Showing posts with label Sacramento Kings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sacramento Kings. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2013

NBA News 2013: Learning From The Kings' Thomas Robinson Mistake

DeMarcus Cousins at the Drew League/Goodman Le...
DeMarcus Cousins at the Drew League/Goodman League basketball game in August 2011 in Washington, DC. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Coming into this year’s draft, Thomas Robinson was considered one of the most “NBA ready” prospects available. An athletic 6’9 240 forward coming off an All-American season at Kansas, he had a defensive position (the 4) and a skill (rebounding) that would immediately translate to the next level. But while Robinson’s collegiate statistics were eye-popping, the holes in his game meant he would only be effective in a limited number of roles in the NBA, at least initially. The Sacramento Kings passed on several players with substantially higher upsides to make the “win now” selection in Robinson; eight months later, they dealt him to the Rockets for pennies on the dollar.

In a draft where Damian Lillard went No. 6 and Andre Drummond went No. 9, you would like to get a little more out of the No. 5 pick than Patrick Patterson, Toney Douglas and Cole Aldrich. Patterson has some value as an undersized stretch 4, but he’s a role player in his third season set to become much more expensive in the near future. With more talented players behind him in Houston, the Rockets would have been looking to give him away this summer. And while Robinson will be a more useful player in Kevin McHale’s uptempo system, he will probably never be a frontline starter. When the Kings selected him, they were thinking short when they should have been thinking long.

From an on-court perspective, Robinson didn’t make much sense for the Kings. DeMarcus Cousins is a low-post center who can’t protect the rim, so his ideal frontcourt partner is a shot-blocking power forward who can space the floor from the three-point line. It would be hard to find a worse fit than Robinson, an undersized big man without a consistent perimeter shot. Instead of making each other better, they made each other worse: they couldn’t co-exist defensively or get out of the other’s way on offense. As a result, with Cousins averaging 31 minutes a night, Robinson slowly slipped out of the rotation.

He will have a better chance to showcase his game with the Rockets. Rather than running an offense built around a post scorer, the Rockets spread the floor and attack with a barrage of pick-and-rolls. Robinson’s speed and finishing ability make him an excellent roll man and the four-out offense creates a lot of room for him to attack the basket. Not only is he now on the receiving end of James Harden’s passes, their breakneck pace (No. 1 in the NBA) gives him more chances in the open court. He’s more effective in transition, where he can use his speed and athleticism to his advantage, than in the halfcourt, where his lack of skill can be easily exploited.

All that said, Houston isn’t a perfect fit for him either. Since he can’t consistently knock down a perimeter jumper, it’s hard to play him and Omer Asik at the same time. The Rockets' offense is based around spacing the floor, and neither Robinson nor Asik can make a defense pay for leaving them open 15 feet from the rim. Asik is the only thing preventing their defense from collapsing in on itself like a neutron star, meaning Robinson will have to learn to shoot to play 30+ minutes a night with Houston. With the Kings, he had a 34% effective field goal percentage outside of 10 feet. Right now, he is best used as a small-ball 5, which means that if another team has a quality 6’10+ post scorer who can punish his lack of size down low, it’s going to be hard to find him minutes.

Developing an outside shot will be crucial for Robinson’s career. Since he’s unlikely to ever develop into an elite shot-creator, either with his back to the basket or off the bounce, a consistent jumper is the only way he can play as a power forward. When he plays as a 4, he can use his lateral quickness to defend in space on the perimeter; when he plays as a 5, he has to be an interior defensive presence and a rim protector. In college, he only averaged 0.87 blocks a game and outsourced defensive responsibility to Jeff Withey. That’s not going to work in the NBA, particularly when his skill-set demands a more offensive-minded big man next to him. He’ll have a long pro career regardless, but he’ll be a third big man if he doesn’t become more skilled offensively.

Robinson may have been more NBA ready than many of his peers, but that really isn’t saying all that much. For 99 percent of rookies, the first year in the league is mostly about survival. Not only have they just received a life-changing amount of money, but they have to become accustomed to the grind of an 82-game schedule. Players from BCS conferences might see an NBA-caliber player at their position once or twice a month; in the NBA, they match-up with multiple NBA-caliber players every single night. Their heads are spinning so fast that it seems unfair to even ask them to learn the complicated help-side defensive principles they never had to bother with in college.

