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Kings 101, Jazz 92: Nik Stauskas arrives as Sacramento holds off Utah

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It wasn't pretty but the Kings avoided disaster and finished off their five game homestand with a 101-92 win over the visiting Utah Jazz to move to 11-10 and hand Utah their 9th straight loss.  Rudy Gay led all scorers with 29 points in the victory.

The Kings looked like they might lose their second game in row to a below .500 team for a while, falling down by 8 early on in the first quarter.  They were able to make up the deficit thanks to some horrendous Jazz shooting, which fell off by a lot after the first quarter.  After allowing 31 points in that quarter, Utah would only go on to score 61 over the following three quarters.  The Jazz ended up shooting just 40.5% from the field and 3-17 from three.  Meanwhile Sacramento made 47.3% of their shots and also made 3 threes but on just 8 attempts.

Sacramento was buoyed by the arrival of Nik Stauskas.  Stauskas, who has struggled immensely in the early season, scored a career-high 15 points on 6 of 12 shooting to go with 8 rebounds in 30 minutes.  He looked aggressive early and kept shooting even after missing his first couple shots.  Hopefully it was the confidence boost he needed going forward.

Utah had five players in double digits, led by Gordon Hayward's 19 points.  Alec Burks came back from injury early to score 16 points on 11 shots.

The Kings will now look to make it two in a row when they visit the Lakers tomorrow.


Orlando Magic 101 Utah Jazz 92 Game Recap: NINE STRAIGHT!!!!

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So that's nine straight losses.

Bummer.

For game specifics, the Jazz had a strong first quarter (up 8) wither away by giving up 30+ points in both the 2nd and 4th quarters. A strong 1st quarter. Gordon Hayward schooled Rudy Gay in the first. And then hit just about nothing the rest of the game, while Rudy Gay scored. Reggie Evans ate all the rebounds. Nik Stauskus had a career night. And the Jazz gunked up the opportunities they had.

Specifically, in the 4th quarter crunch time:

  • Hayward clanked 2 FT's.
  • Burks missed 2 shots within 5 feet.
  • Jazz gave up offensive rebounds after missed FT's ... twice.

There never was much hope, during those last few minutes of the game. Just a fool's hope. But fool's hope dies like that.

* * *

Of course the major bright spot was Rudy Gobert. He gave the team 12 points, 9 rebounds, 1 assist, and 1 block in only 21 minutes. He dominated the 3rd quarter ... probably the only strong defensive quarter we've seen the entire year.

And things are funny ...

Rudy Gobert was part of the lineup that lost the lead in the 2nd quarter. He played primarily with Dante Exum, Joe Ingles, Alec Burks, and Enes Kanter.

Rudy Gobert was the major reason the Jazz came back in the 3rd quarter. He was put in the game because Favors got in foul trouble quick. He played primarily with Trey Burke, Alec Burks, Gordon Hayward, and Enes Kanter.

Who knows why the second run worked so much better than the first. You could say it's because of Gordon and Trey ... they're the differences. Except Gordo and Trey combined to shoot 0-7 during that time. Maybe it was because Gordon and Trey are that much better defensively than Ingles and Exum.

Who knows.

Gobert played well. His defense stifled the Kings. He was the major offensive weapon in the 3rd.

* * *

I don't know when the streak will end. I hope the Jazz aren't dying as the losses pile up. I can point to several little things and say I"m excited about this and that so far. We know the team has a long ways to go ... and sadly it looks like it has a longer journey to respectability than many of us had hoped. My hunch is that we'll see some pretty drastic changes in the team over the next year or so ... lineup changes, personnel changes, etc., and that when we look at the main contributors my the end of 2015, we'll see some things that are not the same as they are now.

It'll be painful getting there. I hope everyone can simply enjoy what there is to enjoy and stick around for the duration of the ride.

The Credits: "All Is Lost" - Lakers Links

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Whether Kobe said he'd go down with "that ship" or "that s***," he and the boys are undoubtedly going under. It's sink or swim for the Lakers who play the Sacramento Kings tonight at 7:30 PST.

Lakers News

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Outtakes!

Kings look to build off defensive effort as they take on Kobe and Lakers

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The Kings played good defense, despite giving up a lot of fast-break points, to hold off the Utah Jazz and they look to carry that over against Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers.

The Sacramento Kings moved back to one game over .500 (11-10) Monday when they defeated the Utah Jazz 101-92 at home. Following the game, head coach Michael Malone and several Kings players told reporters what they thought went right (defense and Nik Stauskas) and what went wrong (fast-break points allowed), as well as how they prepare for Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers Tuesday night.

What Went Right

Malone: "There are going to be nights where you struggle to make shots, but if you can get stops on a consistent basis, you'll be able to hang around and we were able to do that and, obviously, we got going in the fourth quarter a little bit tonight to score 33 points. So great defensive effort, that's just another example of when you win, we defend. And I was really happy to see Nik Stauskas kind of become a man in the NBA tonight. He grew up tonight: 15 points, 8 rebounds and you saw him becoming more and more aggressive as he saw the ball go in and I think that's all he needs is just that little bit of confidence to get him going."

Rudy Gay: "We played great defense on them. The first quarter they scored at will, the rest of the game I feel like we played great defense so I think that is something we can take out of this game and build on that."

Carl Landry: "We stayed the course. Over the last few games, we get into situations where we have the lead and late in the fourth quarter, we find some way to give it up and we stayed the course today. Even when the Jazz got back in the game, we did what it took to finish."

Jason Thompson: "Started off the game a little slow with getting stops, they shot a high percentage. We adjusted, the NBA is a game of runs, it was going back and forth, but the team we are capable of being was the team in the second half - getting more stops, moving the ball and getting a W."

What Went Wrong

Stauskas: "They got a lot of fast-break points. I think they got 29 of them, so that's definitely an area that we probably have to clean up."

