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Showing posts with label Sacramento Kings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sacramento Kings. Show all posts

Friday, January 6, 2012

Keith Smart gets another shot, this time as Kings coach

SACRAMENTO, Calif.   -- Keith Smart spent much of his time during the lockout this summer scribbling notes at home, everything from designing plays to deciding what he'd do differently if he ever got another chance to be an NBA head coach.
He never figured that time would come so soon.
More than eight months after the Golden State Warriors let his one-and-done contract expire, Smart, the former Indiana guard best known for hitting "The Shot" against Syracuse to win the 1987 NCAA title, is getting another shot -- as the Sacramento Kings coach -- and looking to move past his swift Bay Area exit.
"When it happened the way it happened, you say, `I hope I get another opportunity,"' Smart said. "You hope you get another opportunity and it's not, `Let's coach for this year and do all we can and stop developing.' Well, I can coach now and develop a team."
The Kings fired Paul Westphal seven games into the lockout-shortened season Thursday, marking the third time Smart has ascended from assistant to the top spot -- never seeing a second season each time previously, never really even having a chance to earn that time in either case. While nothing is promised again, Smart is confident he finally has strong support to be the lasting replacement.
The 47-year-old isn't one to sulk about whether he got a "fair shake" with the Warriors, who ousted the NBA's career wins leader, Don Nelson, before training camp last year and hastily appointed Smart. Golden State finished with a 36-46 record, a 10-game improvement under Smart from the previous season.
He never stood a chance.
New Warriors owners Joe Lacob and Peter Guber wanted to make their own hire, if nothing else just for the sake of change, cutting ties with Smart and signing the more flamboyant Mark Jackson -- the former Knicks and Pacers point guard and ABC/ESPN broadcaster who had never coached at any level. Smart also had a stint as the Cleveland Cavaliers' interim head coach for the final 40 games in 2003 after taking over for John Lucas.
"This opportunity is not how a coach likes to come into it," said Smart, who spoke with Westphal before signing his contract. "He said, `Don't do anything stupid and reject this. I want you to coach this team.' He felt it, and I felt that he meant it from the bottom of his heart."
Smart's style should mimic the run-and-fun ways Nelson made famous -- only with a bigger backcourt.
When players entered the Kings locker room Thursday, Smart followed a precedent he set from his Warriors days: He walked around to each player and asked for a handshake, signaling a pact that they would allow Smart to coach them and be involved in their lives.
Then he wrote on the white board: "Play Hard," the one request Smart makes before every game without debate.
"What I took from it was everybody was going to be held accountable the same way," said Kings center DeMarcus Cousins, whose escalating feud with Westphal played a major role in the coach's departure. "No matter if you're the star player to the rookie to a role player that doesn't play at all, we all will be held accountable, and that's the way it needs to be."
Smart inherits a roster with perhaps more talent than the one he had at Golden State -- albeit even rawer, more unproven and with more difficult personalities to manage.
A young and emerging team in the deep Western Conference, Sacramento finished 24-58 last season and missed the playoffs for the fifth straight year, although a late-season surge behind a healthy Tyreke Evans -- the 2009-10 NBA Rookie of the Year - provided hope that maybe the Kings weren't that far off from making the postseason again.
Instead, Sacramento stumbled at the start.
The Cousins-Westphal spat dragged on, the guard trio of Evans, Marcus Thornton and Jimmer Fredette has struggled to find a rhythm amid a constantly rotating roster and new additions John Salmons and Chuck Hayes are still searching for their place.
"Right now, the team is dealing with an identity crisis," Smart said. "Each guy is trying to push forth his identity. And so when you have that, they're not playing like they don't want to win, but each guy is trying to do the things to win.
"And that's called an issue."
Sacramento (3-5) was far from playing its best ball when Smart started.
But the team's potential was evident in Smart's debut Thursday night, when the Kings overcame a 21-point halftime deficit for a thrilling 103-100 victory over Milwaukee. Cousins gleefully bear-hugged Smart, players high-fived along the bench and smiles filled the arena for the first time since the season-opening victory over the Lakers on Dec. 26.
"The guys are going to respect him because he is going to be straight up," said Bucks swingman Stephen Jackson, who played under Smart during his seven seasons as a Warriors assistant. "He's not going to sugarcoat anything."
Smart is the second exiled Warriors coach to go straight to the Kings job, following in the footsteps of Eric Musselman (2006-2007). Because he was already on the staff, Kings president of basketball operations Geoff Petrie called Smart "the best man for the job" and decided not to prolong a search for an outside hire.
Ownership agreed.
"We think he can do the job here," Kings co-owner Gavin Maloof said of Smart. "We just got to put everything behind us, all of the negatives and try to push forward and think positive."
Smart's stature as a former player will only go so far in the Kings locker room.
Cousins, for instance, wasn't born until three years after Smart knocked down the baseline jump shot that lifted the Hoosiers over Syracuse for the national title. Smart fizzled out in the NBA after the Warriors drafted him, spending most of his short-lived career overseas and in the CBA.
After serving as a career assistant for more than a decade, Smart has lived in relatively anonymity since. He couldn't care less if he gets any notoriety.
Just so long as he gets a chance.
"I've had my moment to be famous with a championship shot in '87. It's all about them now," Smart said. "I don't need the credit, it's for them. I want them to be good. I want them to have success. And when they have success, everyone around us has success."