If a team is depending on a rookie to be a foundation piece, they aren’t going to be very good. If they need a first-year player to be a complementary piece, he won’t be the one who pushes them over the top. There are situations where a rookie can fill a minor role on an elite team, like when the Heat drafted Norris Cole to match-up with smaller second-unit PG’s in 2011. Even if there was a higher-upside player on the board, Miami made the correct decision in taking a guy who gave them minutes in the NBA Finals as a rookie. However, for the most, there’s really no reason to draft a player based on what they are going to do in their first year.

When a player reaches the end of their rookie contract, what they’ll be able to do as they enter the prime of their careers is far more important than what they’ve done at the beginning. Coming out of UCLA in 2009, Darren Collison and Jrue Holiday both slipped in the draft. Holiday fell to No. 17 because he was many years away from his ceiling; Collison fell to No. 21 because there were questions about how high his ceiling was. Four years later, Holiday is an All-Star and Collison is falling out of favor with his third different team. Does it matter if Collison was a substantially better player in their rookie season?

Before this year’s draft, everyone acted like Andre Drummond was the biggest gamble on the board because of the lack of polish in his game. In reality, the real gamble was passing on a 6’11 270 monster with his type of freakish athleticism. If Sacramento had taken Drummond, he could have formed one of the biggest front-lines in the NBA and perhaps even made Cousins expendable down-the-road. Because the learning curve for rookies is so steep, drafting players is like shopping for a new car: they lose half their value once you take them off the lot. And if you go into the draft expecting that they will all need time to develop, you might as well take someone who can develop into something special when you get the chance.

http://basketball.realgm.com/article/226557/Learning-From-The-Kings-Thomas-Robinson-Mistake

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Friday, January 18, 2013

NBA News 2013: Kings' likely move leaves players, fans in limbo

Sacramento Kings logo
Sacramento Kings logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Aaron Brooks has been in an awkward spot since news surfaced that the Sacramento Kings could be sold and moved back to his hometown of Seattle.

The Kings guard has no answers for family and friends who have been calling and texting for information. Even the excitement his brother, Alvertis, had when he showed up for a visit evaporated once he realized those in Sacramento might feel the same sorrow as when the SuperSonics left for Oklahoma City in 2008.

"Seattle does need a team. But you would hate to have a team leave a city you know wants a basketball team," Brooks said. "It's unfortunate."

For Sacramento players, coaches and fans, this is not an easy time.

The Kings hosted the Dallas Mavericks on Thursday night in the first game since the latest -- and perhaps most serious - round of relocation talks began, with chatter around the aging arena seemingly centering on everything but basketball.

Newspaper and television reporters from Seattle showed up looking for more answers along with an increased local media presence. Fans contemplated whether they should keep supporting a team they love. Ushers and parking attendants who depend on the team for work approached reporters asking if they knew what might happen.

Even players and coaches couldn't deny all the attention made it difficult to focus on the game.

"It's definitely going to be a distraction," said Kings coach Keith Smart. "But we're pros. We've got to figure out a way how to separate the two and then get ready to play."

Seattle investor Chris Hansen has contacted the Maloof family about buying the Sacramento Kings, people with knowledge of the situation said Wednesday. They spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because no deal has been reached.

One person said the Kings could sell for more than $500 million. The Kings' future in California's capital city has been uncertain since the Maloof brothers, who own the team, backed out of a tentative deal with Sacramento last April for a new $391 million arena in downtown.

Yahoo! Sports first reported the discussions between the Kings and Hansen, saying a possible sale could land the Kings in Seattle for the 2013-14 season, where the team would play at KeyArena as a temporary home until a new arena is constructed.

Kings point guard Isaiah Thomas, who is from Tacoma, Wash., and played at the University of Washington in Seattle, said the news has been difficult to ignore.

"I've seen the Sonics go. I've seen when a team gets taken away from a city and devastates the fans. It's not a good thing," Thomas said. "I don't wish moving a team on anybody."

Perhaps the most difficult decision has been placed on fans.

The Kings, once home to one of the most fervent fan bases of any sport in the country, have not made the playoffs in seven seasons. Since the collapse of last year's arena deal, attendance has been down, and apathy has been up. Sacramento ranks last in the NBA in average attendance at 13,177 per game.