Malone: "We can talk about guarding Gordon Hayward or [Enes] Kanter or [Derrick] Favors, [Alec] Burks in the half court, but when the shot goes up, get back. And you heard me all night long imploring, begging, pleading whatever you want to call it, but we didn't do it. And I told our guys, we'll take the win, we held them 40.5 [percent] from the field, but 29 fast break points is unacceptable."

Landry: "We can't have fast break points … and that comes from shot selection sometimes. A bad shot turns into bad defense. So we have got to do a better job of continuing to move the ball, take good shots and get back in transition when the shot goes up.

Thompson: "We can limit our fouls, they got in the penalty really early. At that point it was like 5-1 early in both quarters in the second half, so obviously can't have that because that's easy baskets for teams and gets them into rhythm. But other than that, just got to finish with rebounds, which I think we did later in the game."

What's Next: Los Angeles Lakers

Malone: "At his (Kobe Bryant) age and the fact that he's coming off the injury that he had. The guy is amazing. I know he's first or second in the NBA in points per game so he's chasing Michael Jordan. And when you talk about chasing Michael Jordan you must be doing something right. So, hell of a player and not one guy can guard him, he's a great talent, he gets a lot of looks and shots, so we have to make sure we put different guys on him, but we defend him as five guys because that's what it's going to take."

Thompson: "You can't have him [Kobe] get it going, but obviously it's a team game too so you can't have other guys be factors. You know he's going to get his, you just can't have it affect the game that much where they have more points than us, so got to get stops and attack them."

Gay: "Is Kobe playing? [Laughs] Kobe has been playing well. Kobe is obviously their engine and motor - their everything. So if he's out there, they definitely have a chance to win games. No matter what their record is, they have a lot of good players. They have Carlos Boozer, whose a former All Star and everybody knows what Kobe can do so they have pieces, there's nothing we can go in and be relaxed about."

Lakers vs. Kings preview: Take care of business before hitting the road

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The Kings are without their royal center, making this a prime chance for the Lakers to pick up a win.

The Los Angeles Lakers will be heading out for a three-game road trip soon, but have a home game against the Sacramento Kings to take care of before packing up and leaving Southern California. The Kings are without DeMarcus Cousins for a bit as he recovers from viral meningitis, which means Sacramento isn't the formidable opponent they've been to start the season.

Still, the Lakers don't have games that should be considered "winnable" anymore, a sentiment Nick Young echoed during a postgame interview recently. The season is 21 games in, and there's little progress being made toward improvement. Instead, the locker room quotes have been melancholy, ranging from Titanic sinking references, to dissonance over lineup changes. It's not been a good season for the Lakers, even with Kobe Bryant back and leading the league in scoring.

There will come a time and point when the wins seem more harmful than hurtful, but right now, it still feels too early to throw the towel in. Maybe the euphoria of winning doesn't matter, but the repeated losing is exhausting. There's only so many Sad Swaggy P quotes one fan can handle.

Beating up a Kings team without their franchise center seems like an attainable goal for this Lakers team, but who knows. Let's see if they can take care of business before beginning a three-gamer in San Antonio on Friday. Enjoy the game.

Time: 7:30 p.m. PT

Station: TWCSN, NBATV

Kings vs. Lakers Preview: Without Boogie, another winnable game up in the air

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It was not so long ago that Kings-Lakers meant something, but in recent years the matchup has been a shadow of its former self.  Even without DeMarcus Cousins, this should be a win for Sacramento, but as we've learned, nothing comes easy for Sacramento without Boogie.  The Kings even managed to lose three of four games to the Lakers last year, some of those games with Boogie.  Tonight's action tips off at 7:30 pm  on Comcast SportsNet California, NBA TV and on KHTK 1140.

3 THINGS TO LOOK FOR

1.  The only team the Lakers can say they're better than in the Western Conference is Minnesota.  Historically, the Lakers are almost never bad but for the second year in a row it looks like they'll be in the top half of the lottery.  L.A. made a coaching change in the offseason to Byron Scott as well as a bunch of personnel changes, which resulted in less shooting and much worse defense.  The Lakers were 2nd in the league in 3PM last year and so far this year have dropped to 24th.  Last year they were just 28th overall in defensive rating but this year they're 30th and it's not even close as they're allowing 115.2 points per 100 possessions.  That's on pace to be the worst defensive mark in NBA history, passing the 114.7 mark set by the 1990-91 20 win Nuggets, 1992-93 11 win Mavericks and the 2008-09 17 win ... Sacramento Kings.

2. Rookie Nik Stauskas had a bit of a breakout game yesterday against the Utah Jazz, scoring 15 points on 12 shots to go with 8 rebounds.  This game against the Lakers will be a good test to see whether or not he can keep it going, as a second good game in a row would do wonders for his confidence.  We saw earlier this season that Ben got going after one big game, and if the same can happen for Nik, that would be a big boon to our bench production.

3. Omri Casspi got his first DNP-CD of the season yesterday against the Jazz as Derrick Williams got the call over him.  Williams has had an impressive three game stretch (not counting the 3 seconds he played against Indiana), averaging 13 points on 62.9% from the field in just about 15 minutes of action.  Casspi is too good to be completely out of the rotation, but right now Williams has the upper hand and will likely continue to have it if he keeps playing well.

MATCHUP OF THE GAME

Kobe Bryant vs. Ben McLemore

Kobe Bryant is not the player he used to be and while he's still leading the league in scoring at 25.2 points per game, he's doing it while shooting just 38.9% from the field and 27.3% from three.  Still, this is Kobe Bryant, a guy who can fill it up at any time and is the primary focus of a Lakers team that has fallen on hard times.  McLemore has had a very good sophomore season, but Bryant will make him work hard on both ends.  If the Kings can keep Kobe in check, they'll have a very good chance of winning this game.

