shown to be this season. JT moves the ball really well and did a nice job of flashing to the middle of the floor to get open shots against the Bulls.

On the boards, he was active in tipping the ball away from guys like Noah and Gibson, while managing to grab some for himself. He was also a pretty good defender in this game. He and Sammy did a great job of challenging shots and making things difficult for the Bulls inside.

Thompson ended up with 18 points on 6/12 shooting, 6/7 from the free throw line, nine rebounds, four assists, one block, three turnovers and three fouls.

On to the Next One
Kings play the Indiana Pacers at Arco Arena on Tuesday, the 30th. Tip-off is at 7pm PST. The Pacers are currently 7-8 after dropping two straight to the Thunder and Lakers.

Key Matchup – Samuel Dalembert vs. Roy Hibbert
Roy Hibbert is becoming a formidable force inside for the Pacers and it will be up to Sammy to shut him down. Keeping him off the boards could be the biggest thing because Hibbert’s 3.4 offensive rebounds per game could be big in keeping Indy’s offensive game flowing.

Wolves 98, Kings 89: Watch Out For The Killer Beas

November 11th, 2010 2 comments

How We Feeling?
There’s no way you can feel good about what you saw from the Kings against the Wolves.

The Wolves are probably the worst team in the NBA. Maybe Detroit or Toronto are worse but a team like the Kings needs to take advantage of facing one of the easier opponents, especially when they get to stay home to play them. Instead, the Kings came into this game with some defensive issues and lack of energy to start the game. They ran into a buzzsaw game by Michael Beasley and never had anybody step up and take over with smart, intelligent basketball to counter the offensive barrage Beas was throwing at them.

The Kings just didn’t make smart decisions for the most part. And it looks like they’re going to struggle to guard athletic wing players this season. They were torched by Rudy Gay, Kobe Bryant (understandable) and now Michael Beasley over the last three games. In this game, the Kings threw whatever they could at Beasley defensively and just couldn’t keep the ball out of his hands and out of the basket. The Kings tried five different guys (Omri, Donté, Cisco, JT and Antoine Wright) on Beasley and nothing worked. They tried a zone and he still destroyed them. The Kings never had that one guy who could just buckle down and keep him from being in comfortable positions to score.

The Kings shared the ball extremely well in this game. They just couldn’t capitalize from 3-point range or the free throw line and they couldn’t take care of the ball. They missed 15 of their 20 3-point attempts. They missed 12 of their 32 freebies. The starting backcourt of Tyreke and Beno turned the ball over nine of the 19 times the Kings turned the ball over in this game. There was just a lack of execution on a night in which they needed a defensive adjustment to stop Michael Beasley and a couple of momentum swings on offense to get the game in their control.

Again, you can’t take much good from this game because these are the few gimme type of games the Kings have to take advantage of throughout this season. Now they have lost three straight games at home and fallen below .500.  

Key Sequence in the Game
After cutting the deficit down to a very manageable and winnable three points with 5:11 left in the game, the Wolves went on a 6-0 Kevin Love run to push the score to 91-82. Kings had hung around enough to have one more push in them if they could play a little defense. But Kevin Love ended up coming out of nowhere (seriously, he was nonexistent almost the entire game) to give the Wolves the final push to get a little distance.

Even though this 6-0 run only spanned about a minute and a half, it was at just the right time for the Wolves to get a little comfortable before the final stretch of the game. Kings couldn’t get stops when they needed to in order to take this game back over.

I’d also be remiss if I didn’t mention Tyreke’s foul situation. With 10:34 left in the fourth quarter, Reke picked up his fifth foul. Westphal left him in because he felt like he had just subbed back into the game and wanted to avoid losing a chance at winning this game by having Evans sit for a key stretch in the fourth quarter when the game could have easily been won with a strong showing.

One minute and 32 seconds later, Tyreke picked up his final foul on a fastbreak in which he ran over Sebastian Telfair and the Kings young star was done for the rest of the game. I understand the motive behind Westphal sticking with Tyreke but at the same time, you have to give yourself a chance to win at the end of games with your best guy.

A Big Concern
Where in the hell is Carl Landry? What happened to him? Why is he so nonexistent? Is he still on the team? Did the Kings keep the wrong Landry brother? Is it possible he’s in hiding? Did the Monstars steal his powers? These are all questions I’ll be tackling in an upcoming post.

