After what promised out to be an improved year with some great, young rookies and other young players, the Kings are now looking so disallusioned on the court that they spend more time contemplating their shoelaces then where the basketball is going.
Our new coach Paul Westphal. At first his constant rotation of players in and out of the starting lineup was viewed as a good way to judge his talent with different players on the court starting each night. Now, it looks desparate and disorganized, with players openly questioning the logic in keeping them ignorant as to the rotation each night, whether they are starting, or even playing.
This resulted in the benching of Spencer Hawes. He showed up at Arco to play the Pistons, only to discover his uniform was not even in his locker. His crime? He, Sean Mays, and Tyreke Evans all were quoted in the Bee about the confusion the constant changes to the starting rotation was having on consistency of play. But only Hawes was punished - as if to drive home the confusion further. Mays and Evans both played in the Detriot game and apparently with on disipline applied to either. Hawes won't talk to the media about it and Westphal said that, while Evans made "vague" implications about the rotation and Mays later apologized in person to Westphal, Hawes "knows what he did". Huh??
Admittedly, Westphal is totally distracted by his wife's serious illness, which has made Paul scarce around Sacramento except on game days as he rushes to be with his wife in Los Angeles every day.
Then there is the new arena issue. With seven proposals to be reviewed next month, our mayor Kevin Johnson is trying to get a consensus on the best proposal by saying they should review every one on its merits and funding potential. The problem is that two city council member hate Johnson so much, they get contray to anything Johnson suggests they do. They both like just one proposal, as does the NBA (the same one), which involves a land swap between the land where Arco currently is located, the Cal Expo site, and the downtown railyard land area. Johnson want to take some time to measure each proposal. These others want the city to back just the complicated deal period.
So the team is suddenly not so stable, both on the court and off. Players do not look like they are enjoying the 'fun' of playing any longer and the city management is fighting amonst themselves.