PREGAME LIMERICK

The stars are aligning in L.A.
for another big game from Rudy Gay.
Lakers are bad,
Kobe's mad,
and their defense is more like "olé"!

PREDICTION

Kings 104, Lakers 96 as the Kings are buoyed by all the celebrities that have come out to see them rather than the Lakers.

Wesley Johnson with the Creative Assist to Kobe in Transition

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Wesley Johnson got lucky that no Kings were following him in transition, as Kobe Bryant was there to clean up his ugly miss:

Or, as Ben put it on the Silver Screen and Roll Twitter Feed:

Wes Johnson, Kobe Bryant Hit Clutch Threes

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The Lakers won't go away, with Wesley Johnson striking the latest blow with this three:

Kobe gets the assist, and the Kings rampant double teaming is starting to haunt them. Then, Kobe decided to toss in a three of his own:

Lakers, Kings, all tied up.


Lakers 98, Kings 95: Sacramento falls apart late against Bryant, Lakers

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In one of the uglier games of the season, the Kings faltered late against the 5-19 Lakers.

In one of the ugliest games of the young season, the Kings fell to the cellar dwelling Lakers 98-95 in Los Angeles. Kobe Bryant had 32 points and six assists in the victory for Los Angeles (5-16), while Darren Collison led the way for Sacramento (11-11) with 26 points and six assists.

After Collison hit a reverse layup to give the Kings a 95-94 lead with 45 seconds left, Kobe Bryant hit four straight free throws and the Kings failed to answer. Rookie Nik Stauskas missed a tough three in the closing seconds after a disastrous final play between him and Collison that capped off a sloppy offensive night for Sacramento.

The Kings were playing their fourth game in five nights, and it was clear throughout the game that Los Angeles was the fresher team. The Lakers took advantage of the Kings lack of ball control, snagging 21 points off of 16 Sacramento turnovers while allowing just five turnovers of their own.

Kobe Bryant's 32 points featured his usual array of clutch shots, including a three pointer with 2:15 left in the contest that tied the game at 92. Bryant shot just 11-26 from the floor, but was effective late in the contest with nine points and three assists in the closing six minutes. Carlos Boozer added 15 points and nine rebounds off the bench, while Nick Young had 11 points.

Rudy Gay had 23 points, five rebounds and five assists for Sacramento, while Ben McLemore provided 15 points and consistent defense on Bryant. The turning point in the contest was with seven minutes left in the third quarter when McLemore picked up his fourth foul. The Kings had been leading 67-58, but their offense struggled with turnovers and the Lakers reeled off a 12-2 run capped off by 10 from Bryant.

Sacramento's defense wasn't the issue as they held Los Angeles to 39.6% from the field. On the offensive side, the Kings shot 45.7% but struggled to maintain any offensive consistency despite playing the worst defensive squad in the league (the Lakers allow 115.2 points per game). The biggest surprise of the game came at the free throw line where the Kings sank just 24 of 37, including just 2-8 from Collison.

The Kings bench again struggled mightily, combining for only 18 of the Kings 95 points. Derrick Williams played 21 minutes and contributed just four points and three turnovers, while Ramon Sessions and Stauskas combined to shoot 3-11 from the floor for six points. For the second game in a row, Omri Casspi did not get any playing time as Coach Michael Malone opted to go with Williams.

After the foray to Los Angeles, the Kings return home for a five game home stand starting with the Houston Rockets on Thursday and the Detroit Pistons on Saturday.

For the opponent's perspective, visit Silver Screen and Roll.

Lakers Dethrone Kings 98-95

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A stellar performance by Kobe Bryant leads the Lakers over the Kings for their second win over a conference rival, and only their second win at home.

Kobe Bryant overcame shooting 4-13 in the first half to pour in 32 points including two clutch free throws in the final minute to put the game on ice over the DeMarcus Cousins-less Sacramento Kings. The Kings were game even without their franchise player, gumming up the Lakers offense by double- and triple-teaming Kobe with sometimes reckless abandon. Eventually, other Lakers began to make some open shots and the Kings strategy backfired.

Nick Young overcame some recent ice cold shooting to chip in 12 points on an at least mediocre 5-13 shooting, an improvement over Sunday's effort. Ed Davis also rewarded Byron Scott for his recent decision to start him with 11 points and 6 rebounds on 5-5 shooting. The man he replaced, Carlos Boozer, made an argument for himself to be inserted back in with the starters by scoring 15 points (on 6-13 shooting) of his own to go with 11 rebounds.

If Ramon Sessions' departure rattled the Lakers, his return simply rattled the rims, as the Kings guard shot 1 of 4 from the field in his return. The main positive offensively for the Kings was Darren Collison, the latest starting point guard to have his way with the purple and gold. Collison scored 26 points on 11-18 shooting, to go with his six assists.

A win over a Pacific Division Rival is always enjoyable, and It was fun to watch Swaggy P hit some crazy shots. It was also fun to see Kobe do this.

See you in San Antonio.

Magic vs. Wizards notebook: Orlando reels after a gut-wrenching loss

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Orlando fell at the buzzer Wednesday.

Gut check

After a gut wrenching loss at the hands of the Golden State Warriors last week, the Orlando Magic showed some resolve, coming back and closing out two of their next three games late to take home victories against the Utah Jazz and Sacramento Kings. Against the Wizards on Wednesday, the Magic must have had a sense of deja vu: they had a late lead, holding a five-point edge with just over a minute and a half remaining, yet they were unable to seal the deal.

No matter how you put it, Wednesday's loss is one that's not going to sit well in the stomach every time it's brought up. But it's a learning experience. Orlando can take its they learned and maybe the next time it's in a close game late, close it out.

After the game, coach Jacque Vaughn was asked about how his team closed the game.

Following the game, Victor Oladipo sat at his stall staring into what appeared to be a never-ending abyss.

