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Kings struggle to secure site for new arena, eminent domain threat looms

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The Sacramento Kings have plans to build a new arena at the Downtown Plaza site in Sacramento and open the facility by 2016, but they've run into a problem during the early phases of implementation and may need City Hall to provide some help. Negotiations have broken down between the new Kings ownership and a property owner at Downtown Plaza over the potential sale of a parcel where a building with a Macy's men's store currently sits, according to Ryan Lillis and Dale Kasler of The Sacramento Bee. The ownership group is preparing to ask City Hall to assist in the talks and provide the threat of eminent domain to move the process along.

Macy's plans to vacate the building this fall and relocate to the other end of the Plaza, but the property owner, the New York-based Island Capital group, has walked away from the negotiating table. No eminent domain lawsuit has been filed, but the mention of invoking the city's power is being used as a negotiating tactic. The decision to file a lawsuit could slow down the entire process of building an arena at the site, as the issue would take time to move through the court system, which is why Tom Ziller of Kings blog Sactown Royalty is focused on the leverage the team gains through this process:

The Bee reports that the Kings have promised to pay any costs incurred by city staff working on this issue, and of course eminent domain itself would lead to the property owner getting paid. The Kings will cover all of that. This is really an arrow that the team can line up to put a bit more pressure on the landowner, who -- without a tenant in a couple months, and with no chance another tenant will move into that space at this point -- is just trying to wring a few more dollars out of the Kings. The team's fighting back.

As noted in the report, Sacramento did sue a property owner in 2008 in an eminent domain case over his refusal to sell nine downtown parcels the city was seeking for development. That case was settled eight months after the time of the filing, with the owner receiving $18.6 million for the properties. In essence, eminent domain cases require the government to prove there is a public necessity for condemning property where an owner is standing in the way of a project intended for public use. The owner has the right to dispute the condemnation and the right to be compensated for any taking.

With the plans to build a new arena already in place, the threat of an eminent domain case may be potent enough to assist the Kings in their current talks. It shouldn't take too long to find out whether this development jump starts the negotiation process.

More from SB Nation:

Ziller: The D-League is working

Phil Jackson's coaching options

Paul Pierce: "Time for the Nets to start running" NYC

Fixing the NBA, blogger style

The rise and fall of B-Easy


NBA Schedule Analysis: The Kings Will Go 47-35

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Good news Kings fans! I've done some very serious analysis of the 2013-14 schedule, and have reached the definitive conclusion that the Kings will go 47-35 this year. I divined this knowledge using a standard quarter that might have magical powers (prove it doesn't!). But a simple coin flip isn't enough to convince you, obviously. So I looked into the future and figured out why the coin gave the result it did.

Behold.

OctoberOpponentHeadsTailsAnalysis
Wed 30vs Denver 1Kings win home opener behind a charged up crowd.  Brian Shaw abandons his offense after the first quarter and implements the triangle offense.  Hilarity ensues as JaVale McGee has no idea what a triangle offense is supposed to look like.
NovemberOpponent
Fri 1vs L.A. Clippers 1The Kings lose to the mighty Clippers.  The Clippers somehow have six starters in double digits.
Sat 2@ Golden State 1Sacramento marches into the Bay Area and steals a win.  On the way back to Sacramento, they also steal Travis Schlenk and a desk lamp that Vivek was always fond of.
Tue 5vs Atlanta 1The Atlanta Hawks drop the Kings.  By now the rest of the NBA has realized how dumb they were for not offering Paul Millsap a big contract.
Fri 8@ Portland 1Portland loses the game, but CJ McCollum says all the right things after the loss.  The media swoons.
Sat 9vs Portland 1Portland wins the game, and CJ McCollum says all the right things.  The media predicts McCollum as Rookie of the Year.
Wed 13vs Brooklyn 1The Kings defeat the new-look Nets as Jason Kidd has mysteriously forced his entire team to adopt his free throw line routine.  The Nets go 1-32 from the charity stripe as the Kings sneak out a 3 point victory.
Fri 15vs Detroit 1Brandon Jennings scores 42 and dishes out 1 assist as the Kings struggle to string together consecutive wins.
Sun 17vs Memphis 1Sacramento's victory over the Grizzlies is fueled by Carl Landry, who says his superb play was inspired by a recent StR meme.
Tue 19vs Phoenix 1The Kings defeat the Phoenix Suns because LOL c'mon of course
Wed 20@ Phoenix 1And just like that the Kings have a 3-game win streak.  Pessimistic fans argue that we do not have any more back-to-backs against the Suns, and we should enjoy this lone win streak.
Sat 23@ L.A. Clippers 1The Clippers stumble when DeAndre Jordan tries to use this game to prove himself better than DeMarcus Cousins.
Sun 24@ L.A. Lakers 1Old habits die hard.  Following an inspiring win, the Kings have a let-down game against the lowly Lakers.  Still, the recap is fun to write because we get to use the phrase "the lowly Lakers"
Fri 29vs L.A. Clippers 1Trouble had been brewing in Los Angeles, and tensions between Chris Paul and Blake Griffin have begun to bubble to the surface.  Paul refuses to pass to Griffin, and actually steals the ball from Griffin on three different occaisions.  Doc Rivers looks exasperated.
DecemberOpponent
Sun 1vs Golden State 1The Kings defeat the Warriors, and steal some snacks from the Warriors team bus as Golden State is in the showers.
Tue 3vs Oklahoma City 1The Kings lose to the Thunder because Kevin Durant is still really really really good.
Fri 6vs L.A. Lakers 1The Kings lose to the Lakers because Nick Young goes off for 45 points. Marcus Thornton scores 25 and considers the game a success.
Sat 7@ Utah 1The Utah Jazz lose a nail-biter as they inexplicably bench their starters for the second half.  The Jazz organization denies allegations of tanking.
Mon 9vs Dallas 1Monta Ellis have it all
Wed 11vs Utah 1Under intense scrutiny from the league, the Jazz play their starters normal minutes for the first time all year.  Well-rested, the starters run the Kings off the court and win easily
Fri 13@ Phoenix 1The Kings defeat the Phoenix Suns because LOL c'mon of course
Sun 15vs Houston 1It's only mid-December, but it's already apparent that Houston's team chemistry is being strained by Dwight Howard recent request to be traded
Tue 17@ Charlotte 1Kings players attempt to guard players in Hornets uniforms, and accidentally end up guarding fans as the Bobcats score with ease
Wed 18@ Atlanta 1Nobody can stop Kyle Korver, so the Kings don't even try.
Fri 20@ Miami 1This LeBron guy is pretty good, I guess.
Sat 21@ Orlando 1Victor Oladipo can't guard Greivis Vasquez, who finishes with 17 assists.
Mon 23vs New Orleans 1Tyreke Evans drops 42-13-8, and then goes on an uncharacterically brash post-game rant in which he blasts Vivek, Cousins, Westphal, and Pooh Jeter.  Turns out Tyreke has a fever of 102.1, making his stat line even more impressive.
Fri 27vs Miami 1Luc Bah a Moute holds LeBron to 6 points on 12 shots.  DeMarcus Cousins posterizes Greg Oden.
Sun 29@ San Antonio 1Popovich inexplicably decides to rest his bench, playing his starters for 48 minutes.
Tue 31@ Houston 1Sacramento wins, but only after a 40 minutes delay when the ball gets lost mid-game.  It is eventually found in James Harden's beard.
JanuaryOpponent
Thu 2vs Philadelphia 1The tank rolls on.
Sat 4vs Charlotte 1The Kings guard the right players this time, they just guard them poorly.
Tue 7vs Portland 1Portland loses the game, but CJ McCollum says all the right things after the loss.  The media swoons.
Fri 10vs Orlando 1Greivis Vasquez can't guard Victor Oladipo, who finishes with 25 points
Sun 12vs Cleveland 1Kyrie Irving is the best player in the world and Cleveland fans will fight you if you suggest otherwise.  Bynum wears a very nice suit to the game.
Tue 14@ Indiana 1Ben McLemore lights up Paul George, who is quoted after the game as saying "Maybe I'm not a defensive specialist.  It's time to do some soul searching".  George isn't seen or heard from for three weeks.
Wed 15@ Minnesota 1The Kings defeat the Timberwolves because Kevin Martin sits out the game with a calf injury.  Soft.
Fri 17@ Memphis 1The Kings win a close one as Ed Davis misses a potential game-winner at the buzzer.  Lionel Hollins mutters to himself "See?"
Sun 19@ Oklahoma City 1Serge Ibaka registers 27 blocks in an NBA game.
Tue 21@ New Orleans 1Ryan Anderson lights up the Kings from the corner.  Tyreke is feeling much better and adds 18 points off the bench.
Wed 22@ Houston 1Houston's season has spiraled out of control as Dwight Howard continues to waver on whether or not he wants to be traded.
Fri 24vs Indiana 1Paul George is still missing, and the Kings easily dispatch the PacersDavid West scowls.
Sun 26vs Denver 1JaVale McGee keeps getting distracted by Brian Shaw shouting "triangle" from the sideline.  "The court is a rectangle", JaVale thinks to himself.
Mon 27@ Utah 1The Kings easily win as Gordon Hayward has been shut down for the season following a pretty serious stubbed toe.
Wed 29vs Memphis 1Memphis wins by like 30 points, cause that just seems to happen once or twice a year against the Kings.
Fri 31@ Dallas 1The Mavericks are the darlings of the West, having won 11 straight.
FebruaryOpponent
Sat 1@ San Antonio 1The Spurs rest their starters, the Kings are no match for San Antonio's bench.
Mon 3vs Chicago 1Derrick Rose thinks he'll be ready to play any day now.
Wed 5vs Toronto 1Look, Rudy Gay is going to have a great game every now and then.  If you happen to be on the receiving end of it, you just accept it and move on.
Fri 7@ Boston 1In which it is definitively settled that DeMarcus Cousins is better than Jared Sullinger
Sun 9@ Washington 1You'd think they'd be used to it by now, but the Wizards spend a good chunk of the game being distracted at how skinny Otto Porter's legs are
Tue 11@ Cleveland 1Kyrie Irving is the best player in the world and Cleveland fans will fight you if you suggest otherwise.  Bynum wears a very nice suit to the game.
Wed 12@ New York 1Carmelo Anthony scores 38 points as the Knicks lose.  Marcus Camby and Kenyon Martin duck out after the first quarter to grab an early dinner.
Wed 19vs Golden State 1The Kings defeat the Warriors and steal Steph Curry's shoes.
Sat 22vs Boston 1Boston loses despite 12 points from Avery Bradley.
Sun 23@ Denver 1A small coup occurs at halftime, with JaVale McGee telling Shaw "The only way we're going back out on that court is without you.  I don't want…your life."  The rest of Denver's roster doesn't feel compelled to tell McGee that he messed up the quote.
Tue 25vs Houston 1Harden took Dwight to a, ahem, "club" over the weekend, and Dwight's in pretty good spirits.  The improved team chemistry leads to a Rockets win.
Fri 28@ L.A. Lakers 1Kobe leads the way with 46 points.  Kobe actually re-tears his Achilles before halftime, but using his regenerative healing power to come back in the third quarter.
MarchOpponent
Sat 1vs Minnesota 1The Kings were no match for how adorable Ricky Rubio is.
Mon 3vs New Orleans 1Eric Gordon sulks on the sidelines as the Kings win a close one.
Wed 5@ Milwaukee 1LARRY SANDERS! blocks a would-be game-winner.
Fri 7@ Toronto 1Can we rename the Raptors the White Walkers?  It would keep with the theme of just borrowing a currently-popular pop-culture reference that won't hold up well over time, but it'd be pretty cool for a few years.
Sun 9@ Brooklyn 1The Kings lose after being terrified of the Brooklyn Knight at halftime.
Tue 11@ Detroit 1Brandon Jennings scores 42 and dishes out 1 assist as the Pistons struggle to string together consecutive wins.
Wed 12@ Philadelphia 1Nothing can stop a tank.
Sat 15@ Chicago 1Derrick Rose thinks he'll be ready to play any day now.
Sun 16@ Minnesota 1Ricky Rubio is kidnapped by an evil alien who extracts all of Rubio's cutonium using an extraction chamber.  No longer under the spell of Rubio's cuteness, the Kings prevail.
Tue 18vs Washington 1I dunno.  Bradley Beal scores a bunch of points or something?  John Wall, maybe?
Fri 21vs San Antonio 1The Spurs wake up just in time to secure their playoff positioning.
Sun 23vs Milwaukee 1Luc Bah a Moute reveals the secrets of Milwaukee's system.  The Kings dominate.  John Salmons sheepishly admits he never considered sharing that information.
Wed 26vs New York 1The Knicks have really struggled since half their roster retired at the All-Star break.
Fri 28@ Oklahoma City 1The Thunder are given a boost as Jeremy Lamb, runaway favorite from Most Improved Player, drops 25 points on 19 shots.
Sat 29@ Dallas 1The Mavericks lock up home court advantage for the first round of the playoffs with this win.
Mon 31@ New Orleans 1Tyreke Evans still feels really bad about his fever-induced rant, and he decides to let the Kings have this one.  He misses a half court heave at the buzzer, and gives Jerry Reynolds a knowing wink.
AprilOpponent
Wed 2vs L.A. Lakers 1Pau Gasol continues his bounce-back year.  After the game he eats a pizza.
Fri 4@ Golden State 1Andre Iguodala gets torched by Ben McLemore as the Warriors are bounced from the playoff race.  Pete D'Alessandro shows no emotion as Iguodala begs for forgiveness.
Sun 6vs Dallas 1The Mavericks have nothing to play for and rest their starters.
Tue 8vs Oklahoma City 1The Thunder expiriment with a new offense where Kendrick Perkins passes out of the high post, with disastrous results.
Wed 9@ Portland 1Portland wins the game, and CJ McCollum says all the right things.  McCollum is runaway favorite for Rookie of the Year.
Sat 12@ L.A. Clippers 1Chris Paul hasn't passed to Blake Griffin in months.  Opposing teams have stopped even guarding Griffin when Paul has the ball.
Sun 13vs Minnesota 1Rubio has recovered his cuteness after Balloony comes to the rescue.  The Kings don't stand a chance.
Wed 16vs Phoenix 1The Kings defeat the Phoenix Suns because LOL c'mon of course
Total4735