Advanced Stuff

This isn’t an advanced stat but I was impressed with the Kings not giving up a single fastbreak point to the Wolves in this game. In the first game these two faced each other, the Kings gave up 35 fastbreak points to the Wolves and narrowly escaped with a road victory. In this contest, their turnovers were possession killers but not huge point swings. They got back on defense and avoided letting the Wolves get out and run, which is something they love to do considering they have the top pace in the NBA.

Here is where the Kings stand in the Four Factors after Game 7 of the season:

Player of the Game
Samuel Dalembert was probably the best King in this game with 14 points, nine rebounds, two assists and two blocked shots. The Kings involved him a lot more in the offense and did it in an intelligent way. They didn’t just post him up and hope he could figure out a good way of scoring in the post. They got him rolling to the basket and getting dunks and layups at the rim. This is the smart way to use him I chronicled in the off-season.

On to the Next One
Friday at Phoenix to face the Suns at 6pm PT. The Suns are currently tied with the Kings in the Pacific Division standings with a 3-4 record. They’re coming off of a loss against the Grizzlies in Memphis and haven’t played since Monday night. They’ll have fresh legs too.

Key Matchup – Tyreke Evans vs. Jason Richardson.
Reke has to be able to match Richardson’s scoring (21.7 ppg, 48% FG, 47.9% 3-pt) in an efficient manner and not let J-Rich get into any kind of rhythm early.

Evolution of a Kings Fan

October 27th, 2010 5 comments

I am well-aware that this article is much more Noam-y than it is Kings-y. If this bothers  you, I will gladly reveal to you the punchline – I am a former Kings fan who was drawn back into the world of Sacramento basketball by a team so fun it makes you believe in unicorns – and send you on your way. However, the punchline as of itself is quite stale. It is the journey that brought me to re-embrace my Kings fanhood that I felt the urge to share with you, this being my first “full” season writing for Cowbell Kingdom. If you would be so kind as to tolerate the ramblings about Israeli sports teams you’ve never heard of and bad attempts at sophisticated jokes, I think you’ll have a better understanding of what the hell I’m doing on this cyberspace, anyhow.

As most sports fans worldwide would probably testify about themselves, the development of my sports fandom is the result and intricate combination of random circumstance and my father.

In college sports, I possess the ever rare double-edged fandom of the Florida Gators and the Ohio State Buckeyes. No, not because of recent success combined with bandwagon tendencies, but because my father’s work led to me spending 3 years of my childhood in Gainesville and 2 in Columbus. In major international soccer competitions – which, by definition, do not include Israeli squads – my allegiance is forever reserved for the Italian teams, after years of Dad teaching me that “the Italians are just so, so nice”. And of course, my one true love, Hapoel Jerusalem (both soccer and basketball), is based in the hometown of both mine and my father’s, and has been a cause of happiness and mental distress for him long before I was present on this planet.

However, as my father constantly laments, my sports education includes one glaring failure: my favorite sport is only second in his hierarchy.

He has only himself to blame. Despite the flaming passion for soccer that he has successfully conveyed to me as well, basketball has been the clear alpha dog in my book ever since my 4th birthday. That was when, as a present, I was given a small plastic basket, the type you can adjust in height so little kids can dunk on them. Thanks to me, he used it almost as much as I did. Our living room became the scene of some of the world’s greatest one-on-one games, with me assuming the role of Hapoel’s then superstar Adi Gordon (widely considered as the best player ever to play for the team), while Dad would play Gordon’s teammate, Doron Sheffa. As the 4 year old Gordon drove the 32 year old Sheffa into the ground again and again, it was clear that for me, soccer could never rank higher than second.

However, unlike the Israeli basketball league, I was not equipped with an NBA franchise at home. Not that my father wasn’t interested in the NBA – I’ve yet to see him turn down a good NBA game, and he hates the Lakers as much as the rest of us – but once we left the US and returned to Israel, he voluntarily gave up the wear-and-tear of sleepless nights for box scores and recaps.

As such, my NBA fandom was left abandoned, susceptible to the ever-changing impressions of a young child. And who do you like in the NBA when you’re a young child in the late 1990s?

Yup, I was a Bulls fan. Except, I wasn’t really a Bulls fan. I had no association with the red-and-white jerseys, or the past antics of Artis Gilmore. What I loved was that bald dude wearing number 23 who killed everybody else. Not that I didn’t grow to love every other Bull. I loved Pippen’s all around brilliance, the kind clear even to a child; I loved Rodman’s hair, tattoos, and general craziness; I loved just how white Luc Longley was. I especially loved Steve Kerr, for the clutch shooting that helped seal the deal so many times in the playoffs. But MJ was a step above everybody.

