Sacramento Kings Wiretap

Bibby Becomes Clutch in Playoffs

You suspect, then, that Bibby will indeed get a vote or two in the race for Player of the Playoffs, assuming Sacramento can win either Friday's Game 6 at Staples Center or an if-necessary Game 7 at home Sunday.

The Kings would thus proceed to the role of overwhelming favorite in The Finals against the New Jersey-Boston survivor. Sacramento has two shots to win one against the Lakers, largely because of Bibby embracing fourth-quarter pressure much more readily than he soaks up postgame adulation.

After three seasons of torment toiling in Vancouver, and an unremarkable fitting-in regular season with the Kings, Bibby has gradually established himself as Sacramento's most dependable postseason player. That's despite arriving for a first-round matchup with Utah sage John Stockton with no prior experience, unless you count an NCAA championship as an Arizona freshman in 1997.

Via Dallas Morning News


Lakers May Want to Start Taking This Seriously

Why should anyone be surprised the Lakers find themselves in this predicament?

They have, after all, been headed here for months, a fateful rendezvous at the intersection of Hubris and Nonchalance.

For most of the season, it was almost as if the Lakers were playing under a sponsorship from the United States Postal Service. You know, mailing it in.

As a sizzling 16-1 start turned into a tepid 58-24 finish and only the second-best record in the Western Conference, the two-time defending champs have been nothing if not haughty in their conviction they are owed a third title.

From Shaquille O'Neal to Kobe Bryant to Phil Jackson to even newcomers such as Samaki Walker, their philosophy and attitude seem to have been bought at a lamp store. Just flip the switch and the light will go on.

Via Houston Chronicle


Lakers Prove to Be Vulnerable

Two games left, and zero hesitation remaining. It's already official, no matter what happens Friday night to the twice-defending NBA champions.

They're vulnerable.

The question that hung over the Los Angeles Lakers all season, with an answer promised us in the playoffs, isn't being asked any more. You no longer wonder about LA – really vulnerable, or just teasing? – because you've either seen or heard about the first five games of the Western Conference finals.

Sacramento has won three of them and came within a 3-pointer at the buzzer by Robert Horry of winning Game 4, too. From here, whether or not these young Kings can actually finish the series off, you also know that they're going to keep getting better, with a little team from Dallas determined to spend and deal and follow the same depth-trumps-stars blueprint.

Via Dallas Morning News


Kings May 2002 Archive

  • Chucky Brown Sees '95 Champions in Kings

    Brown has searched the world, or at least an unprecedented bulk of the NBA, to get the championship feeling again.

  • Could it be a Kings-Nets affair?

    All Webber wants is the ring

  • In Bibby, Substance Trumps Style

    The Kings used to have a point guard who could make plays.

  • Kings of the NBA

    Mike Bibby used a Chris Webber screen to perfection last night, leading to what became the winning basket as the Sacramento Kings took a 3-2 lead in the best of seven series.

  • Kings Show They Belong

    Worry not for the team overthrown by buzzer-beaters in both halves, the team that couldn't hold a 24-point lead, the team that let slip the chance to usher Phil Jackson and Team Smug to death's door for a change.

  • Lakers Look to Recapture Form

    They did just enough to win fourth quarters and beat the Spurs.

  • Kings need to rebound in more ways than one

    Martin McNeal of the Sacramento Bee writes: The Kings have smacked, whacked, cracked, jacked, overwhelmed and embarrassed the two-time NBA defending champion Los Angeles Lakers.

  • Four teams intertwined

    Last night it was Horry's turn to play hero

  • Lakers look for reassurance

    It has been a long time since the Los Angeles Lakers have been in a situation like this.

  • Kings stop Lakers in their tracks

    The Sacramento Kings looked the hungrier and more determined team in Los Angeles last night, the Kings leading big before the Lakers finished Game 3 strongly to win 103-90 and take a 2-1 lead in the playoff series.