So as you can see, it's a pretty foolproof result.  Feel free to take the season off.  See you for the playoffs, gang!

Chris Hansen Did Not Blunder

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We are never getting the Kings. We know that. The book is closed on the issue.

Can we also close the book on a related issue that came up repeatedly during that entire fiasco? The issue was whether or not Vivek Ranadive and his group controlled all of the land necessary to build its arena.

When Chris Hansen met with NBA owners, who were charged with deciding the fate of the Kings, he made his position on the issue very clear. According to numerous reports, he pointed out that the Seattle group had complete ownership of all necessary real estate and that the Sacramento group did not. This was to demonstrate how much farther along in the process Seattle was.

Sacramento's Chris Lehane, an adviser to Mayor Kevin Johnson, strongly refuted that claim and even gloated about how Hansen made a critical mistake in that argument. He did so in an article at the Sacramento Bee, which you can read by clicking here.

Here is an excerpt.

Once inside, the Sacramento group couldn't believe its good fortune. Based on the questions from the committees, it appeared the Seattle delegation had blundered.

According to Lehane, the Seattle group made false and easily refutable claims about Sacramento. The most blatant: Sacramento's investors didn't control the land they needed to build an arena.

"We all sort of looked at each other like, is this a trick question?" Lehane said. "It was an enormous mistake." The miscue let Sacramento bolster its credibility.

After reading that article, I remember thinking to myself "Maybe we were wrong all along. Maybe they had complete ownership or at least agreements in place".

Guess what. We weren't wrong.

Chris Hansen wasn't wrong and the Sacramento group knows it. Why do I say that? Read today's article in the Bee by Ryan Lillis and Dale Kasler, entitled "Kings owners ask city to possibly use eminent domain threat in arena site talks". Click here to read it.

The article opens this way...

After months of negotiations, the new Sacramento Kings ownership group has been unable to close the deal on buying the remaining parcel at Downtown Plaza seen as vital to the development of a new arena.

Now, to remain on track to open the facility by 2016, the team is asking City Hall to assist in the talks and provide its threat of eminent domain as a potential negotiating tactic.

Eminent domain is the nuclear option for a city looking to acquire land that it needs. In my opinion, it's an unethical option for a city looking to acquire land that it simply wants. Whether it's a need or a want, however, it's not an option you use unless it's the last resort. Nor is it an option you use if you already control the land.

I don't know if the Sacramento group flat out lied to the NBA or if they had the eminent domain idea in mind all along, but I do know three things. Chris Hansen didn't blunder, the Sacramento group DOES NOT HAVE all of the land they need, and the Seattle group does.

I just felt like this needed to be said.

Due to Maloof taint, political operatives quit anti-arena Sacramento petition drive

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We haven't covered the STOP initiative drive to kill the Sacramento Kings arena at all. So first, an explanation.

1. We just finished three years of daily reporting/commentary on non-basketball topics. What a relief to be able to focus primarily on the sport! (Welp.)

2. We (editorial staff) don't support the proposed initiative or the group pushing it. For a while there, it looked seriously underfunded, so it needed all the publicity it could get. Why would we, a Sacramento Kings blog, give it to them?

3. I was legitimately hoping the whole thing would disappear in a poof of smoke.

That said, Friday's developments were ... big. The DowntownArena.org group (which includes Region Builders and Crown Downtown) has been pushing for disclosure from the petition drive on where the funding is coming from. No one seems to know or want to say. Finally this week the arena advocates made a complaint to the Fair Political Practices Commission. That hasn't yet been resolved, but The Bee's digging turned up some pretty incredible information.

The push to derail Sacramento's arena plan was thrown into disarray Friday, when it was revealed a Los Angeles law firm that represents the Maloof family wired $80,000 to the campaign. [...]

Loeb & Loeb, the law firm that represented the Maloof family in failed attempts to move the Sacramento Kings to Anaheim and Seattle, gave a Tulare-based campaign consultant $80,000 to pay for signature gatherers working on a petition drive for an arena ballot measure, the consultant said in a statement emailed to the media.

Now L&L is a huge firm. And the Maloofs are denying any involvement. But Loeb & Loeb also hasn't made the proper filings with the city or state on who supplied that $80,000 -- it's unlikely that the law firm would be funding the project of its own volition -- and isn't commenting. So the mere suggestion of Maloofian taint is enough to lead to ...

[Consultant Paul] Olson and Sacramento political consultant Tab Berg said in a joint press release that they were cutting ties with the campaign. Their resignations came two days after a complaint was filed with the Fair Political Practices Commission alleging that the signature campaign had not properly reported donations and expenditures.

"I have broken no laws, and I am not going to stand in front of those who refuse to take responsibility to try to throw my colleagues or I under the bus," Berg said in an emailed statement that appeared alongside Olson's comments.

That's a well-known, well-respected local consultant refusing to get that taint on him.

At some point, the source of that $80,000 will be known. I honestly can't totally rule out the possibility that the Maloofs are somehow involved. And that -- the mere possibility -- is throwing the anti-arena campaign into upheaval. Pretty amazing.

More from Sactown Royalty:

Miami Heat Player Countdown: #104-101

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104. Cedric Ceballos


Cedric Ceballos, a native Hawaiian from Maui, was born on August 2nd, 1969. A 6'6" small forward, he played two seasons of collegiate basketball with the University of California State at Fullerton. Over 58 contests, he averaged 22.1 points and 10.7 rebounds per game. After declaring for the draft after his sophomore season in 1990, the Phoenix Suns spent their second round pick on him, selecting him 48th overall.

Ceballos played four seasons in Phoenix (254 games), winning the NBA dunk contest with a blindfolded jam in 1992. He later represented the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1995 all-star game, and
played two and a half seasons for the team overall (144 games). Later, he rejoined the Suns (77 games) eventually playing for the Dallas Mavericks (94 games). He played for the Detroit Pistons to start the 2000-01 season, appearing in 13 games. On November 26th, they traded him to the Heat with a second round pick for a second round pick. Miami paid him $3,937,500 for his service.

Ceballos played 27 games off the bench for the Heat, playing almost 15 minutes a game and scoring around seven points with three rebounds per appearance. He finished in double figures six times, including three double-doubles. In seven games from March 12th to March 31st, he averaged 12.4 points on 48% shooting with 6.7 rebounds per appearance. On March 14th, in a 114-104 win over the Sacramento Kings, he scored a season high 21 points with 11 rebounds in 25 minutes. In three playoff games, he scored five points with six rebounds in 15 combined minutes.

Ceballos didn't again play in the NBA, playing in Israel and in Maylasia. He currently is part owner and sometimes
player with the ABA's Arizona Scorpions.