But what happens when a little kid who just wants to root for MJ finds himself in an MJ-less world?

Well, in my case, the bizarre answer was rooted in the summer of 1997, and the small town of Davis, California.

The summer of ’97 saw a 6 year old me travel, by van, from our then Columbus home to sunny California, staying for 2 months in Davis before driving all the way back. Not unlike the rest of my life, I remember that trip for the constant basketball occurrences throughout – watching Karl Malone almost singlehandedly tie the finals from my uncle’s home in Rochester, Minnesota, worrying me out of my mind that MJ might just lose; my fears happily slipping away as I watched the Flu game at a Wyoming hotel, knowing then that game 6 will go to Chicago; the kind man at the (then named) Delta Center, who offered my father and me a short, free tour of the Jazz’s legendary arena when we just showed up there to look at it from the outside; and the pink and green plastic courts set outside the aforementioned Delta Center, who witnessed Adi Gordon yet again beating Doron Sheffa in a game of one-on-one.

But the highlight of the trip was, without a doubt, the Sacramento suburb. Maybe it was the vacational vibe, or the fond memory of a young child, but Davis remains one of my favorite places in the world to this day. The ever-present sun, always warm but never relentless, the laid back attitude that leaves you without a care in the world, and of course, Silver Dragon, which has reached legendary status in the Schiller family ranks (I dream of their cashew nut chicken on a nightly basis). My second and third visits to the city are just as magical as the first, and I count on visits 4-through-hopefully-a-lot to live up to the same standard.

More importantly to our Sacramento-basketball related story, it was during this Davis stay that my father took me to the Californian capital to witness my first live, pro ball game. Except that if you’ve been reading until now (if not, I don’t blame you), you’ve probably noticed a glitch: the NBA Finals were over before we arrived at Davis. The Kings don’t play in July.

Indeed, the first time I was in attendence for a professional basketball game (I saw a few college one’s before), the league under which the game took place was the WNBA.

Now, this is the part of the story where the narrative takes a turn to the bizarre, so you’ll just have to believe me that this is how a 6 year old thinks. At the time, I was still all Jordan, all the time. Heck, a few months later, on October 31st 1997, I went to sleep crying after second year pro Antoine Walker scored 31 points to beat the Bulls on opening night (no amount of “Noam, it’s the first game of the season, it’s all right” could console me). But the seeds were planted. I remember not who the Sacramento Monarchs played when I was in the building (I do remember they won) or the names on the back of the home jerseys, but from that moment on, I had a strong sympathy for all Sacramento basketball teams. I swear, when I found out the Monarchs franchise folded, I was legitimately sad, even if I discovered it something like 2 years after it actually happened.

After Jordan’s second retirement, it only made sense to me that the Kings were now my favorite team. As if to solidify my feelings, the Kings drafted Jason Williams in the 1998 draft. I was in attendence for White Chocolate’s final home game with my beloved Gators, when he scored 26 points off a ridiculous 8 for 12 showing from 3 to defeat Auburn. Even when the Kings traded Jason for Mike Bibby, I remained a King – the franchise had grown on me, and besides, I enjoyed Bibby’s run at Arizona and didn’t mind rooting for him at all. Seems funny saying that today, doesn’t it?

And yet, the foundation was severely weakened by my return to Israel. I don’t know if you’ve ever tried to be an underaged NBA fan living 7 time zones away from the East coast of the US in a pre-internet era, but it ain’t pretty. My NBA fandom was pretty much reduced to dial-up-based box score scouring, and the extremely rare occasions when a game was broadcast, and it wasn’t a school night, and I managed to stay awake. This is also the reason that even though I was a Kings fan at the time, I can still hear conversations about the 2002 WCF Game 6 without running away in tears – I loved those early decade Kings teams from the bottom of my heart, but as far as actually experiencing them, I was hardly a part of it.

My re-fanaticization, to invent a word that describes the situation better than any existing one, of the NBA took place during the 03-04 season. I’m not really sure why – if I had to give a reason, I’d say it was a combination of my new school having constant internet access in the library, thus enabling me to go on my box score runs without incapacitating our phone (yeah, laziness made my family kind of late on the technology train), and that NBA Live 2004 was just a really good game (if you disagree, don’t tell me. I realize in retrospect that it may have sucked, and I made the transition to 2K sports like everybody else, but Live 2004 has too many happy memories in my head).

