He sounds like Jerry Lawler who does the Clippers game...ack.
One thing I did notice last night is there is no true leader on this squad. Ron Artest is by far the most aggressive player on the squad but it looks like he only wants to be the man when things are going good. He was awfully quiet (vocally to his teammates, he kept trying to shoot ala Kobe Bryant) when the Lakers started to build that lead back up after being down 97-100. Kevin Martin looks to be too passive when Artest in around to be that guy who says 'you know what? we are not losing tonight lets finish this out'
No, the Kings have a leadership void and no one on this squad can fill it. Artest 'wants' to be that guy, but that just sounds crazy from all angles.
I mentioned that Miami game the Kings' played in Florida last week. Apparently, as the reporters who follow the team alluded to, many of the young guys on the team spent the prior evening enjoying the many entertainment aspects that exist along Miami Beach well into the morning hours. There is a curfew in place, but since these are supposed to be responsible, wage-earning young men, policing them is seldom done, and not just by the Kings. Anyway, on gameday, many of the players just lacked any energy on the court, and, surprise, surprise, they lose to the worse team in the NBA by 21. It is this type of behavior that convinces me the team is not worth getting overly excited about this year and probably next year as well. So what if they played the Lakers and the Mavs and the Spurs and the Jazz tough in losses. If they had played that "tough against Miami, the Clippers, the Sonic, the Wolves, and a few other lower echelon teams they have lost to this season, their record could be the reverse of what it actually is.
A on-the-court team leader would never have let these types of things happen. Good teams focus on the game at hand and not the local nightlife when on the road, and especially the night before the game. And Good teams also never "get down" to the level of a bad opponents regularly.