"You don't take any possession for granted," said Vaughn. "I think we were up three with 30-some odd seconds left to go in the game. We didn't take advantage of the possession, We will watch film and learn from those possessions and that is what I mean, there is plenty of other opportunities in the court of the game that could have put us up in a better position not to count on someone else to make a mistake."

In the locker room following the game, Victor Oladipo sat at his stall staring into what appeared to be a never-ending abyss. Others sat quietly, with stoic looks on their faces. It was clear that the loss wore heavily on every Orlando player. Oladipo said that it was "tough" not to be able to close out the game, but gave his teammates credit for playing well down the stretch.

This team is still a young one, and it's going to have games like this. While such games might sting for a day or two, it's a learning experience for everyone involved. All the Magic can do is hope that next time out, they are able to close their opponent out.

Dedmon's strong play continues

After catching on with the team following two 10-day contracts last season, Dewayne Dedmon has begun to carve out a role for the Magic. The seven-footer out of Southern California picked up basketball late, but continues to come and give the Magic good, high-energy minutes every time he's on the floor. While his six-point, seven-rebound, two-block performance Wednesday might not jump off the page, it's still solid for a guy who's still learning the game up.

In five December games, Dedmon has averaged six points, 6.3 rebounds, and a block in 18.3 minutes of action. Previously this season, Coach Vaughn has talked about Dedmon making it hard on him not to play him, and that's certainly been the case of late. Of course, this does come with the caveat that Nikola Vucevic has been out with a back sprain, but it still could be something to watch.

Prior to Wednesday night's game, Vaughn talked about how the former Trojan comes in every day and works hard, and it's showing in his play. He still lacks some touch around the basket and doesn't have a real back-to-the-basket game, but his athleticism and leaping ability help make up for that. He has a nose for the ball, and is able to go and get it in almost any situation, which we saw with his putback dunk off a missed layup by Elfrid Payton and a ridiculous throw down off a transition lob from Payton.

Once Vucevic is able to return from his back injury, it's very likely that Dedmon will see his minutes all but go away, no matter how well he's playing. One thing that could save some of his minutes, however, is the fact that Kyle O`Quinn is able to slide down to the power forward spot, opening up some minutes for Dedmon while Vucevic is getting a rest. Either way, it's good to see an underdog story start to pan out, and clearly that's the case with Dedmon.

Houston Rockets vs. Sacramento Kings game preview

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The Rockets look to shake off a tough loss against Golden State when they take on the Sacramento Kings tonight.

West coast games suck. Usually, I'm falling asleep by halftime, but I missed all of the game yesterday because I'm studying for a board exam. I'm not upset that I missed the Rockets running out of gas late, but I am pleased that they fought a team that had most of its rotation firmly in place in their arena.

Back-to-backs suck a lot. I'm sure they suck for NBA players, but I really hate them because trying to turn around and write a game preview right after a game that ends around midnight local time is difficult. Barring injury, there's not much to say that you guys don't know already.

So excuse me while I treat you like intelligent NBA fans and just give you my feelings about the game and skip the matchups.

Sacramento has been missing DeMarcus Cousins for their last 7 games due to viral meningitis. You don't need a medical student to tell you that's some bad stuff, but I'll say it anyway: that's some bad stuff. I hope he gets better quickly. I'm sure Kings fans are also pulling for him, as the Kings are 2-5 without him. The last game he played in was actually against the Rockets.

Houston's coming off a tough loss against the Warriors and the Kings are coming off a tough loss to the Lakers (been there) on Tuesday night.

The Kings have their fair share of guys who can light up a scoreboard. Rudy Gay, Darren Collison, and Ben McLemore can all shoot from all over the place and can get to the line almost at will. Derrick Williams can come off the bench and throw 20 at you. Ramon Sessions hasn't been great this year but he's been known to play well against Houston.

Reggie Evans is a mad dog under the basket and grabs every possible rebound. Jason Thompson will always look like a stud against the Rockets and he's always good for a offensive rebound followed by a putback dunk every time these teams square off. Ryan Hollins gets under everyone's skin and Nik Stauskas is a rookie with range.

Oh, and we all still love Carl Landry around here. Omri Casspi has 2 straight DNP-CDs so he may not get much burn if any at all. Still, it was incredibly nice of him to say such nice things about his time with the Rockets when a certain Chach Douche pretty much burned his bridges as he left Houston. For that, I'll always have appreciate the Playa from Judea.

I'm sure when TNT picked this game up, they were thinking of "Dwight Howard vs. DeMarcus Cousins" or "Rudy Gay vs. James Harden." Well, they'll get one of those tonight. I really hope Shaq tries to give the centers advice. In my head I can already hear it.

Shaq: Terrence Black's got 2 points and 4 rebounds at halftime Ernie. I need him to get at least 25 more points and 15 more rebounds. Donuts-ah Valanciunas is down there making moves and he's just wiggling around down there.

Ernie: Um, it's Tarik Black and Donatas Motiejunas, and Motiejunas has 12 points and 7 rebounds at the break.

Shaq: Valanciunas, Motiejunas, Divac, Olajuwon, I owned all of them!

Kenny: Actually, Hakeem and I beat you 4-0 in the Finals.

Charles (after sucking in his spit before he talks like he always does): Kenny, you never beat nobody. You just prayed Hakeem would do all the work.

Kenny: Someone had to pass him the ball!

Ernie: Guys...

Shaq: NO ERNIE, JOEY DORSEY ISN'T SHOWING ME ANYTHING DOWN THERE! HE'S TOO LITTLE DOWN THERE!

I could write for the NBA on TNT. Really I could.

Also, Propeller Plane revenge game!

The Kings were one of my favorite teams during the early 2000s. I hated Steve Francis so I needed a team to root for that routinely had a shot in the playoffs and I picked Sacramento. I'm devastated for them that they never won a title, but there's still Youtube to remember them by.