"What (the Maloofs) are doing is like throwing their problems away," said 26-year-old Kings fan Nicole Shearer, whose parents were season-ticket holders from the first season in 1985 until 2007. "I think they realize how this affects people, but they really don't care. It's been a series of continuous problems for them as owners. But if they really cared, they would try to stay and work things out."

Kasim Ersoy, who has lived in Sacramento for two years, said he became a Kings fan when he watched the Chris Webber-Vlade Divac combo on television growing up in Germany.

"It's horrible that the Kings could be leaving," Ersoy said. "Basketball is my favorite sport in the U.S., so it will be very sad to not have an NBA team any longer in Sacramento."

Some Sacramento fans launched a fight to keep the team -- again.

The grass-roots organization Here We Stay, which has worked to keep the Kings for two years, started an online petition drive urging the NBA to allow a Sacramento buyer to match any offer from Hansen and give Seattle an expansion team instead. The petition had drawn more than 4,000 signatures within 24 hours.

Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson has said he would do all he could to try to find a buyer with a Sacramento connection to possibly purchase the team and keep it in California's capital city. It's not the first time Johnson, a former NBA All-Star, has faced a difficult challenge.

http://www.nba.com/2013/news/01/10/kings-sale-reaction.ap/index.html

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Thursday, July 5, 2012

NBA News 2012: Bobcats express interest in former Wolfpacker J.J. Hickson

JJ Hickson (J.J. Hickson) of the NC State WolfpackJJ Hickson (J.J. Hickson) of the NC State Wolfpack (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Four years after acquiring an extra first-round pick in hopes of acquiring him, the Charlotte Bobcats are taking a second look at former N.C. State big man J.J. Hickson.

Hickson’s agent, Andy Miller, confirmed in a brief email to the Observer that the Bobcats have expressed interest in his client. Hickson became an unrestricted free agent last week when the Portland Trail Blazers chose not to tender a $4.4 million qualifying offer.

Had the Blazers done so, Hickson would be a restricted free agent, giving Portland the right to match any offer and keep Hickson. Now he’s truly on the open market, and several suitors – notably the Golden State Warriors – are in pursuit.

Back in 2008, when Hickson turned pro after a single college season, the Bobcats made a deal with the Denver Nuggets for the 20th pick. The objective was to draft one of three big men: Georgetown’s Roy Hibbert, Hickson or French pro Alexis Ajinca. Hibbert went 17th and Hickson 19th. The Bobcats chose Ajinca 20th, and he was a bust.

Now the Bobcats are apparently revisiting Hickson as a free agent. It’s clear why they’d be interested: General manager Rich Cho has said the roster needs at least one more big man, and Hickson (6-foot-9 and 23 years old) is a true back-to-the-basket post scorer. None of the Bobcats’ current big men – Bismack Biyombo, Tyrus Thomas, Byron Mullens or Gana Diop – fit that description.

Over four NBA seasons with the Cleveland Cavaliers, Sacramento Kings and Blazers, Hickson has averaged nine points and 5.8 rebounds and shot 49 percent from the field. Those numbers sound modest, but the one season Hickson got big minutes – 2010-11 in Cleveland – his production jumped to 13.8 points and 8.7 rebounds (admittedly on a bad Cavaliers team where someone had to register statistics).

After three seasons with the Cavaliers, Hickson was traded to the Kings for forward Omri Casspi and a future first-round pick. Hickson didn’t work out in Sacramento last season, and the Kings ended up waiving him. The Bobcats would have gotten first crack at claiming him off waivers, but didn’t have the room under the salary cap to absorb his salary.

Golden State intended to sign Hickson as a free agent once he cleared waivers, but the Blazers instead claimed him, and he played well in Portland on another team in need of inside help. The Blazers chose not to make him a qualifying offer, but that isn’t necessarily a judgment on Hickson’s value; Portland was protecting the cap space to make Indiana Pacer Hibbert a maximum-salary offer.

It’s unclear how strong an interest the Bobcats have in Hickson, but they now have plenty of potential room under the salary cap to make an offer. They’ll have competition; the Warriors are again quite interested in adding Hickson to their roster.


