“We can’t accept the way that we played tonight and think that everything is going to be okay going forward.”
That was Mike Brown’s message a week ago after the Kings’ semi-miraculous last second win over the Chicago Bulls. It rung true a few days later when Sacramento dropped a very winnable game at home to the Rockets, a contest fraught with mental mistakes and lack of effort.
But something clicked Tuesday night against the Bucks, as the Kings turned up the intensity level on both ends of the floor against one of the Eastern Conference’s best teams, running away with a wire-to-wire 129-94 victory.
“Our guys were flying around tonight, we had some beautiful high fives on our close outs and that’s what we’ve been preaching,” Mike Brown said. “We were flying around trying to protect one another and seeing what we could do on that end of the floor.”
With Keegan Murray on the bench due to an ankle injury, second year player Keon Ellis stepped into the starting lineup, and his impact was felt immediately. De’Aaron Fox blocked Milwaukee’s first shot attempt of the game and found Ellis for a three pointer, the first of three such shots made by Sacramento in the opening minutes. Sacramento would connect on their first four attempts of the night and shoot 66% in the first half (55.6% from three), as red-hot offense partnered with a defensive intensity that hasn’t often been seen this season by the Kings.
“He’s got an uncanny ability to defend the pick and roll, to be a great help defender,” Brown said of Ellis. “He’s really elusive and really quick back to the ball. He has a chance to be a special defender. He’s stayed ready and been as steady as he can be. I am happy for him, happy he’s stepping up, happy we rewarded him with a regular contract, and happy he’s lived up to what we gave him.”
The home team would build a 20 point lead in the first half, as four of the five starters crested double-digits, led by Fox’s 15. Kevin Huerter, he of an extended slump over the last several weeks, came out firing, hitting four of his first five attempts from the field, including a 3-4 effort from deep.
As impressive as the offense was in the first 24 minutes, it was the defense that was writing headlines; multiple Bucks possessions ended with shots clanking off the rim as the Kings did an excellent job closing out on three point shooters (Milwaukee was just 3-16 in the first half) while consistently getting their hands in the passing lane for deflections and diving for the 50/50 balls that Mike Brown loves to see his team win. Ellis put the clamps on Damian Lilliard, holding the All Star to just four points on 1-7 shooting. The Bucks’ other star, Giannis Antetokounmpo, was a different story though; Sacramento had absolutely no answer for the Greek Freak, who dropped 22 first half points on 8-10 shooting while pulling down seven rebounds
Sacramento held a 75-56 advantage at the break, but it’s been the third quarter that has been their undoing the last several games.
That was not the case Tuesday night.
Though the shooting cooled off considerably in the frame, the Kings’ defense helped keep them in front, as Sacramento shot just 7-23 from the field but maintained a 17 point advantage thanks to their free throw shooting and defensive intensity.
Chris Duarte got some early minutes in the third after Trey Lyles left the game with an ankle injury in the second, and picked up defensively on Lilliard where Ellis had left off. Lilliard would finish the night with 10 points on 2-12 shooting, well below his season average as the Kings kept him from impacting the game on the offensive end of the floor. It’s just what is expected of the second year player, according to his teammates.
“Be solid. Be solid in whatever he does,” Malik Monk said of Ellis. “Whatever situation you put him in, he’s solid. He wants to learn, he listens. That’s what Keon does – be a professional.”
“You’re not stopping Dame Lilliard,” Brown said of Ellis’ defense of the All Star. “But the way he made him work was phenomenal to watch.”
While Giannis was exceptional Tuesday, he wasn’t the only one wreaking havoc in the paint, as Domantas Sabonis overtook the franchise record for consecutive double-doubles with his 46th, a mark he set in the third quarter. He would finish with a final line of 22/11/8 while Giannis would end with 30 points — 22 of which came in the first half.
“Night in and night out, he’s come up big for us,” Fox said. “We talk about how immune people are to it, how no one outside of us basically talks about him. He comes ready to play every night, he hasn’t missed a game. He’s not just playing every game, he’s contributing and making an impact every time he’s out there.”
Sacramento held the Bucks at arms’ length in the fourth, allowing just 16 points and emptying the bench with five minutes remaining after Fox hit a three pointer while being fouled, and completed the four point play to put his team up 118-87. It’s among the most complete games this team has played all season, and a sign of what they are capable of when clicking on all cylinders. And clicking they were, as even JaVale McGee got in the three point act, draining one from the top of the key to put the Kings up 126-90.
“When we do play the right way, we can be a dangerous team,” Brown said. “We can score, obviously, and I truly believe we can defend. Tonight I thought we brought it on both sides of the ball in the right way.”
