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Kings vs. Mavericks Fan Predictions

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It's Prediction Time!

Link to The Leaderboard

Below are a series of prediction questions for tonight's game. The first four questions will be asked every game, while the 5th will change each game.

Point value for predictions are listed next to the questions. If you believe that more than one player will lead a category, you can vote for multiple players, and this is worth double points if you are correct, but zero if you are wrong. Alternately, if you only guess one player when multiple players are tied, you get zero points.

All submissions must be input before tip-off. Any submissions after tip-off will not count. You are allowed only one submission and may not change unless specifically stated.

Questions:

1. Who do you think will win the game, and what will the final score be? (1 point for guessing winner. 2 points for guessing winner and correct score of one team. 5 points for guessing winner and exact score)

2. Who will be the game's leading scorer? (1 point for guessing scorer, 2 points for guessing exact points scored)

3. Who will be the game's leading rebounder? (1 point for guessing rebounder, 2 points for guessing exact rebounds)

4. Who will be the game's leading assist man? (1 point for guessing assist man, 2 points for guessing exact assists)

5. Predict Dirk Nowitzki's 3PM, Monta Ellis's steals and Jose Calderon's turnovers (1 point for right answer, 3 points for two right, 5 points for all right)


Talking Kings with Akis Yerocostas of Sactown Royalty

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Akis Yerocostas of Sactown Royalty was kind enough to answer some questions about the Kings before they take on the Mavericks tonight.

What's the deal with DeMarcus Cousins and Rudy Gay? Are they back tonight and are they near 100%?

Rudy Gay came back Wednesday against Memphis and had a very solid game, scoring 23 points on 10-16 shooting. He did tweak the injury on a dunk late in the game, but he remained in the game and said he should be available on Friday.

DeMarcus Cousins did not play Wednesday but did warm up before the game. He remains day-to-day but I would expect that there's a greater than 50% chance he plays. If he does play, I expect it will be with a chip on his shoulder at not being selected to the All-Star game but he also might be a tad rusty.

Just for variety's sake, give me the argument for why DMC shouldn't be an All-Star.

There's really only one argument as to why DMC shouldn't be an All-Star and it's that the Kings are 15-30 (15-26 with Cousins) and last in the West. Cousins' excellence hasn't led to a lot more wins, and coaches don't like that. Cousins also has work to do on the defensive end (where he's improved but still isn't great) but being bad at defense has never kept anyone off the team.

Do you think Rudy Gay will opt-out this summer to get a long-term deal? I could see the Mavs throwing a lot of money at him.

I think the only way Rudy opts out is if he gets a guaranteed extension with Sacramento above the $12 million/year range. Sacramento is in a position to make him this guarantee whereas other teams are not, so it'd be a risk for him to do so. In my personal opinion, I don't think he opts out mainly because $19.7 million is a whole hell of a lot of money and a big extension is likely in the books next year anyway. I know if I were in his shoes, I probably wouldn't say no to that final big year.

This seems like it could be a big game for Jose Calderon. How can Isaiah Thomas guard a 6'4 guy who can shoot off the dribble?

Thomas actually could do pretty well on Calderon because the biggest problem Thomas has on the defensive end is dealing with quickness & athleticism, and that's one thing Calderon isn't known for. The last time these two teams played, Calderon was held to just 11 points and 2 assists on 4-10 shooting. Last year, he scored just 16 points over 2 games against Thomas combined. If anything, I'd be worried about how Calderon is going to stop him; Thomas put 24 points and 12 assists on Dallas in their earlier matchup.

How is Sacramento's bench these days? I know the second unit has had a lot of turnover.

The bench hasn't been looking as great since Thomas left it for the starting lineup but there have been a few bright spots: Quincy Acy provides good energy, Jimmer Fredette has been solid as a shooter and occasional distributor, and Derrick Williams is phenomenal when he attacks the basket. Sacramento also got veteran Carl Landry back recently, but he's still working back into game shape and is still a ways away from being the same Carl Landry he used to be. The biggest problem with Sacramento's bench is there really hasn't been much consistency.

Nuggets Nate Robinson Instagram's photo and comeback talk

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The injury on Nate Robinson has been called a "sprain" which can mean a sprain, partial tear or full tear of his ACL. It's looking like Robinson is talking about a long term injury.

Denver Nuggets point guard Nate Robinson sent out this photo and caption this (Jan. 31st) afternoon. The caption isn't too promising for a return to the court this season.

I'm going to come back stronger faster & with more bounce then ever ... You can watch the progress on the #stateofnate filmed by @teejayregan be back in a flash ... #heartoverheight#ToughTimesNeverLastTough PeopleDo & I'm a TOUGH MF #holdat

The three different types of ACL sprains are as follows:

Grade 1 Sprains. The ligament is mildly damaged in a Grade 1 Sprain. It has been slightly stretched, but is still able to help keep the knee joint stable.

Grade 2 Sprains. A Grade 2 Sprain stretches the ligament to the point where it becomes loose. This is often referred to as a partial tear of the ligament.

Grade 3 Sprains. This type of sprain is most commonly referred to as a complete tear of the ligament. The ligament has been split into two pieces, and the knee joint is unstable.

With Robinson talking about coming back "stronger faster & with more bounce than ever" it sounds a whole lot more like he's got a Grade 3 sprain - which is what The NY Daily News' Frank Isola Tweeted out early today:

Tough injury news continues for the Nuggets.

David Stern changed the NBA and Sacramento forever

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A man of many faces. A man of many reputations. A man who means quite a bit to Sacramento.

David Stern sat at a hotel lobby table cheerfully conversing with George Maloof. A little while later, he calmly got up and walked over to take a photo with a young NBA fan and his mother. A few hours later, Stern could be seen leaving his board meeting for a break in the action, hands gesturing wildly as he paced about.

The scene was at the Hilton Anatole hotel in Dallas, Texas last May before the NBA Board of Governors voted in favor of keeping the Kings in Sacramento and against relocating the team to Seattle.

The many faces of the outgoing NBA commissioner are what those who follow professional basketball have become accustomed to. Most of the time, his PR genius left folks trying to decipher his messages. His ability to say something without actually saying something and say things of meaning at the same time is a Stern staple. We saw it throughout the Kings relocation saga.

He was a master at cutting the cake, but making the slices as small as possible.

He would drop intentional bombs like Sacramento's offer on the team "is not quite there" in comparison with Seattle's offer. (Later it would become comparable, of course.) On the other hand, he would say he doesn't "believe it's going to come down to economics." He would call the potential Seattle ownership group "strong" and then praise Mayor Kevin Johnson and Sacramento's efforts.

Basketball reasons man.

One thing he did say that hit home during the saga was, "I don't see any scenario where both cities are happy."

These are memories that probably produce some strong emotional response from Kings fans (and Sonics fans). But regardless of what he said, you always got the sense that he knew what the endgame would be and that he was always in control of the Kings' fate, not the Maloofs.

Throughout much of his tenure as NBA Commissioner, Stern seemed to be in control and he is often tagged with the label of running the league with "an iron fist." Fair or unfair, for the most part, he made the NBA a lot better by running it the way he did.

Since he took office on Feb. 1, 1984, he revolutionized the league through TV deals (a $600 million deal with NBC in 1989); made the NBA an international game; helped the country through the Magic Johnson HIV news and the spread of the disease in general; hired the first female referees in U.S. sports (Violet Palmer and Dee Kantner); and he's taken a league that was once a one-floor operation with 24 employees to a league that is now valued at around $19 billion.

And that is just a short list of all the things he accomplished.

I said earlier that "for the most" his impact was positive because you can't overlook things like the Tom Donaghy scandal (certainly Kings fans can't forget) and the Malice in the Palace, but overall, the league is in much better shape than it was when he took over.

And don't forget, the Kings coming to Sacramento in 1985 was just Stern's second big decision as commissioner (the Clippers moved from San Diego to Los Angeles in October 1984). So maybe there has always been a soft spot in his heart for the capital of California.