All-Time HEATline: One season, 27 games, 14.6 minutes, 6.9 points, 3.0 rebounds, 0.5 assists, 0.4 steals, 0.1 blocks, 16.1 PER, 1.0 win shares.

103. Leadell Eackles


Leadell Eackles, sometimes known as the "A-Train," is a 6'5" shooting guard from Baton Rouge, LA. After two collegiate seasons with the University of New Orleans, he declared early for the 1988 NBA Draft. His confidence paid off with a second round selection, 36th overall, by the Washington Bullets.

Eackles played four seasons with Washington, playing in 290 contests. During his first stop in DC, he averaged 12.7 points, 2.3 rebounds, and two assists in 21.5 minutes per contest. After spending 1992-93 in the Continental Basketball Association, the Bullets waived his NBA rights.

Before the 1994-95 season, the Heat signed Eackles to a $150,000 free agent contract. He started six games at shooting guard that season, appearing in 54 overall. He averaged seven points, two boards and a helper in just under 17 minutes per night. He scored in double figures 16 times for the Heat during the season. On November 12th, in a 109-99 loss to the Bullets, he scored a team high 22 on eight-of-nine shooting, hitting both of his three-point attempts. He seemed to save his best efforts for his former team. On March 5th, Miami beat the Bullets 103-90, as Eackles scored a team high 17 points with four rebounds and three assists.

Eackles rejoined the Bullets for 55 games in 1995-96. After spending the 1996-97 season in Israel, he rejoined Washington, now known as the Wizards, for a third time. He played 42 games with the team, his last NBA experience. He has two sons in Division I NCAA basketball.

All-Time HEATline: One season, 54 games, 16.6 minutes, 7.3 points, 1.8 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 0.4 steals, 0.0 blocks, 12.1 PER, 1.0 win shares.

102. Rashard Lewis


Rashard Lewis is a 6'10" power forward from Pineville, LA. Born on August 8th, 1979, he entered the 1998 NBA Draft without the benefit of college experience, coming straight out of Elsik High School in Alief, TX. The Seattle SuperSonics chose him in the second round, with the 32nd overall pick.

Lewis played nine seasons in Seattle, and ranks seventh on the Thunder/Sonics all-time leaderboard with 617 games played. He also ranks highly with 10,251 points (fifth), 3595 rebounds (seventh), 708 steals (eighth), and 362 blocks (ninth). He represented the Sonics in the 2005 all-star game. He later played three and a half seasons in Orlando (257 games) with a second all-star selection in 2009, and one and a half seasons with the Washington Wizards (60 games). The Wiz traded him to the New Orleans Hornets on June 20th, 2012, where he was waived just 10 days afterward.

Miami picked up Lewis as a free agent soon thereafter on July 11th for two years and $2,751,688. He started nine games at power forward, playing in 55 overall. He averaged 14.4 minutes and shot 41.4% from the floor, including 38.9% from long distance while racking up just over five points per game. He scored in double figures 13 times. On November 2nd, he came off the bench for 20 minutes against the New York Knicks, scoring 16 points (including four-of-six from three-point range) with six rebounds in a 104-84 loss. On April 6th, in a 106-87 win over the Philadelphia 76ers, he scored 14 points with seven rebounds and three assists in 26 minutes. He later made 11 postseason appearances in helping Miami to their second straight NBA title. He scored 17 points in a combined 47 minutes. He's signed through next season.

All-Time HEATline:
One season, 55 games, 14.4 minutes, 5.2 points, 2.2 rebounds, 0.5 assists, 0.4 steals, 0.3 blocks, 10.9 PER, 1.1 win shares.

101. Rex Walters


Rex Walters is a 6'4" Japanese-American from Omaha, NE. Born on March 12th, 1970, the left handed shooting guard started his college career with Northwestern University for two seasons. After transferring and sitting out for a season, he played two years with the Kansas Jayhawks, graduating with the Class of 1993. As a Jayhawk, he averaged 16 points, three rebounds, and four assists in 29 minutes per appearance. The New Jersey Nets selected him 16th overall in the 1993 draft.

Walters played two and a half seasons with New Jersey (139 games), later spending parts of three seasons with the Philadelphia 76ers (111 games). He signed on with the Heat as a free agent on January 27th, 1998 for $537,500. Through what left of the season, he played in 19 games, shooting at a 54% rate in just under six minutes per game. On January 19th, in a 101-89 Heat loss to the Atlanta Hawks, he scored nine points with four assists in 18 minutes. Although the Heat graduated to the playoffs, Walters did not make a postseason appearance.

1998-99 would see Walters appear 33 times for the Heat, including 13 starts at shooting guard. He played just over 15 minutes per game, shooting 37% from the field and pitching in with two points and two assists per appearance. On May 5th, in a 101-88 loss to the New York Knicks, he scored six points and dished out a season high nine assists in 46 minutes. Later, he made three postseason appearances, going scoreless with four assists in 13 minutes of floortime.

Halfway through the 1999-00 season, the Heat signed Walters for $1,100,000. He appeared in 33 games, playing just under a quarter per game and shooting 42% from the floor, along with a rebound and two assists per appearance. On December 16th, in a 96-95 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks, he dished out a season high eight assists, scoring five points in 28 minutes. The season would mark the last NBA appearance for him.

Walters later went into coaching, first with Florida Atlantic University for two seasons (31-33), then later with the
University of San Francisco. He is going into his sixth season as the team's head coach, and currently carries a 76-80 coaching record with the team.

All-Time HEATline: Three seasons, 85 games, 11.8 minutes, 2.7 points, 1.2 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 0.2 steals, 0.0 blocks, 8.0 PER, 1.1 win shares.

NBA Free Agency 2013: Rodrigue Beaubois, Cole Aldrich among young players looking for jobs

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NBA Free Agency has entered its second month, and while a large amount of roster spots have been filled, there are still plenty of players out there looking for work. Some will be signed, some will compete for a spot in training camp and some will head overseas.

Saturday, Satchel Price looked at some veteran players still out there. Another route teams will go to fill out their final roster spots are young free agents, many who are coming off their rookie contracts. Generally speaking, they come cheaper than an older veteran and are more open to a non-guaranteed contract.

Front offices may also view these players, most still in their early 20s, as men who never reached their full potential with their original team but could still be a valuable contributor to a new team. The extreme example of this is Danny Green, who has developed into the San Antonio Spurs' starting shooting guard after seeing very little playing time in Cleveland.

Here's a list of notable players with two to four years of NBA experience still looking for a team:

Cole Aldrich: The former Oklahoma City Thunder lottery pick has never been more than the final big man on a roster or a developing talent in the D-League. He spent the first two seasons of his career with the Thunder before being traded to Houston as part of the James Harden deal last October.

He was then part of the Patrick Patterson-Thomas Robinson trade last February and finished the season with the Sacramento Kings. There he saw the most playing time of his short career, playing 11 minutes a game and pulling down over four rebounds a game during those 15 games he played. Aldrich is young and he's nearly seven feet tall. Chances are he'll land with a team eventually, but he'll need to continue to compete for minutes.

Luke Babbitt: Believe it or not, at 3.9 points per game, Babbitt was one of the more productive members of the Portland Trailblazers bench last season. He did have his moments last season, scoring in double figures seven times. He also shot a respectable 35 percent from the field.

It's unlikely he's back with the team next season, given the offseason additions of Dorell Wright and Allen Crabbe. The question is now whether a team will sign him to play back-up minutes and be a designated shooter, ala Steve Novak or Brandon Rush.

Rodrigue Beaubois: The once untouchable Roddy Buckets. Now he's a player teams don't want any part of. Beaubois couldn't stay on the court, partly due to inconsistent play, but mostly due to injuries. He's never played more than 56 games in a season. His best year came in the 2011-12 season, when he averaged close to nine points a game in just under 22 minutes a game.

Despite an inability to stay on the floor, he's an ultra quick and athletic guard. A team will likely take a chance on him as long as there's no guaranteed money involved. The question is will Beaubois be willing to take that chance if there's more money for him in Europe?

A.J. Price: Price quietly had a very nice season for the Wizards, both when the team was without John Wall and when he returned from injury. The four-year veteran averaged 7.7 points per game last season and also improved his three-point shooting to 35 percent. The Wizards seem to be comfortable moving forward with Wall, Bradley Beal, Eric Maynor and Garrett Temple as their back-court rotation, which means another team could find a cheap but effective back-up guard.

Terrence Williams: Four seasons, four different teams, continued inconsistent play. Why do teams still give Terrence Williams a chance? Because he's actually a decent contributor when he's playing well. For example, in the final two months of his rookie season, he averaged 14 points a game for the Nets and even had three 13-rebound games. He can help a team score and can rebound, but doesn't contribute much else. It's unclear if he'll start the season on a roster, but like the Celtics did this year, a team looking for some scoring off the bench could take a chance on him.

Sam Young: Young was very good in his first two seasons with Memphis. But once he left, his game, particularly his offensive production, fell off a cliff. His solid defense does make up for his poor offensive game, at least in small stretches. His destiny seems to be as a 10th or 11th man on a contender.

More from SB Nation:

Ziller: The D-League is working

Phil Jackson's coaching options

NBA All-Star Weekend 2015 in Brooklyn and Manhattan?

Fixing the NBA, blogger style

The rise and fall of B-Easy

Former Kings guard Mike Bibby wants 1 more NBA season

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Even though Mike Bibby sat out the 2012-13 season, he hopes that an NBA team will give him one more chance. The longtime point guard and Sacramento Kings all-time assists leader told The Kings Blog's Alex Kramers that he'd like to play another year before getting into coaching.

Watching his son play at his own alma mater, Shadow Mountain High School in Phoenix, Bibby's only blip on the radar last season was getting tossed from a high school game for arguing with referees from the bleachers.

Sactown Royalty: More on the Kings

Bibby averaged 17.6 points and 5.4 assists with Sacramento, most notably leading a team featuring Chris Webber, Vlade Divac and Peja Stojakovic into clashes with the Los Angeles Lakers. His shot in Game 5 of the 2002 Western Conference Finals against the Lakers might have been the play to etch deepest into Kings fans' memories.

Bibby discussed that shot with Kramers and also said that one of the toughest players to match up against was Stephon Marbury.

The 35-year-old Bibby played 14 seasons in the NBA and was drafted by the Vancouver Grizzlies following one year at Arizona, where he won an NCAA championship. He was most recently with the New York Knicks in 2011-12.

More from SB Nation:

Ziller: The D-League is working

Phil Jackson's coaching options

NBA All-Star Weekend 2015 in Brooklyn and Manhattan?