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NBA News 2012: Hawes agrees to terms to stay with 76ers

BOSTON, MA - MAY 12: Spencer Hawes #00 of the ...BOSTON, MA - MAY 12: Spencer Hawes #00 of the Philadelphia 76ers tries to block a shot by Paul Pierce #34 of the Boston Celtics in Game One of the Western Conference Semifinals in the 2012 NBA Playoffs on May 12, 2012 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston Celtics defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 92-91. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
Much to the relief of Philadelphia 76ers fans, 7-foot-1 center Spencer Hawes isn’t going anywhere for the next two years.

Hawes, who had become a free agent at the end of this past season, has agreed to terms on a new contract with the 76ers, according to multiple reports. The two-year deal is worth a reported $13 million, according to those reports.

The 76ers had offered Hawes a new deal at the end of the 2010-11 season, when he was a restricted free agent, but he declined to sign at that time, preferring to become an unrestricted free agent at the end of the recent 2011-12 season.

Hawes was originally drafted in 2007 by the Sacramento Kings, before being traded in June 2010 to the 76ers.

Since then, Hawes has averaged nearly 10 points, 7.3 rebounds, one block and 2.6 assists per game over five NBA seasons. He was hampered for more than half of the lockout-shortened 2011-12 NBA season due to injuries, although he did return in a big way in the playoffs to lead the 76ers to a first-round upset over the highly-favored Chicago Bulls.


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Thursday, June 28, 2012

NBA News 2012: Nets get Tyshawn Taylor

English: Tyshawn TaylorEnglish: Tyshawn Taylor (Photo credit: Wikipedia)The Brooklyn Nets acquired the draft rights to Tyshawn Taylor after he was selected 41st overall by Portland, in exchange for cash considerations, ESPN.com.

Taylor, a guard out of Kansas, averaged 17.3 points and 4.8 assists per game.

Also, the Sacramento Kings traded the 36th pick to the Indiana Pacers for cash. The Kings picked Orlando Johnson for the Pacers.

The 76ers sent the 54th pick to Brooklyn for cash, ESPN.com reported. The Sixers drafted Tornike Shengelia for the Nets.

Finally, The Los Angeles Lakers bought the 55th pick from Dallas, ESPN.com reported. Picking for the Lakers, the Mavericks selected Darius Johnson-Odom of Marquette.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/draft-day-trades-nets-get-tyshawn-taylor
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Monday, February 7, 2011

NBA News 2011: NBA Retrospective DeMarcus Cousins

CHARLOTTE, NC - FEBRUARY 25:  DeMarcus Cousins...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
DeMarcus Cousins, 6-11, Center, Sacramento Kings, 1990
13.5 points, 7.7 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 0.8 blocks, 2.7 turnovers, 43% FG, 67% FT, 27% 3PT

One of the most divisive prospects in the NBA draft last season, DeMarcus Cousins has had a very rocky start to his NBA career. Playing on one of the worst teams in the league, the #5 pick has undergone a drastic change in environment coming from a Kentucky Wildcats team that was ranked #1 in the nation for a good portion of last season. While Cousins has at times looked outstanding, his game-to-game production and efficiency are massively inconsistent, he's had multiple publicized problems with his coaching staff, and he's one of the most foul-prone big men in the league. Still, it's what he's been doing on the court that is most interesting.

Outlook:

Looking forward, Cousins remains one of the most enigmatic prospects in basketball even now that he's in the NBA. On one hand, he has extremely strong physical attributes and is capable of being one of the most uniquely dominant centers in the NBA, something that does show up every few games. On the other, he's basically done everything every doubter from the draft process expected him to do, and he has been one of the most inefficient, turnover prone players on one of the worst teams in the league.

There's still plenty of time for Cousins to turn things around at just 20 years old, and while it may be unfair to put such high expectations on a player this young, it's somewhat deserving given where he was taken in the draft combined with how productive a player he was at the collegiate level.

Unlike many prospects who fail transitioning to the NBA, Cousins' issues aren't due to his skills not translating, but more so of him abandoning everything that made him a great prospect and collegiate player in order to try being a completely different type of player.

While Cousins may significantly improve his perimeter and finesse offensive games in his time in the NBA, it's unlikely he'd be as successful as if he went back to what made him a great prospect in the first place. Fortunately, he still has plenty of time to do so.



