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Tyreke Evans

Game #16 Preview: Kings Without Crowns

by Jared Wade on November 30, 2010 at 5:53 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Sacramento Kings
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
10:00 pm EST
Arco Arena
Sacramento, California

I watch a ton of NBA basketball, but I have to be honest with you on this one: I haven’t seen the Kings play much this year. I probably haven’t even caught 10 quarters worth of Sacto ball, which is a crying shame considering they were one of my favorite five or six teams to watch last year. Much of this was due to Omri Casspi, who I simply adore, and Tyreke Evans, who last year looked like a guy who would be playing in near-double-digit All Star Games during his career.

He hasn’t been playing so hot this season, however, and that’s probably a big reason why the Kings are 4-11, which includes a good-for-the-Pacers 2-7 home court (dis)advantage. Other than that, the fact that Paul Westphal’s job security has been questioned and DeMarcus Cousins got kicked out of practice the other day, I really don’t know what I’m talking about when it comes to Sacramento basketball.

Luckily, I have solicited one of the people on this earth who know the most about the team to enlighten us further. Our old friend Zach Harper of Cowbell Kingdom drops knowledge below.

What’s going on with Tyreke Evans this year? He hasn’t been playing as well as during his incredible rookie campaign.

Zach Harper: There are four problems with Tyreke this year: bad ankle, plantar fasciitis, elbow issue and some effort problems. The injuries have really limited his ability to get to the basket efficiently and finish, which is hindering how well he scores. However, the effort problems are a little more concerning. I think it’s easy and a cop-out to chock the effort problems up to the injuries but he doesn’t seem as motivated as he was last year. If he can get into a rhythm, you’ll see a much more driven Tyreke on both ends (it happened against Toronto this season). Until then, it’s just one big ball of frustration with him feeling like he has to make every play (which he does).

Carl Landry has now had a full offseason to blend in and get acclimated to Sacto. How is he looking?

Harper: He looks terrible. He’s also not in any kind of rhythm and he’s been much more of a ball-stopper this season than he was last season. Part of that is I just don’t think he’s a starter in this league. He’s much better providing scoring off the bench than trying to help set the tempo on both ends of the floor to start out games. Looking at him against decent-sized, starting power forwards, he just doesn’t have the bulk or the length to defend them properly. He’s now back to the bench where he can get back to being the sixth man he was so good being in Houston.

Tom Ziller had an interesting piece today about how the fact that DeMarcus Cousins got kicked out of practice will make it harder for the Maloofs to can Paul Westphal. First, do you think Westphal is going to be let go soon? Second, should he be? Third, will he be or is what Ziller said valid?

Harper: I don’t think the Kings will fire Westphal this season. I think his option getting picked up for next year forces the Kings to stay patient until the start of next year and see if Paul can get everybody on the same page. The Kings just don’t have the luxury of eating that $2 million. Secondly, I don’t think he should be. I think his approach, while much different and potentially volatile, is the right thing. Outside of Tyreke, every player has had to earn their time with the Kings and that’s the way it should be. I think Ziller is dead on with his assessment.

You think they will beat Indy tonight?

Harper: I actually do think they will beat Indy tonight. Not that they’re the better team but they always seem to respond well to team controversy. Also, it’s hard to imagine they’ll keep losing at home, and perhaps Indy will be looking past them.

Who is your favorite king: King Tut, King Richard the Lionheart, Don King, King Kong Bundy or the Burger King?

Harper: Don King. He’s still holding strong with the denim jacket despite it not being the 80s. Have to respect that kind of loyalty in a guy that’s probably murdered a lot of people.

Pacers vs. Kings By the Numbers

Kings vs Pacers
4-11 (13nd) Record (Conf Rank) 8-7 (6th)
2-7 (Home) Home / Road Records 3-2 (Road)
Lost 4 Current Streak Won 1
2-3 Last 5 Head-to-Head 3-2
-6.33 (27th) Avg Scoring Margin (Rank) +3.60 (9th)
102.5 (27th) Offensive Rating (Rank) 105.5 (19th)
46.2% (29th) eFG% (Rank) 49.8% (14th)
109.4 (22nd) Defensive Rating (Rank) 101.7 (3rd)
50.1% (19th) Opponent's eFG% (Rank) 46.3% (2nd)
91.8 (19th) Pace (Rank) 94.0 (11th)

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Game #55 Preview: Kevin Martin’s Debut

by Jared Wade on February 20, 2010 at 5:08 pm · 0 comments

Indiana Pacers @ Houston Rockets
Saturday, February 20
8:30 pm EST
Toyota Center
Houston, Texas

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For those of you living under a rock, the trade deadline featured two major deals.

The first was Antawn Jamison to the Cavs, which pretty much makes this season’s chase for an NBA championship a two-horse race between Cleveland and Los Angeles.

The second was a three-team trade that sent Kevin Martin to the Rockets, Carl Landry to the Kings and Tracy McGrady to the Knicks.

