January 8, 2010

SAC @ GSW 1/8/10

PreThoughts
Ahh, the Sacramento Kings. Our homely, purply, neighbors up north. Doesn't it seem like the NBA has some franchises way out in the hinterlands? Aside from the stunning fact that San Antonio is the seventh-largest city in the US, Sacramento (37th), Oklahoma City (31st), Memphis (19th), Portland (29th), Indianapolis (14th), and Salt Lake City (136th!), certainly subjectively seem like smallish markets, probably for the lack of another pro franchise, even if they are not actually that small after all, and draw their fans from their entire state or multi-state area. Alas, four of these six teams are in the red, and it's just a matter of time (or crime) before those fratty Maloofs (Malooves?) sell or move.

The Kings have taken some rough losses of late, ceding six of their last seven to good teams, but they should be well-rested tonight and ready to fight at Oracle. There have been some epic scoring salvos between these teams over the last few years, and though this Kings team is quite different internally from last year's, they still score a lot and allow even more. There should be no excuses: Sacramento does not defend three-pointers and shoots free-throws poorly. If the Ws can get their steals, hit a few threes and trade a few dunks for hard fouls, a win should be in order.

As for the players, Tyreke Evans is roughly congruent to Monta Ellis, statistically, and while they both make scads of unforced errors, Ellis' turnovers are the result of doing too much, while Evans is just straight up unrefined. Jason Thompson may some day be a good player, but his ceiling, unlike Anthony Randolph's, is already well-established. Spencer Hawes is on his way to becoming the next Troy Murphy, and Omri Casspi has been playing excellent basketball and is averaging 40 minutes per over his last five games. The Kings strike me as strong and rugged, but most of all young, and less gravely so than the Warriors, what with Stephen-Curry-As-Basketball-Legatee and the prodigal, mercurial Randolph. Until this losing streak, and possibly even still, the Kings have been one of the surprises of the league.

This is a very meaningful game for the Warriors. It's the start of a homestand after
a shaky but undeniable road win, against a beatable, nominal rival. I think we're in for some good basketball, Worriers.

Warrior to Watch: Ronny Turiaf, who needs to challenge Thompson, Evans and Greene for 25 hearty minutes.
King to Watch: Beno Udrih, who is quietly having a very efficient year.

3 comments:

Owen said...

Yeah, the NBA's dispersal of franchises is really weird. Even more glaring than the odd cities it includes are the odd cities it excludes: St. Louis, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Baltimore and San Diego are all amply represented by other leagues, and just flat-out sound like good cities for teams to be from. The NBA has of course been in all of these cities in the past, and some of them are metropolitan areas in decline, but you'd think it'd make more sense to give St. Louis another try than to head to Sacramento or SLC or (obviously) OKC.

The Kings sort of strike me as the pain-free version of us. Their error-prone star SG is more exciting than frustrating; their second-year PF is not flighty or enigmatic (though, as you say, his ceiling is lower); their offense-minded coach has retained his grip on the basic necessities of the game; their cap situation is a sunner version of ours. I think that the Warriors' roster, if properly harnessed, has the greater potential. Sadly, "if properly harnessed" is a refrain we may be singing to our graves.

But I agree: feels like a win-type night. We're pissed off and back at home... against a middling team, that should be enough.

Ethan Sherwood Strauss said...

You gotta look past city size. It's all about metro size. Btws, moving a team from Seattle (giant market, 14th largest), to OklaSiberia is the dumbest NBA decision of all time.

doug said...

Agreed about metro as a much better indicator of the fan pool, Zark, I was just playing quick and dirty. It's more about the cacophony of these low- or off-key cities. Orlando? Sacramento? These are cities from hell.

And that move from Yattle to OKC wasn't just dumb: it was probably illegal (though I hear nice things about OKC).