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Sunday, January 30, 2011

NBA News 2011: Lakers talk freely about what went wrong in loss to Kings

Cheerleaders perform at during a LA Lakers gam...Image via Wikipedia
Let's get this straight.

The Lakers lose to the lowly Sacramento Kings at Staples Center on Friday night and the media get blamed for the loss?

"Yeah, I'm blaming this on you guys," Lamar Odom said after the Lakers dropped a 100-95 decision to the Kings. "You guys are jumping to the Boston game."

Odom was joking.

But the media did begin asking about the Lakers playing the Boston Celtics on Sunday, many ignoring the Kings (11-33) in the process.

Still, the Lakers had put a gag order in place, saying no one was allowed to talk about the Celtics until after the Lakers finished off the Kings.

Lakers co-captain Derek Fisher was the one who said no one could talk about the Celtics.

All the good it did.

Again, Odom was asked if he really was going to lay blame for the Lakers' inexplicable loss to the Kings on the media.

"Yep," Odom said, half-smiling. "I'm blaming it on you."



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Saturday, January 29, 2011

NBA News 2011: Lakers looking to make a run in the near future

DSC02142Image by bridgetds via Flickr
In Lakers Coach Phil Jackson's eyes, his team has been too inconsistent in its last six games.

There was the loss to the lowly Sacramento Kings on Friday night. There was the loss to a Dallas Mavericks team that had lost six games in a row. And there was the loss to the Clippers in which the Lakers blew a big lead.

Also in that six-game stretch were victories over Utah, Denver and Oklahoma City, three probable playoff teams.

Save on daily L.A. Times deals powered by Groupon.

That leaves the Lakers with a 33-14 record, three games behind last season's pace after 47 games.

They will try to recapture some consistency Sunday at Staples Center against the Boston Celtics in a rematch of the NBA Finals.

"We've been up and down," Jackson said after practice Saturday. "We had a little run. I thought maybe we could make another little run in this homestand, but we're struggling a little bit."

Jackson said "we know why" the Lakers have been struggling.

"We're turning the ball over at inopportune moments," Jackson said. "We're not executing our offense very well. Transition defense, as a result, is not very good."

Maybe, it was suggested to Jackson, his team has slipped some in its play because the Lakers are coming off consecutive championships.

"We know that," Jackson said. "We know that sustaining that pace is going to be difficult. We know we have to get back on it, though. We have to get back on that horse and get going."

It won't be an easy ride for the Lakers.



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Friday, December 3, 2010

NBA News 2010: Pulling Evans out of season-long slump top issue for Kings

LAS VEGAS - OCTOBER 13:  Tyreke Evans #13 of t...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
SACRAMENTO -- Forget DeMarcus Cousins. This is a fun little show he's got going, lighting his rookie season on fire in plain view. But he is not the biggest problem for the stalled Kings. Cousins has already been kicked out of practice and fined in separate incidents, has already fouled his way to a reduced role of 23.3 minutes a game, has already been ripped by people around the league for an attitude some predict will keep him from stardom. None of it is surprising.

Tyreke Evans is the pressing issue.

His approach is great, unlike Cousins' attention-stealing immaturity, but his health is not. Neither is his shot. Evans spent an offseason breaking down and reconstructing his jumper, one of the few glaring holes in an arsenal filled with positives. But he's at 40.1 percent from the field after 16 games. His mindset is as scattershot as his shot.

"I'm frustrated because I know I can do better," Evans said. "It's just tough. I'm just trying to figure things out."

Evans has regressed from his Rookie of the Year season in 2009-10, and so have the Kings. Without his health, without a roster change to reduce the offensive burden, with an increasing level of angst -- he could be like this all season.

"His attitude's great," coach Paul Westphal said. "He's a team player all the way. He tries to do anything he can to help his team win. I think probably as much as anything -- and I don't know if he would admit this or not -- his body hasn't always responded the way he expected it to and it's made him a little hesitant. That's my best observation."

"He doesn't seem as consistently quick so far," Westphal said. "He's shown flashes. [Saturday against the Bulls] particularly, the first half he looked like himself. But he's had more off games this year already than he probably had all of last year. I think he's probably questioning himself a little bit more.