Heart played a big part (from a lot of people) in keeping the Kings in Sacramento, but it wasn't just that that made the difference. As has been said many times, the decision on whether to relocate the team was always up to Sacramento and its ability to find new owners and a viable plan for a new arena. Stern and the majority of the other NBA owners discovered Sacramento had what it takes and made the decision, plain and simple. And it was clear from the start that Stern thought Sacramento had a chance.

At the beginning of the 2013-14 season, Stern returned to Sacramento as a follow-up meeting to that rainy day in Dallas last May. As he stepped onto the "Purple Carpet" and the fireworks shot into the air (yes, remember when that actually happened?) he was all smiles. He embraced the moment, spent ample time with reporters, waved to the fans and watched the Kings defeat the Denver Nuggets in their home opener as new owner Vivek Ranadive, the man who replaced Stern's chair side partner in Dallas, sat courtside.

It was Stern's world - a world he's helped establish and facilitate over the last 30 years.

"It feels really, really good to keep the Kings in Sacramento," Stern said on his Sacramento trip.

As Greg wrote earlier, we may never know just how big of a role Stern played in keeping the Kings here because there were so many moving parts, but all things considered, having this lion of a man so closely involved never was going to hurt Sacramento's chances.

Stern now has the key to the city and let's never forget that he helped unlock Sacramento's future.

"I'll be there when the new arena opens in October 2016," he said last October.

Final Score: Mavs depose Kings, 107-103

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Dallas eventually finished the DeMarcus Cousins-less Kings, but not before giving us a scare

The Dallas Mavericks outlasted the Sacramento Kings 107-103 Friday night, in a wild game filled with huge point swings. Dirk Nowitzki had another massive night, scoring 34 points and grabbing five rebounds. Rudy Gay pushed Dallas to the brink, scoring 35 points of his own, while grabbing 12 rebounds and dishing out five assists.

Look, there are two ways to look at this game:

  1. A thrilling, come from behind victory
  2. A game where they needed a Herculean effort from their aging star to get a win over a bad team

I'm going to go with narrative one, because narrative two pisses me off and I'm tired of writing about how terrible the Dallas defense is and how really bad some of our players are. I'm sure I'll still talk about both, but for now, let's revel in Dirk's 35 point night with a little dancing.

dirk dirty timber (via Jeffrey Rozman)

I honestly can't say I was paying a ton of attention. Dirk lit Jason Thompson on fire a bit (that guy would make a solid Mav, in my opinion) but Rudy Gay did his thing on Jae Crowder, scoring the first 10 points for the Kings. I'm not really sure how, but Sacramento hung with Dallas for most of the quarter, trailing the Mavs by four, 20-24 to end the period. Baylor product Quincy Acy had some massive dunks and a wonderful beard.

The second was much more exciting. Yeah, sure Dirk had scored eight in the first quarter but with the way the offensive balance on this team trends, I certainly wasn't expecting 10 points from Dirk in the period. He some how did all of his damage early in the quarter, because Dallas didn't force the ball to him during the latter half of the period as Sacramento whittled down the Maverick lead to five points by halftime. Devin Harris played a hell of a quarter, pushing the ball on misses and making some great dishes. Monta was relatively quiet in the first half but he did find a cutting Vince Carter for great slam dunk. Dallas lead 54-49 at the half.

The third quarter was one of those where I threw things at the TV and cursed the world on Twitter. At one point, the Kings went on a 23-7 run, absolutely punishing Dallas on both ends of the floor. The Mavs seemed stuck in quicksand and it looked like another game where they'd let things slip away. It was maddening. But then, Monta Ellis drilled an outside jumper. He also snuck in to make a great steal from the Kings at the top of the key and dunked. These two plays woke up the Mavericks just enough. After being down by double digits, Monta and Dirk worked Dallas back to within six, trailing 75-81 heading into the final period.

Back to back "and-one" shots started the quarter for Dallas from Dirk and Brandan Wright. Things were trending the way of the Mavericks and it seemed like only a matter of time before the Kings collapsed in upon themselves. The Kings got into foul trouble very early and Dirk and Monta shot free throws to tie and give Dallas its first lead since halftime. From there, it was a matter of holding on. Neither team could defend the rim at all, at by the final two minutes it seemed to be a matter of who would get the ball last. Dirk and Ellis kept Dallas in the lead with free throws and jumpers. Rudy Gay managed to pull the Kings within two with 24 seconds remaining, but instead of fouling the Kings let Dallas in-bounds and tried to steal the ball. A failed attempt to double Dirk saw the ball swing from him to Vince to Monta, who got fouled making a lay up giving Dallas a five point lead.  The Kings were able to hit a three to close the lead back to two, but Ellis calmly sank two free throws to effectively ice the game.

Some notes:

  • I am finally with Andy on this one. Jae Crowder is not good at basketball. His box score tonight showed some stats, finally, but all of his makes were fast break layups. His five misses were all CLANGs or, in one case, a botched layup. Rudy Gay crapped all over Crowder's advanced defense, scoring at least 25 of his 35 points on the second year forward. I know Gay is good, but Crowder also committed some stupid fouls. He's not good. The Legends have better players on their roster right now. This isn't sarcasm.
  • Jose Calderon looks like he either needs a drink, a smoke, a good night's sleep, or all three. So many bricks. In the comments for another article, someone mentioned that Calderon is a good trade possibility. I wish that were the case. He's pretty damn good at that very specific thing he does (shoot) but when he's not hitting, he's a gaping hole in the Dallas roster. But, seeing as the Mavericks always overvalue their own assets, he's ours for a long time.
  • Brandan Wright! You can rebound you silly stick man, you. If only you didn't weight 205 pounds and could handle a back down.
  • Quiet, sneaky good game from Monta. I'm glad. He needed it. Devin Harris and he need to be starting.

Anyway, I'm going to bed. Have a good night folks.




Late-game execution continues to be a problem for Sacramento as they fall 107-103 to Dallas

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Sacramento dropped their 6th game in a row and 19th in a row in Dallas (going all the way back to 2003) as Dallas proved to be the better team down the stretch.



The Kings lost to the Dallas Mavericks today, their 6th straight loss.  Rudy Gay was phenomenal with 35 points (10-16 from the field), 12 rebounds and 6 assists but aside from Isaiah Thomas (19 points, 6 assists) no other King managed to score in double-digits.

The Mavericks were led by future hall of famer Dirk Nowitzki's 34 point, while Monta Ellis chipped in 20 on just 10 shots since he got to the line 9 times.  Sacramento actually shot better from the field than Dallas and hit 5 more threes, but Dallas had a big advantage in both Free Throws made (29 to 20) and Points off Turnovers (18 to 4).  Dallas as a team had just 4 turnovers, a season low for a Kings opponent.

At one point in the 3rd quarter, the Kings turned a halftime deficit into a 14 point lead, but from that moment on, the Mavericks outscored Sacramento 43 to 25 thanks to a combination of Dallas' defense locking in while Sacramento's defense slipped.

The Kings have a short trip tonight as they head to San Antonio to play the Spurs tomorrow.  It's also StR's first away night, so I hope to see several of you there.

For the opponent's perspective, visit Mavs Moneyball

Portland Trail Blazers vs. Toronto Raptors Preview

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The surging Toronto Raptors come to Portland tonight featuring the impressive play of DeMar DeRozan and Kyle Lowry. The Blazers will try to shake off a couple bad recent losses, hoping first-time All-Star Damian Lillard can bust out of a shooting slump.

Saturday, February 1
Moda Center; Portland, OR | 7:00 p.m. PST | Local TV/Radio: CSNNWHD; 620 AM
Out for the Blazers: N/A | Out for the Raptors: Landry Fields

Following a rare three-day rest, the Blazers host the Toronto Raptors tonight, a team coming off a convincing win in Denver yesterday.

The buzz around the Raptors the last couple days has been excitement over shooting guard DeMar DeRozan'sselection to the Eastern Conference All-Star team and frustration over point guard Kyle Lowry's snubbing from the mid-season exhibition game.

A case could be made for both players' deservedness to represent Toronto at All-Star weekend.