Tip-off is at 9:30 CST on TNT.

Rockets vs Kings coverage

Sactown Royalty

The myth and reality of Jason Thompson

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Jason Thompson has inexplicably become a controversial players amongst Kings fans the past several years. We attempt to confirm or deny all relevant rumors.

Jason Thompson's time as a Sacramento King, all 482 games of it, have been a rollercoaster. Jason Thompson has been the power forward of the future, the power forward pariah, and everything in between. And somehow the 12th pick out of Rider became one of the most argued about Kings among Kings fans. This season is no different, as questions still abound, so we'll attempt to sort some fact from fiction.

***

Jason Thompson has developed a jumper

This was a new development we heard about in training camp. We heard that JT had developed a jumper, including putting up attempts from beyond the arc. The stats do not support this rumor, though. According to NBA.com/stats, when JT is shooting about 22% between 10 and 19 feet. He's a surprising 4 for 8 from 20-24 feet, but this seems to be more due to sample size than a sustainable change. Overall JT is shooting 33% from mid-range, and has taken no three pointers.

Conclusion: Myth

***

Jason Thompson has bought into his role on the team

This is a little more subjective topic, as it's difficult to say what JT's mentality actually is. But based on what we can observe, JT definitely seems more engaged. He came into camp in amazing shape, but that's no different than usual. What's different is that we aren't seeing the visible frustration we'd seen in recent seasons. Last year Jason was obviously unhappy with his place on the team, even going so far as to give interviews admitting his frustration publicly. This season, there have been no such interviews, and Jason looks happy on the floor again, despite career lows in usage rate and points per minute.

Instead, we're seeing boosts in other categories. On a per minute basis, this is JT's best season for assists since 2011-2012, as is his assists percentage. A positive attitude and better passing stats, despite a far reduced role in the offense? It's subjective, but I'm calling this a win.

Conclusion: Reality

***

Jason Thompson is playing good defense

This has been perhaps one of the more controversial myths about Jason Thompson. It's become common rhetoric in discussions, based mostly on the eye test. As a result of one of these conversations, I checked to see if the stats backed up this observation. The results:

Jason Thompson is playing really solid defense. Within 10 feet, he's holding opponents to a FG% that is 7.9% worse than their averages. JT was a plus defender in this area last season as well, holding opponents to 2.1% worse than their averages, but the improvement this season is significant. This also contributes to the notion that JT has bought into his role. When looking at these stats, it's also important to remember that JT is regularly drawing the opponent's best big man.

Conclusion: Reality

***

Jason Thompson is a bad value to contract

This one has been around a while. Thompson's contract, when all is said and done, will have spanned three different iterations of the NBA's financial realities. The length of his contract is a relic of the first CBA he played under. The current CBA made his contract's length and dollar value seem excessive and impossible to trade. But now the new TV deal will likely make his final season a bargain. It's a fascinating look at how a player's perceived value is influenced by external factors. Right now, on a contract of $6 million this season, $6.4 million next season, and an unguaranteed $6.8 million in the contract's final year, Thompson's contract suddenly isn't so bad. Combined with his renewed positive attitude and positive defensive impact, Jason Thompson's value to contact is better than it has looked in years.

Conclusion: Myth

***

Jason Thompson is having a really strong start to this season

While rumors of Jason Thompson The Stretch Four appear to have been greatly exaggerated, JT is still off to a tremendous start. Thompson's career as a King has taught me that this could be fleeting, or it could last for an extended period of time. I don't know what changed JT's attitude, but whatever it is, I'll happily take it. The other myths and realities listed above may change between now and the end of the season, but this final point is undeniable.

Conclusion: Reality

Early Season Review: There Are Glitches In "The System" That Need Refining

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When the Reno Bighorns hired David Arseneault Jr. they knew exactly what they were getting -- an uptempo, exciting brand of basketball. The jury is still out on whether or not "The System" can provide winning basketball however.

"We're going to play an exciting brand of basketball. It's going to be up-tempo. They certainly didn't hire me to run the Princeton offense. It's going to be up-tempo with a lot of 3-point shots."  - David Arseneault Jr.

There's an old adage that says any publicity is good publicity and the Reno Bighorns certainly would have to agree at this point in the 2014-15 D-League season. The league and it's followers have been abuzz with Bighorn-mania to start the year and all the attention seems to be centered around sudden star Brady Heslip. The attention is so rampant now that Heslip recently appeared on the Dan Patrick Show to discuss his early successes.

The league (and the Sacramento Kings) have to be thrilled with the relatively suprising hire to this point considering all of the media buzz that is surrounding the team, Heslip, and ultimately the league. While all of this is good news, the question remains -- is The System capable of winning at the professional level and will it serve the D-League's purpose of developing players for the next level?

The numbers are astronomical, both on the offensive and defensive side, however they haven't yet turned into team success for Reno who currently sits at 3-4 through their first seven games. There has definitely been an immediate impact from The System as shown in the following chart.

2013-142014-15
FGA82.3113.3
3PA19.353.7
FTA27.622.7
TOV18.920.9
SPG9.015.1
PPG104.8138.9

As you can see the offense has flourished under the new regime and it isn't merely Brady Heslip alone having a great season. Other guys are prospering as well, but just haven't received the media onslaught that Brady has. Ra'shad James is the other name that pops up as a big winner here. He averaged 7.6 points a night last year with Reno and so far he's up to 19.5 points per game! Some of that can be attributed to hard work and natural progression for James, but how much is because of The System?

There lies the difficult question as to how these players are supposed to be evaluated by scouts looking for players they can plug in at the next level. Some of these numbers unfortunately have to be taken with a grain of salt, however the fact remains that shots still have to be made and the Bighorns are certainly making them in abundance.