The Kings won despite having 19 fewer free throw attempts than Milwaukee, mostly due to a three point shooting effort that saw them connect on 18 of 40 attempts and a low turnover night (8).
Fox finished with 29 and Malik Monk added 25 off the bench to lead the team. Monk also passed Bobby Jackson for the most assists by a reserve player, something he did in just two seasons.
“I told Bobby I was going to beat him,” Monk said of earning the record. “Before I signed, I told him I was going to beat all his records. And I did it in two years, too.”
Fox quipped, “B Jack wasn’t trying to pass, so I was like ‘Malik, you should have got that’.”
Harrison Barnes had a hot shooting night and added 16, and Kevin Huerter managed 11 despite early foul trouble. It was a complete and balanced effort from a team that has been severely lacking in that department as of late. Ellis was big in his 27 minutes, scoring seven points, securing three steals, and being a complete pain in the you know what on the defensive end.
“I think we played a great game,” Fox said. “Defensively, we were physical. That kind of trickled on to everything. We were able to defend the paint well, get out on shooters. That impacted our offense. What we did defensively, [that was] one of the most complete games we’ve played this year.”
Now they’ll look to keep the heat over a quick turnaround, as they prepare for a critical matchup with the Lakers Wednesday night. Consistency is still being sought by the head coach, but he understands that his team is still inexperienced when it comes to playing under the spotlight.
“We are a team that has a chance to be really good, but we are going through ups and downs like any team in the position we are in,” Brown said. “We are trying to play with some expectations, and you’re going to have some ups and downs with that. As long as you’re making strides before you get to playoff time, I can live with some inconsistencies.”
From Houston to Milwaukee
I kept waiting for Dame to check his wrist only to find that Keon had stolen his watch!
Great game.
Brown: You’re not stopping Dame Lillard.
Keon Ellis: Um . . . didn’t I just do that?
Undrafted free agent signing playing like a first-round draft pick.
Credit to the Kings G-League and coaching staff throughout the organization for grabbing him as soon as they could and then letting him develop so impressively.
Hopefully next season it will be Colby Jones with the impressive improvement.
That could happen.
Player development??? On the KINGS?!?!?
Patience is a virture.
.
Would someone please tell ABB that Keon Ellis is an NBA player!
Huh?
And the roller coaster continues!
Coming into this week I would have thought a 1-1 record in the last two games would be completely reasonable.
That was an ass-whuppin tonight. Outstanding effort, physicality, hustle, etc by the entire team. Domas, Fox, and Monk were not going to be denied, and great contributions from role players.
Does Dame seem exposed on a team with expectations? Or is he just older? I am sure it was easier in PDX for him, but that roster has some holes, and a salary/player age situation that is not ideal. Needing Jae Crowder to play significant wing minutes is pretty dicey for a team that also has to have Doc coaching in crucial playoff games.
Amazing defense tonight, but what I loved the most is how the pushed the ball. Just a relentlessness that was so prevalent last season and has seemed spotty this year. The Bucks never had a minute to catch their breath and regroup, all night Sac was in their soup.
My favorite moment? Giannis turning around all hot and bothered aftert he was fouled, only to see Mt. Len standing there, and then just nod and go to the line.
I still think this Kings team is more playoff ready than most are giving it credit for. Yes, they will cough up a game, but I think a lot of teams have trouble defending quick guards, and the Kings have two outstanding ones in Fox and Monk, and whilst beating this team once is attainable for even Detroit, beating them four times in seven games is gonna be a chore for any WC team sans Denver.
The team that played Milwaukee is a playoff team, the team that played Houston and San Antonio, not so much.
Sac still sitting in the Play-In seat: 0.5 game behind 6th seeded Phoenix and 0.5 game ahead of 8th seeded Dallas and 2 full games behind the surging the Delta Birds (NOP) who are on a 4 game win streak and seeming to secure 5 or better unless they come back to Earth.
18 games to go in the Reg. What say you is the magic number of wins to get to secure seed 6? Is it Fifty (50)?
After the dance, we feast
Seemed the Kings use of Zone D tonite was very effective and much improved . Fakers in next finish them !
Yes.
They proved me wrong again.
It helped that Malik Beasley missed 8 3-pt attempts, most of which were wide-open looks!
that’s true, though Sac’s Free Throw defense was not as effective (77%) but fairly decent.
Bucks shot 35 free throws (Sac just 16)! And Kings play the Lakers tonight. I expect more of the same disparity.
btw – Alex Len gets a /hat tip for his play, and I thought Davion came in and contributed well – it was nice to see his teammates looking for him to shoot the 3.