DeRozan is having a solid year, and his play of late has been impressive. In his last few games, he's scored almost 21 points a night, shot 40 percent from the field, made half his threes -- he's normally about a 30 percent three-point shooter -- and gotten to the line over nine times a game. Half of DeRozan's shots come off jumpers in the mid-range, where he's decent at converting. He can also attack the paint and score, a good finisher in the lane.

Lowry has played with slightly more efficiency for the length of the season, a 40 percent outside shooter attempting over six three-pointers a night. He had a rough outing from downtown against the Nuggets yesterday, missing eight of his 11 three-point attempts, but a performance like that is the exception and not the rule. Over his last five games, Lowry has been a great ball-distributor as well, ringing up almost 10 assists per contest. Almost half of Lowry's shots come from deep, but he's also capable of drives to the lane. He's not as efficient near the hoop, but Lowry is still a threat to score inside as a heady 6-foot guard.

Forward Terrence Ross is the third wheel of the Raptors' offensive trifecta, upping his shots significantly the last several games. Recently he's hit about 43 percent of his overall field-goals but almost half his three-pointers. Ross prefers jump-shots outside of the key, many of them coming from behind the three-point line.

Big men Jonas Valanciunas and Amir Johnson have also had a solid recent stretch of play, both hitting well over half their field-goals and averaging double-figures. Forwards Patrick Patterson and Chuck Hayes round out Toronto coach Dwane Casey's frontcourt rotation. Patterson has been reliable, spreading his shots evenly across the court and being most effective close to the basket. Hayes has struggled lately, only making a quarter of his shot attempts in his 15 minutes a night.

Guards Greivis Vasquez and John Salmons have been shooting in much lower volumes since coming to the Raptors in a trade that sent wing Rudy Gay to the Kings. Both have also seen a drop in their efficiencies, too, though they're capable three-point shooters along with the rest of the Raptors' backcourt. Forward Steve Novak, hitting almost 40 percent of his threes on the season, has been in a lull shooting from outside the last few weeks, connecting on only 28.6 percent of his deep shots and even registering a couple DNP-CDs.

The Blazers have been inconsistent the last few weeks on the offensive side of the ball, as opposing teams have cut off the three-point line and are forcing Portland to take contested jumpers. One of the best outside-shooting teams the first half of the regular season, the Blazers have only hit a third of their threes their last 10 games.

Guard Damian Lillard has hit only 17.2 percent of his outside shots the last five games. Over that same span, rookie combo-guard C.J. McCollum is at 30.8 percent, wing Wesley Matthews is six percentage points below his season average at 35.5 percent and forward Nicolas Batum is making a putrid 7.7 percent of his threes. Sixth-man Mo Williams comes off the bench as the only outside shooter on the Blazers right now not struggling, connecting on over 44 percent of his attempts, though his shots within the arc aren't as likely to go in.

As a whole, Portland is right around their season average for field-goal percentage right now at about 44 percent. Power forward LaMarcus Aldridge -- second only to Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony in field-goals attempted per game this year with 21.2 -- has been a few notches below his season average in field-goal percentage at 43.4 his last five games, still scoring over 26 points a night over that stretch. Aldridge also goes to the line over eight times a night, his aggressiveness apparently rubbing off on Matthews as the shooting guard's gotten to the line over six times a game recently.

Center Robin Lopez, usually the team's most efficient scorer, has seen his field-goal conversion rate sink below 50 percent the last few weeks. Backup big man Joel Freeland is shooting well, but his attempts are very limited. Forward Thomas Robinson has also provided few contributions on the offensive end of the court lately, too.

Both teams are great at rebounding, battering opponents recently on the boards. Hayes, Valanciunas and Johnson are all great individual rebounders on both sides of the ball, though they are particularly effective on the defensive end. Lowry and DeRozan also make solid contributions on the glass from the backcourt.

The entirety of Portland's frontcourt is aggressive on the boards, with Lopez, Aldridge, Freeland and Robinson all decent-to-great two-way rebounders. Batum pulls in about six rebounds a night from the wing, with Lopez bringing in about nine and Aldridge picking up a dozen. Expect a potential back-and-forth struggle on the boards as both teams have been out-rebounding opponents consistently all season.

The Blazers' defense has been pretty ineffective lately, allowing over 105 points a night the last 10 games. Portland has also allowed opponents to hit 46.7 percent of their field-goals and 41.7 percent of their three-pointers in those games. Even when the Blazers' offense is playing well, they still have to have impressive scoring outputs usually to make up for what the defense allows. When the offense is stalling like it has at times recently, though, things get doubly hard for Portland and the gap is even harder to close. This has led to a few bad losses in a row and the Blazers will look to correct their execution on both sides of the ball tonight after getting a few days of rest since they last played Tuesday.

Toronto holds opponents in check from within the arc, but has allowed 40.1 percent shooting from outside the last 10 games. Lowry is considered a good individual defender, and DeRozan has improved his efforts on defense this year, too. Still, the ball can be moved against the Raptors and they also put teams at the foul line a decent amount.

The Blazers will look to adjust to the recent defensive looks they've seen from opponents the last several weeks, and tonight might be a good night to right the ship after a couple days of mid-season practice and facing a somewhat-forgiving Toronto perimeter defense. Portland can also manufacture easy points at the free-throw line. Slowing down Lowry and DeRozan is key tonight for the Blazers, because they've both been hot lately. Defending the three-point line will also be huge, as both teams love to shoot from deep. The game tonight could very well be won from outside, and if any combination of Portland's struggling shooters -- Batum, Lillard and to some degree, Matthews -- can turn things around, the Blazers will have an opportunity to pick up a solid win against one of the surprise teams in the East.

-- Chris Lucia | bedgecast@gmail.com | Twitter

Game Preview: San Antonio Spurs vs. Sacramento Kings

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After a three-game road stretch, the Spurs return to San Antonio for one game versus the Sacramento Kings before departing on this season's Rodeo Road Trip.

San Antonio Spurs vs. Sacramento Kings

AT&T Center, San Antonio, TX
February 1, 7:30 PM Spurs Time
TV: FSSW - RADIO: 1200 AM WOAI

The San Antonio Spurs try to stop a three-game slide tonight by taking on the worst team in the Western Conference on a second night of a back-to-back when the Sacramento Kings roll into to town. The Spurs have struggled on both ends of the floor with Manu Ginobili, Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green and Tiago Splitter missing from the starting lineup, but in the grand scheme of things, three losses in a row coming to Miami, Houston and Chicago is not all that alarming.

Yes, the Spurs have lost five of their last seven games, but all the losses came to playoff teams. And no one should push the panic button just yet. No other team in the league could survive this many significant mid-season injuries without running into a skid of losses. It is more impressive that it wasn't until the Spurs lost a fourth member of the rotation that they really started to struggle.

The Kings could be just the medicine San Antonio needs while so many of their players are ailing. At the very least, Sacramento can provide a Band-Aid for a team trying to get off their first losing streak of the season. The Kings have lost six in a row after nearly pulling out last night's game at Dallas. The Kings defense is one of the worst in the league, ranking 28th in points per game, which sets up perfectly for a Spurs squad that can use it can get putting the ball in the bucket right now. San Antonio has averaged 88 points in the last two games and struggled offensively for long stretches of the 113-101 loss to Miami.

The Spurs have already bested the Kings once this year, winning a 112-104 home game in come-from-behind fashion on December 29th. The Spurs outscored Sacramento 31-17 in the fourth quarter after trailing by six points and were led by the Big-3, as Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Tim Duncan all had big games. Boris Diaw scored 14 in the game and looks to be a factor tonight if the Spurs as Pop has called his number pretty heavily since Manu's hamstring forced him into street clothes.

DeMarcus Cousins had a monster game that night, with 29 points and 14 rebounds, while Isiah Thomas had 27 and Rudy Gay posted 24 in the loss. And the Kings are a threat to score every night, as they 101.9 points a game. They are in the middle of the league in rebounding, but lag in assists. That is one of the reasons the Kings struggle down the stretch against good teams. Sacramento has a lot of individual basketball talent, especially on offense end, but the team lacks chemistry on both ends. It hurts defensively with a lack of rotations and it hurts offensively down the stretch when the game becomes slower and condensed. In those situations, the Kings turn into a one-on-one offense and that is a hard thing to be consistent with, especially if you're not a team full of outside shooters.