The System is looking like it could be revolutionary on offense, however there are two ends of the court in the game of basketball and where this system excels on one end, it surely falls flat on the other.

2013-142014-15
OPP FGA83.498.3
OPP FG%45.556.3
OPP 3PA24.921.6
OPP PPG103.9137.7

The worrisome part of the scheme Reno is employing is that the players are not playing good defense, if they are playing any at all. The helter skelter style of the full court press lends itself to wide open layups and dunks which is why opponents are shooting a ridiculous 56.3 percent against Reno this year. Giving up easier shots for opponents also explains why Reno is giving up less 3-point attempts this year (as shown above) but still allowing almost 34 more points per game.

While the goals of each D-League team might range from winning D-League championships, to getting players called-up, to developing players and coaches the best they can, etc. it's clear that Reno is proving to be very successful at garnering attention for their franchise right now.

"My dad never thought it was going to be a competitive strategy. He just thought that if they were going to lose, why lose 60-40 when you could lose 150-130. At least then the guys will have something positive to talk about after they lose because somebody was scoring all those points."   - Arseneault Jr.

Will the success of The System earn Reno's players NBA looks, or will their production be lost due to their circumstances? Reno hasn't had a call-up yet this season, though only five teams have, and perhaps even more troubling is that they did not have a call-up the entire 2013-14 season (Only Fort Wayne, Idaho and Reno didn't have a call-up last year). Their last call-up was Garrett Temple almost two years ago on Christmas Day 2012.

The goal has to be to develop these players and prepare them for the next step and for me the jury is still out on whether or not this strategy will help the franchise achieve that goal.

The quotes used in this article are from the Reno-Gazette Journal and stats from D-League.com

Kings vs. Rockets Preview: Sacramento looks to remain undefeated on TNT

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The Kings can't seem to find a rhythm without DeMarcus Cousins, losing the other day to the Los Angeles Lakers despite holding the lead for most of the game.  Even against lesser opponents, the Kings haven't been able to figure out how to hold on to a lead and close a game out.  Tonight they'll have even more trouble as the 16-5 Houston Rockets come to town.  Tonight's action tips off at 7:30 pm on TNT and on KHTK 1140.

3 THINGS TO LOOK FOR

1.  The last time these two teams met, Rudy Gay and Darren Collison didn't play and the Rockets got off to a hot start thanks to a plethora of Kings turnovers and bad defense.  Turnovers have consistently been a problem for the Kings all season, as they average 16 a game.  Meanwhile the Rockets hardly ever turn the ball over at 11.3 a game, the best mark in the NBA.  The Kings don't have to be that protective of the ball, but they can't turn it over 21 times for 32 Houston points again if they hope to win.

2.  The Rockets are somehow even more injured than last time.  While they have Patrick Beverley back, they're still missing Dwight Howard and Terrence Jones, and have also lost Kostas Papanikolaou, Francisco Garcia and Isaiah Canaan (who killed the Kings in their last matchup) to injury.

3. Houston loves to shoot the three.  In fact, 42.2% of their total shot attempts are three pointers, which you might note is an insane number for the NBA.  They're first in both 3PM and 3PA for the year.  By comparison, the Kings only shoot 17.8% of their total shot attempts as threes, and are 30th in makes and 29th in attempts.  Now, Houston is only 16th in percentage, so the Kings will have to do their best to make sure Houston's shots are at least contested.

MATCHUP OF THE GAME

Donatas Motiejunas vs. Jason Thompson

Last time these two teams played, Motiejunas surprised us all by killing the Kings in the post with a bevy of moves, scoring a career-high 21 points.  He's been playing very well since joining the starting lineup in Dwight Howard's absence, averaging 15.1 points per game on 57.3% from the field over the last 9 games.  The Kings can expect someone like James Harden to have a big game regardless, but it's guys like Motiejunas that Sacramento needs to keep under control, and that will fall to Jason Thompson.

PREGAME LIMERICK

Another game on national TV,
but this time with no Boogie.
Gotta play hard,
avoid their bombard,
and win at home on TNT.

PREDICTION

Kings 99, Houston 98 after Darren Collison hits the game winner over James Harden and then pulls his beard, revealing it to be fake and Harden to actually be the alias of a pretty athletic Texas telemarketer named George Softout.


Carl Landry contributing again but expects more out of himself

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Carl Landry is feeling more and more like his old self after two major surgeries last season, but he expects more.

In a span of six months, Carl Landry tore the part of the body that allows for the bending movement of the knee and flexing of the hip (hip flexor) and later tore the band of cartilage (medial meniscus) that provides cushion for the knee. After two surgeries and a long summer, the 31-year-old power forward is back in the Kings rotation and surpassed a milestone last week - he has played in more games already this season than he did in the entire 2013-14 campaign (18).

While the injuries kept him from ever getting his wind back last season, Landry has a relatively steady role this year in a frontcourt that has also featured DeMarcus Cousins, Jason Thompson, Reggie Evans and Ryan Hollins. The 6'9'' power forward isn't exactly lighting the box score on fire, but head coach Michael Malone knows what he is going to get from Landry every night - patience under the basket combined with solid footwork, perimeter shooting, rebounding, defense and overall toughness.

Landry is averaging 7.8 points, 4.1 rebounds in 18.9 minutes per game. He also is averaging a career-best 90 percent from the free throw line. In the 2012-13 season (right before he signed a four-year deal with the Kings), he played in 81 games as a key reserve for the Golden State Warriors, averaging 10.8 points and 6 rebounds in 23 minutes of action.

The veteran, who is now in his eighth NBA season, won't go as far as to say he is back to 100 percent healthy, but said the soreness is gone for the most part and that he is feeling better every day. And while he is beginning to contribute on a more consistent basis for the Kings, he is striving for more.