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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

NBA News 2010: Lakers off to dominant start without being full strength

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 12:  Francisco Garc...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Lakers don't have 7-0 center Andrew Bynum because of right knee surgery. Kobe Bryant still isn't himself, either, because of right knee surgery.

And still, the Lakers were not just winning but mostly dominating en route to a 4-0 start, with a 13-point average margin of victory, entering Wednesday's game against the Sacramento Kings. The Lakers' lowest production had been 107 points against the Golden State Warriors on Sunday. That meant rookies Devin Ebanks and Derrick Caracter got more playing time than expected, and veterans such as Bryant (15th season) and Ron Artest (12th) were able to rest.

Artest had played more than 29 minutes only once. Bryant hadn't played more than 27 minutes in the previous two games. Ebanks got into two games and was averaging 11.5 minutes. Caracter hadn't played more than 10 minutes in three appearances.



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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

NBA News 2010: Who Will Be The Most Surprising Team?

Carl Landry (left) playing with the Houston Ro...Image via Wikipedia
This year, once again, some team will emerge from their apparent wreckage and blossom into a legitimate NBA contender for years to come. In the East, an early favorite could be Indiana, who finally found a real point guard in Darren Collison to pair with Team USA participant Danny Granger on the wing. 

The West has an obvious choice in the Houston Rockets, as Yao Ming returns from a year-long injury hiatus, but for a deeper sleeper, what about the Sacramento Kings?  With Tyreke Evans, last year's Rookie of the Year, paired with the Kings' suddenly beefy frontcourt (Carl Landry, Jason Thompson, Samuel Dalembert and  DeMarcus Cousins), the Kings have real potential for a breakout season, even if they don't make the playoff leap in the always-competitive West.


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Saturday, April 1, 2000

NBA News 2000: 2000 NBA Quarterfinals between Los Angeles Lakers versus Sacramento Kings

This is the picture of Vlade DivacImage via Wikipedia
YouTube videos of 2000 NBA Quarterfinals between Los Angeles Lakers versus Sacramento Kings.

A dominant Shaquille O'neal and upcoming Kobe Bryant of Los Angeles Lakers matches-up against Chris Webber and Vlade Divac of Sacramento Kings.

Los Angeles 117, Sacramento 107 
· Game Recap · Box Score 
  1. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 1/12 
  2. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 2/12 
  3. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 3/12 
  4. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 4/12 
  5. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 5/12 
  6. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 6/12 
  7. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 7/12 
  8. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 8/12 
  9. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 9/12 
  10. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 10/12 
  11. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 11/12 
  12. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 1 part 12/12
Los Angeles 113, Sacramento 89 
· Game Recap · Box Score 
  1. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 1/13 
  2. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 2/13 
  3. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 3/13 
  4. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 4/13 
  5. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 5/13 
  6. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 6/13 
  7. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 7/13 
  8. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 8/13 
  9. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 9/13 
  10. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 10/13 
  11. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 11/13 
  12. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 12/13 
  13. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 2 part 13/13
Sacramento 99, Los Angeles 91 
· Game Recap · Box Score 
  1. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 1/14 
  2. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 2/14 
  3. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 3/14 
  4. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 4/14 
  5. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 5/14 
  6. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 6/14 
  7. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 7/14 
  8. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 8/14 
  9. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 9/14 
  10. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 10/14 
  11. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 11/14 
  12. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 12/14 
  13. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 13/14 
  14. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 3 part 14/14
Sacramento 101, Los Angeles 88 
· Game Recap · Box Score 
  1. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 1/13 
  2. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 2/13 
  3. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 3/13 
  4. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 4/13 
  5. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 5/13 
  6. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 6/13 
  7. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 7/13 
  8. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 8/13 
  9. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 9/13 
  10. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 10/13 
  11. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 11/13 
  12. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 12/13 
  13. 2000 NBA WCQF: Lakers at Kings, Gm 4 part 13/13
Los Angeles 113, Sacramento 86 
· Game Recap · Box Score 
  1. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 1/10 
  2. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 2/10 
  3. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 3/10 
  4. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 4/10 
  5. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 5/10 
  6. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 6/10 
  7. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 7/10 
  8. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 8/10 
  9. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 9/10 
  10. 2000 NBA WCQF: Kings at Lakers, Gm 5 part 10/10

YouTube links c/o Lakerground.net just-ming

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