Fixing the NBA, blogger style

The rise and fall of B-Easy

A history of bizarre Nuggets off-seasons ...

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The summer of 2013 will undoubtedly go down in Denver Nuggets history as one of the most bizarre in franchise history. Coming off an NBA franchise-best 57 regular season wins (and a third overall seed in a brutally competitive Western Conference to boot), the Nuggets jumped into this off-season by losing their "NBA Executive of the Year" general manager Masai Ujiri to the Toronto Raptors, firing their "NBA Coach of the Year"George Karl, losing their prized free agent in Andre Iguodala and trading away key role players Kosta Koufos and Corey Brewer while taking back an assortment of role players in Randy Foye, Darrell Arthur, J.J. Hickson and Nate Robinson.

This collection of moves has left Nuggets fans somewhere between bewildered and perplexed. Or maybe it's between confused and frustrated? Regardless, the Nuggets will enter the 2013-14 NBA season with a roster somewhat re-made (lest we forget that the key players sans Iguodala remain on the team) with a new head coach and new general manager supervising the re-making.

But as I've written before, I don't foresee this tumultuous off-season having grave impacts on the Nuggets season. Would they be a little better - or at least as good - had Ujiri, Karl and Iguodala stayed? Perhaps. But with the Houston Rockets nabbing Dwight Howard and the Los Angeles Clippers upgrading both their roster and their head coach, the Nuggets were likely to slip down two or three seeds with or without Iguodala anchoring the starting two-guard spot.

And, believe it or not, this off-season ranks as simply one of several bizarre off-seasons that we as Nuggets fans have had to endure since the team joined the NBA in 1976.

1984

Coming off three straight playoff appearances under head coach Doug Moe (he of the "Stiff" phrase-coining) featuring one of the NBA's most exciting run-and-gun teams, then Nuggets GM Vince Boryla made a blockbuster trade that shocked the entire NBA. In June, Boryla traded All-Star (and the NBA's third-leading scorer) Kiki Vandeweghe to the Portland Trailblazers in exchange for Fat Lever, Calvin Natt, Wayne Cooper, a second round pick and a first round pick in 1985 that became Blair Rasmussen.

Controversial at the time and very upsetting to many Nuggets fans, the trade had an immediate positive impact on the team as the Nuggets ended up in the 1985 Western Conference Finals and were one of the West's most competitive teams throughout the remainder of the decade with Lever leading the way. When ranking the Nuggets best trades of all time, I put this one as second. And Boryla was rewarded with the NBA's Executive of the Year Award in 1985 for having the foresight to pull off this major deal.

1990

Just five years removed from competing in the Western Conference Finals, new Nuggets ownership consisting of Peter Bynoe and Bertram Lee (a disastrous ownership period recapped in detail by Jeff Morton recently) decided they weren't satisfied with a playoff bottom feeder that loses in the first round each season. And rather than build upon a roster that still featured star caliber players like Alex English, Fat Lever and Michael Adams, at ownership's direction new GM (and Denver Stiffs Hall of Fame Lifetime Achievement Award Winner) Bernie Bickerstaff pulled off one of the great "gut and tank" jobs in NBA history.

In one summer, Bickerstaff said goodbye to Nuggets stalwarts English (via free agency), Lever (traded to Dallas for draft picks) and starting center Danny Schayes (traded to Milwaukee), and gone also was legendary head coach Doug Moe (the coach with the most wins in Nuggets history) in place of Paul Westhead ... who hadn't coached an NBA game since Magic Johnson had him fired from the Los Angeles Lakers fired him in 1981.

Talk about a disruptive off-season! The pick brought in for Lever was then parlayed with the Nuggets' own first round round pick in a trade with the Miami Heat that enabled the Nuggets to draft Chris Jackson (who later became Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, via name change not trade for those not old enough to remember). Under Westhead's stewardship, the Nuggets soon became the laughingstock of the NBA, would "win" 20 games and couldn't even land the first overall pick at season's end.

1996

Believe it or not, Bickerstaff's "gut and tank" job of 1990 almost worked. By the time the 1993-94 season came around (which Jeff will be memorializing this summer in honor of its 20th anniversary), Bickerstaff had assembled a roster deep in young talent and character, with the likes of Dikembe Mutombo, LaPhonso Ellis, Bryant Stith, Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, Reggie Williams, Robert Pack and Brian Williams on board for one of the franchise's greatest playoff runs ever, when the 42-win Nuggets defeated the 63-win Seattle Supersonics in the first round of the NBA playoffs ... becoming the first ever eighth-seed to knock off a one-seed in the NBA Playoffs.

But thanks to misfortune (Ellis' devastating knee injury in 1994, head coach Dan Issel abruptly resigning the following season) and mismanagement, the Nuggets went from a would-be dynasty to a lottery denizen in just two years. Coming off a disappointing 35-win season, Bickerstaff supervised what was arguably the most bizarre and worst off-season in Nuggets history.

It all started with the 1996 NBA Draft when Bickerstaff - holding onto the 10th overall pick - arbitrarily decided that there wasn't a player worth drafting after nine and subsequently traded the pick, along with Reggie Williams and rising star Jalen Rose, to the Indiana Pacers for an aging Mark Jackson, an aging Ricky Pierce and the 23rd overall pick (which Bickerstaff used to draft Efthimios Rentzias - a name I've typed so many times on this blog that I don't have to look it up anymore) ... missing out on Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash, Jermaine O'Neal and Peja Stojakovic in the process.

Then Bickerstaff doubled down on stupid by trading away Abdul-Rauf to the Sacramento Kings for an aging and oft-injured Sarunas Marciulionis and, unforgivably, allowed perennial All-Star center Mutombo to walk away to the Atlanta Hawks for nothing. For nothing! Thanks to the off-season of 1996, the Nuggets wouldn't return to the playoffs for seven years.

2002

Why is it that the Nuggets insist on shaking up their rosters every six years? (Remember also 2008 when the Nuggets trade away Marcus Camby in the off-season and Allen Iverson in the regular season.)

Following that trend, the man that was once traded in a surprising blockbuster was now doing the trading on behalf of the organization in 2002 when Kiki Vandeweghe took over as general manager for the 2001-02 season (a forgettable 27-win campaign). Well before the 2002 off-season began, Vandeweghe had already made a splash when he sent Nick Van Exel, Raef LaFrentz, Avery Johnson and Tariq Abdul-Wahad to Dallas in exchange for Juwan Howard, Donnell Harvey and Tim Hardaway, setting up a "gut and tank" job that is legendary even by NBA standards. Aiming squarely for a deep 2003 NBA Draft, Vandeweghe continued his tank job into the off-season to ensure that the Nuggets would suck - and I mean suck - throughout the 2002-03 NBA season.

To do this, Vandeweghe drafted a raw Georgian prodigy named Nikoloz Tskitishvili (another name I no longer have to look up) fifth overall in the 2002 NBA Draft and then pulled off a draft day coup by trading away the oft-injured Antonio McDyess to the New York Knicks for Camby, Mark Jackson and the draft rights to a Brazilian named Nene Hilario (I ranked that trade as third best of all time in Nuggets history). To top things off, Vandeweghe hired a no-name coach named Jeff Bzdelik to supervise the 2002-03 tank job.

Vandeweghe's plan worked (sort of), as he landed Carmelo Anthony with the third overall pick the following off-season and the Nuggets haven't missed a post-season since.

2010

The 2010 off-season wasn't bizarre so much for the transactions that took place but rather for what was happening surrounding the organization. Even though it feels like a lifetime ago, it was only three years ago that the Nuggets organization and its fans were enduring the summer-long Melodrama as Anthony - an unrestricted free agent-to-be after the completion of the 2010-11 NBA season - refused to sign a contract extension to remain in Denver, immediately fueling speculation that Anthony would be traded before training camp that fall.

Making matters that summer even more bizarre, the Nuggets didn't renew the contracts of their two-headed general manager duo of Mark Warkentien (who had won the NBA's Executive of the Year Award just a year earlier) and Rex Chapman, and opted instead to bring the largely unknown and untested Masai Ujiri on board to handle the Melodrama and its aftermath. In fact, the only substantive move made that off-season was when Warkentien overpaid for free agent Al Harrington (and his plantar fasciitis) before his own contract expired. Many people in NBA circles have joked with me that the Harrington signing was "Warkentien's revenge" given that Warkentien knew he probably wasn't coming back.


So there you have it. A quick rundown of some bizarre Nuggets off-seasons. Where exactly does the 2013 off-season rank? I'll let our fellow Stiffs decide.

Poll
What was the most bizarre off-season in Nuggets history?

  155 votes |Results


Keith Thurman on Robert Guerrero possibility: 'It's an exciting fight for me'

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If Richard Schaefer gets what he says he wants, he'll pit welterweight contenders Keith Thurman and Robert Guerrero against one another on November 2, part of a big Golden Boy run on Showtime. A fight between the unbeaten Thurman, coming off of his best career win, and the veteran standout Guerrero, coming off of a loss in his biggest career fight, looks solid on paper, and the 24-year-old Thurman says he's definitely interested in the fight.

From RingTV.com:

"It's an exciting fight for me, because Guerrero, he's been in the mix within the welterweight division, which is pretty much where I want to be. To face someone who has walked the path and walked down the alley where you want to go, and who has been where you want to be, I just think that it's a great test and a great opportunity to see what Keith Thurman's all about. ... I see myself as a true warrior. I see myself as a champion. I'm in this sport to be a champion, so, you know, I'm calling out all of the champions and all of the ex-world champions."

Thurman (21-0, 19 KO) made his Showtime debut on July 27, knocking out Diego Chaves in the opening bout of the excellent "Knockout Kings II" card in San Antonio. He previously had said he'd give fans a refund if the fight went more than two rounds, which I still think people should call him on, because rules are rules, Keith, get used to it, but I don't hear anyone complaining about the nine-plus that we got.

Guerrero (31-2-1, 18 KO) has been pretty quiet since losing a wide decision to Floyd Mayweather on May 4, but he did get some good news 10 days after that fight, as his gun charge in New York was dropped. He did recently discuss via text a possible fight with Victor Ortiz, but as the days go by like paper in the wind, it doesn't really seem like Vicious Victor is all that determined to get back into the ring, not when he's got FaceLube to promote, stars to dance with (no, wait, he was the star), and Expendables 3 to "star" in. While he told Guerrero he could "do that for sure broham...," it appears that Broham may have to find a new target, and Thurman fits the bill.

I SAY DO IT, YOU GUYS! BROHAMS!