For our old friend Donnie Walsh in New York, this was an “all-in” move hoping to win the spoils of the free agent class of 2010. It’s officially “LeBron or Bust” for those in MSG, who desperately are hoping β€” nay β€” praying that The Chosen One for some silly reason decides that he wants to play in New York with one of his very talented friends (either Wade, Bosh, Joe Johnson, Amar’e or Boozer), Danilo Galinari, Wilson Chandler, Toney Douglas, Eddy Curry and a bunch of minimum-ish-level salaried guys. (Obviously any of Wade/Bosh or Joe Johnson/Bosh or Wade/Boozer or Wade/Amare or perhaps a few other combinations would not be a total failure for the Knicks either.)

For the Kings, they got a very good (and very cheap) low-post scorer in Landry as well as enough cap room this summer to perhaps offer some free agent the max. (Kevin Arnovitz breaks down all the 2010 free agency player very well here.) Or, since Tyreke Evans is a budding superstar himself, they might be wiser to bring in one $10 million guy and one $7 million guy who can play well alongside Evans, Landry, Thompson, Casspi and Spencer Hawes. Either way, Sacramento now has a lot of flexibility and a lot of young talent to build something.

For the Rockets, they got not just Martin, but two first-round picks from the Knicks, perhaps-promising rookie Jordan Hill and Jared Jeffries, who while seen as a salaray-cap albatross in New York will just be a good defensive specialist for Houston since they weren’t trying to get under the cap this summer anyway. Aside from Danny Ferry getting Antawn, this was the coup of the deadline. Daryl Morey, aka the guy Bill Simmons calls Dork Elvis, made a very shrewd play and has set his team up very well for the next few seasons. (He didn’t do quite as well in negotiations as some people expected, but it was still a stellar move.)

More important to the Pacers, of course, is not how the Rockets play in the coming years β€” but how they play tonight.

Hopefully for Indiana, Houston isn’t able to seamlessly integrate Martin and Jeffries (and perhaps even Hill) into the game plan and the result is a sloppy, lackluster, disjointed effort by Rick Adelman’s boys.

If so, the Pacers will probably only lose by six or seven.

Pacers vs. Rockets: By the Numbers

Pacers @ Rockets
18-36 (14th) Overall Record (Conf Rank) 28-25 (9th)
6-21 (Road) Home / Road Records 15-11 (Home)
3-7 Record Last 10 Games 4-6
Lost 4 Current Streak Won 1
2-3 Last 5 Head-to-Head 3-2
-4.93 (28th) Avg Scoring Margin +0.36 (15th)
101.4 (28th) Offensive Rating 106.7 (15th)
43.7% (27th) FG% 44.2% (26th)
48.1% (24th) eFG% 48.8% (22nd)
106.5 (15th) Defensive Rating 106.3 (13th)
45.2% (10th) Opponent's FG% 46.7% (22nd)
48.8% (9th) Opponent's eFG% 50.1% (19th)
97.5 (2nd) Pace 93.2 (12th)

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Milwaukee’s rookie point guard Brandon Jennings has already captivated the league. His 55-point outburst against the Warriors in his seventh career game marked the highest scoring total by a first-year player since Earl “The Pearl” Monroe put up 56 in 1968. Considering that 1968 was the year that Green Bay won Super Bowl II, the year Richard Nixon became president and the year that Mattel introduced Hot Wheels toy cars to the world, it’s safe to say that Jennings’ accomplishment fully deserved all the hype that it received.

Still, lost in all the discussion of Jennings (who, oh by the way, has been shooting terribly and not even playing particularly well during the Bucks current “we just lost four out of five games” bump in the road) and all the disappointment about Clipper blue-chipper Blake Griffin missing the entire season so far with a stress fracture in his knee has been Tyreke Evans.

Physically, Tyreke is Calvin Johnson with handles. He’s TO without a helmet. He is, in short, an athletic freak with the strength of fifteen Kevin Martins.

Physically, Tyreke is Calvin Johnson with handles. He’s TO without a helmet. He is, in short, an athletic freak with the strength of fifteen Kevin Martins. And he’s tearing up the league. Right now he’s averaging a silly 18.8 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 4.5 apg and 1.3 spg along with 44.6% from the field. As a rookie. And those numbers are actually hurt by a few shaky early-season outings. He’s scored 20 points or more in 8 of his past 10 games and it’s probably not a coincidence that the Kings haven’t lost at home during this stretch.

I’ll have a more in-depth game preview up later today, but, much like Monta, this guy will give the Pacers perimeter defense fits and, while he won’t likely drop 45 on Indy’s collective head, he will do damage. So watch for him later tonight.

Zach Harper of the Kings blog Cowbell Kingdom, a guy you will be hearing more from around these parts shortly, put together the following video of just how destructive Tyreke can be. And keep in mind that all these highlights are from a single game.

I mean, I doubt I could even come up with a video half this long of highlights of Brandon Rush’s entire NBA career. (Kings.com also has this shorter, 30-second highlight video of Evans to commemorate his recent Rookie of the Month award.)

Not only does Tyreke wreck defenses. He also raps. (Scroll down to the bottom video in the post to see the rapping, although the whole thing is worth reading if you have the time.)

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