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Doug Christie’s Toughest Job as the Sacramento Kings Head Coach | Locked On Kings



Doug Christie’s Toughest Job as the Sacramento Kings Head Coach | Locked On Kings

Doug Christie is one of the few things that I’m confident in with the Sacramento Kings going into this next season. But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t have an extremely difficult job. On today’s show, we’ll talk about the hardest aspects of Doug’s job. Finding the balance on offense for everybody, getting the defense to take on a physical identity, and finding playing time for the young guys amongst this veteranheavy roster. It’s all right here on Locked on Kings. You are Locked on Kings, your daily Sacramento Kings podcast, part of the Locked On podcast network. Your team every day. And now, ladies and gentlemen, it is that time. Time for another episode of Locked on Kings. Hello and welcome to Locked On Kings, your podcast hub for Sacramento Kings coverage all off seasonason long. Today’s episode is brought to you by Game Time. Download the Game Time app, create an account, and use code locked on NBA for $20 off of your first purchase. My name is Matt George. I have the privilege of being your host here. I’m a Sacramento sports anchor and reporter for ABC10 News. And as some of you may know, those of you who are new, just get an understanding of of how I feel about this team and the approach to the next season. I’m not feeling great about it. I know this roster has a tremendous amount of talent. This is one of the most talented rosters that the Sacramento Kings have had in the last 20 years for sure. But just because you have all this talent doesn’t mean it all fits together. And that is essentially the crux of the problem or the foundation of the most difficult thing that Doug Christie has to do with this group this season. It is find a way to put the pieces of the puzzle together that creates some sort of consistency, not just success, but consistency while also establishing the culture and identity that the Kings and Scott Perry and Doug Christie and this new regime are trying to establish this season. That has become the, from what I understand, the primary goal of this organization this year. Sure, they’d love to win basketball games. Of course, they’d love to make the playoffs, but establishing a culture and an identity is priority number one. And Scott Perry is doing what he can to make changes to this roster. Of course, Dennis Shruder is the biggest addition that he’s made. He made some some changes and some uh some adjustments along the edges. Who knows, maybe more changes could be coming. We’re still waiting to find out if anything’s going to come of this Jonathan Kaminga situation, although it sounds like it’s not, and I’m pretty much okay with that at this point. But Scott has put this roster together or made the adjustments that he’s capable of making in just one off season on the job. And then he’s going to pass the torch over to Doug. And like I said in the intro, I have a tremendous amount of confidence in Doug. I’m not confident in this organization or much with much in this organization. I’m confident in Scott Perry and I’m confident in Doug and I believe that Doug is capable of working together well with Perry to ultimately execute whatever plan that they have that they haven’t really completely shared with us and they shouldn’t completely share with us. But I’m looking at next season in a vacuum of just next season, right? How do you get this group next season to succeed? And we’re going to talk about the defense. We’re going to talk about the playing time, but let’s be honest, everybody, this roster is an offensive roster. This roster strength has to be on the offensive end. And again, everything that Doug Christie like like the hardest part of Doug Christiey’s job is finding a way to put these pieces together. There is not a perfect fit with this puzzle. This puzzle is not, these pieces are not the same. A better analogy would be like they’re a bunch of mismatch Lego blocks. And how can you find a way to put these Lego blocks together in a way that is consistent? Consistency has been a big issue with this team for a very long time. We know you have a ton of sto scorers on this roster, right? Zack Lavine Deon still being on this team. He’s a scoring first guard. Deont Sabonis is capable of scoring and should be one of the leading scorers on the team even though he doesn’t have a scoring first identity or mindset. But how do you get all these scorers to succeed together? Now, that doesn’t mean how do you get Demard Rosen and Zack Lavine and Demand Sabonis to each score around 20 points per night while having Keon Ellis and Keegan Murray and Malik Monk shoot 38% from three-point range. Like, there’s no the expectation is not find a way to make sure all of these guys are eating at the same time. If that’s the case, then the Kings are going to score 150 160 points a night. That’s not realistic. But how do you find a way to get everybody to succeed together and find a balance of how these different individual players want to play, right? You have Demard Rosen who is an ISO specialist. You have other guys like Demand Sabonis who want to move the basketball. You’ve got catch and shoot threats in Keegan and Keon. You have a pick and roll threat in Malik Monk. How do you find a way to balance ISO and team basketball and ball movement? Doug Christie has always talked about the ball having energy. And when the ball has energy, meaning it’s moving quickly and it’s touching a lot of hands and the ball movement is great and it’s crisp and it leads to a good shot, that is what Doug Christie is all about on the offensive end. It’s he calls it