Miami Heat Player Countdown: #100-97

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100. Loren Woods

Loren Woods, a 7'1" center from St. Louis, MO, was born on June 21st, 1978. As a high school senior at Cardinal Ritter, he earned a selection to the 1996 McDonald's All American squad. He then played two seasons of college basketball with Wake Forest before transferring to the University of Arizona, graduating with the Class of 2001. His time with Arizona would see him average 14 points and seven rebounds. The Minnesota TimberWolves chose him in the second round of the 2001 draft, with the 45th overall pick.

Woods played two seasons in the Twin Cities, appearing in 98 games. He scored a total of 190 points with 217 rebounds during his stint. He signed a free agent contract to play with Miami on August 8th, 2003 for $638,679. For Miami, he averaged 13.3 minutes over 38 games, starting two for the Heat at center. He shot 45.8% from the field. On November 18th, in a 105-98 win over the Seattle SuperSonics, he scored 12 points on five-of-six shooting from the field along with nine rebounds. A week later, he again scored 12 points on five-of-six shooting, along with four rebounds and two steals in 29 minutes of a 91-87 win over the New Orleans Hornets. He made a single postseason appearance after the season, playing in two minutes of a 93-63 win against the Hornets. Left unprotected in the expansion draft, he was selected by the Charlotte Bobcats on June 22nd.

Woods played parts of two seasons later on with the Toronto Raptors (82 games), playing in Lithuania in 2006-07 and in seven games for the Houston Rockets the following year. He has also made appearances in Turkey, Spain, Iran, and Lebanon, and is currently signed there with Al Riyadi Beirut. As a side note, Woods marks the halfway point of our countdown, with 99 players above and 99 below. He is the very definition of the "average" Heat player.

All-Time HEATline:
One season, 38 games, 13.3 minutes, 3.2 points, 3.5 rebounds, 0.3 assists, 0.3 steals, 0.5 blocks, 12.3 PER, 1.1 win shares.

99. Otis Thorpe


Thorpe was a 6'9" power forward from Boynton Beach, FL. Born on August 5th, 1962, he played four seasons with the University of Providence, averaging 17 points and 10 rebounds per contest as a senior in 1983-84. He was drafted in the first round of the 1984 draft by the Kansas City Kings, with the ninth overall pick.

Thorpe played four seasons for the Kings, first in Kansas City and later in Sacramento. He scored nearly 16 points with over eight rebounds per contest, playing half an hour per game. Later on he played with the Houston Rockets for parts of seven seasons, playing in the 1992 NBA all-star game. With Houston, he shot 56% from the floor, with 16 points and nine and a half rebounds per game. He then played with the Portland TrailBlazers (34 games), the Detroit Pistons (161 games), the Vancouver Grizzlies (47 games), the Kings (27 games), and the Washington Wizards (49 games).

Thorpe joined the Heat as a free agent during the summer of 1999, signing for one-year/$2,000,000. He played in 51 contests, including one start at power forward. In just over 15 minutes per game, he shot 51.4%, totaling five and a half points and 3.3 rebounds average in each appearance. He finished in double figures 10 times, including two double-doubles. On January 21st, he went seven-for-nine from the field, scoring 14 points with 10 rebounds. In his only start of the season, on April 14th, he made all seven of his field goal attempts, again finishing with 14 along with three rebounds in a 105-101 loss to the Indiana Pacers. He played 136 minutes over 10 postseason appearances, scoring three points with three rebounds per game. On April 29th, he scored 10 points with 10 boards as the Heat eliminated the Pistons, 91-72 in game three of a best-of-three sweep in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals.

Thorpe joined the Charlotte Hornets for 49 games the following season to close out his professional resume. He retired with over 17,000 points scored and 10,000 rebounds over his NBA career.

All-Time HEATline: One season, 51 games, 15.2 minutes, 5.5 points, 3.3 rebounds, 0.6 assists, 0.5 steals, 0.2 blocks, 9.9 PER, 1.2 win shares.

98. Duane Causwell


Duane Causwell was a 7' tall center from Queens Village in New York City, NY. Born on May 31st, 1968, he played three seasons with the Temple Owls in college, averaging 11.3 points and 8.8 rebounds per game over his last two seasons. The Sacramento Kings chose him in the first round of the 1990 draft, with the 18th overall pick.

Causwell spent his first seven seasons in Sacramento, playing just under 20 minutes per game and scoring five and a half points, grabbing four and a half rebounds, and blocking one and a half shots per game. He ranks 23rd on the Kings all-time list of games played, with 429. During the 1997 offseason, the Kings traded him for Matt Fish, Gary Grant, and a second round draft pick to the Heat. His first contract in Miami was for three seasons and $4,362,102.

Causwell's first season in Miami would see him play in 37 games, including two starts at center. He scored 2.3 points with 1.8 rebounds and almost one block per game. On March 12th, in a 97-74 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers, he scored four points with four blocks and 12 rebounds. April 4th would see him grab 14 rebounds in 21 minutes of a 101-88 win over the Charlotte Hornets. On April 19th, he scored a season high 15 points on seven-of-nine shooting in 34 minutes of a 101-89 loss to the Atlanta Hawks. On May 3rd, he made his only playoff appearance, grabbing two rebounds in five minutes of a game five elimination loss to the New York Knicks, 98-81.

Causwell appeared in a more limited role in 1998-99, appearing just 19 times and scoring a total of 44 points with 35
rebounds and 11 blocks. He only figured in double digits once, in his season's only start, a May 5th, 101-88 win over the Knicks. He finished with 10 and four rebounds.

In 1999-00, Causwell started in two of his 25 appearances, shooting at a 54.1% clip. As in each of his previous Miami seasons, he scored in double digits once. He scored 13 points with six rebounds in a 93-69 loss to the San Antonio Spurs.

After signing a one-year, $4,000,000 contract, Causwell shot a career worst 37.6% from the field in his final season, 2000-01. He played in 31 games, starting 14 of them and for the first time in a Heat uniform playing more than a quarter per game. He averaged two and a half points with two and a half rebounds per game. November 24th was the closest he would get to finishing any game category in double figures, when he finished with nine points and nine rebounds in an 85-80 loss to the Cavaliers. He finished his NBA career with a scoreless effort in the playoffs, finishing with three rebounds in five minutes of a 106-80 loss to the Charlotte Hornets.

All-Time HEATline: Four seasons, 112 games, 9.5 minutes, 2.5 points, 2.4 rebounds, 0.1 assists, 0.2 steals, 0.6 blocks, 8.4 PER, 1.3 win shares.

97. Scott Hastings


Scott Hastings, a 6'10" center from Independence, KS, was born on June 3rd, 1960. He played four seasons in college for the Arkansas Razorbacks, averaging 19 points with six rebounds through his senior season, 1981-82. The New York Knicks chose him in the second round of that year's draft, with the 29th pick overall. He played 21 games for New York before a trade for Rory Sparrow made him an Atlanta Hawk. He spent the majority of his career in Atlanta, appearing in 299 games over most of the next six seasons.

Hastings was left unprotected in the 1988 expansion draft, where the Heat picked him up for a $220,000 contract. He started six games over the course of the season, ranking sixth on the roster with 75 appearances. He shot 43.6% from the floor, averaging just over five points and three rebounds in 16 minutes per game. He scored in double figures 14 times, including one double-double. He scored a season high 17 points with six rebounds in an April 11th, 114-98 loss to the Golden State Warriors.

After just one season in South Beach, Hastings elected to join the Detroit Pistons as a free agent, playing in 67 games for them over the next two seasons. He later joined the Denver Nuggets for two more seasons, playing in 116 contests. He is currently in broadcasting in the Denver area, providing color commentary on the Nuggets, hosting a radio show, and a television golf show during the offseason.

All-Time HEATline: One season, 75 games, 16.1 minutes, 5.1 points, 3.1 rebounds, 0.8 assists, 0.4 steals, 0.6 blocks, 9.4 PER, 1.5 win shares.

Grizzly Bear Blues Schedule Review: February

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DateGame
2/1vs. Milwaukee
2/3@ Oklahoma City
2/5vs. Dallas
2/8@ Atlanta
2/9@ Cleveland
2/11vs. Washington
2/12@ Orlando
2/18vs. New York
2/21vs. L.A. Clippers
2/22@ Charlotte
2/26vs. L.A. Lakers
2/28@ Oklahoma City

First, the numbers:

  • Total games — 12
  • Home games — 6
  • Away games — 6
  • Against 2013 playoff teams — 7
  • Back-to-backs — 3
  • FOGAFINIs — 1[1]

The month starts off rough with a home game against Milwaukee after three games in four nights in Portland, Sacramento (which is always a tough place for the Grizzlies to play, no matter how good or bad the Kings are), and Minnesota. After completing that FOGAFINI there’s only one day of rest before it’s off to Oklahoma City to play the Thunder on the road. A home game against Dallas sits in the middle of a few days off (cue Admiral Akbar saying "It’s a trap!") before it’s back out on another FOGAFINI, this one against mostly crappy teams (except the Hawks).

After the All Star break (that gap between 2/12 and 2/18, I’m assuming) the games are a little more spread out, but the competition is still tough: both L.A. teams come to FedEx Forum, there’s another road game against the Thunder, the Knicks come to Memphis, and the Grizzlies have a nasty habit of barely beating the Bobcats in Charlotte because they’re looking past them to the next game.

All in all, February is tough—but it could be worse. March packs the same kind of intensity, only against tougher teams most of the time. The season is long, and these January and February games can sometimes feel listless and weird, but that’s why we watch, right? The Grizzlies are going to have to play tough on these FOGAFINI’s even though it’s got to be hard to stay motivated when you’re on your fourth game in five nights on the road against the Orlando Magic. Every game counts this year.

More from Grizzly Bear Blues:


  1. Two if you count the one that starts on January 28th at Portland and ends at home against the Bucks on the 1st.

Sacramento tourism to get nice assist from new Kings arena

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As the battle to prevent the Kings from relocating to Seattle raged on earlier this year, the Sacramento Convention and Visitors Bureau knew they had to help somehow - having the Kings as a regional draw is a key piece to what they do after all.

The Visitors Bureau is responsible for getting national and international visitors to come to Sacramento. They do that by going after major conventions, leisure travelers and professional visitors to the Capitol such as lobbyists and attorneys. The goal: get them to spend their discretionary income in the area. When a visitor stays in a Sacramento hotel they pay a transient and occupancy tax, and those funds go into the general fund of the city of Sacramento and county of Sacramento.

