Kings Blog and Q&A

News, observations and reader questions about the Sacramento Kings and the NBA.

Until the Kings' fourth-quarter rally against the Clippers, Bill Walton's commentary was the most entertaining part of the game. Talk about a mudslinger. The Clippers at least an excuse, having played in Portland last night. But here were the Kings yet again, catching an opponent on the back end of a back-to-back, yet appearing to be the more fatigued team.

A few late thoughts on the Kings:

• For whatever reason, this is a poorly-conditioned squad. They are young and athletic; they should be forcing turnovers, running, and dunking. Maybe they should be running suicides or fastbreak drills in practice? Until Tyreke Evans threw an outlet to Omri Casspi with 1:55 remaining in the first quarter, it was hard to remember what a Kings fastbreak looked like.

• DeMarcus Cousins is immensely talented, and given that big, chunky body of his, he'll have to play himself into NBA shape. That was a good move by Paul Westphal to stick him in the starting lineup. Plus, it's not like the Kings were winning games when the youngster was coming off the bench. Love, love his potential (and passing skills).

• This might have been Casspi's most complete game. The second-year forward is at his best when he is rebounding, running the floor, cutting ... and the Kings are moving the ball. His game comes much more easily when the Kings move the ball and stop playing in mud.

• Agree with Walton: the Kings' perimeter was (is) absolutely terrible.

• My biggest gripe? There is no excuse for the collective lack of energy. For most of the season - including the first three quarters against the Clips - the Kings played like a bunch of 40-year-olds with sore knees, sprained ankles or migraine headaches. Very perplexing.

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