  • Kobe should play in Game 3

    The doubt surrounding the availability of superstar Kobe Bryant looks like it was a false alarm after all.

  • Kobe to miss Game 3?

    Michael Arkush of the New York Times is reporting that talk in the Lakers camp is not on the adjustments the team has to make to revenge the Game 2 loss to the Sacramento Kings, but rather a possible adjustment the team may have to make to play without superstar Kobe Bryant.

  • Kings do a lot of things right, but not enough

    The Kings can run with anybody.

  • Blinebury: Jordanesque Effort Falls Short

    Fran Blinebury makes excuses for Kobe Bryant and the Lakers: Monday night, Bryant attempted a re-creation of one of Air Jordan's greatest hits -- jumping up off his sickbed to work playoff magic.

  • Be like Mike? Kobe falls short

    The debate through the years has always been who is the air apparent to His Greatness Michael Jordan.

  • Webber Can Do More

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Lakers' win should quiet the Kings

    Having spent days talking trash to the defending world champion Lakers, vowing they would rule the West because their home-court advantage was too much for Los Angeles to overcome, the Sacramento Kings promptly turned in 12 horrendous minutes of basketball that they spent 36 minutes futilely trying to overcome.

  • Kings' progress leaves Wolves behind

    In November 1999, the bold proclamation came from the grandest pro basketball pooh-bah of them all: David Stern.

  • Lakers silence Kings

    The Los Angeles Lakers took immediate control of the Western Conference Finals last night, taking an early lead against the Sacramento Kings at Arco Arena and never giving it up to take a 1-0 lead.

  • Lakers Miscast Themselves as Underdogs

    The final horn had barely sounded when head coach Phil Jackson and fourth-quarter matinee idol Kobe Bryant were rushing to a spot in the headlines and trying to establish the Lakers as underdogs in their next playoff series.

  • Webber Made Right Decision to Stay

    The Los Angeles Lakers completed a second-round sweep of the Kings on that day a year ago.

  • Defense in Crunch Was Costly to Mavs

    It was a jubilant Mavericks team that entered the playoffs against Sacramento.

  • Mavs Need Tutorial on Defense

    Perhaps Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban learned that lesson in his team's five-game drubbing at the hands of the Sacramento Kings in the Western Conference semifinals.

  • Kings, Lakers already heating up

    If the pre-series altercations are any indication the Los Angeles-Sacramento series is bound to be a feisty one.

  • Mavs' Bench Doesn't Come Through

    Turns out they didn't have the edge at point guard.

  • Sacramento Eliminates Mavericks

    The season ended despite the return to form of Dirk Nowitzki, who finally delivered the kind of All-Star performance that had eluded him all series.

  • Mavs Bow Down to Kings

    With four minutes left in Monday's 114-101 series-clinching victory over the Mavericks, Sacramento Kings fans started loudly chanting "Beat LA, Beat LA.

  • Bibby gets credit for Kings improvement

    As the Sacramento Kings moved past the Dallas Mavericks in the second round of the playoffs to book their place in the Western Conference Finals, Gerry Fraley of the Dallas Morning News could not help by look back to the Kings of yesteryear, a team which lost close games and was swept in the second round, to see what has changed.

  • Kings do their part, showdown vs. Lakers looms likely

    Mike Bibby has made a world of diffence to the Sacramento Kings.

  • Bibby does the impossible

    Fate seemed against the Sacramento Kings in Game 4 yet the team was able to dig deep to pull out the unlikeliest of victories, 115-113 in overtime, to go up 3-1 in their second round series against the Mavericks.

  • Bobby Jackson Ejected; then Brought Back

    Mavericks owner Mark Cuban didn't have to go far to get an official explanation this time.

  • Kings Keep Nowitzki from Dominating

    He managed no more than a quiet 19 points and five rebounds to take the sharpest dip yet from the first-round domination that put Nowitzki on last week's Sports Illustrated cover.

  • Mavs Let One Get Away

    The Sacramento Kings spent parts of Thursday's Game 3 without two of their starters.