Mike Testa, senior vice president with the Visitors Bureau, says that transient and occupancy tax can bring in up to $25 million a year for the city and county. That is why he says, "tourism isn't about the tourists; it's about the quality of life of the locals."

And that is why his organization decided to create this video that played in Times Square during the crucial NBA Board of Governors meetings that took place on April 18-19 in New York City.

I had a chance to speak with Testa about this video and what a new downtown arena is going to mean for the Visitors Bureau's efforts to boost tourism in the future.

BE: Let's talk about the video that your organization did earlier this year that played in Times Square. How did that come about and were you pleased with the outcome?

MT: That came about internally, it was a suggestion from one of our employees and we had been brainstorming about how we could make an impact on this thing because for us, there is a lot of benefit with the Kings. One of which is from a marketing standpoint; it's great international exposure for this destination. If you go to Europe and you bring up Sacramento, most people aren't going to ask about the Gold Rush, they are going to ask about the Kings. When the Kings were good a few years back, they had 22 nationally televised games. That's great exposure for us because when they cut to a commercial and it's a shot of the Tower Bridge or other landmarks and it drives curiosity. We see our website hits go up fairly dramatically when we've got nationally televised games, so for us, it was a matter of how can we create something that has an impact?

We thought about the Board of Governors meeting in New York, and then we started talking about how we can reach them, and the idea morphed into a Times Square video. Certainly, we wanted to capture their attention, but it was also for this local market to show the pride that we have internally and express it in an external way.

BE: Let's get into Sacramento tourism. Obviously, Sacramento probably does not stack up in comparison to San Francisco and Los Angeles in terms of tourism, but where do we fit in to the scheme of things?

MT: In our industry, they rank cities by tiers. So San Francisco, New York, L.A. would be Tier 1 cities, and part of that is because of how many hotel rooms and convention facilities they have. Sacramento is considered a Tier 2 city. Our biggest competitors in the convention world are probably San Jose and Long Beach. We compete quite a bit with Portland, Reno, Carmel and Monterey. So we compete with some of the smaller to mid-level cities in California and the best example of that is San Jose.

BE: Right now, what would you say is the biggest draw for Sacramento as far as tourism goes?

MT: From a leisure/traveler standpoint there are a couple of them - the "Farm to Fork Capital of America" is something that is resonating very well with people and we are getting a lot of interest in culinary tourism, whether it is visiting farms or going up to the wineries, or even just coming and sampling our restaurants. Certainly, the history angle with the Gold Rush is big for the fourth and fifth graders who are studying California history - it's an experience to come here and see where it happened. Obviously, Old Sacramento still has some of that look. Those are probably the biggest two draws for leisure - culinary and history. Also with the history angle, we have 28 museums in Sacramento, from the Crocker Art Museum to the Railroad Museum to some of the smaller ones you may have never heard of, so those are a pretty big draw. There are not a lot of cities that boast 28 museums.

From a business standpoint, we go after what fits. So we find a group that we have enough space in the Convention Center for, that we have enough hotel rooms to accommodate their delegates and that we have the dates available to them when they want them.

BE: How is the addition of a downtown arena going to change what the Sacramento Convention and Visitors Bureau can do in terms of a marketing standpoint and also in terms of an overall quality of living?

MT: From the 30,000-foot view, you look at what's happened in other cities, whether it is Phoenix, or San Francisco, or Baltimore when they put their arenas in. The neighborhoods where those went in changed dramatically. You look at AT&T Park in San Francisco, that was an area that you didn't really venture into during the day or at night partly because there wasn't a lot there, and now that area is completely transformed - we all wish we had bought substantial land there before any of this happened and then we would all be retired. The same sort of thing in Phoenix happened when they built their arena downtown. The arts organization saw a huge increase in donors, patronage and attendance. Arenas in central cities really create that critical mass and give you a lot of different options. So we expect the same sort of development to happen in Sacramento that we see in other markets. It's a catalyst and private developers are going to see opportunities around that arena and will build other attractions.

From a programming standpoint, there's just going to be a lot more stuff to do in downtown Sacramento ... A lot of the concerts in the Bay Area add a second and third show to attract the Sacramento market. Once we have a new facility located downtown, we're going to see a lot more events and probably a lot more bigger-name concerts coming through.

And then specifically for our business, we try to bring in religious groups who need big general session space for, you know, 10,000 delegates. The challenge with Sleep Train Arena for them is they don't want to shuttle. They want their folks to be able to walk from a hotel or take a quick ride over to the arena. So when you have a facility that is downtown, it is going to allow us to compete for some of that business that, frankly, we just haven't been able to go after. Now, can I tell you we are going to book 10 of those in a year? No, that's not going to happen. We would hope to get one or two or three; but even with one of those, the economic impact of a four-day event would be in the millions of dollars. You've got 10,000 delegates that all need somewhere to eat, and then they are going to spend money if they drove in because they are going to fill up their gas tanks before they leave. There are just some huge impact opportunities.

The final piece is we now run the Sacramento Sports Commission out of the Convention and Visitors Bureau offices, and our ability to compete for sporting events will be easier in that facility. We will be able to go after NCAA events, whether it's basketball or volleyball or pick the sport. To be able to lure them with a brand new state-of-the-art arena is going to be very appealing to the NCAA, so it helps our bid process when we can attach something like that to what Sacramento is offering.

BE: I know regional branding is a big part of generating tourism for a city. Will having the arena downtown and having a central hub create a situation where Sacramento could be rebranded all together?

MT: One of the challenges that Sacramento, and many other cities, have is sometimes our worst enemies are the people who have lived in Sacramento for their entire lives and they will tell you, ‘it is boring, there is nothing to do here and we go somewhere else for entertainment.' And for those of us who have lived other places and have come to Sacramento, I don't think I could disagree any more with comments like that because there is a lot of activity going on in the city and some really great stuff that you don't find anywhere else. But when you have a facility like that, there is some community pride that comes along with it, and maybe it starts to change the mentality of some of the naysayers who live in this community that say we're a cow town. Cow towns don't have buildings like this. Cow towns don't look ahead and try to shape their future and cow towns don't see the value of professional sports and how it impacts everybody that lives here in a positive way, whether you are a sports fan or not.

I think part of it could be some community pride that gets fostered out of this. There was a great sense of pride when it was announced that the Kings were staying, from business people to ordinary citizens who got involved, there was a sense of, ‘wow, we accomplished this and we played a role in helping to keep this team here.' And I expect that that will continue as we open this new facility and continue to celebrate the accomplishment of keeping the Kings.

BE: The Sacramento Film Commission is housed under the Visitors Bureau. Does the arena have any impact on what you currently do in that area in terms of bringing more filmmakers to Sacramento?

MT: I think what it does is it increases interest and it increases the number of eyeballs that are on us. Let's fast forward to when the Kings are back in the playoffs and doing well and there is a rivalry with the Lakers again, I mean how many Lakers fans are coming up here from Southern California that are taxed in the film industry that are going to be exposed to this market? How many nationally televised games are going to be on that show the scenic beauty that most people don't know about Sacramento and they say, ‘oh, we didn't realize there was something there.'? So, I think there is an opportunity to expose the area to people who normally wouldn't see it.

BE: I am sure you have heard some of the arguments out there against this project. When you hear things like Sacramento shouldn't be allowing wealthy developers to come in and build in the city, how do you respond to things like that?

MT: So the alternative is what? We let those plots of land lay vacant and nobody benefits from them? I would much rather a developer come in, spend their money, even with a little bit of assistance from the city of Sacramento, and create things that I can take my family to. I'm working with a local promoter who is trying to do a concert in the region, and I hope he makes a fortune on his show because that means he is going to come back next year, and the year after and the year after. If these developers create businesses that we all patronize and we are all getting benefit from, they are going to want to do more and that improves the options for those of us who live here. It's an odd argument to say we'd rather have nothing than to play a role in dictating our own fate. I think it's the role of elected officials to speak for the people, that is why they were elected. So when you have got these guys approving deals for developers to come in and create new things, I think that is a good thing. That generates tax dollars that wouldn't have been generated on vacant land, it generates activity and entertainment for those of us who live here and helps the image of Sacramento.

More from Sactown Royalty:

Miami Heat Player Countdown: #96-93

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96. Brad Lohaus


Brad Lohaus (sometimes called "Big Bird,") was a 6'11" power forward from New Ulm, MN. Born on September 29th, 1964, the left-handed big man played four seasons for the University of Iowa, scoring 11 points and eight rebounds per game as a senior in 1986-87. After college, he was drafted by the Boston Celtics in the second round, with the 45th overall pick. This move was both wise and ironic for the Celtics, who now had Big Bird and Larry Bird on the same team.

Lohaus played parts of two seasons in Boston (118 games), later playing with the Sacramento Kings (29 games), the Minnesota TimberWolves (28 games), and the Milwaukee Bucks (350 games). The Heat picked him up on the free agent market for $325,000 just prior to the 1994-95 season.

Lohaus appeared in 61 games with the Heat in what would be his only season in Miami. He shot 42% from the floor, averaging four and a half points and two rebounds per game. He was also a long-distance shooting specialist, sinking 63-of-155 shots for Miami. He played most games off the bench, his only start of the season came on November 16th, when he scored 12 points on five-of-10 shooting in 27 minutes of a 109-96 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers. He finished in double digits 10 times over the course of the season, including a 105-104 loss to the San Antonio Spurs on January 20th. He scored 17 points with eight rebounds and two blocks in 27 minutes. The Heat gave him his walking papers after the season.

Lohaus caught on with the Spurs for 32 games in 1995-96, splitting the season between San Antonio and New York, where he closed the campaign with 23 games. He played six games for the Toronto Raptors in 1996-97, rejoining the Spurs for nine games the following season. He is currently employed as a scout for the Spurs organization.

All-Time HEATline: One season, 61 games, 12.0 minutes, 4.4 points, 1.7 rebounds, 0.7 assists, 0.3 steals, 0.4 blocks, 12.7 PER, 1.5 win shares.

95. Norris Cole


Norris Cole was born on October 13th, 1988 (three weeks before the Heat would take the court for the first time). Born in Dayton, OH, he is a 6'2" point guard, and a graduate of Cleveland State University. He played four seasons with the team, starting the last three and averaging 21.7 points, six rebounds and five assists as a senior in 2010-11. The Heat acquired Chris Bosh by trading Cole's eventual pick and another away to the Toronto Raptors in 2010. The pick was traded to the Chicago Bulls. The Bulls selected him in the first round of the draft, 28th overall, then traded him to the Minnesota TimberWolves, who sent him to the Heat for Bojan Bogdanovic, so, yeah, we won that one.