like beautiful and that’s the way that his Sacramento Kings played when he was a player in the early 2000s. That’s great. But you have again a quote unquote ball stopper who’s unbelievable in the isolation in Demard Rosen. And last season it felt like for the entire season, you had two offensive identities that did not mesh with with each other. And when Demar Rozan was cooking in isolation, everybody else was just kind of standing around watching because there’s nothing else that they could do. And then when the Kings were trying to move the basketball, Demar D Rozan was as much of an offensive threat as he should be. And I can even throw Zack Lavine into that mix as well. I don’t think Zack Lavine is as I isoheavy of a scorer as Demar De Rozan is, excuse me, but he’s going to be very he he’s going to be another isolation threat, another guy with the ball in his hands a lot that’s going to be taking a lot of shots. He’s going to be shooting off the dribble just as much as he’s going to be catching shooting. So, it’s going to be inc I I don’t know what the answer is. Like, and these are things I’m sure Doug Christie and his coaching staff and and Mike Woodson and all these guys are probably already working on and already brainstorming and they’ll get to work and really hit it hard when they get into actual training camp. but finding a way to balance these individual skill sets together into a team coherent offensive identity because an a team offensive identity is way better than the individual identities. Again, we know the strengths of these guys. We know how they want to play, but you need to find a way to balance them out with each other so that it doesn’t feel like you’re flipping a coin every time you’re down the floor. Heads, we’re playing a team half court isol team half court set where we’re moving the basketball and pick and roll and blah blah. Tails, get the ball to Demard Rosen and let him cook. And I know Mike Brown’s philosophy was, hey, try and move the ball around and then if it got to within a certain point of the shot clock, like less than 10 seconds or 14 seconds or something like that, okay, now we go to Demar when when things break down. And maybe there’s an element of that that could work, but it obviously didn’t because either Demard Roen had the ball in his hands for 16 to 20 seconds sometimes, or the Kings didn’t get Demar the ball until it was too late because they tried to create something as a team and it just wasn’t there. Demard or Demand Sabonis is still on this roster and I know we have concerns with the Sabonis with being a top guy and the amount of money he’s being paid and the fact that he is not a scoring big man for the amount of money that he’s being paid but Deont Sabonis second to Nicolic is the best passing big in the league. Likes to get his teammates involved. Can find his open teammates. You can play through him. When the Kings were at their best, what were they doing? Playing through Demand Sabonis in the uh in in the DHO game. I I think that can work. I don’t know why I don’t know why we saw videos of Demar Rozan and Demand Sabonis working together at USC last off season and then we never saw a twoman game between the two of them really at any point last season. Figure out a two-man game with them. Demanis Leonis better have a twoman game with Zack Lavine. If not, what the heck are we doing? Doug Christie has to find a way to get these strengths to intermingle with each other. And role players need to be featured, too. This is something that Mike Brown did not do a good job job on. Every single year that Mike Brown was here, there was at least one guy on offense that just their job was just to stand in the corner and try not to become invisible. Floor spacing is important. And Keegan Murray is going to be out there to space the floor. And Keon Ellis is going to be out there to space the floor. Maybe Nick Clifford is going to be out there to space the floor. Like floor spacing is absolutely important so you have room to work and so Demar has room to get to that spot in that mid-range isolation that he likes or Zack Lavine has room to get downhill. Spacing is good, but shoving someone in the corner like Keegan Murray who’s capable of being more of an offensive threat than that. It’s what it was kind of the Harrison Barnes treatment. You’re just wasting that player. And the defenses know it too because they have to respect it. So they have to hover and remain close. But they know more likely than not the ball’s not getting out there. And if Keegan’s not getting consistent amount of looks offensively from three-point range, how in the heck can we expect him to get that three-point percentage back up into the high 30s, which is where we need it to be, where Keegan needs it to be. So finding a team offensive identity, finding consistency on the offensive end where everybody is featured, not just the top guys in reality, right? Like if we’re talking about how do the Sacramento Kings be the best version of themselves next season, they have to be a really really good offensive team, but it’s not going to be the same as it was in beam team one. That team was about pace and getting up and down the floor really quickly. And I do think the Kings should and can play fast, but when you have Demard Rosen and and Zack Lavine on your roster, like that’s not going to be and you no longer have De’Arren Fox, one of the fastest, if not the fastest point guard in the league, like it’s not going to be as strong as it was a couple of seasons ago. But what can be elite with this team? Find a way to have one of the top, if not the top half court offense in the league. When you get into the half court, you have enough sets. You are comfortable enough playing together. You