Ailene Voisin of the Sacramento Bee: Some movement needed, and fast
The Kings should not be this terrible.
No, no, no, no, no.
While no one expected a playoff run, or even anything resembling an extended winning streak, this early season tumble is shooting flares all over the place.
Is there a plan? Is there an offense? Maybe not. But no one's getting fired.
"We're disappointed," Kings co-owner Joe Maloof said Tuesday, his club having lost eight of its past nine games, "but we're not panicking. The defense is much better, and if we start making shots, we'll win some of these games.
"Let's get 25 games into the season and then we'll have a better sense of where we are."
Patience, he says. But here's the thing about patience. Most NBA players have the attention span of school kids.
They want to see results. They need to see results to continue believing in a system, and a philosophy, and a coach who controls their minutes and influences their livelihood. And right now, Paul Westphal, who is signed through next season and seemingly enjoys better job security than most state employees, is entering a precarious phase.
While players lean on him for guidance, last year's pattern repeats itself. The only difference is that, at least a year ago, the Kings flirted with a .500 record (13-14) before they stopped passing, stopped moving, stopped evolving into a team, and became observers in a one-man play.
It's not even the numbers. It's not even the opponents, though recent home-court losses to Memphis, Minnesota, Detroit and New York ruined any chance for a happy holiday season around Arco Arena. Rather, it's the players' confused looks and the chronically sluggish nature of the defeats.
Late Monday night, a visibly upset Beno Udrih basically summarized what advance scouts (and many of his teammates) have been reporting about the Kings for weeks: "We're predictable. We don't make other teams work for anything, never attack from different sides of the floor. We don't move the ball. It's all one-on-one."
In fairness to Westphal, everyone acknowledges the Kings are far from a finished product. They need outside shooting like ski resorts need snow. They need DeMarcus Cousins to behave like a mature adult, not a 20-year-old kid. They need a facilitator so they can move Tyreke Evans to shooting guard or small forward and exploit his strength and natural scoring instincts.
Better yet, they need Geoff Petrie to acquire a more conventional point guard – or a player whose skills would better complement those of Evans – and accelerate the learning process. (The Kings are aggressively pursuing a move and reportedly have inquired about Atlanta's Jeff Teague and Houston's Aaron Brooks, among others, though team officials declined to comment on the speculation.)
"There's no point bemoaning what we don't have," Westphal added. "Right now with this team, the best possible thing we can (accomplish) is to put together a defensive identity. Put the pieces together in a way that fits. Be the best defensive team we can be. We will work it out offensively. I don't think anyone expected us to look like the 1971 Knicks after 13 games."
So how about imitating the Kings of the opening week? You know? The team that used its youth, depth and athleticism en route to a 3-1 start and an entertaining home opener against the Toronto Raptors?
"We knew we would have our ups and downs," said Maloof, who was surprisingly upbeat considering the circumstances. "This isn't the end of the world."
True, this is sports. This is all a big game. And the Kings can at least pretend to have fun once in a while, and more than once in a while, pass the darn ball.