The great thing about my enhanced interest in the NBA in 03-04 was that it coincided with a career year from my favorite King. Peja Stojakovic dominated that campaign, scoring 24 a night on a ridiculous 62% true shooting. If you take nothing else from this post, at least reflect for just a few minutes how damn good Peja used to be. He was by far my favorite player in the league at the time (he was also the first “real” player to join the roster of my imaginary basketball team “The Supers”. Yeah, I kind of wish you didn’t read that), and never truly recovered from the recurring back injuries, but before he was dead weight on the Hornets, this dude was the truth.

Sadly, this wasn’t to last. I spent another year in the States during the 04-05 season, raising my NBA awareness and fandom to new heights (you’d be amazed how much easier it is to watch basketball when you’re awake during the games). The Kings part, on the other hand, was on a steady decline. Vlade was done, Peja was breaking down, the remnants of Chris Webber were stuffed into a duffel bag and mailed to Philly. Nothing was right anymore. And while I realize this sounds like a bandwagoner’s diary, the bottom line is that my original connection to the team was rickety at best. I had watched very few Kings games (and NBA games in general) during this episode of my fanhood, and my connection was to the names I saw on the box score, and not so much the color of the jerseys or the name on up front. Thus, as the core group who led that team slowly disintegrated, so did my interest. The sympathy always stayed, but once Peja finally left for a nutjob I had no interest in rooting for, it was all that remained.

And so I became the dreaded “players fan”. The NBA nomad who wanders the streets of basketball, knocking on car windows and asking for spare change, occasionally finding it in players both transcendent and just plain entertaining. I rooted for the Cavs because of the way Lebron James made my jaw drop. I rooted for the Suns because of how Steve Nash made me want to take a ball, go to the nearest court, and practice no-look passes to the molecules standing on the three point line at the other side of the court. I rooted for the Hornets because of how I won my 2006 fantasy league thanks to rookie Chris Paul (sixth round, son!) and Most Improved Player runner up David West (waiver wire). But the satisfaction of watching 82 games of one team just to see what they do on every given night wasn’t there any more.

Until last season, when once again circumstance decided to play a funny game with my NBA loyalties.

First and foremost, I was luckily presented with a boatload of free time, which happilly coincided with the NBA’s rapidly evolving online presence. Given the ability to do absolutely nothing, I purchased League Pass Broadband, gave up sleep, and dove head first into the everyday NBA world. And while I had been reading big name blogs like Ball Don’t Lie and Truehoop before hand, the booming blogosphere along with the emergence of Twitter and the successful new Daily Dime Live chats allowed me to surround myself with the NBA 24 hours a day, while giving me a voice to chime in with. Obviously, after delving into this world I now realize that LPBB is here to stay even if life tries to get in the way, but I think you’d agree with me that making a conscious decision to be awake from 2 A.M. to 8 A.M. on a nightly basis is something that one has to arrive at, and not a natural state of being.

My newfound exposure to the online NBA world and the many incredible writers who contribute to it not only expanded my knowledge and love of the game of basketball, but also raised the question of my fanhood from the dead. Now provided with more voices than only Marv Albert, AP recaps, and whatever I was reading at the time, I started missing that unique perspective of monogamous basketball. I still had it at home – cut to me beaming at my Hapoel Jerusalem season tickets – but not in the NBA. And it was sorely missed. Coming in constant interaction with dozens of voices swirling in a never ending roller coaster of emotion, I couldn’t help but feel like the cold, toneless robot that wasn’t invited to the party. Specifically, this fantastic post from Matt Moore regarding his own venture towards supporting the Grizzlies was a big influence on this piece, since it echoed so many of my own sentiments regarding my placement as an NBA fan. If you didn’t read it at the time, and even if you did, I recommend you do so.

The second factor was, obviously, Omri Casspi. The second Omri’s name was called by David Stern, I immediately knew two things: 1. I would be watching a lot of Sacramento basketball for the next few years. 2. I will never be able to root for them again. It felt too much of a bandwagon jump for me, with so many people in Israel who had no idea what NBA basketball even was all of a sudden declaring they bled purple and white – this assuming that they actually bothered to find out what colors the Kings wore. Besides, I had just spent the past few years despising Casspi as he bore the Maccabi colors (I think anyone who watched the Kings last year can understand how Casspi is the kind of player one absolutely loathes when he’s playing against you), and while I had no doubt that I would be rooting for his success, making the jump towards rooting for his team seemed too extreme.