have enough weapons to where it is tough for the defense to know how to stop you and what to take away. As constructed, this roster needs to be really, really, really good on the offensive end to have a chance at making the playoffs. and their halfcourt offense needs to be elite. That is what Doug Christie has to figure out. Scoring is your superpower in the half court. You have to be dangerous. And then of course defensively too, we can’t just completely punt that side of the ball. But we also have to be realistic again with this roster of what to expect from the defense. We’ll talk about that. Plus playing the young guys versus playing the veterans. That’s another problem for Doug Christie to figure out and we’re going to talk about it right here on Locked on Kings. Like I said at the top of the show, this episode of the Locked on Kings podcast is brought to you by Game Time. 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Go out to Oracle Park in San Francisco to watch the Giants. We got the A’s here in West Sacramento. Get your tickets with Game Time to either of those games or any ball game around the country. Take the guesswork out of buying tickets with Game Time. Download the Game Time app, create an account, and use code locked on NBA for $20 off of your first purchase. Terms apply. Again, create an account and redeem code locked on NBA for $20 off. Download the Game Time app today. Last minute tickets, lowest price guaranteed. Of course, the Sacramento Kings can’t just ignore the defense. And Doug Christie being the player that he was in the NBA is, of course, very aware of the importance of the defensive side of the ball. Defense is one of the things that Scott Perry identified as as a identity trait that he needed to establish and wants to establish with this team. It’s all fine and dandy, but this roster like it’s been for years is not loaded with defensive star power. Keegan Murray, Keon Ellis still on this roster. Best believe they’re going to still be workh horses. I don’t think Keegan is going to have to guard the fives at times like he had to do last season, but Keegan is still going to wear the primary defensive responsibility for anybody over 6’5. And anybody under it, Keegan might still guard them at times, but that’ll be Keon Ellis’s responsibility. And we hope, hey, Dennis Shruder can play better defense. The Kings as a team can play hopefully some better defense. But again, looking at this roster and expecting Doug Christie because Doug was a defensive player back in the day to just suddenly be able to turn this roster into a defensive roster or a even average defensive team. It’s a tough ask, but there are things on the defensive end that we can see and that Doug can do that might not necessarily produce the results that we all want. It won’t necessarily make the Kings a top defensive team in the league, but it can start to build towards establishing that identity. The Kings defense can play physical. Now, it might get them into foul trouble on some nights or most nights, and if that’s the case, then you ramp back the physicality a little bit. But I know Doug Christie is all about like making sure, for lack of a better term, and it’s a pause moment, but it’s what it’s what he says, like make sure they feel you. Guys can feel you. Like he wants the opposing team to know and to feel that Kings defenders are always there and always around them. I’m not expecting Demard Rozan and Zack Lavine and Deontto Sabonis to suddenly become really good defensive players, but I don’t have to ask much of this from Sabonis because this is naturally who he is. Sabonis is physical as hell. So even if Sabonis isn’t the greatest rim protector on the planet, he does have a pretty good defensive field goal percentage around the rim because of how physical he is. like Doug if he can find a way to on the defensive end of the floor get this team to buy into a attitude and a physicality that’s like we’re going to take pride in this and yeah we might foul out of games and yeah we might foul three-point shooters which was a big problem under Doug Christie last season remember the amount of times that the Kings gave up three or four-point plays last season and fouled three-point point shooters last season. It’s because they were trying to be aggressive on closeouts. That’s great. Hopefully that’s not a problem for 82 games, but I want to see this team bring a physicality to the defensive end from the jump this season. And again, if you have to r like tone it back because Keegan Murray and Keon Ellis and everybody’s getting into foul trouble and it’s costing you games, then you can make that adjustment. But I need to see physicality from this group. That is something like skill setwise. I know the Kings don’t have the greatest of individual defenders. I know a lot of the defensive end of the floor too is heart and hustle and the willingness to do it. It’s a great cliche for all of us to say while we’re sitting on our couches not actually having to go out there and do the work. Like I understand if more offensively driven guys and guys that have high expectations on the offensive end like Lavine and D Rozan don’t necessarily want to exert the energy on defense that is required to be a good defender. I’m realistic. I’m not expecting that to suddenly change. But you can get this team to take on an attitude of like we’re going to play physical. We’re going to be tough. You’re going to know we’re there. If you still still score 120 points on us or get us into foul trouble, okay, but you’re going to know we’re there. That that to me is the starting point. That to me is a achievable goal for this defense. Find a way for the love of God to to break opposing teams confidence shooting the basketball