I'm not entirely sure how his pay is doled out, but in my best estimation, he signed a two-year contract with separate options for third and fourth seasons just prior to the end of the 2011 lockout, for just over a million per season and just over two million in his hypothetical fourth season. As a rookie, he appeared in 65 of Miami's 66 games, only starting twice and shooting 39.3% from the field and just 27.6% from long distance. He averaged seven points and two assists in 19 minutes per contest. He finished in double figures 21 times, including two 20-point games. In just his fifth career game, on New Year's Day, he scored 16 points on six-of-eight shooting, along with a season high nine assists in a 129-90 demolishion of the Charlotte Bobcats. He saw significantly less action in the playoffs, making 19 appearances and playing 8.9 minutes average in helping the Heat to their first of two consecutive titles.

Cole was expected to turn a corner in 2012-13, as the Heat bolstered their roster with even more shooters, including Rashard Lewis and Ray Allen. Instead, he seemed to hold steady in his progress, in fact producing an identical player efficiency rating from the previous season (7.9). He improved his shooting percentages to 42.1% and to 35.7%, respectively, while racking an identical 19 minutes average per appearance and seeing his average points drop to five and a half points. He started four out of his 80 appearances over the season, scoring in double figures 13 times. On March 24th, he played 22 minutes and scored 15 points (including a three-for-four night from long range) along with six assists in a 109-77 win over Charlotte. His best game of the season came on April 15th, as he earned a rare start as the regular starters took a break. He finished with his first career double double, missing the hat trick by one assist with 16 points, 11 rebounds and nine helpers to dust off the Cleveland Cavaliers, 96-95. In 21 playoff games, he raised his PER into the mid-12 range and scored 18 points twice as the Heat won their second title in a row.

All-Time HEATline:
Two seasons, 145 games, 19.7 minutes, 6.1 points, 1.5 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 0.7 steals, 0.1 blocks, 8.3 PER, 1.5 win shares.

94. Jamario Moon


Jamario Moon, a 6'8" small forward from Goodwater, AL, attended college at Meridian Community College in Mississippi. Born on June 13th, 1980, he played just one competitive season before graduating. Undrafted by the NBA, he latched on with several lesser pro-leagues in the states, including the NBA D-League, the USBL, the CBA, the WBA, and the ABA. He also played a spell in Mexico and another with the Harlem Globetrotters. His travels brought him to Canada during the 2007 offseason, where he signed with the Toronto Raptors. He played 132 games over parts of the next two seasons with the team.

Miami acquired Moon at the 2009 trade deadline along with Jermaine O'Neal and two draft picks for Marcus Banks, Shawn Marion, and cash. He signed with the Heat for the remainder of the season for $711,517. He started 21 games for Miami at small forward, appearing five times in relief. He shot 45.9% from the floor, along with an impressive 37% three-point rate. He scored just over seven points per game in 27 minutes, pitching in with 4.5 rebounds and an assist average. For Miami, he figured in double figures nine times. His best game was on March 22nd, in a 101-96 win over the Detroit Pistons where he scored 17 points with six rebounds and three blocks in 37 minutes. In three playoff appearances, he went perfect from the field and finished with 12 points and nine rebounds in a combined 40 minutes.

Moon tested the free agency market after the season, winding up as a Cleveland Cavalier for the next season and a half (101 games). He has also played with the Los Angeles Clippers (19 games), and the Charlotte Bobcats (eight games). He currently plays in the NBA D-League with the Los Angeles D-Fenders.

All-Time STATline: One season, 26 games, 26.5 minutes, 7.1 points, 4.5 rebounds, 1.0 assists, 0.8 steals, 0.6 blocks, 12.0 PER, 1.7 win shares.

93. Travis Best


Travis Best was a 5'11" point guard from Springfield, MA, and the only sub-six-footer on our countdown to this point (stay tuned). Born on July 12th, 1972, he was a starter for the Georgia Tech YellowJackets for four college seasons, averaging 36 minutes and scoring 17 points with three rebounds and six assists per game. The Indiana Pacers selected him in the first round of the 1995 draft, with the 23rd overall pick.

Best played his first six and a half seasons with the Pacers, playing in 469 games and ranking ninth on the franchise
all-time leaderboard with 1,785 assists. He later played with the Chicago Bulls for 30 games of 2001-02. The Heat signed him during the 2002 offseason for $1,400,000.

Best played in 72 games, starting 52 for Miami at point guard. He averaged 25 minutes per game, scoring eight and a half points, two rebounds, and three and a half assists. He finished in double figures 27 times that year. His best game came on January 27th, when he finished with 20 points and three assists with two steals in a 102-95 win over the Indiana Pacers. Just two days later, in an 82-80 victory over the New York Knicks, he dished out a season high 10 assists, also scoring nine points. On February 15th, he scored 21 points with three rebounds and eight helpers in a 98-92 loss to the Dallas Mavericks.

Best did not rejoin the Heat for another season, instead playing for the Mavericks the following year (61 games). He later played a season with the New Jersey Nets (76 games). He has since played in Russia, Italy, and Poland, most recently with NSB Napoli in an italian league.

All-Time HEATline: One season, 72 games, 25.1 minutes, 8.4 points, 2.0 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 0.6 steals, 0.1 blocks, 11.2 PER, 1.8 win shares.

What does the future hold for Jason Thompson?

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Jason Thompson is currently the longest tenured King, dating all the way back to 2008. He's also No. 5 on the pay scale, making right about the NBA league average salary ($5.6 million). But he's also on a long-term deal -- he has guaranteed salary through 2016-17 -- and might not be the starter this season.

These are four things we know about the Kings and Jason Thompson right now.

1. The Kings are totally committed (for now) to DeMarcus Cousins, and Cousins and Thompson aren't the most compatible pairing imaginable. This applies in basically all strands: they don't seem to be particularly friendly (remember that JT and Donte Greene were best buds, and Greene and Cousins went to blows back in 2011), neither is a really strong defender (and in fact Cousins is a really weak defender) and neither stretches the floor to the three-point line.

2. This Kings front office signed Carl Landry, a power forward, in one of its three big free agent moves. Power forward was not exactly a need position before that signing. Landry has previously been in a battle with Thompson for the starting job. Adding Landry to a position where Thompson, Patrick Patterson and Chuck Hayes already reside is not a sign of great confidence in the incumbents.

3. Thompson's contract is long, and that is one major factor in tradeability. He's guaranteed $6.4 million in 2015-16 ... and has a 5 percent trade kicker. (Thanks, Geoff!) He's guaranteed $2.6 million in 2016-17 if waived, per ShamSports.

4. Thompson is a really solid player. A decent scorer who doesn't need touches but knows what to do with them, a good rebounder, not a turnover machine. He's not excellent in any category (except personality/winning smile), but he's really solid.

Based on all of that, I really don't think Thompson is long for the Kings. Landry is at his best as a sixth man, a bench scorer who can bang and add some gravitas to the locker room. Patterson is pretty darn good, and while he's not a defender (sense a theme?) he can shoot the deep ball and he has a good relationship with Cousins. Patterson will be a restricted free agent in 2014, as will Isaiah Thomas, Cousins and Greivis Vasquez, barring early extensions. I imagine that Patterson will at the very least be given a strong shot to pair with Cousins this season. If it works, Thompson becomes almost superfluous because of Landry's bench scoring ability and Hayes' defense.

That said, it'd be a lot easier to imagine a Kings team with Thompson if the club had another center. Playing Hayes at center has worked in the past, but it's not optimal. And given Cousins' propensity for foul trouble and the ever-present hurdle of injury, you'd be looking at playing Luc Richard Mbah a Moute or Travis Outlaw at the four at times. Which, again, it's worked in the past. I'm not sure it's optimal.

I think the front office's devotion to Cousins carries with it a certain tone that makes me think Thompson is not someone they see in the team's long term. If that's the case, it'll be interesting to see how the rest of the league values a pretty solid, pricey big man with a good attitude.

More from Sactown Royalty:

Lakers news: Nick Minnerath invited to Lakers training camp, according to report

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The Los Angeles Lakers' training camp has added more wing depth to the roster by inviting former University of Detroit Titan Nick Minnerathaccording to Alex Kennedy of HOOPSWORLD. Minnerath went undrafted in the 2013 NBA Draft.

Minnerath did not play for the Lakers' Las Vegas Summer League team but was on the Sacramento Kings' summer league roster. He averaged 5.6 points and 1.8 rebounds over five games. In his final season with the Titans he averaged 14.6 points and 5.9 rebounds. He also averaged 39.7 percent from deep in the three years he spent in college.

Minnerath is expected to join Marcus Landry (has a "small" guaranteed deal) and Elias Harris (received a two-year deal with one year guaranteed) in training camp. Chris Douglas-Robertswas "expected" to receive an invite but there have been no updates.

In the meantime, Minnerath took to Twitter to thank the Lakers organization for giving him an invite:

And here's a Minnerath alley-oop because alley-oops:

Want more Minnerath? Ok. Slam Online has been producing an undrafted prospect profile series and have an episode on Minnerath.

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The difficulty with being patient

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I'm finding it difficult to be patient.

In the 2012 NBA Draft, the Portland Trail Blazers were one pick behind the Kings.  The Kings were picking fifth, the Blazers sixth.  Both teams were, by any objective measure, bad.

The Kings had been bad longer.

The Kings selected Thomas Robinson.  Reports later came out that Robinson was selected because the front office wasn't sure the team's owners would pay to retain Jason Thompson, who was entering restricted free agency.  The owners did pay to retain Thompson, and Robinson failed to receive consistent playing time.  He often looked lost on the court when he did play, but his Per 36 numbers showed promise.

At the trade deadline of his rookie season Thomas Robinson was traded to the Houston Rockets.  The team had given up on Robinson, and brought in Toney Douglas, Cole Aldrich, and Patrick Patterson.  Douglas was allowed to walk in free agency, and is now a member of the Golden State Warriors.  Aldrich remains, as of my writing this, an unsigned free agent.  Patterson remains, but he'll enter restricted free agency next offseason.  Patterson is being discussed as a potential starter, as part of Sacramento's logjam at power forward.

The Blazers drafted Rookie of the Year Damian Lillard.  The Blazers exceeded every expectation last season, including the expectations of their own front office.  Blazers GM Neil Olshey admitted that he would have worked harder to build Portland's bench for last season if he had only known how good his starting five was going to be.  Portland was just outside the playoffs last year.