Ellis being able to guard Dame 1v1 really helped. Allowed others to fly around to the ball and double giannis.
Ellis and Keegan out there would have been great defensively. Hope to see that more as the season continues.
Ellis had some amazing shot contests on Lillard. He fought through screens and definitely made him feel uncomfortable.
He’s definitely more than earned a spot in the rotation. Not to mention he’s on a bargain contract for the next two seasons after this one.
His contract could turn out to be one of the best things Monte has ever done. If Ellis can continue on this track, not only will it be on one of the best contracts in the league and give the Kings some excellent cap flexibility, it also give the Kings his full Bird Rights.
Love the inclusion of post game quotes. Really helps inform.
It seems like The Kings-Brown etc have developmental tools. Ellis but also the improvements to Murray, Fox, Sabonis and maybe even Davions game. All seem to be better/improved/have worked at it.
I love the post-game quotes as well and agree with your take on development.
Kings led by 17 after 3. If you’d known that one team would outscore the other by 18 in the 4th how nerve wracking would that have been?
Dear god, please grant our beloved coach, Mike Brown, the wisdom to keep Keon Ellis and his game-leading plus/minuses in the starting lineup for the rest of freaking eternity, amen.
It’s games like this, against good teams, that keeps hope alive for the Kings performing well in the playoffs. They play up to their level of competition often.
And who the hell made that Jrue/Dame trade? And fired Budenholzer? Grass ain’t always greener on the other side.
We’ll see how long Doc Rivers survives his stint in Milwaukee. Based on history, he isn’t going to get that far in the postseason.
I’m very conflicted. It seems anytime I pick the Kings to lose they win. I don’t know if I have it in me to pick them to lose against the L*kers. They are going to have to “Buck” the trend and beat the L*kers either way!!! GO KINGS!
This is why I’ve started picking them to win against the good teams for the prediction contest and vice versa, because more often than not that has been what has ended up happening.
And I always pick them to beat the Fakers just because. 😉
Definitely the most complete game on both ends of the floor this team has played this season. Opening up the game with a lead and never trailing, and holding the Bucks to 94 points and not allowing them to score even in the 3rd quarter when our shooting cooled off. Hopefully the extra rest the guys got at the end of the game will be enough to play today (although we always seem to come out swinging versus the Fakers).
I truly feel the Ellis dynamic really changed the defensive energy or the starters last night. I’m not knocking Keegan, as he’s been proving himself defensively all season, but Eilis needs a major uptick in minutes or maybe even a try starting over Huerter. IMO, the Kings don’t need Ellis to score, they need him to disrupt. Any offensive points he gets you is gravy when you take into consideration the defensive points saved.
Kings are better without Murray. Who knew? ????
Klngs are not better without Murray. In the long run you better realize that he is here to stay which is the right call. Over the next 5 to 7years I have a hunch you will change your mind.
It was meant to be irony. I’m a huge Keegan fan. I mainly think it’s funny how so many teams step up when key members are missing. The Kings have fallen victim to this many times this season.
Thanks for your reply. I hope this doesn’t happen tonight as James is questionable. Might be better if he does play. As an old coach I go along with what Sabonis said. ” I want to play a team with all their players not just a few”.
Last night I had a bunch of living room table craftsy stuff to do so I had the game on mute.
Without the sound you could tell one team was bullying the other.
SOMEbody has to peak at the right time, maybe this year it’s Sacramento.
Kawhi injured again could be bad. Top 4 is not set?
Man, that free throw disparity! The Kings were definetly fouling, I’m not arguing that. But the lack of calls when Fox/Monk/Domas did drive is frustrating. The Kings are more likely going to take outside shots, but maybe the key is to get Monk and Fox pissed at noncalls. Seems to be when they start making shots more, especially Monk.
I probably should be happy, that was a smackdown by the Kings. Just hopefully some more calls go our way tonight.
time for this discussion?: if Keon moves to the starting lineup, which current starter would come off the bench?
Huerter.
I’d platoon Barnes/Huerter depending on matchups
Huerter or Barnes. Depending what they are doing early on that night take your pick,
THIS. This is the game I’ve been wanting all season. Grab a big lead and put them the hell down. Love it. Keep that energy and focus. Pedal to the metal. We got some depth if everyone hustles.
Great win! Maybe the most complete game of the season.
I’d like to see Keon starting the rest of the season. Platoon Barnes and Huerter depending on matchups. The non-starter can sub in with Monk to add scoring.
Let’s go streaking!
It is probably a little match-up dependent, but I sure had fun watching Fox, Monk, Ellis and Sabonis on the floor together last night.
ME TOO!
Badge Legend