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 Wednesday, December 15
Webber, Williams and Co. are contenders
 
By Dr. Jack Ramsay
Special to ESPN.com

 
Chris Webber
Webber and the Kings are a team to watch in the playoffs.
The Sacramento Kings got their start in professional basketball as the Rochester (N.Y.) Royals in the defunct National Basketball League in 1945. That franchise joined the Basketball Association of America in 1948, and stayed with it when that group became the National Basketball Association in the following year (1949).

The Royals moved from Rochester to Cincinnati in 1957, became the Kansas City/Omaha Kings (1972 to 1975), the Kansas City Kings from 1976 to 1985, before moving West to settle in Sacramento the following year.

While on this odyssey, the Kings won one championship (1951), when the team was coached by owner Les Harrison. The franchise has been represented by a surprising total of 14 Hall of Famers: Harrison, Bob Davies, Bob Wanzer, Arnie Risen, Alex Hannum, Wayne Embry, Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas, Red Holzman, Bob Cousy, Nate Archibald, Jack Twyman, Clyde Lovellette and Bill Russell, who served briefly as the team's coach and general manager after his great playing career with Boston.

Rick Adelman, the Kings' current coach, once played for the Kings when it was in Kansas City/Omaha.

As might be expected from a franchise that moved so frequently, success has been an elusive quality. In its 51-year history in the NBA, the Kings have missed playoff participation 29 times, and only once -- the championship year of 1951 -- did the team have a better than .500 playoff record.

With the new and youthful ownership of the Maloof group, and under the capable administration of VP/basketball operations Geoff Petrie, the Kings expect better results. They had a winning season and made the playoffs in '99 and gave Utah fits before losing in the first round, 3-2.

Trades, Free Agents and Draft Picks

  • 1994-95: Drafted Brian Grant, 6-9 forward from Xavier (first round, 8th pick); Michael Smith, 6-8 forward from Providence (35th pick overall); Lawrence Funderburke, 6-9 forward from Ohio State (51st pick overall). Re-signed center Olden Polynice and forward Lionel Simmons.

    THROUGH THE YEARS
    Year Record Playoffs
    1994-95 39-43 --
    1995-96 39-43 1-3
    1996-97 34-48 --
    1997-98 27-55 --
    1998-99 27-23 2-3
    Totals 166-212 3-6

  • 1995-96: Drafted Corliss Williamson, 6-7 forward from Arkansas (first round, 13th pick); Tyus Edney, 5-10 point guard from UCLA (47th pick overall); and Dejan Bodiroga, 6-8 small forward from Yugoslavia (51st pick overall). Traded Walt Williams and Tyrone Corbin to Miami for Billy Owens and Kevin Gamble.

  • 1996-97: Drafted Predrag Stojakovic, 6-9 forward from Greece (first round, 14th pick); Jason Sasser, 6-7 forward from Texas Tech (41st pick overall). Hired Pete Carril (Princeton) as assistant coach.

  • 1997-98: Drafted Olivier Saint-Jean (now Tariq Abdul-Wahad), 6-6 guard from San Jose State (first round, 11th); Anthony Johnson, 6-3 guard from College of Charleston (40th pick overall). Traded Michael Smith and Bobby Hurley to Vancouver for Otis Thorpe and Chris Robinson. Traded Mitch Richmond and Otis Thorpe to Washington for Chris Webber. Hired Rick Adelman as head coach.

  • 1998-99: Drafted Jason Williams, 6-1 point guard from Florida (first round, 7th pick); drafted Jerome James, 7-1 center from Florida A&M (36th pick overall). Signed free agents Vlade Divac, 7-0 center (Charlotte); Jon Barry, 6-4 guard (L.A. Lakers); Vernon Maxwell, 6-4 guard (Charlotte) and Scot Pollard, 6-11 center (Detroit). Acquired Chris Webber for Mitch Richmond and Otis Thorpe.

  • 1999-2000: Drafted Ryan Robertson, 6-5 guard from Kansas (45th pick overall). Traded Tariq Abdul-Wahad and a future first round pick to Orlando for Nick Anderson; Signed free agent guard Darrick Martin (LA Clippers), guard Tony Delk (Golden State), forward Tyrone Corbin (Atlanta) and center Bill Wennington (Chicago). Hired Dave Twardzik as regional and advance scout.

    Present and Future
    Geoff Petrie has done an excellent job in turning the Kings around. His draft choices (Williamson, Williams, Stojakovic and Funderburke), trades (Webber and Anderson), and free agent signings (Divac, Barry, Martin, Delk, Pollard and Corbin) make up the entire roster. He has gathered a solid coaching staff (Adelman, Carril, John Wetzel, Byron Scott and Wayne Cooper) and added another quality basketball man in Twardzik for scouting. Last season was the Kings' first .500 season since 1983.

    This year, the Kings bolted out of the gate, put on dazzling displays of uptempo basketball, and at one point, had the league's best record (8-1). Chris Webber put up a triple-double, Jason Williams made highlight reel passes and shots, as the Kings blew past bewildered opponents. They were the NBA's favorite team to watch.

    An extended eastern road trip and some tough opponents at home combined to bring them back to earth and removed some of the sparkle from their game.

    Despite the Kings' quick start, Coach Rick Adelman knew his team would ultimately have to upgrade its defensive quality and be more selective with its shots to be among the elite teams. That time is now. Webber, Divac, Williamson, Funderburke and Pollard rebound well enough to generate fast breaks. There is nice foot speed among the big men on which Adelman wants to capitalize.

    Once the team is running, the ball is usually in Williams' hands. He must be more consistent with his overall handle. Jason tends toward the spectacular when a fundamental pass would do just as well. His assist/turnover ratio is barely two-to-one. He also needs to control his shot selection (35 percent from the field). His teammates also need to govern their output from the perimeter, where they rank close to the bottom of the league in three-point accuracy.

    Overall, I like this team. It plays with a lot of energy, competes hard, and there's good team harmony. Adelman makes good use of his bench guys (Barry, who is now injured, Funderburke, Pollard and Stojakovic have been dynamic). With Adelman's firm but flexible hand on the reins, I expect the Kings to regroup from this brief funk and be very competitive as the season progresses.

    One thing is certain, this isn't a team for anyone to take lightly in the playoffs.

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