Struggling Sacramento Kings fire coach Westphal


(Reuters) - The Sacramento Kings fired coach Paul Westphal on Thursday after opening the season with a disappointing 2-5 record.Sacramento Kings head coach Paul Westphal signals to his players in the first half of their NBA basketball game against Oklahoma City Thunder in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, February, 15, 2011.   REUTERS/Bill Waugh
Tensions on the team have mounted as the losses increased and a dispute between Westphal and center DeMarcus Cousins festered.
"Unfortunately, the overall performance level of the team has not approached what we felt was reasonable to expect," Kings President of Basketball Operations Geoff Petrie said in a statement.
Current Kings assistant coach Keith Smart was to serve as head coach in Thursday's game against the Milwaukee Bucks, Petrie said.
In two-plus seasons, Westphal compiled a 51-120 record with the Kings, going 25-57 in 2010 and 24-58 last season as they missed the playoffs for the fifth consecutive year.
The Kings were expected to improve this season and perhaps challenge for a playoff spot but instead sit in the cellar of the Pacific Division.
They opened the campaign with an upset of the Los Angeles Lakers, but have since suffered lopsided losses to Portland, Chicago, New York, Memphis and Denver with their only other victory coming against New Orleans.
Cousins did not play in the New Orleans game after Westphal questioned the center's commitment to the Kings and told him to skip the game.
The coach also said Cousins, a former first-round pick, had demanded to be traded, something Cousins later denied.
Westphal, who previously coached the Phoenix Suns and Seattle SuperSonics, had not been an NBA head coach since 2001 when hired by the Kings in 2009.
"I would like to thank the Maloof family (Kings owners) for the incredible opportunity they gave me to participate in the attempt to bring the Sacramento Kings back to prominence," Westphal said. "While the job is far from finished, I am proud of the strides we were able to make."

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Rose, Korver lead Bulls to rout of Kings

CHICAGO (AP) – Derrick Rose and Kyle Korver scored 18 points apiece as the Chicago Bulls routed the Sacramento Kings 132-92 on Monday night.

The win gave the Bulls (50-19) their first 50-win season since 1997-98 and allowed Chicago to remain tied with Boston atop the Eastern Conference. The Celtics beat the New York Knicks on Monday.

Carlos Boozer scored 16 points in his return to the Bulls' lineup after missing five games with a sprained left ankle. He joined a balanced Bulls attack that had eight players scoring in double figures in a game that was not close after the first period.