  • Kings' Win Is All About Biiby

    DALLAS - It hasn't taken Sacramento Kings guard Mike Bibby long to warm to playoff basketball.

  • Kings Retake Home Court

    After expending all that energy in taking home-court advantage away from the Sacramento Kings on Monday, the Mavericks gave it back Thursday night.

  • Dallas Gets Drowned Out Amid Noise

    There were thousands of cowbells and hundreds of decibels echoing off the walls.

  • Mavericks cannot rattle Kings

    Michael Murphy of the Houston Chronicle reports that the Mavericks did everything in their power to try to get inside the heads of the Sacramento Kings, even going as far as importing some cow bells similar to the ones Kings fans used, but Sacramento just would not bite.

  • Divac Hopes to Rebound

    He played fewer minutes, took fewer shots, scored fewer points and grabbed fewer rebounds.

  • Defense Rests on LaFrentz

    And why Raef LaFrentz is suddenly the Mavericks' most important factor of all.

  • Bell of the Brawl

    For local fans, it's payback time – time for a real uproar, said Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who told a reporter in Sacramento: "Just wait till we get back to Dallas.

  • Mavs Plan Mediated Cowbell Payback

    After complaining about cowbell-ringing during timeouts in Sacramento, Dallas is planning on payback, within limits, writes Jodie Valade of the Dallas Morning News.

  • Stojakovic Disappears for Playoffs

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Nash Beats Bibby in Battle of Point Guards

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Ringing One Up

    With cowbells still ringing in their ears, the Mavericks were finally able to quiet the Sacramento Kings.

  • Kings' Inside Game Trumped by Mavs

    no good reason to change, the Kings went away from what worked on offense so well in the opening game of this second round playoff series.

  • Little Guys Take Game 2 for Mavs

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Do you hear the noise?

    It looks like Mavs owner Mark Cuban is unhappy with the noise coming out of the Arco Arena, the fans making an unbearable noise through the ringing of cow bells in an effort to give their side any time of advantage.

  • Vlade the Predictor Punishes Mavs Inside

    After the way Divac quietly shredded them inside Saturday, with a whopping 18 points and 16 rebounds, one of the visitors felt moved to make the bold post-game prognostication.

  • Dallas Looking to Regain Touch in Game 2

    "Do we look panicked?" Nelson asked.

  • Mavs Hoping for a Split in Sacramento

    By DWAIN PRICE Star-Telegram Staff Writer SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • No Place Like Kings' Home

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Sacramento Kings Get No Respect

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Mavs-Kings Showcases League Global Growth

    No two teams better display the rise of the international player, and the NBA's best chance of overturning the power-driven dominance of Shaquille O'Neal's Los Angeles Lakers now lies in foreign-born names like Nowitzki, Stojakovic, Divac and Wang.

  • Tale of Two Cities

    Sacramento, though, is as distant culturally from San Francisco as it is geographically.

  • Nowitzki as Superstar

    Problem is, it's not just nagging questions these days.

  • Finley Misses Practice with Back Strain

    DALLAS (AP) - Dallas guard Michael Finley didn't practice Thursday because of a back strain, but he is expected to be ready for Game 1 of the Mavericks playoff series in Sacramento on Saturday.

  • Foreigners Crucial to Mavs-Kings Series

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Webber: Kings Are Underdogs

    SACRAMENTO, Calif.

  • Mavs Must Make Case on the Road

    DALLAS - The Mavericks rolled through the regular season as the NBA's ultimate road warriors, compiling the best away record in the league and franchise history - 27-14.

  • Nellie's Best Shot

    In all, 22 coaches have guided teams to the NBA's conference finals since a feisty young Don Nelson made his third and final visit with Milwaukee in 1986.

  • Mavs and Kings Leading Way of New NBA

    According to Brad Townsend of the Dallas Morning News, the defensive rules changes the NBA instituted last offseason were a success.