Cousins has grown into one of the better young players in the league, but he has been suffering through an ankle injury, and his status for Saturday's game is unknown. That has forced Jason Thompson into the starting lineup for the Kings and the drop-off in production has been significant, placing all of the scoring pressure on Gay and Thomas. In Sacramento's loss to Memphis on Wednesday, no Kings player besides Gay and Thomas scored more than eight points while they combined for 47 of the team's 89 points. Even with San Antonio's defensive struggles while missing its top-three defensive players, expect the Spurs to defend well enough to be able to shut down only two options if Cousins isn't healthy enough to suit up.

Matchup to watch: Without Green and Kawhi, matching up with Rudy Gay will be San Antonio's biggest challenge. The Kings defense should allow San Antonio to score enough points to put pressure on Gay and Thomas to have monster games.

Lineups

Starters
PG:Tony Parker
SG:Nando De Colo
SF:Othyus Jeffers
PF:Tim Duncan
C:Jeff Ayres

Key Bench Players
Marco Belinelli
Boris Diaw
Cory Joseph

Head Coach
Gregg Popovich

Lineups

Starters
PG:Isaiah Thomas
SG:Marcus Thornton
SF:Rudy Gay
PF:Jason Thompson
C:Aaron Gray

Key Bench Players
Ben McLemore
Carl Landry
Derrick Williams


Head Coach

Mike Malone

Kings perspective can be found at Sactown Royalty.

Game Prediction: Spurs by 7.

Line in Vegas: Spurs by 10 1/2.

As always Tony must dominate Fisher, and NBA league pass is recommended for those who are willing to pony up the cash. Almost every Spurs game will be broadcast there, which is especially helpful for those of us who aren't in the San Antonio area. Please don't post links to illegal game feeds in the game thread. Links to illegal feeds are not permitted on SBNation, but you can probably find them out there on the internets if you're resourceful and desperate.

Get your San Antonio Spurs tickets from Daniel Farias with Spurs Sports & Entertainment:

Tel: 210-444-5607 | dfarias@attcenter.com


Kings gaining experience at being inexperienced

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The Kings managed to blow a second half lead and were doomed by their own mistakes.

The Sacramento Kings gave away Friday night's game, losing 107-103 to the Dallas Mavericks. The Kings should have won, could have won, but didn't deserve to win.

Rudy Gay was simply marvelous. Gay finished with 35 points, 12 rebounds, six assists, and a steal. Those 35 points came on just 16 shots. The rebounds often came at key moments. Gay had a few ill-advised heat checks, well-guarded, well behind the arc heat checks, and had three turnovers, but generally speaking I have no complaints about Gay's performance.

Isaiah Thomas played alright. He finished with 19 points, six assists, and two rebounds. But he took 21 shots to get his 19 points, and also chipped in three turnovers.

After Gay and Thomas, no Sacramento King scored in double figures. We often talk about this team having a "big three". And while the Kings' big three may not necessarily stack up to some other big threes around the league, games like this show just how crucial Sacramento's big three are for the Kings to have a shot at winning.

The Kings were once again without DeMarcus Cousins, who is still recovering from his rolled ankle. Hopefully Cousins comes back soon, because another double digit scorer on the floor could have turned this loss into a win.

Instead, the Kings settled for finding ever more creative ways to lose. 10 players saw the floor for the Kings, and every single one registered at least one turnover. Sacramento finished with 14 turnovers to Dallas' four. The Kings trailed at the half, but actually managed to take the lead in the third quarter, leading by as many as 14 at one point. But the Kings' poor defense sent the Mavs to the charity stripe far too often. Dirk Nowitzki, who finished with 34 points, was a perfect 11-11 from the free throw line. Monta Ellis was 8-9 from the stripe, and finished with 20 points.

Despite all this, the Kings found themselves within striking distance as the game drew to a close. With 23 seconds remaining, the Kings trailed 102-100. The Kings failed to foul immediately, as was the obvious plan. Instead, the Kings scrambled about, not wanting to foul Dirk Nowitzki. Given his perfect night from the line, that's a perfectly reasonable train of thought. But the Kings allowed precious time to tick away, finally fouling Monta Ellis. Unfortunately, Ellis was fouled while making a layup as the clock ticked away to 12 seconds.

The Kings allowed 10 seconds off the clock, fouled a good free throw shooter, and gave up a three point play as Ellis made the free throw. It was a painful sequence to watch. Reviewing it now I can hardly believe it was only 10 seconds. It felt like an eternity.

The Kings are a young team, and they are going to make mistakes like this. Growing pains are never fun to watch, and they're even less fun when the team doesn't seem to be learning from the mistakes.

Sacramento will have an immediate opportunity to learn from its mistakes, and the Kings visit the San Antonio Spurs Saturday evening. Don't forget that Sactown Royalty Night III is going down at O'Malley's in Old Sac. If you're able to attend, I highly recommend it.

VIDEO QUOTEBOARD: "We got down but we hung in"

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There was a palpable sense of relief postgame as the Mavs pulled out the victory they needed against a tough Kings team.

For once in what seems like a long time, it was a relaxed locker room at AAC last night. There was palpable relief, a lot of jokes, and nice things to say about a hard-fought comeback win against a Kings team that gave the Mavs a run for their money. Read/watch below to find out what Carlisle thought about Monta's effort, what Monta thought about Monta's effort, and what Dirk thinks about those sleeved jerseys he'll be sporting for the All-Star game.

Rick Carlisle

Take a peek at Carlisle's comments about Monta's best all-around game of the season, Dirk's groove, no second half turnovers, and hanging in against a tough opponent:


Monta Ellis

On what he looked to do on defense...

I just looked to make the right plays, be aggressive and find open guys.

On what the strategy was when they were down by 14...

Keep playing, it's a long game. The way they were playing us, we knew we was going to get back in the game.

On his individual defense...

The last few days we've just been talking about helping more as a team. I was in the help position and was able to get back to my man. I was just more locked in defensively today.

On Carlisle calling this his best game of the year...

It's good. Hopefully we can have more of them consistently.

On four turnovers as a team...

That was our biggest thing the last few games, our turnovers have been very high. I think we were trying to make the risky passes. And tonight we didn't. Four in the first half and none in the second half -- that was the reason why we were able to chip away and get back in the game.

Vince Carter

On finally winning a close game...

Everybody was locked in. We were shuffling in a lot of guys in, but it was great to see each guy come in and do what they were supposed to do. It's something we haven't done a great job of. But you've gotta start somewhere.

On Dirk...

He's in a great rhythm. If you look at everyone else doing their job -- Monta getting to the basket, Jose shooting the ball -- it's everybody really contributing and making it easier for [Dirk] because now the other teams have to make a decision. And I think he's really benefiting from that -- getting some shots that he didn't get earlier in the year. It's great to see... there was a stretch where he didn't have any legs, it [seemed like] he didn't have any confidence in his shot, and that's not the case [now].

Dirk Nowtizki

On coming back to win the game...

We had to grind it out...even without Cousins they're a talented team, they can score, and we really had to dig deep and get some stops in the fourth quarter.

On whether two big games in a row boosts his confidence...

Oh, man. I'm 36, I don't need a confidence boost. I've been in this league too long. But yeah, I've been in a nice groove. Before the last three I didn't really have a good groove...it was a lot of games since after Christmas. I got a little rest and this week, we have two days off twice and that helps a lot.

On whether he knows when he has a groove early...

Yeah. You try to be aggressive early, like I said, we knew they were a good team so I wanted to establish myself early. Got some good looks, guys kept feeding me in my spots, and definitely made some shots. The second half I wasn't that hot and missed a couple of easy ones...but made enough to win the game.

On Monta...

He actually played a great floor game, I don't think he forced anything, they collapsed a lot of those pick and rolls and he couldn't get to the lane as much. But then I thought in the fourth quarter he took what they gave us...if you're 6/10 from the floor that's an efficient night.

On taking care of the ball...