"I feel good, but I want more out of myself. Definitely as far as like I want to become faster, I feel like I might be a step slow … more athletic, just everything that I think mentally that I can do, sometimes the body just isn't there yet, but I am working at it every day, and things are definitely getting better," Landry told Sactown Royalty.

Recognizing what it was going to take for him to get back to a competitive level in the NBA, Landry spent the whole summer rehabbing.

"It was rough, the whole summer was rough. It was the hip, it was the knee, then it was the knee, then it was the hip .... You always hear, ‘when it rains it pours,' and that's what happened. I just couldn't get a break," Landry said. "I'm just glad that I have the opportunity to compete now at that level and I'm getting better every day."

Landry didn't begin to feel better until the second week of training camp when he got knocked down for the first time and was able to establish his timing.

"That is something that I just couldn't simulate in the summer no matter how hard I tried. Individual workouts or even just a pickup game, it's not the same as a real NBA game; you can't simulate it," Landry said.

Lately, Landry and his frontcourt teammates have been filling in for Cousins, who has missed seven games now with viral meningitis, the best they can. In that stretch, the team has gone 2-5. Landry's tone grew serious as he talked about Cousins' battle with meningitis.

"First and foremost, he's a friend, he's a teammate. I want him to get well. Meningitis is something that I've never experienced, but we all know it's serious. And I've heard some people passing away from it, so that's what is most important is his health and hopefully he gets well soon," said Landry, who also played for the Kings during Cousins' rookie season.

In the seven games that Cousins has missed, Landry, who is known as "Top Hat" around these parts, is averaging 6.2 points and 4.1 rebounds.

"We've got to continue to rebound the ball and play defense. Reggie [Evans] has done a great job, day in and day out. JT [Thompson] has been consistent. We've had a lift off the bench from Derrick Williams with scoring and defensively with Ryan Hollins," Landry said. "So everybody has to contribute, it has to be a collective effort from all the bigs because what's lost with DeMarcus is a lot so everybody has to pick up their game a ton."

Landry has his health in the back of his mind.

"I think that is the most important part, because without that you don't have a game," Landry said.

The Sactown Royalty Show Ep 62: Ben McLemore

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Sacramento Kings shooting guard Ben McLemore joins us for a one-on-one interview.

The Sactown Royalty Show is back!  This week I'm joined by Ben McLemore, starting shooting guard for the Sacramento Kings.  This week's episode is a little shorter than our normal show, but we were happy with the time Ben was able to give us.  Even with it being shorter, we still talked a lot about Ben's offseason preparation, his holiday plans, and the (entirely fictional) strife between him and Rudy Gay.

This episode was recorded on Tuesday, December 9th.  We have a slightly slower turnaround time on episodes since we stopped doing them live, but it's helped the audio quality quite a bit.  This episode also marks the unveiling of my new microphone, which should make me sound even better/dumber.

Check Out Sports Podcasts at Blog Talk Radio with The Sactown Royalty Show on BlogTalkRadio

Like the show? Subscribe to us on iTunes or on Stitcher! Leave us ratings, leave comments, let us know how we're doing. Ratings and comments on iTunes really help us out with promoting the show. And of course, continue the discussion in the comments below.

And a big thanks to Audible.com for supporting us. To get your free 30-day trial and a free audiobook, sign up here. Using that particular link gets you the special offer, and let's them know you heard about them through our show.

As always, thanks for listening.

Rockets 113, Kings 109: Late game miscues doom Sacramento

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Late heroics by James Harden combined with late Sacramento turnovers cost the Kings a winnable game against the Houston Rockets.

Two days removed from the loss in Los Angeles, the Kings followed a familiar script; a solid fourth quarter lead evaporated due to unforced turnovers, missed free throws and an abundance of threes by their opponent. It needed an overtime period, but Sacramento's late mistakes led to a 113-109 loss to the Houston Rockets.

James Harden had 44 points, including a game-tying three to force overtime and 12 points in the extra period to win it for the Rockets (17-5). Sacramento (11-12) made a late overtime run capped off by a three from Darren Collison with seven seconds left that made it 111-109, but Harden made two clutch free throws to secure the victory.

Rudy Gay finished with 13 points, eight rebounds and eight assists but shot just 4-18 from the field. Collison led the Kings in scoring with 24 points, seven assists and six turnovers, while Ben McLemore had 21 points. Trevor Ariza and Patrick Beverley each had 15 points for Houston.

With 35 seconds left in regulation, Gay missed a contested three, and Harden sank one of his own with 20 seconds left to tie the game at 95. Gay missed a 18 foot jumper on an iso play the next possession, but Houston didn't have enough time to ward off the extra period.

Houston had been struggling with the three point shot until the final quarter, going a combined 5 of 27 in the first three periods but sank 8 of 13 in the fourth and 2 of 3 in overtime. The Rockets are the NBA's best three point shooting team, and even without the anchor of Dwight Howard in the middle, they weren't shy about taking them; they finished a combined 15 of 44 on the longball.

The Kings meanwhile finished with 21 turnovers-14 of them in the second half-and shot 23 of 34 from the free throw line, both problems that haunted them in the 98-95 loss to the Lakers on Tuesday.

Sacramento broke out in the first quarter, running to a 26-16 lead while holding the Rockets to 28% shooting. Unlike the season's regular pattern, the bench unit did not surrender the lead to begin the second-they combined for 14 first half points while holding their own against many of the Rockets' starters. The Kings maintained a 46-36 lead at halftime, which was the lowest amount Houston has scored in a half all season.

Sacramento had plenty of opportunities to close out the game, including a 95-90 lead with 57 seconds to go, but Gay misfired on both of his late iso possessions while Harden managed his own.

It wasn't the full match-up that the national TNT audience would have liked-DeMarcus Cousins missed his seventh straight game due to his viral meningitis, while the Rockets were without star Dwight Howard (knee), as well as Terrence Jones, Kostas Papanikolaou, Francisco Garcia and Isaiah Canaan.