And yet, as I watched Omri, and by proxy, his new teammates, I felt myself slowly gravitating into that once familiar territory. No, this wasn’t Peja pulling the ball to that sweet spot just behind ear before slingshotting in another three, and it wasn’t Bibby pulling up for a clutch three pointer when all logic says to wait things out. This was different. But still, it was those same colors that had me jumping up in my seat. The more the season went by, the more my interest expanded from just “tell me when Casspi is in the game”, to the point that I was actually looking forward to watching the Kings even when Omri fell out of favor late in the season.

I was yelling in glee as Tyreke Evans turned fourth quarters into layup lines, and in frustration as Spencer Hawes just refused to show any semblence of a will to enter the paint. I was in awe at how Beno Udrih managed to flick up floaters above people that seemed poised to consume him every second, and in shock at how Andres Nocioni just didn’t realize that shooting isn’t his thing. I was clutching at my chest as this young squad took the Lakers and Cavs to overtime, crushed at how they just couldn’t pull it off. And of course, no matter how much the rest of the team found it’s way into the roundball dimensions of my soul, nothing could compare to the sense of pride at watching Omri knock down a three, or get fouled while converting a tough layup, or smashing Danilo Galinari’s face, and then yelling to the skies, his fist repeatedly asking his chest “what’s up?”

When the Kevin Martin for Carl Landry rumors started rushing in the night before the trading deadline, it was after all of that night’s games were done. Around 8 A.M. local time. And yet, I was transfixed, glued to the refresh button, with my twitter account spread out on the screen, unable to quench my thirst for more information. And then it was official. And I was ecstatic. “The Kings got Carl Landry!” By the time the draft came by, and David Kahn passed on DeMarcus Cousins, the sentence that resulted was similar, but so, so different. “We got DeMarcus Cousins!”. We.

When Zach offered me to write here last February, I found it ironic. The Truehoop blogger who writes for the team he doesn’t root for, asking me, who doesn’t root for anybody, to write for him. In the perspectively diverse NBA blogosphere, the perspective of Cowbell Kingdom was, and will remain, that of an outsider.

Not anymore. You’ve got a Kings fan on your hands.

Season Preview Essays: Donté Greene

October 27th, 2010 No comments

March 16, 2010: Donte Greene of the Sacramento Kings during the game between the Sacramento Kings and the Los Angeles Lakers at Arco Arena in Sacramento, CA. Ben Munn/CSM.

More than anything else, Donte Greene makes you think.

We’re talking about a 6’11″ small forward. 6-freaking-11. Same height as both candidates to start for the Kings at center. Taller than the projected starting power forward. Taller than any small forward in the league, sans the occasional minutes Lamar Odom spends at the 3. Taller than anyone I can remember playing the position since Dirk Nowitzki and Kevin Garnett were listed as such earlier in the decade (remember that? That was cool).

And yet, the role the Kings need Donte to fill is rarely bestowed upon players of his physical attributes.. They don’t need him to play in the post, or rebound the ball – they have plenty of guys to do that. They need him to knock down outside shots and guard the opposition’s best perimeter player every night. Jobs more typically bestowed upon wings of the 6’6″ish variety. It’s just that when you’re the Kings, you’re 6’6″ish guard is your lead guard.

The fact that those attributes are what they are makes you wonder about the whole positional revolution thesis almost as much as Evans does. Donte’s would-be bigmanny height lacks any true semblance of bigmanny muscle and no bigmanny game. Not that there aren’t any other perimeter power forwards in the league, but you’ll be hard pressed to find any power forward who took 1.8 threes out of 4.3 shots a game while making just 26%, such as Donte shot in 08-09, or who boasted consecutive rebound rates of 6.9 and 8.2. Mainly because power forwards with those stats don’t get off the bench.

But as a small forward? The concept of a 3 so… well, the word big doesn’t apply much to Donte, but… long, is one that is hard to accept. For some reason, small forwards are defined as 6’5″ to 6’9″ish and that’s it. And when you have a guy like Donte who can even play some of the 2 (though I wouldn’t recommend it), it gives you a lot of options. The same options that make the positional revolution so intriguing.