Marcus Thornton led the Kings with 25 points.

With the game well in hand, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau was able to rest his top players. Rose played just 28 minutes, his lowest total of the season. He didn't play in the fourth quarter.

The Bulls shot 61.3 percent from the field. More aggressive from the outset, Chicago forced 22 Sacramento turnovers and held a 36-7 edge in fastbreak points. The Bulls' points total were a season high.

The Bulls have won 13 straight at the United Center, their longest home winning streak since 1997-98. At 31-4, the Bulls have the NBA's second-best home record behind San Antonio (32-3).

Chicago led by as many as 25 in the third period, reaching that advantage when Keith Bogans lobbed a pass toward the rim on a fastbreak and Rose flew in from the baseline and dunked it with both hands.

C.J. Watson's steal and alley-oop pass for Ronnie Brewer's dunk highlighted a 9-2 Bulls run, that pushed the lead to 13 early in the second quarter.

Chicago pushed the lead to 19 points on a pair of 3-pointers by Korver late in the first half and led 64-47 at the break.

The Bulls shot 66.7 percent in the first half. Thornton scored 18 points for the Kings in the half.

Sacramento, which entered the game averaging more turnovers (16.1) than all but two NBA teams, had 12 miscues in the first 18 minutes, leading to 19 Chicago points.

Boozer was aggressive early, taking four shots in the game's first four minutes. He had six points, two rebounds and three assists in the opening quarter.

The Bulls led 34-28 after one quarter. Bogans, who entered averaging 4.0 points, scored seven in the first 12 minutes, matching Rose for the team high.

Rose's double-pump, reverse dunk on a breakaway gave the Bulls a six-point first-quarter lead and ignited the crowd at United Center.

Thornton led the Kings with nine points in the opening period.

Notes: Chicago mascot "Benny the Bull" celebrated his birthday. He was joined by mascots flown in from other teams as party of a halftime party. ... The win might have helped the Bulls overcome the painful memory of Sacramento's last visit to Chicago. On Dec. 21, 2009, the Kings erased a 35-point third quarter deficit and beat Chicago 102-98. It was the NBA's biggest comeback in over 13 years. ... The 1997-98 Bulls won their 50th game on March 20, one day before this year's Bulls reached that mark. ... Thornton has scored 20 or more points in nine of Sacramento's last 12 games. ... This is the 14th time in franchise history that the Bulls have won 50 or more games. ... The Bulls improved to 38-2 when holding teams under 95 points or less this season


Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Sacramento Kings won 129-119 over the Warriors

(AP) Sacramento, California - Marcus Thornton scored 42 points and Samuel Dalembert had 27 in what might have been the final meeting ever in Sacramento against Golden State. The Kings won, 129-119.

DeMarcus Cousins added 15 as the Kings had their second-highest scoring game of the season and shot 57 percent to win for just the second time in their past nine home games.

Al Thornton scored 23 points and Stephen Curry added 19 to lead the Warriors.
The Kings are contemplating a move to Anaheim after the season

Friday, February 25, 2011

Kings acquire Marquis Daniels from Celtics


(NBA) The Sacramento Kings today acquired forward-guard Marquis Daniels and cash considerations from the Boston Celtics in exchange for a protected second-round pick in the 2017 draft, according to Kings President of Basketball Operations Geoff Petrie.
Daniels, in his eighth NBA season out of Auburn, appeared in 49 games for the Celtics this season, averaging 5.5 ppg (.491 FG%, .684 FT%), 2.3 rpg, and 1.3 apg, before suffering a bruised spinal cord on February 6 versus Orlando and has not seen action since then.

With Daniels likely out for the rest of the season , this may seem like a pointless trade. But it allows the Celtics to free up a roster spot and reduce their luxury tax payment by $2.4 million. They send enough cash in the deal to make it worth the Kings' trouble.