against you, especially in your own gym. It’s been a problem for god knows how long. How many times do we see teams who are not good three-point shooting teams come into Sacramento or play the Kings on the road and shoot 40 plus percent from three-point range and knock down 15 or more threes? How many times? Feels like it happens once a week, if not more during the season. I feel that while defensively the Kings still don’t have a lot of guys or any guys other than Keegan Murray that’s like 67 68 69 the Kings can again adopt this mindset of physicality and this they’re going to feel us mentality and at the very least try and throw off or impact the confidence of teams when they come into games against you that they don’t think or they don’t know that they’re going to have the green light and good looks from three all game long. Shooting is all about confidence. Every team shoots well against the Sacramento Kings, it feels like. Why? Because every team, regardless of how good or bad their shooters are, is confident against you because they know your identity on the defensive end of the floor is to allow a lot of good looks from three-point range. You can change that. you can impact that without a roster full of top-notch defenders in the league, which of course the Sacramento Kings do not have. The question is, can you get, and I don’t mean to single these guys out like they’re the problem, but can you get Demar Rosen and Zack Lavine to buy into that? Again, both those guys have a tremendous amount of responsibility on the offensive end. They’re offensive specialists. They’re superstars on the offensive end. Defensively, can you get them up to a level where they are not only willing to be held to the same standard with that physicality on the defensive end as the entire team, but they’re leading by example with it. That’s going to be a big question mark for me with this team on the defensive end. Finally, talking about Zack Lavine, talking about Demar Rosen, these veterans that while they’re on the roster, you figure you’re going to play them a lot, right? But you also have young guys. You got Nick Clifford, you got Maxim Reno on this roster that I think deserve playing time. And how do you find playing time for them consistently? And what happens if the season gets to a point where things aren’t looking great? And it might be time to prioritize the young guys. Is Doug capable of doing that? We’ll talk about that in just a second. This episode of the Locked on Kings podcast is also brought to you by Open Phone. If you’re running a business, you know that every missed call is money left on the table. Think about the last time that you had an urgent need, maybe for like a a plumber or a service provider. If the first person didn’t answer, did you wait for them to call you back? No, probably not. You you moved on, right? It’s urgent. You need something. That’s why you need Open Phone. Open Phone is the number one business phone system built to streamline and scale your customer communications all from an app on your phone or on your computer. or open phone lets you manage your business calls and texts from a single app. The shared inbox feature is a gamecher. 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Zack Lavine is not going to play less minutes so that Nick Clifford can get opportunity right out the gate. But if we get into February, we’re getting around trade deadline time. And of course, at the trade deadline, Scott Perry might decide to go in a direction and maybe trades away Demar or I’d say Zack, but I don’t know if anybody would take Zach’s contract or’s, but let’s say that it could it could be that Scott Perry makes the decision for Doug. Scott trades away some of his veterans and now Doug is like, “Well, now I have the opportunity to play some of these young guys.” But what happens if we get to a point this season where it’s not going great? You’re at best a bottom playing team, like a ninth or tth seed at best, but you really don’t feel like you have much of a shot. Things aren’t going well. Things just are they they’re just as disjointed with this roster that does not mesh and does not fit together as last season. you tried some things, it didn’t work. And to be honest with you, I think that scenario is the expectation at this point. And I I don’t think that’s too overly negative or pessimistic to say. What we have seen from this roster is that it’s not it doesn’t work. It’s not very coherent. We saw that last season. So, we’re hopeful that Doug Christie can figure that out and change that by doing all the things that we talked about in the first two segments. But, as of right now, what we’ve seen is that this team doesn’t mesh together. So, if that stays true and carries through the entire season or most of the season, what happens to when we get to the final third of the year and it’s time for the young guys to be prioritized, it’s time for Nick Clifford to get consistent minutes. Now, I don’t know if Nick would ever work his way into the starting lineup or anything like that, but do you sacrifice? Do you take away some of D Rozan or Lavine’s minutes to give to Nate Clifford? Maxim Reno I already think should be part of the rotation with Nate Clifford right away because I don’t care about Drew Eubanks. Like sorry Drew. I don’t care about what Drew brings to the table and I I don’t think it’s that big of a deal. Like play Maxim Marino right away unless he’s so bad that he’s not ready. But if you get to the final third of the year where you really can play Maxim Reno or I don’t know, give Keegan Murray more offensive responsibility the final third of the year. Have him be a priority on the offensive end. Draw things up for him. Get him more. I mean, they should be doing this