In the post MJ era, we have almost forgotten a very basic rule in basketball – in a game where the objective is to place the ball inside a little hoop that is 10 feet high, being as tall as possible goes a very long way towards winning. It’s why a good big man will always be more important than a good shooting guard. Just look at how the Lakers have been dominating teams. Sure, Kobe Bryant is a once-in-an-era type of player, but how far does that team go without the three headed monster of Andrew Bynum, Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom? Just re-watch the Finals, and tell me what bothered Rajon Rondo the most: his inability to get past Kobe, or the three giants that were waiting for him at the rim?

Donte isn’t nearly the player that Bynum, Pau or Odom are, but he has the potential to have an effect along the same concept. Just look two years into the future, at a lineup featuring Tyreke at point, Omri and Donte at the wings, and Cousins and Dalembert sharing the frontcourt. Pretty stupid, right? Tyreke would remain as the only ball handler on the squad, both Omri and Donte can’t play the 2, and both Cousins and Dalembert are too slow to defend 4s. But forget what you know about traditional lineups and stick with me here, if only for the purspose of the exercise. If Omri and Donte can both improve their outside shooting enough to spread the offense (certainly a realistic goal for Omri, and not too much of a stretch for Donte if he improves as much as he did last season), how do teams score on you? That lineup has the combined wingspan of a flock of eagles! They could high five from different ends of the court!

Obviously, Tyreke has a lot to do with the option of such versatility – there are very few 6’6” guys who can play point in this league. His offensive set is entirely 2-like, and he is quick enough to guard your traditional 2s. Sure, he can’t help with handling the ball, and smaller, quicker guys such as Dwyane Wade and Monta Ellis might pose problems. But how many teams have those guards? And how many teams can have a guy who offers the possibility of such crazy mismatches and defensive units?

That’s what makes Donte such an interesting prospect going forward. He’s already the best perimeter defender on this squad. Is he consistent in his shut down abilities? No. That’s why the Kings signed Antoine Wright this summer. But he’s certainly shown flashes. I don’t think any Kings fan will soon forget the incredible job Donte did against Kobe last season in those heartbreaking losses. You might also remember he wasn’t too shabby at staying with Carmelo Anthony.

Well, that’s what you can do when you have the length – both height and wingspan – of a center, but have the skills – both the speed and the hops – of a shooting guard. It’s a wonderful combination to have, on both sides of the court. And while on offense, you can’t get along with physical attributes alone (pour one out for Gerald Green), on defense those tools go very very far. Obviously, one also needs things like footwork, smarts, and discipline are key to a good defender – the same things that enable largely unathletic players to be good defenders – but the physical tools are so, so important, that just by having them and the right mentality you could be great.

This is what the Kings’ coaching staff has to be explaining to Donte on a daily basis. Sure, he needs to work on offense as well (I’m getting there shortly). But he has the unique tools to become not only a lockdown individual defender, but a key cog in a lockdown unit. He’s already shown the willingness to take on that role, and has performed quite ably. But if he takes the next step? He could be much more than “that guy traded for Ron Artest”.

Moving on to the “put the ball in the basket” part of the game, Donte should be able to pose a constant mismatch. I say should, because the physical advantage he holds over nearly every small forward in the game is mostly negated by his style of play and lack of muscle. In an ideal world, Donte would pick up another 20-30 pounds of bulk while keeping his athleticism (note: he did the first part without apparently keeping the athleticism), thus enabling him to take his man to the post time and time again.

Luckily for the Kings, what they need out of Donte has nothing to do with his individual best case scenario. Sure, Donte’s body could make him dominant as a post-up guy/driver, but the Kings already have enough guys living in the paint. The Kings need Donte to do what he likes to do best – stand outside and stroke that three-point shot.

In that, Donte is indeed a work in progress, but the progress is certainly there. After making only 26% of his threes and 31% of his long twos his rookie year, Donte bounced up to respectable figures of 37.7% and 42%. More importantly, Donte abandoned the idea of becoming only a shooter, taking much more shots at the rim (2.1 this season, 1.0 last season) to keep defenders honest.

Of course, the Kings will probably want a little more cosistency than what Donte showed, with his monthly splits seeing his 3 point percentages ranging from 25% in December to 50% in February. But that’s the price you pay when you’re a youngster trying to carve out your niche, and it’s something that is bound to get better as Donte does.