The Kings remain home for four more straight games, continuing with the Detroit Pistons on Saturday and the Oklahoma City Thunder on Tuesday.

For the opponent's perspective, visit The Dream Shake.

Why can't the Kings sustain a lead?

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With yesterday's loss to the Houston Rockets, the Kings are now 11-12 with five of their 12 losses coming despite the team leading by double digits at some point during those games.  Even some of Sacramento's wins (like the recent one against Indiana) came despite a big double-digit lead being erased.  While the loss of DeMarcus Cousins hasn't helped matters, this was a problem even before Cousins' absence.  So why does it keep happening?

The Bench

It's no secret that Sacramento falls off dramatically when the bench comes in, but it's easier to just show the numbers:

NameORtg On CourtORtg Off CourtDRtg On CourtDRtg Off Court
DeMarcus Cousins112.4103.2100.2112.3
Jason Thompson106.7107.8103.6111.5
Rudy Gay111.498.1104.5112.8
Ben McLemore109.6101.9104.9111.7
Darren Collison112.4103.2100.2112.3
Carl Landry101.7110.5107107.2
Omri Casspi101.4110112.2104.5
Derrick Williams107.9107116.8104.5
Ramon Sessions100110.6110.4105.5
Nik Stauskas102.1109.2117.2103.2
Ray McCallum102.6107.6121.2105.7
Reggie Evans106.5107.4110.7105.8
Ryan Hollins96.5108.6114.9106

Numbers courtesy of basketball-reference.com

For those that don't know, ORtg (Offensive Rating) and DRtg (Defensive Rating) are an estimate of a team's points per 100 possessions with a player on the floor.  You want a higher number for ORtg and a lower number for DRtg.  As you can see from these numbers, the Kings have a big positive net difference on both ends of the court with the starters, but just as big of a net negative difference with most of the bench players.  The only bench player on the team to make the offense better is surprisingly Derrick Williams, but Williams also has the second worst net defensive difference to rookie Nik Stauskas (McCallum is the worst but he has only seen garbage time minutes so his numbers are based on a very small sample size).

Game after game we've seen leads by the Kings given up as soon as the bench comes in.  What this tells me is that for now, we can't trust our bench, and it's probably best that going forward our rotations are staggered so that we avoid all bench units as much as possible.  I don't envy Malone's job, because this is much easier said than done.

Three Point Shooting

Another reason Sacramento has trouble sustaining leads is three point shooting, namely that they can't hit any and other teams can.  Against Houston for example, the Kings actually made more Field Goals than the Rockets but Houston hit 15 threes to 8 for Sacramento, and 8 is a lot for the Kings (their highest mark this season is 9 against Dallas).  7 of those triples came in the deciding fourth quarter.  Now, the Kings are actually pretty good at defending the three point line, allowing just 31.5%, the 5th best mark in the NBA, but they're going to be the inferior shooting team almost every night.  Sacramento's just 29th in three point makes, 28th in attempts and 24th in percentage.  It's hard to keep a lead when an opponent keeps answering your twos with threes.

Turnovers

The Kings also aren't helping matters themselves as they continue to be one of the most prolific teams at turning the ball over.  The Kings are the 4th worst team in the NBA in terms of turnover rate at 15.0% and they also aren't good at forcing teams into miscues of their own, with the worst (and by worst, I mean best for the opponent) opponent turnover percentage in the league at just 10.6%.  That means Sacramento opponents are getting more chances to score on any given night.

***

The Kings are obviously not a good team yet.  They have good, even great, pieces but they are also still very much a work in progress.  This team has already improved much more quickly than I think any of us thought it would after last season, and the one thing I think we can count on this front office to be is aggressive in searching for improvement.  There's bound to be growing pains in this process but at least we are moving in the right direction.

Watch James Harden snatch a Rockets win from the jaws of defeat

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Sacramento could've used DeMarcus Cousins' interior defense against James Harden in the Houston Rockets' 113-109 overtime loss on Thursday.

The Kings led the Rockets by 10 points after the first quarter, 10 points at the half and eight heading into the fourth quarter. By that point, Houston's James Harden had already scored 24 points.

But his Thursday night was far from over. Harden would lead the Dwight Howard-less Rockets with 44 points and eight assists by the end of what would become a 113-109 overtime victory against a Sacramento team without DeMarcus Cousins. It wasn't that the Kings were playing bad defense all night long. They held Houston to 40 percent shooting and Ben McLemore was literally going down trying. But they did break down at the most crucial times.

Harden took advantage. According to ESPN Stats and Info, Harden leads the NBA by shooting 7-for-11 over the last two seasons on shots that put the Rockets ahead or tie them with opponents in the final 24 seconds (with a minimum of 10 attempts).

Sacramento led 95-92 in the final minute after Harden left Derrick Williams wide open for a three. No, it wasn't poor focus by Harden. He was helping out on a drive and didn't get help in return. Nonetheless, Harden would save the Rockets, pumping in this quick-trigger three over Rudy Gay with 20 seconds left in the game to ultimately force overtime.

HardenTie

In the overtime period, Harden continued to roll. He scored seven points before the Kings could blink, once hitting a three and three times slicing through Sacramento's defense without much issue. The Rockets started with a 10-1 all-Harden run in the overtime period that ended with this drive for the score.

It's a fine example to show how easily he was getting to the rim.

Harden then found Patrick Beverley for a three-pointer and hit the final two free throws for Houston as the Rockets found the bottom of the net while nearly shooting their way back into the game.

Add an improved effort on defense into the equation, and it made sense Harden looked exhausted toward the end of the game. After all, Sacramento made him take 32 shots and get to the foul line 15 times to reach his totals. Playing catchup didn't make it easy on him.

Still, the barrage of points looked anything but effortless.

★★★

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