Tag Archives: Maloof Brothers

Sacramento Kings Preview

Basketball Intelligence Previews the Kings’ 2014-15 season

Team Name: Sacramento Kings

Last Year’s record 28-54
Key losses: Isaiah Thomas. Quincy Acy, Travis Outlaw, Aaron Gray
Key additions: Darren Collison, Ramon Sessions, Nik Stauskas, Omri Casspi, Ryan Hollins,
Eric Moreland, Dean Oliver (Analytics)

1. What Significant Moves Were Made during the Off-season:

Darren Collison replaces Isaiah Thomas at point guard.  Collison plays at a faster pace but otherwise is not the offensive contributor that Thomas was.  Ramon Sessions is one of the best back-up point guards in the Association.  First-round pick Nik Stauskas is potentially one of  the NBA’s top rookies. Known mostly for his outstanding marksmanship and range in college, he will help address the Kings’ 3-point shooting and floor spacing deficiencies. He is also an excellent ball handler.  Sessions, Stauskas, Casspi, Hollins and Moreland represent a bench upgrade. Bringing in Dean Oliver to head analytics and be involved in personnel decisions is a major plus.

2. What are the Team’s Biggest Strengths:

Frontcourt scoring ( DeMarcus Cousins, Rudy Gay). Offensively, Cousins is one of the very best big men in the league.  The Kings are optimistic that his FIBA World Cup experience will result in maturation, a better attitude and improved all-around play. His talent has never been questioned.

Versatility: Coach Malone can mix and match due to the mulit-positional abilities of several of the Kings’ key players.

Improved Bench Play:  The Kings significantly upgraded their bench adding Sessions, Stauskas, Casspi, Hollins and Moreland.  If Stauskas starts, then Ben McLemore moves from starter to sub.  Having Ray McCallum, who played well last season as a rookie,  as the third point guard is a luxury, but will it stunt his growth by over-limiting his playing time?

Analytics: The addition of Dean Oliver to head this aspect is a coup for the Kings.

3. What are the team’s biggest weaknesses?:

Defense: The Kings have been a poor defensive team for many years.  There is a lot of blame to go around.  For example, Cousins’ contributions have mostly come on offense.  He has often appeared not to even try on defense.  If all the praise he has received for his play with Team USA is indicative of some maturation, perhaps we will see a much greater effort from him defensively.  He has the tools to be much better than he has shown in past seasons.  The Kings are also counting on new-acquisition Darren Collison to supply more ball pressure than Isaiah Thomas, which could help. In addition to his exemplary rebounding, Reggie Evans is a high-energy defender. His minutes are generally limited though, since, when he is in the game, the Kings’ offense almost plays four-on-five. Acquisition Ryan Hollins can supply rim protection but he is also  limited offensively.

Lack of Ball Movement: Last season, the Kings were horrible in this regard ( last season they were in the bottom five in the league in ball movement  despite finishing in the top five in player movement.) The hope is that a 2nd year under Coach Malone and the roster changes will bring improvement.

4. What are the Goals for the Team?:

While most of the moves the Kings have made are upgrades, they still play in the extremely difficult Western Conference so a playoff spot remains unlikely.  35 wins is not an unreasonable goal.

5. Have the Kings Successfully Moved Past the Stench of the Maloofs?

First, let’s recognize just how horrid the wannabe playboy brothers’ ownership was.  How best to describe them:  The Hollies would say “King Midsases in Reverse”: they managed to turn an (inherited) successful beer franchise, a Las Vegas Casino and and NBA team into crap; Ann Richards would say: “They were born on third base and thought they hit a triple.”.  And if someone asks if they are “fools or knaves”, the best answer is “both”.

They managed to turn the maniacal local Kings’ fan base entirely against them before being run out of town.

The new Kings’ ownership group, headed by Vivek Ranadive, is now in its second season and has made significant progress in turning things around quickly. Ranadive is a forward thinker and that manifests itself in many ways that should benefit the Kings’ future.  It also helps that the ownership has deep pockets, so the Kings have said goodbye to the skinflint ways of the past. Work on a new arena to replace the embarrassing current structure is progressing. GM Pete D’Alessandro and Head Coach Mike Malone are well-respected around the Association. On the whole, the local fans are so glad to be rid of the goofball family that excitement for the team has returned to a significant degree, reflected in improved season ticket sales. Off-season moves look promising. (The one controversial change was replacing Isaiah Thomas with Darren Collison.  Time will tell if the expected resulting pace change will pay off.)

OKC-MIA, Hack-a-strategy, AD, Warriors, Pacers’ “D”, Cavs “Non-D”, Mozgov, Maloofs, Steinsma

– Scott Brooks’ Decision to “go small” pays off in OKC win:

– From Darnell Mayberry at NewsOk.com:  http://newsok.com/darnell-mayberrys-notebook-nuggets-scott-brooks-makes-a-change/article/3928702

-From Steve Aschburner at NBA.com; http://hangtime.blogs.nba.com/2014/01/30/okc-gets-minor-victory-over-miami-may-have-major-lineup-breakthroug

– From Ethan Skolnick, Bleacher report: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1941690-scott-brooks-adjustment-kevin-durants-burst-mean-long-night-for-lebron-heat

– Gregg Popovich hates foul strategy: (from Nick Friedell, ESPNChicago):

”  Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich dislikes employing a “Hack-a-Shaq” type fouling strategy, but he’s going to do it anyway.