But the steady improvement from his rookie season shows that it’s possible.This is a player whose main impact in his rookie season was in “who was the worst player in the league” discussions. Suddenly, those discussions turned into “should he start?”. If he makes a similar jump this year, the official Donte discussion topic of July 2011 could be frightningly optimistic.

Season Preview Essays: Francisco Garcia

October 26th, 2010 15 comments

March 16, 2010: Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers is defended by Francisco Garcia of the Sacramento Kings during the game between the Sacramento Kings and the Los Angeles Lakers at Arco Arena in Sacramento, CA. Ben Munn/CSM.

You tend to forget just how good Francisco Garcia is.

It’s nobody’s fault, really. Just a series of flukes that somehow pushed Cisco’s ability to the back of our mind. The overblown contract. The bizarre medicine ball injury. The less-than-impressive return last season. The miserable failure of the “play him at point guard” experiment, that reminded us mostly of what he can’t do and not of what he can.

But let’s face it – how many of us can play point guard in the NBA? Or can avoid weight-room appliances exploding and indirectly decimating our wrists? It’s not Cisco’s fault that he arrived when the franchise was on the verge of a depressing downslide, thus staining his advantages with the stench of a golden era in the rearview mirror. Sure, he has his liabilities, maxing out as a very good role player/locker room presence. But when given the choice between having Francisco Garcia on your team and not having Francisco Garcia on your team – salary factors not included – I don’t see how you could possibly choose the latter.

And yet, when you look at this Sacramento rotation and tell yourself that the Kings have no help on the wings, you suddenly blink, cock your head to the right, and say: “wait, a tick… is that El Flaco I see there on the depth chart?” Read more…

Season Preview Essays: Antoine Wright

October 14th, 2010 1 comment

I knocked the Antoine Wright signing when it happened, and after weeks of self-reflection (this is the stuff I reflect on, so shoot me), I’m not much happier. In fact, my stance remains pretty much the same.

It’s not that I don’t like Wright. In fact, in NBA Live 2006 (this was before my switch to 2K), my affection for the Kidd-Carter-Jefferson and my disturbing Nenad Krstic obsession (THE DUDE WAS A BORDERLINE ALL-STAR IN 06-07 BEFORE TEARING HIS ACL!!… yeah, sorry, not the time or place) made the Nets my go to team. On that squad, rookie Antoine was always the first guy off the bench. For reasons still unbeknownst to me, I saw something in that guy, and wanted to believe he could be a major player in this league.

I was wrong.

I’m sorry. I know this is pretty cut and dry. But Wright has had 5 years to show us that he has any basketball skills except for good perimeter defense. And he has yet to show it. So why bring him over? To bolster your outside shooting with the career high 33.5% three point shooting he posted last season? To give the Kings another creator in the backcourt with his 1.1 to 0.9 assist-to-turnover ratio? There is a good reason why Antoine has yet to make his mark. The need for stoppers is always there – Bruce Bowen started for three title teams, for Christ’s sake – and yet Antoine’s only choice for this offseason was a minimum, one year deal from the Kings. That’s not a coincidence.

This feels too much like Desmond Mason 2.0. Remember what happened to Desmond? He was cut. 5 games in. Because he had nothing to give at the NBA level. And what happened then, when it seemed like the Sacramento front office admitted their mistake? They signed Ime Udoka to a similar role. And while Udoka is much better than Mason at this point, and gave much more, it was the same messed up philosophy behind both signings. The “why let our young players develop when we can ignore them in favor of veterans who aren’t as good?” philosophy, which is all too prevelant in a sport that has minds who should be above this.

The exact same philosophy is sadly existent here. Sure, it would suck to watch Omri or Donté or Cisco get torched by someone on defense and wish there was a strong perimeter stopper to help out. But isn’t it better that the young ones learn to do it on their own? To instill a culture which, in a few years, allows the Kings to play Omri and Donte without needing to sign an Antoine Wright as a backup, because the youngsters are good enough on their own?

I hope I’m wrong here, I really do. The Cisco-Beno pairing set to take the court at shooting guard is far from ideal to me, with both players giving up cosiderable weaknesses. But this is not the answer. Not over a motivated D-Leaguer, or an undrafted rookie, or just more minutes of what Sacramento already has.