This season, Portland is widely expected to be in contention for the playoffs.  If they miss the playoffs, the expectation is that they would barely miss.  The starting five returns, and the bench depth has been marvelously addressed.  The Blazers drafted C.J. McCollum and Allan Crabbe, and signed or traded for Mo Williams, Robin Lopez., Dorell Wright..and Thomas Robinson.

I've been at the forefront of preaching patience with the Kings new ownership and new management.  The Kings have been so bad for so long, it's simply unrealistic to expect the new regime to turn things around in one summer.  Especially in a summer where management had to hire a new head coach and a new GM.  The team made some moves, but they weren't franchise-altering.  Or at least they don't appear to be at the time.  Forgive me, I was young, but I don't recall anyone thinking the Vlade Divac signing was a franchise-altering acquisition at the time.  Maybe Greivis Vasquez or Luc Mbah a Moute are franchise-changers.  Who knows?

But even when I know I'm supposed to be patient, it can be difficult during the offseason doldrums.  August is an incredibly slow month for the NBA.  After the whirlwind of activity Kings fans have endured over the past several years, we're now left with nothing but free time to sit and examine the roster.

I have faith that the new ownership and the new management will right this ship.  I believe the best days for Kings fans lie ahead.  But those days probably aren't happening this season, and right now I'm struggling to remain patient.  I'm sure these issues will go away once the season draws near, and I'm slapped upside the head with the realization that holy crap we saved the Kings and just be happy you dummy.  But until then I'll sit around and examine the roster and pass the time impatiently.

Phoenix Suns 2013-2014 Pre-Season Schedule feature Spurs, Clippers, and Maccabi Bazan

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Last year the Phoenix Suns came in with some promise and obvious question marks. They finished the pre-season 4-3 and even had a game on National Television (ESPN) to add an exclamation point on the excitement of the new season beginning.

This year the team welcomes in a few of the same teams as last year as they released the pre-season schedule for the 2013-2014 season today:

The repeats from last season include the Thunder, Nuggets, Blazers, and the Kings. This years slate of games provides a unique array of teams from the very bad, to the middle of the pack, and even some Championship contenders that will test the Suns early. An added note, there are no National TV Games this year.

It is not a perfect barometer for the season as a whole as a 4-3 pre-season can easily turn into a 25-57 debacle.

Overall the most important factor in this schedule is that the Suns host Maccabi, the Clippers, and the Thunder giving some excitement early on for the fans early. Is there a chance the Suns show promise against this group of teams? Can they equal or surpass last season's 4-3 mark? How do you feel overall about the teams the Suns not only host, but the teams on the schedule in general?

NBA news roundup: Andrea Bargnani has pneumonia, Dwight Howard works out with Hakeem Olajuwon

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New York Knicks forward Andrea Bargnani has been unable to suit up for the Italian national team over the past week due to a respiratory infection. The player himself later revealed on Twitter, in Italian, that he has actually developed pneumonia.

Then, in English, Bargnani said he's currently at home trying to get better so he can participate in EuroBasket 2013 when it gets going on Sept. 7. There's still quite a bit of time for him to recover for that so it seems likely that he'll be able to play in the tournament, although pneumonia can be a bit tricky.

Even if the illness does keep Bargnani out of EuroBasket, it should have no effect on his readiness for Knicks' training camp, unless there's a significant setback. Still, this is a rather ominous start to Bargnani's Knicks tenure as he tries to resurrect his NBA career.

Dwight works with The Dream

The Houston Rockets used Hakeem Olajuwon as part of their pitch to pry Dwight Howard away from the Los Angeles Lakers. They plan on having Olajuwon impart his wisdom on Howard going forward, too, in order to make the 27-year-old a more well-rounded player.

Olajuwon and Rockets coach Kevin McHale, a legendary big man in his own right, took the court with Howard on Monday in what should be the first of many training sessions featuring the three basketball giants. If Howard buys what the two Hall of Famers are selling, the sky may be the limit ... as long as he stays healthy.

While Howard says he's soaking in as much information as he can, he told Jason Friedman of Rockets.com that he doesn't want to simply emulate how Olajuwon and McHale played:

"Having these guys in my backyard and have them pushing me to the limit is just going to make me better," said Howard after his 90-minute workout wrapped up. "It's not about emulating Dream. That's the thing. We get caught up in comparing players, trying to do what this guys does just because you work with him. The thing is, when you workout with a guy like Hakeem or Kevin McHale, you take away certain things. You don't try to do everything they can do. I could workout with Michael Jordan, but I'm not going to be able to shoot the fadeaway like Michael Jordan.

"The biggest thing when we're working out is I'm always watching his feet. Today we were working on spin moves and I was doing a spin move with my left foot in the back and I saw him doing it with his right. So once I caught that, I adjusted. It's little things like that where you see something and you put your own mix to it - that's what makes it great."

Olajuwon will soon officially become a member of the Rockets' organization. He plans on working with Howard as much as possible in order to help the big man reach his full potential.

Stevens sends letters to former Celtics

Brad Stevens has a lot of work to do the next few years in order to get the Boston Celtics back among the NBA's elite, but he has gotten off to a pretty good start. The former Butler coach has put together a solid staff, made an effort to form a positive relationship with Rajon Rondo, and generally has just said all the right things.

Long-time NBA writer Peter Vescey revealed Stevens' latest good move, saying the 36-year-old sent letters to former Celtics to make it known they're always welcome.

Former Celtics point guard Kenny Anderson was a recipient of one of these letters, and he claimed Stevens sent them to ALL past Celtics. That seems a bit unbelievable, but if true, that's pretty impressive. There are certainly a lot of former Celtics out there.

Aldrich back to Sacramento?

The Sacramento Kings currently have one guaranteed spot left on their roster, and it may be used on somebody who was with the team last season. Free-agent big man Cole Aldrich worked out for the Kings on Monday, according to Jonathan Santiago and James Ham of Cowbell Kingdom.

Sacramento declined to exercise the 2013-14 option on Aldrich's rookie contract, making him an unrestricted free agent. With the big man market drying up, however, the 24-year-old may be one of the best options out there.

Aldrich averaged 3.3 points and 4.2 rebounds in 15 games with the Kings after coming over in a trade from the Houston Rockets. He posted double-doubles in two of the last three games of the season.

English signs overseas

Unable to secure an NBA job for the upcoming season, former Detroit Piston Kim English has signed with Italian power Siena, according to Jorge Sierra of HoopsHype. English confirmed the news on Twitter. Sierra reports the deal has an NBA out until Aug. 22 so English has about a week to find a team for next year.

English was selected No. 44 by the Pistons in the 2012 NBA Draft, but played sparingly last season. The 6'6 guard appeared in 41 games, averaging 2.9 points and 0.9 rebounds in 9.9 minutes per game.

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Sacramento City Council Agrees to help Kings acquire Macy's Land

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As was reported last week, the Kings were getting ready to ask the city of Sacramento for help in negotiations with N.Y. based Island Capital, the owners of the Macy's Men's Store at the downtown plaza.  That piece of property is the last piece of land that the Kings group needs in order to have all the property available for the new arena.  The two sides had come close to a deal before, but it fell apart.

Last night the city council voted 7 to 2 in favor of helping the team in its negotiations.  Councilmen McCarty and Fong were the lone objectors.  Neither offered any substantial comment as to why, although Fong simply said that his vote "followed the votes I've voted in the past."

The city's role in the negotiations might be to use the threat of eminent domain or condemning the property in order to get Island Capital back to the table.  City Manager John Shirey told the council yesterday that the city's financial contribution to the arena would not increase by helping with these negotiations.

The Macy's Men's Store is currently in the process of being moved to the existing Macy's Women's store.

Mail Sac Wednesday: Sharing the ball, alternate team names, favorite live sporting events.

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Mail Sac Wednesday begins with Steven: "Why don't the Kings share the ball? A successful NBA team passes first but the Kings shoot first or drive into lane clogged with defensive players. Will Michael Malone be able to instill in them a true team concept?"

One thing that I think we have to remember is the level of personnel turnover from last year to this year. To wit, the Ranadivé group has replaced the Maloofs, D'Alessandro has replaced Petrie, Malone and his coaching staff has replaced Smart and his coaching staff, and no fewer than eight players that wore Kings purple last year (Aldrich, Brooks, Douglas, Evans, Garcia, Honeycutt, Johnson, and Robinson) are gone, with Landry, Mbah a Moute, McLemore, Vasquez and McCallum in their place. Only Thornton, Salmons, Hayes, Thompson, Cousins, Outlaw, Fredette and Thomas were on this team at the beginning of last year, and one could project that only Thornton, Thompson, Cousins and Thomas project as being core rotation guys right now. So it is really difficult to apply past performance to this new Kings team.

It appears that this team is really being built around DeMarcus Cousins right now. And whether or not you agree with that direction, it is a distinct departure from Cousins>Evans or Evans>Cousins dynamic of the past couple of years. Cousins looks to be the primary offensive weapon, with Marcus Thornton projecting to be offensive weapon 1A. I don't know that you are going to see a lot of volume passing, but I'm guessing/hoping that you are going to see better ball and player movement, with the primary objective being a good shot opportunity primarily for Cousins or Thornton. I am also guessing that Malone will want to install an aggressive transition game, as "easy" baskets will be critical for this team, and a weapon like Vasquez should help facilitate such opportunities.

I don't know that we will see "golden age" Kings passing, but we should see a system that at least conveys passing with a purpose.

Our next question comes from adamsite: "With the recent changes and expected changes to NBA team names and the newly anointed Republic FC, I have to ask this blasphemous question. If Ranadivé had the knot in his undies to change the team name, mascot and logo what would you like it to become if the Kings were no longer an option?"

"Chico's Bail Bonds" is the first name that springs to mind. "The Sacramento River Otters" for absolutely no good reason whatsoever. "The Official Basketball Club of the State of California." Or just name ‘em the titmice.

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Pick & Droll is presented by Madzillagd: "If you could attend a sporting event of your choosing for free anywhere in the world, what would it be? The Masters, NBA Finals, Man U game, Super Bowl, Olympics (which event), etc.?"

I'm not a huge hockey fan, but I'd love to attend the Stanley Cup finals for an entire series. I think that it would be fantastic.

I'd like to attend the NCAA final for football, basketball and baseball. I've been to the College World Series for semi-final games, and I've seen Elite Eight of the basketball tourney. The emotion of the crowds at those games made the events memorable. I've never been to a college bowl game.

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Send your questions and topic ideas to asksactownroyalty@gmail.com.

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