Popovich, who ordered his team to foul Houston Rockets center Dwight Howard seven straight times in the fourth quarter of Tuesday night’s 97-90 loss, is not a fan of sending guys to the line — but concedes it’s part of the game.

“I hate it,” Popovich said of the strategy before Wednesday night’s game against the Chicago Bulls. “I think it’s awful. I hate doing it. Seriously. I think it’s a pain in the neck, fans don’t like it, I don’t like it, nobody likes it. It disrupts the flow of the game. If there’s an equitable way to get rid of it, I’m all for it.

“But it’s part of the game. It’s part of the rules now and if you think somebody can’t shoot a free throw you might as well take advantage of it. If you think somebody can’t shoot you don’t guard him the same way. So [the strategy’s] fair, it’s just kind of ugly I think.”

Read it here:http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/10373909/gregg-popovich-san-antonio-spurs-hates-hack-shaq-fouling-strategy

– Anthony Davis is the NBA’s next transcendent talent (from Drew Garrison, SBNation):

“Anthony Davis is on track to accomplish things on the

basketball court that only the greats of the game have. The signs are everywhere that he is primed to be the NBA’s next generational frontcourt talent.”

Read it here: http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2014/1/29/5351704/anthony-davis-new-orleans-pelicans-statistics-analysis

– Q&A: Warriors GM Bob Myers (from Nate Duncan,BasketballInsiders.com):

Part I

” Nine months after engineering the Golden State Warriors’ first playoff appearance and series victory since 2007, General Manager Bob Myers sat down with Basketball Insiders’ Nate Duncan in the midst of another solid season.  In part one of a two-part interview, Myers discusses the Warriors’ approach in building from his hiring in 2011 to their 2013 playoff success.”

Read it here: http://www.basketballinsiders.com/qa-warriors-gm-bob-myers-part-1/

Part II

“Nine months after engineering the Golden State Warriors’ first playoff appearance and series victory since 2007, General Manager Bob Myers sat down with Basketball Insiders’ Nate Duncan in the midst of another solid season.  In part two of a two-part interview, Myers discusses the Warriors’ acquisition of Andre Iguodala, the extension of Andrew Bogut and the team’s approach with its core going forward.”

– Cavalier Film Room: Too much help-side and three point consequences (from Kirk, Waitingfornextyear.com):
“Today, we’re going to be talking about help-side defense and what happens when players help too much. Specifically, we’re going to take a look at several wide open three-point looks the Suns got on Sunday night and how these could have been much better contested with proper defensive floor balance.
” Guarding the three-point arc has always been the Achilles heel of the Mike Brown defense. But right now, it’s a flatout mess as the players with the heaviest minutes loads can’t seem to figure it out.”
– The Pacers Are the Seattle Seahawks of the NBA (from Kirk Goldsberry, Grantland.com):
” The Pacers are the Seattle Seahawks of the NBA. In an offensive era, they are an emerging defensive juggernaut. They have yet to win a title, but this may finally be the year, and if it is, they will have their defense to thank. Like the Seahawks’, the Pacers’ defense is more than good. Statistically, it’s the best defense in the league by a mile.
“In 2014 the NBA is a drive-and-kick league. In the absence of hand checks, attacking guards and wings run wild, slashing into defenses, wreaking havoc, and either scoring or pitching it out to an open shooter. That formula might work reasonably well against 29 NBA teams, but it doesn’t fly against Indiana, which, like the Seattle Seahawks, has built a modern-day defense that effectively stops teams from scoring the ways modern-day offenses love to score.”
– The Maloofs Want Back in NBA, Introduce NBA 3.1
This satire on the Maloofs from beeradgee88 is irresistible.  read it here: http://www.sactownroyalty.com/2014/1/29/5352658/maloof-family-satire
– Greg Stiemsma’s long and winding road to the NBA (From Jim Hoehn, Madison State Journal)

 Greg Stiemsma’s current basketball home is the Big Easy, but the winding journey from Randolph to the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans has been far from any kind of easy.The 6-foot-11 Stiemsma, 28, who followed up a high school career that included three state titles at Randolph with a collegiate career as a role player at the University of Wisconsin, is in his first season with the Pelicans but his third NBA stop in three years.

Along the way, Stiemsma’s post-collegiate basketball path also has included stops in Korea, two in Turkey, signatures on two NBA contracts when he didn’t get off the bench, and a couple of South Dakota winters with the Sioux Falls SkyForce of the NBA Development League.”

Read it here: http://host.madison.com/sports/basketball/professional/nba-greg-stiemsma-s-long-and-winding-road-to-the/article_0524c78e-b3b8-501b-897b-7461d84d258c.html

(Note: Did you know that Stiensma averaged 2.7 points, 2.3 rebounds and 1.0 blocks in 10.2 minutes over 93 games, including just seven starts as a collegian at UW?)