You might see a lot of Antoine Wright this season, and you might see very little. Hopefully, it’s the latter. Hopefully, the minutes he gives will be better than any minutes he’s given throughout his career. However, the fact that you’re seeing any of him at all is the result of flawed thinking by a front office who has successfully minimized, yet hasn’t completely abolished personnel mistakes.

Opening Night Starting Lineup Taking Shape?

October 13th, 2010 No comments

This from Jason Jones after the victory over the Warriors Tuesday night:

*The small forward race might begin taking shape. For the second time lately, Westphal had nice things to say about Donte’ Greene’s play and the role of Omri Casspi.

Casspi had 11 points and nine rebounds off the bench. Greene started and had 10 points, four rebounds and three steals.

“I like Casspi off the bench,” Westphal said. “I think he gives us a really nice niche…And I like Donte. I thought he really showed the kind of impact he can have on a game. Donte’ really played well I thought.”

I’ve been pretty back-and-forth on whether or not I thought Omri should start at small forward over Donté or Donté should start over Omri. I really like the fire and attitude Omri brings to this team. He seems to be one of the most competitive players in the league (not just the team) and young teams like the Kings can use more guys like that playing significant/starter’s minutes. At the same time, Donté Greene may be the best overall defensive player the team has and this team certainly proved last year they need as much defensive work as they can get.

Looking at their numbers from last year, they couldn’t have been more similar:

(Click to enlarge)

Their Per 36-Minute numbers are nearly identical. Donté gives you almost the same everything across the board except he’s a shot-blocking threat. Omri gives the same production as Donté except he’s a much better rebounder. When you look at how efficiently they are on offense in different situations, they’re also really similar (according to Synergy Sports):

(Click to Enlarge)

Donté Greene’s Synergy numbers have the white background and Omri’s have the gray background.

Surprisingly, Donté seems to be the better offensive weapon, which I didn’t expect at all. Omri is regarded as the better shooter and the more efficient play-maker in many ways but Donté’s proficiency in the pick-and-roll seems to put him over the top.

When we turn to the defensive numbers that Synergy provides us, we sort of get flipped on our heads again:

(Click to Enlarge)

The numbers here (remember Donté in white, Omri in gray) show Casspi to be the better defender by far. In fact he was the 10th best defender in isolation last season in the entire league. 10th! Part of this could be due to the fact that Donté’s numbers are a little out of whack considering he was often guarding the best offensive opponent on the floor. But overall, Omri’s defensive numbers are simply stunning.

However, that doesn’t change my feeling on what each player brings to the table. Omri has shown a much better flair for creating scoring chances for himself and his teammates. Some scouts I talked to during Summer League often glowed about his ability to make the “Gretzky assist” (the pass that lead to the pass that got the assist). And with Omri’s ability to shoot the ball from all over the court, I think it’s safe to say he IS in fact the better offensive option. With Donté you’re going to get a guy who is capable of guarding the best scorer on the opposing team. It doesn’t mean he’s always going to stop that guy but even with his added muscle and bulk (I don’t care if the Kings want him to get rid of the extra weight. I think it should stay to help his versatility), he can still stay and bother most perimeter scorers while being able to guard bigger guys in the post.

Ultimately, I’d like the play-maker to come off the bench to provide a spark and the defensive-minded guy to roll out with the starters. If Coach Westphal is indeed content with starting Donté and bringing Omri in as a 6th or 7th man force, it’s a decision I think all Kings fans can feel confident in.

Sacramento Kings 2010-11 Season Preview

September 21st, 2010 14 comments

Remember the post about the Atlantic Division being previewed by the NBA blogosphere? Well the Pacific Division is happening over the next few days and we’re happily participating with the Kings preview (along with Sactown Royalty). Check it out:
Read more…

From SLAM Online: More Than A Mural

September 17th, 2010 3 comments

I haven’t given any coverage to the Omri Casspi mural defacing because I don’t want to indirectly give it attention. It’s a heinous act that is disgusting in every way.

But just because I don’t want to cover it on this space doesn’t mean you shouldn’t read great pieces about it elsewhere. Tzvi Twersky of SLAM posted this fantastic piece on the mural and incident.

Tomorrow, on one of the most introspective holidays, I’ll spend the day at synagogue studying my faults, flaws and sins. Thousand of miles away, Omri Casspi will, too.

At some point in their lives, whether they’re apprehended or not, hopefully the swastika-painting Sacramento criminals reassess themselves as well.

Read the entire piece here.