We try to do that every night. As an older team, if we turn the ball over, the younger teams are running it right up our throat and getting layups, so our goal should be every night to take care of the ball, play off each other and get a shot up, that way we can set our defense. Which really hasn't meant much lately. [laughter] But at least in transition we have no chance.

On being in his best groove of the season...

Yeah I'm on the meds, so I feel good. [laughter] Anti-inflams, you know that. So obviously Holger is here, we shot a little bit, worked on some stuff the last couple days. Like I said, I wasn't in a good groove there on the east coast; we had too many games and I felt a little sluggish. But we had some days off here, and working smartly with Holger here and there, it's been good. Hopefully we keep going. Obviously the way we're playing, we're going to need every single point.

On his ASG selection...

It's great. I didn't really know what to expect. I thought there were some guys who were very deserving. I think Anthony Davis is playing phenomenal, if he hadn't missed four weeks or whatever with his hand injury he might have been picked; I thought DeMarcus Cousins has been playing a phenomenal season if you look at his numbers...there are always some guys that deserve it. But both of these guys are very young and they've got a long long future in this league and they're gonna be okay. Maybe this is my last hurrah.

Can't wait to wear those sweet jerseys with the sleeves. It's really nice and snug. Should bring out my physique nicely.

On the best part of the ASG...

Just to go and have some fun and represent this franchise and these fans is what it's always been about.

Kings vs. Spurs Preview: Whatever happens, at least we'll have beer

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The Kings play the Spurs in San Antonio to try to end a six-game losing streak. Good luck.

Sacramento enters tonight game against the Spurs (5:30 pm on News10 and KHTK 1140) as losers of six in a row and counting. The Spurs are ailing, missing Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green, Tiago Splitter and Manu Ginobili, and are themselves looking to break a three game losing streak.

MATCHUP OF THE GAME

Isaiah Thomas vs. Tony Parker

Isaiah has had some big games against Parker in the past, and with so many weapons out for San Antonio, Parker is the focal point. If Sacramento can slow Parker down, the Spurs don't have many other offensive threats even though they're a very well-rounded team. It will be interesting to see how Thomas plays after logging yet another 40+ minute game last night.

3 THINGS

1. There's still no word on DeMarcus Cousins and whether he'll play. The Kings have yet to win a game this season without their big man. On the one hand, Rudy Gay has been great in the two games he's come back, but on the other, it hasn't been enough. Also for those wondering, the Kings now hold the 5th spot in the lottery, although Philadelphia (4th), Boston (3rd), Cleveland (T-7th), Utah (T-7th) and Los Angeles (9th) are all within a game of each other. Personally, I think the Kings will surpass those teams once Cousins comes back.

2. Every year we expect the Spurs to finally drop off but every year the Spurs remain atop the standings. Even with all the injuries they've suffered this year,they still hold the 2nd best record in the West. One area where the Spurs really struggle is guarding athleticism, as teams like OKC and Miami have shown. The Kings are pretty athletic, but they'll also need to play smart basketball on both ends to have a chance.

3. San Antonio is the best 3-point shooting team in the league, hitting 40.2% of their threes. The Kings are the 28th best 3-point defense team, allowing opponents 37.5%. That could be a problem.

PRE-GAME HAIKU

Lots of injuries.
Probably means Matt Bonner
will score 34.

PREDICTION

Spurs 94, Kings 91 as Pop decides to rest all his starters despite only having 10 available players. Spurs still win.

Lakers lose to Bobcats, losing streak continues

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Down, down, down.

The Los Angeles Lakers aren't quite at the bottom, but the team is just one run above the Sacramento Kings after a 110-100 loss to the Charlotte Bobcats. Rule of thumb, don't let a player go off for his career-high, like they did with Al Jefferson. He went off for 40 points and 18 rebounds.

This wasn't uncharted territory for the Lakers, either. They've been giving up career-high and season-high point totals throughout the season. That it was against the Bobcats makes it just another statistic among many.

No Steve Nash. No Jordan Farmar. No Steve Blake. No Kobe Bryant. No Xavier Henry. No rest for this cursed Lakers squad. They lost. This is the team's third six-game losing streak of the season and there's no reason to believe that these open wounds will be sewed up any time soon. All those early season positive vibes feel like an eternity ago.

To keep things interesting, the team will now head out on a three-game road trip. They'll be visiting Minnesota, Cleveland and Philadelphia and play three games over four days with the first game against the Timberwolves on Feb. 4. These are three winnable games -- all three teams are dawdling in one way or another -- but whether the Lakers can muster enough strength on the road after a brief pit stop in Los Angeles or not remains to be seen.

Don't go into this span expecting to roll over Kevin Love, Kyrie Irving and a Sixers team at the end of another trip around the United States.

Let's talk about these losing streaks, though. This season has featured three six-game womp-womp streaks. They did this once last season at the start of 2013. Prior to these two frustrating years they hadn't seen a six-game "L" streak since the 2007 season. How about looking ahead?

The last time a Lakers team was on a seven-game losing streak was in 2007. It's only happened four times in franchise history. Eight games? It's happened three times, last occurring in 2005. The team has never ended on a nine-game streak, but the all-time franchise low losing streak is 10 games. The 1994-1995 Lakers "accomplished" this.

With a three-game road trip ahead and a game against the grind-it-out Chicago Bulls when they return, the team could flirt with the all-time losing streak, especially if Pau Gasol misses time with a groin injury. Gasol is considered questionable for the three-gamer, which could be a huge blow to the purple and gold's chances to stay away from all-time-terrible status.

Injuries and fringe players. Either a recipe for sad streaks or a chance for a high-tier draft pick. Is your glass half full or half empty?

Kings vs. Spurs Fan Predictions

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Link to The Leaderboard

Below are a series of prediction questions for tonight's game. The first four questions will be asked every game, while the 5th will change each game.

Point value for predictions are listed next to the questions. If you believe that more than one player will lead a category, you can vote for multiple players, and this is worth double points if you are correct, but zero if you are wrong. Alternately, if you only guess one player when multiple players are tied, you get zero points.

All submissions must be input before tip-off. Any submissions after tip-off will not count. You are allowed only one submission and may not change unless specifically stated.

Questions:

1. Who do you think will win the game, and what will the final score be? (1 point for guessing winner. 2 points for guessing winner and correct score of one team. 5 points for guessing winner and exact score)

2. Who will be the game's leading scorer? (1 point for guessing scorer, 2 points for guessing exact points scored)

3. Who will be the game's leading rebounder? (1 point for guessing rebounder, 2 points for guessing exact rebounds)

4. Who will be the game's leading assist man? (1 point for guessing assist man, 2 points for guessing exact assists)

5. For tomorrow's Super Bowl: Seahawks or Broncos, and who will be Super Bowl MVP? (1 point for right answer, 3 points for two right)

Full Coverage: San Antonio Spurs vs. Sacramento Kings

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After a three-game road stretch, the Spurs return to San Antonio for one game versus the Sacramento Kings before departing on this season's Rodeo Road Trip.

San Antonio Spurs vs. Sacramento Kings

AT&T Center, San Antonio, TX
February 1, 7:30 PM Spurs Time
TV: FSSW - RADIO: 1200 AM WOAI

The San Antonio Spurs try to stop a three-game slide tonight by taking on the worst team in the Western Conference on a second night of a back-to-back when the Sacramento Kings roll into to town. The Spurs have struggled on both ends of the floor with Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green and Tiago Splitter missing from the starting lineup, but in the grand scheme of things, three losses in a row coming to Miami, Houston and Chicago is not all that alarming considering the circumstances.

Yes, the Spurs have lost five of their last seven games, but all the losses came to playoff teams. No one push the panic button just yet. No one in the league could survive this many significant mid-season injuries and not eventually have a skid of losses. It is probably more impressive that it took this long for the Spurs to really start to struggle than it is alarming that the Spurs are currently in the middle of said struggles.

