If nothing else, this really shows how impatience the Maloofs are. They admit to being used to their teams getting into the playoffs regularly. I just don't think you dump on the coach after one year when your players are just not top notch guys in the League at their positions. And the fact is, the Kings have weak and non-atheletic power forwards on the team. Kenny Thomas is taking up too much cap space for too little production, and he pouts when benched. Sharif Addur-Rahim is just a below average PF who can't carry a team, has little strenght, and no leadership qualities. Corliss Williamson is clearly the best of the bunch, but at 6'7" and also non-atheletic..... uh uh.
The non-drafted rookie, Justin Williams, has the desire, and could develop a game, but maybe if he puts on 40 or 50 pounds, he could compete night in and night out.
Give the new coach a rebounding power forward with some atheleticism before blaming the coach on the teams lack of defense. That and a coach that would have the respect of the players. Musselman really never had that. Plus, and I am not sure how this sounds, but Eric was just a tad weird.
An example - and this is NOT current, of course, but just lays the groundwork for what came later. A former NBA referee (I missed his name) was interviewed on the local radio sports station (about the Duncan/Crawford incident, but that is neither here nor there). This guy was refing a game in the CBA years ago that featured Eric's dad Bill as one of the coaches and Eric, then 12 years old, sat on the bench with him. Every time Bill yelled something about a call the ref made, like "That was a bad call, ref", Eric would immediately yell out "Bad call ref". Bill would yell, "what a dumb-ass call!' and Eric would chime in "Dumb-ass call!". Everything Bill said, Eric would shout out the key phrase right afterwards.
He still seems to be looking for a mentor to mimick.