anyway, but make him a guy at the end of the season if things aren’t going well. Does Doug Christie have the confidence in himself, have the relationship, and this is the part of Doug I’m most confident in because Doug is phenomenal at building relationships and is so well respected. Does he have the ability to go to Demar or to Zach or to any of these vets and go, “Look, you’ve been around the league a long time. Obviously, you know, things aren’t working out here. We’re not winning. We’re not where we want to be. We’re we got to think years ahead here. Even if that’s of course a time when you’re not around. And if if you want out, of course, we can have that conversation this summer or have that conversation at the trade deadline to try and trade you away to a place where you can be more valuable and you can be playing for winning ways. But right now with where this organization is going, I I need to give Nick Clifford some some burn. I need to give Maxi Marino some burn. I need to see what Keegan has on the offensive end before we make a decision about his contract extension. Does Doug have the ability and the confidence to go to those top guys? Again, he’s got a Hall of Famer on his roster, a future guaranteed hall of famer and Demard Rosen. He’s got a star offensive player. There’s question marks about Zack and his ability to be an overall all-star or star level basketball player, but on offense, Zack Lavine’s absolutely a star. Does he have the confidence to go to those guys and go, “Look, we’re not going to completely shut you guys down.” I mean, maybe we will, but it’s time for us to take away some of your minutes or or or kind of wean you off a little bit so that we can get these guys more playing time. And truth be told, both those guys, it might be to a point in the season where maybe they’re banged up or anything where they’re like, “Yep, we get it. All right, that’s fine. Nothing really to play for.” And and I like I believe Demard Rosen at least specifically is enough of a a veteran that he knows what’s going on and he’s also going to be helping the young guys throughout the entire season. He’s going to be a mentor to some of the young guys, a mentor to Ne Clifford. Hopefully, we’ll still keep working with Keegan Murray. like all this this isn’t at a left field, but I’m very curious if the season gets to a crossroads, how Doug handles that crossroads and if Doug and Scott and the Kings decide the future is the priority now. We we gave it 4050 games with this group that we primarily inherited. it didn’t really work again or some things worked, other things didn’t. Now, we’re going to greenlight some of our young guys to really get some opportunity to learn and develop and grow. And if we lose a bunch of games, then I guess we get a better draft pick. If we start winning, then we found something that we’re excited about. I’d like to I’d like to believe that Doug with the backing of his front office because that’s the thing. Mike Brown, Monty McNair, very clearly not on the same page for a lot of their time together with who they wanted to play, what kind of guys they wanted. I do have faith and confidence that Scott Perry and Doug Christie are and will remain on the same page. So, if Doug decides, I want to play Neat Clifford, I want to play Maxim Reno, I want to bench this guy, that Perry will support that. And vice versa, if Perry goes to Doug and says, “Look, the season ain’t working. Let’s see what we got in Keegan Murray before I pay him.” That Doug will say, “All right, I hear you.” And then actually execute that and bring that to the floor. Hopefully we don’t get to that point. Hopefully the Kings are good and a playoff team and the young guys are still having some sort of impact and that like I think Nick Clifford is going to be a rotational piece for the Kings right away. So hopefully everything is just sunshine and rainbows, but I’m I’m realistic about what this roster is. And I’m very curious now that Doug is not coaching for his job, but he’s now got the job, how he coaches, how he approaches it. It’s one of the things I’m I’m actually really excited about to see for this upcoming season. Now, I want to hear from you. Your thoughts on all this stuff that we talked about, your confidence in Doug to handle these different things, how you would handle these different things. Hit me up. Let me know. Matt George Sack on Twitter. You can email me matte [email protected] or leave your thoughts in the YouTube comment section down below. Appreciate your support as always. Can’t wait to have you join me on the next episode of Locked OnKings. Until then, my name is Matt George. You’ve been listening to the Locked On podcast, part of the Lockdown Onet.

Matt George breaks down the hardest parts of Doug Christie’s job next season and how he can piece this roster together in a way that wins games.

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Doug Christie’s Toughest Job as the Sacramento Kings Head Coach
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4 Comments

  1. In Doug we trust hopefully 🤞. But His job will be difficult this coming season. We’ll see how he does down the stretch

  2. Dude, all i hear all over the league is how nobody seems to think Scott Perry has a single clue at how to do his job😂 even sam veceni said just yesterday, that noone around the league thinks he has a clue. Wt hell matt? 😂

  3. If Nique could learn to play point, this team could actually be really good. Im hoping the 26-27 team looks like Nique, Keon, LaVine, Keegan, Sabonis as starters with Monk, Isaac Jones, Maxime Raynaud, a rookie point guard, and a rookie wing off the bench. I think Nique is gonna be a damn good player.

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