The Kings could be the medicine San Antonio has been looking for over the past few weeks. At the very least, Sacramento can provide a Band-Aid for a team that needs a victory as much as a franchise with as much proven success as the Spurs needs a victory in the first game of February. The Kings had lost five-straight and were sitting at 15-30 entering last night's game at Dallas. The Kings defense is one of the worst in the league, ranking 28th in points per game. The Spurs need all the help they can get putting the ball in the bucket right now. San Antonio has averaged 88 points in the last two games and struggled offensively for stretches even in the 113-101 loss to Miami.

The Spurs have bested the Kings once this year, winning a 112-104 come-from-behind contest on January 29th at home. In that game, the Spurs outscored Sacramento 31-17 in the fourth quarter after trailing by six points leading into the final 12 minutes. The Spurs were led by the Big-3, with Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Tim Duncan all having big games. Boris Diaw scored 14 in the game and should be a factor tonight if the Spurs have a chance of winning.

DeMarcus Cousins had a monster game in defeat, recording 29 points and 14 rebounds while point guard had 27 points. Rudy Gay scored 24 in the loss.

The Kings are a threat to score, averaging 101.9 points a game. They are also in the middle of the league in rebounding, but struggle with assists. That is one of the reasons the Kings struggle down the stretch against good teams like it did against San Antonio in the first meeting. Sacramento has a lot of individual basketball talent, especially on the offensive end, but the team lacks chemistry on both ends. It hurts defensively with a lack of rotations and it hurts offensively down-the-stretch when the game becomes slower and condensed. In those situations, the Kings turn into a one-on-one offense and that is a hard thing to be consistent with, especially if you're not a team full of outside shooters.

Cousins had grown into one of the better young players in the league, but he has been suffering through injury, and his status for Saturday's game is unknown. That has forced Jason Thompson into the starting lineup for the Kings and the drop off in production has been significant. It has placed all of the scoring pressure on Gay and Thomas. In the loss earlier in the week to Memphis, no other Kings player scored more than eight points. Gay and Thomas combined for 47 of the team's 89 points. Even with San Antonio's defensive struggles without arguably its top-three defensive players, San Antonio should play well enough defensively to be able to shut down only two options if Cousins cannot give it a go.

Matchup to watch: Without Green and Kawhi, matching up with Rudy Gay will be San Antonio's biggest challenge. The Kings defense should allow San Antonio to score enough points to put pressure on Gay and Thomas to need monster games.

Lineups

Starters
PG:Tony Parker
SG:Nando De Colo
SF:Othyus Jeffers
PF:Tim Duncan
C:Jeff Ayres

Key Bench Players
Marco Belinelli
Boris Diaw
Cory Joseph

Head Coach
Gregg Popovich

Lineups

Starters
PG:Isaiah Thomas
SG:Marcus Thornton
SF:Rudy Gay
PF:Jason Thompson
C:Aaron Gray

Key Bench Players
Ben McLemore
Carl Landry
Derrick Williams


Head Coach

Mike Malone

Kings perspective can be found at Sactown Royalty.

Game Prediction: Spurs by 7.

As always Tony must dominate Fisher, and NBA league pass is recommended for those who are willing to pony up the cash. Almost every Spurs game will be broadcast there, which is especially helpful for those of us who aren't in the San Antonio area. Please don't post links to illegal game feeds in the game thread. Links to illegal feeds are not permitted on SBNation, but you can probably find them out there on the internets if you're resourceful and desperate.

Get your San Antonio Spurs tickets from Daniel Farias with Spurs Sports & Entertainment:

Tel: 210-444-5607 | dfarias@attcenter.com

Kings fall short once more, lose to Spurs 95-93

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In what's becoming a familiar tale, the Kings come up juuuuuuuuuuuuuust short.




The Kings found themselves trailing the Spurs by one with less than thirty seconds remaining.  The Kings fouled Tim Duncan.  Duncan missed both free throws.  With eleven seconds remaining, the Kings ran a play to isolate Isaiah Thomas, but he was well defended and passed to Rudy Gay.  Gay drove right, and pulled up for a contested jumper.  It was a shot we've seen Gay make many times.  Tonight was not one of them.  For a moment it appeared Derrick Williams might get the putback, but Tony Parker came out of the scrum with the ball.  A quick foul, but too little too late.  The Kings lost 95-93.

Rudy Gay finished with 23 points, seven rebounds, six assists, and five steals.  A mere five blocks away from the coveted 5x5 game, but an impressive line nonetheless.  Isaiah Thomas led the team in scoring with 26 points on 26 shots, and finished with five assists.  Derrick Williams added a nice punch off the bench with 14 points, while Jason Thompson finished with 10.

The Spurs were led by 23 points and 17 rebounds from Tim Duncan.  In case you had forgotten, Duncan is still really good.  Tony Parker also had a double-double for San Antonio, tallying 18 points and 10 assists.

The Kings were once again with DeMarcus Cousins, who remains day-to-day with an ankle injury.  Jimmer Fredette also missed the game as he suffered with a stomach illness.

For the opponent's perspective, head on over to Pounding The Rock.


Final Score: Spurs eek out win over Kings, 95-93

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Well that was a close one. In the end the Spurs played just well enough to get by Sacramento.




Look what we have here. A Spurs WIN! It was much needed after that three-game slide.

The Spurs had Tiago Splitter available for the first time since his shoulder injury, and while he didn't impact the box score much, it was nice to see him back. Shannon Brown made his Spurs debut as well tonight and he started. He played 13 minutes in the game and had two points, two rebounds, and one assist. He also received a cut to the eye when Rudy Gay crashed into the bench. In addition he appeared to injure his hand. Let's hope it's not a metacarpal. Jeez.

37-year old Tim Duncan was great tonight. That dude never stops impressing me. Tonight he missed a couple of late game free throws that would have pushed the Spurs lead to three with 13 seconds left, but besides that he was fantastic tonight. He finished with 23 points (8-of-13), 17 rebounds, five assists, two blocks, one turnover, and zero fouls. He was the best player in the game, and he's been excellent since that November start. Since December started Tim is averaging 16 points on 51% shooting, and 11.2 boards per game.

Tony Parker, Patty Mills, and Boris Diaw were also good tonight. They helped out when the Spurs needed them.

But Matt Bonner, the Masked Mamba, took the game over for about three possessions. He knocked down a three, hit a jumper, and had a pump-fake dribble drive for a score. It was really fun to watch, and after the layup the Spurs were up two. They held on to win by the same margin.

The Spurs needed this one, it's the last home game for a long time as the Spurs start the Rodeo Road Trip on Monday in New Orleans.

Spurs win! And your team goes to 34-13.

Recap: Spurs stop skid, beat Kings 95-93

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The Spurs stopped their three-game skid by narrowly defeating the Sacramento Kings in San Antonio.

Saturday night, the injury-riddled Spurs battled the Kings in San Antonio. Tiago Splitter made his much anticipated return to the Spurs' starting lineup, and newcomer Shannon Brown also started to give the Spurs yet another new look to begin a game. Still without Danny Green, Kawhi Leonard and Manu Ginobili, the Spurs found themselves in a very competitive game with the team sporting the worst record in the West, even though DeMarcus Cousins missed the game with an injury of his own. In the end, the Spurs emerged victorious thanks to a total team effort.

Flow_kings

I love these game flows because they allow you to quickly understand exactly how the game played out at a glance. As you can see, this one was close throughout with many ties and lead changes. The Spurs' biggest lead of five points occurred early in the second quarter while the Kings led by 10 towards the end of the third.

Since Kawhi succumbed to injury, I feel like the Spurs are giving up way too many easy looks to their opponents. These three guard lineups are painful to watch. Pop started the game with Tony Parker, Cory Joseph and Shannon Brown. From there, he subbed with Patty Mills, Marco Belinelli and Nando De Colo, always keeping three guards on the floor in the first half. Even with Tiago back from injury to help protect the rim, the Spurs' defense is just not formidable with so many guards on the perimeter.

The Spurs' smaller players are not capable of keeping bigger forwards out of the paint. Even when they anticipate the offensive move, they are not strong enough to dissuade the drive. The penetration ultimately results in defensive breakdowns and poor defensive rebounding position, since our bigs have to scramble in help defense. Without defensive stops, the Spurs are unable to make runs. Before the injuries, the Spurs would make a few runs a game that ultimately were the difference. Without the ability to go on a run, the Spurs' best chance at winning seems to be to keep the game close and steal it in crunch time, as they did tonight.

For me, the turning point of the game occurred with four minutes remaining in the third quarter with the Spurs down four points, 67-63. Coach Pop finally gave up on the three guard lineup and subbed in Matt Bonner for Marco Belinelli. Instead of Tony, Cory and Marco, the Spurs went big with Bonner, Diaw and Ayres. I was just happy that Pop was trying something new. The Kings had controlled the game from the start and it felt as if this one was about to slip away.

The first two minutes of the experiment didn't go well. The Spurs quickly found themselves down by 10 but Popovich didn't panic and let the bigger lineup continue to fight. He subbed Tim Duncan into the game for Tiago Splitter and the future hall of famer steadied the Spurs as they didn't allow the game to get out of hand. The Spurs cut the lead to seven at the end of three.

The Spurs began the fourth with Patty Mills, Nando De Colo and Marco Belinelli. Although these are three guards, this is one of the biggest "traditional" lineups the Spurs can put on the floor. Both Nando and Marco are 6'5". The Spurs were able to get away with it because Rudy Gay rested to start the quarter and although the Kings had a mismatch with Marco defending Derrick Williams, they didn't take advantage.

With five quick points from Patty Mills, the Spurs quickly closed the gap and forced the Kings to take a timeout at the 8:30 mark with just a two point lead. The Kings subbed in Rudy Gay and Popovich responded by once again going big with Boris, Tiago and Bonner. The Spurs didn't go back to their three guard lineup till the final play when Pop was trying to avoid a Sacramento 3-pointer. Though the Spurs were unable to pull away, their defense finally took a stand thanks to the big lineup. It felt like months since the Spurs were last able to shut down an opposing offense in the fourth. Tonight, they forced the Kings to shoot just 25% from the field in the fourth and make just one of three from beyond the arc.

To the Kings' credit, Sacramento never gave up. The Spurs seemed to be destined to win this one comfortably but the Kings wouldn't allow it. With the Spurs leading by three with 1:19 remaining, Isaiah Thomas tied it with a 3-pointer. Tony Parker answered with his own 3-pointer to give San Antonio a cushion. Thomas then made a tough jumper to cut the lead to one. In a broken play, Tony Parker jumped a pass to Patty Mills that should have been picked off. Patty somehow came up with the ball and as he attempted to create some space for a desperation heave with the shot clock about to expire, the officials gifted the Spurs with a foul on Marcus Thornton. This reset the shot clock and forced the Kings to foul. Tim missed both free throws but Diaw saved the day with a nice defensive effort on Rudy Gay that forced a miss. Tony made one of two at the line and the game clock expired. The Spurs won, 95-93.

Observations

  • I think what really hurts the three guard lineup is that it involves playing Cory Joseph. In garbage minutes, what stood out to me about Cory's play was his hustle. In the several games that he replaced Tony Parker because of an injury or just to rest him, Cory seemed competent but he was flanked by the Spurs' superb starters. His job was basically not to do anything dumb and stay out of the way. Now that he's getting extended minutes in less than fantastic lineups, it's fairly clear to me that Cory is not an NBA player. I think it's time for Pop to sit him on the bench and give Nando a shot. Cory's line tonight: two points on one of four shooting, zero rebounds, zero assists, two turnovers and a +/- of -14 in 23 minutes. The box score does give him credit for two blocks, but I'm pretty sure someone screwed that up. I don't remember him blocking anyone.
  • In contrast, and I can't believe I'm saying this, what made the big lineup so effective was an outstanding performance by Matt Bonner. The Masked Mamba had a downright stellar outing. His stat line of seven points on three of four shooting, four rebounds, one assist and one block in 17 minutes is impressive, but it doesn't do his performance justice. He was the key to the game. Before he checked in, the Spurs seemed listless. Even though the score was close, the Kings controlled the game and it felt like it was a matter of time before they pulled away. Bonner checked in and was always in the perfect position both on offense and defense. His movement and spacing created shots on the offensive end and deterred shots on the defensive end.
  • Patty Mills also had a strong game. With so many of our scorers out with injuries, Patty is shouldering more of the offensive load. He scored 15 points on six of 14 shooting. It's not the most efficient line, but I'd much rather him take 14 shots than spread those amongst Joseph, Brown, Nando and Marco, who had an off-night. Those four combined to make just four of their 16 shots.
  • Tim and Tony continued their mostly steady play this season. Tim put up an impressive double-double of 23 points and 17 rebounds. Tony also recorded a double-double with 18 points and 10 assists. Tony came up big in the fourth where he scored six of his points and dished out four of his dimes.
  • Boris Diaw scored 14 efficient points on just six shots. He is the Spurs' defensive and offensive flexibility right now. Tonight he defended Rudy Gay for most of the second half. This allowed Pop to go big, which allowed the Spurs to control the glass and paint. If you're thinking things couldn't get much worse, imagine what this team would look like without Diaw. I think Pop would just call up the entire Toros squad and give Sean Marks the reins for the rest of the month.
  • Aaron Gray is the goofiest NBA player I've watched in a long time. First off, he doesn't do himself any favors with that haircut. Second, his aptitude for fouling made Ayres seem like a finesse player in comparison. Third, his weird temper tantrums are hilarious. He's kicking tables, slapping the basketball stand, all while his unkempt hair amplifies his goofy facial structure. That guy is definitely Shaqtin' a fool.
  • With the Spurs up one point with .5 remaining in the game, Tony Parker calmly sank his first free throw. Popovich motioned Tony over before his next free throw and most likely told him to miss it on purpose. Tony took one dribble and rushed the free throw. It caught the back iron and a Spur was able to tip the ball back forcing the clock to expire. I thought it was a great move by Pop. Rather than get the three point lead and give the Kings a chance to make something crazy happen, Pop chose to miss the free throw to run the clock out. He rarely does stuff like this at the end of games, but desperate times....

Please visit Sactown Royalty for the Kings' perspective.

Super Bowl XLVIII: Open Thread

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The Denver Broncos face the Seattle Seahawks in today's Super Bowl.

The Kings aren't in the Super Bowl but if they were I'd be like "Hey the Kings are playing the wrong sport" and also "Kevin Fippin's nightmare of the Kings turning into a football team is actually happening".

I don't know nearly as much about football as I do basketball but if the Kings were a football team, the following would be bound to happen:

  • DeMarcus Cousins would lead the NFL in penalties.
  • Jason Thompson would tell his coach to use all his challenge flags before the 1st quarter is over.
  • Ben McLemore would have an amazing 50 yard reception and run, but fumble the ball at the 1 yard line.
  • Aaron Gray would be an entire offensive line by himself.
  • Rudy Gay would still be awesome.
  • Everyone would ask me why Jimmer isn't quarterback over Isaiah Thomas.
  • Travis Outlaw would be MVP.
I hope everyone out there enjoys the Super Bowl, and if you're not interested, have a happy Sunday! We'll be back to our regularly scheduled programming tomorrow with the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.

Game Preview: San Antonio Spurs @ New Orleans Pelicans

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The San Antonio Spurs kick off this season's Rodeo Road Trip with a matchup against their division rivals, the New Orleans Pelicans.

San Antonio Spurs @ New Orleans Pelicans

AT&T Center, San Antonio, TX
February 3, 2014, 7:00 PM Spurs Time
TV: FSSW - RADIO: 1200 AM WOAI

For the second time this season, the San Antonio Spurs overcame a bad third quarter against the Sacramento Kings with a strong fourth quarter effort to steal a victory. It was a needed win for a Spurs team that has been hobbled with injuries throughout the lineup. A win against the Kings won't stop any "San Antonio can't be a top team this season" talk, but it did stop a losing-streak. Tim Duncan and Tony Parker led the way offensively for the Spurs, while Tiago Splitter made his return to the starting lineup, which will help with the bench rotation and the defensive rotations on the floor.

The New Orleans Pelicans, and their terrifying mascot, host San Antonio tonight. In their last game, New Orleans knocked off a Chicago team that recently beat the Spurs. The Pelicans are 5-5 over their last 10 games, and Anthony Davis is becoming more of a force in this league. New Orleans is still a few pieces away from competing for a playoff spot in the Western Conference, but they are a team that can beat anyone in the league if they are shooting well that night.

New Orleans resides in the middle of the pack in most statistical categories, ranking 17th in points per game, 19th in rebounds per game, 14th in assists per game and 19th in points allowed. There's just not a lot that this team does great, especially with point guard Jrue Holiday out with a fractured tibia. That has put all of the pressure, on both ends of the court, on Davis. "The Brow" is starting to find his stride and he may one day end up being what we all thought Dwight Howard could be when he entered the league. In a league devoid of great big men, Davis has a chance to be one of the next real stars in the post because of his athleticism and length.

Against Chicago, Davis scored 24 points, grabbed eight rebounds and had six blocks. He went 10-of-14 from the field and was perfect on four free throw attempts. Add in three assists and three steals and you can see why people around the league are starting to mention Davis when naming the most feared big men in the league. For the season, Davis is averaging just over 20 points and 10 rebounds with a 27.1 PER. All of this as the lone guy opposing defenses really have to plan for with Holiday and Ryan Anderson being injured.

In the win over Chicago, Davis was the lone Pelican starter to score in double digits. Guards Eric Gordon and Tyreke Evans are averaging over 10 points per game for the season, but not having Anderson and Holiday cripples what New Orleans was trying to accomplish around Davis. Brian Roberts has filled in at point guard for Holiday, but Evans is the guy to watch down the stretch because of his offensive game. The former rookie of the year has found a home, and a role in New Orleans, but he appears to be a guy that will never live up to the hype that surrounded him after his first season in Sacramento.

Al-Farouq Aminu and Alexis Ajinca start at the three and five position, respectively, for the Pelicans, but Jeff Withey and Greg Stiemsma have been logging as many minutes at center as Ajinca. Austin Rivers and Anthony Morrow provide minutes off of the bench at the guard position, but Rivers is another guy that has fallen well short of expectations.

Much like the matchup with Sacramento, the Spurs are the better team on paper even with the injuries. New Orleans has two normal starters out as well, so that excuse won't hold up as much tonight as it has over the past few weeks if the Spurs leave the floor with a loss.

Matchup to watch: Stopping the Pelicans is pretty simple in theory: slow down Anthony Davis. With a healthy Duncan and Splitter, the Spurs should have enough bodies to throw at Davis the entire game, especially now that Boris Diaw can get back to his role as the first big off of the bench.

Lineups

Starters
PG:Tony Parker
SG:Cory Joseph
SF:Shannon Brown
PF:Tim Duncan
C:Tiago Splitter

Key Bench Players
Patty Mills
Boris Diaw
Marco Belinelli

Head Coach
Gregg Popovich

Lineups

Starters
PG:Brian Roberts
SG:Eric Gordon
SF:Al-Farouq Aminu
PF:Anthony Davis
C:Alexis Ajinca

Key Bench Players
Tyreke Evans
Austin Rivers
Jeff Withey


Head Coach

Monty Williams

Pelicans perspective may be found at The Bird Writes.

Game Prediction: Spurs by 5.

Line in Vegas: Spurs by 4.

As always Tony must dominate Fisher, and NBA league pass is recommended for those who are willing to pony up the cash. Almost every Spurs game will be broadcast there, which is especially helpful for those of us who aren't in the San Antonio area. Please don't post links to illegal game feeds in the game thread. Links to illegal feeds are not permitted on SBNation, but you can probably find them out there on the internets if you're resourceful and desperate.

Get your San Antonio Spurs tickets from Daniel Farias with Spurs Sports & Entertainment:

Tel: 210-444-5607 | dfarias@attcenter.com

Trevor Ariza, Rudy Gay and why NBA free agency is still a terrifying prospect for teams

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The NBA has lessened the pain from the biggest free agent mistakes teams can make, but July is still a frightful time for NBA teams with tough decisions to make.

In the last three collective bargaining agreements, the NBA has taken the sting out of the worst contracts. In 1998, the league capped peak individual salary and annual raises. Future deals shrunk the maximum length of deals, further contracted raises and made exceeding the salary cap by large amounts more painful. There are also some salves: We've had two amnesty clauses in 10 years, and the new stretch provision allows teams (in theory) to recover from a bad signing by stretching the cap hit over multiple years.

But something the tighter salary cap and more punishing luxury tax have also done is made every dollar in a team's cap figure more scarce, more valuable. When you can't pay away the damage painlessly, you need to better manage your cap sheet. Mistakes are, in a way, magnified. One bad move with a mid-level deal and you're at a real disadvantage, because throwing money at the problem isn't as effective.

That's what makes the specter of free agents like Trevor Ariza and Rudy Gay so terrifying.

Ariza will be a free agent in July, having completed a five-year, $34 million deal that was never really worth it until this season. The Rockets signed Ariza to the contract after he had a rollicking good playoff run with the Lakers in 2009. At that point, he looked like a strong foundational piece, an athletic wing defender who could disrupt opponents and hit threes on the other end. He famously thrived under Kobe Bryant's tutelage and soaked up Phil Jackson's lessons.

Things didn't go well from there. In Houston, he took a ton of threes and shot poorly. He was jetted off to New Orleans for Courtney Lee, and again to Washington in the Emeka Okafor deal. How much faith did Washington have in Ariza going into this season? They re-signed Martell Webster to a fairly substantial deal and drafted Otto Porter. That doesn't sound like much.

But a crazy thing happened this season: He's playing wonderfully! At this point, that old joke about certain players and contract years is unavoidable with Ariza. It's hard to imagine the Wizards (now 23-23 and challenging for home court in the first round) doing so well without him, especially considering Washington's strength is defense (No. 8 in the NBA). Ariza has started 41 games, and on Saturday led the charge in not only slowing down Kevin Durant (8-21 shooting, 0-6 on threes, five turnovers) but in putting points on the board for the Wizards (team-high 18). In fact, he's third on the team in per-game scoring and sixth in per-minute scoring. He and Webster are both doing well at small forward, turning a position that has been a weakness since the Caron Butler trade into a legitimate strength.

So the question is, when July 1 arrives, can the Wizards can feel comfortable signing him to more than the mid-level exception? Ariza is 28 with relatively low mileage, but Webster is under contract for three more years and Porter is supposed to be the future. The Wizards begin paying John Wall the big bucks in 2014-15, and Marcin Gortat is a player the team will need to re-sign or lose. Plus, the Wizards would be foolish not to ensure their cap sheet remains clean in 2016, when DMV native Kevin Durant could be on the market.

How high a priority is Ariza? If he is a priority, how afraid do the Wizards need to be that this season isn't another mirage? How much are the Wizards willing to risk? How do you balance the potential benefit of Ariza with the need to fortify the aging frontcourt? It's a tough spot.

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Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

Should he opt out, Gay is an even bigger dice roll. He's due $19 million next season, but has an option to become a free agent on July 1 if he so chooses. Before being traded to Sacramento, no one dreamed he'd opt out. With the Kings, he's averaging 21 points per game while posting a 61.3 true shooting percentage. Those are star numbers.

Imagine he does opts out. What on Earth do you offer a guy like this, who with one team can score 20 times a game at 38 percent and in that same season with another team score more than 20 per game on Durantian efficiency? His stat sheet should just be a bucket of question marks. If Gay continues this torrid performance and then opts out, his July courtships will be fraught with peril.

(There's a strong line of thinking that the Kings will reach a deal with Gay, leading him to opt out and sign for multiple years at a lower rate -- say, $12 million per year -- a la Richard Jefferson and the Spurs. That would allow the Kings to pay Isaiah Thomas and stay under the luxury tax while pushing for the playoffs next season.)

The NBA did everything it could to ease the sting of bad free agent deals. And sure, there are no more Juwan Howards or Eddy Currys, deals that crush franchises for almost a decade. But free agency is still tricky, and mysterious veterans like Ariza and Gay are why.

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