This season won’t be remembered for a single bad week or unfortunate injury. Sacramento has had bad teams before, but rarely one that so definitively stamped its name into the wrong side of the record books. And the uncomfortable truth is that this collapse may end up shaping the franchise’s direction more than any play-in chase ever could.
Record Breaking Season
Welp, the season from hell has officially set records, with this year’s team officially breaking not just the Sacramento-era but the franchise-era record for most losses in a row. This is the oldest team in the NBA that has had almost nothing but a lack of success over the last 50 years, and yet just now is seemingly hitting rock bottom. This has a chance to be the worst team in franchise history, but even the current worst team in franchise history (the 2008-09 squad that won just 17 games) didn’t manage to lose this many games in a row. The Kings are at 16 losses and counting, and to be honest, I’m not sure that ends any time soon. Tonight is probably one of the better chances against a Memphis squad missing half their roster, but if they don’t win tonight, I wouldn’t be surprised if this streak gets to 20+, especially now that the Kings have shut down Domantas Sabonis, Zach LaVine and De’Andre Hunter for the season. That’s also not to mention the Kings are without Dylan Cardwell for at least four weeks due to an ankle sprain. My personal guess on when the streak ends is March 8th at home against the Chicago Bulls, which would put this losing streak at 21 games.
The Kings would need to win 5 of their next 24 games simply to just tie the worst record in franchise history. That’s actually a higher win rate than they’ve managed to do so far, so there’s a real possibility they don’t even get to 17 wins. How hilariously ironic that this team finally did a jersey homage to the Beam during the year when the Beam has barely been on. But in all honesty, this is probably the best possible result that could have happened this season. This franchise needed a wake up call, and finishing with the worst record in a loaded draft will give them a head start on getting things right for the future, which is much better than the outside shot at the playoffs that this team got the last couple of years. Of course, trusting this team to do the right thing even when it falls into their laps is probably a foolhardy venture, but such is the essence of being a Sacramento Kings fan.
Reclamation Projects Anonymous
We’re officially at the “kick the tires on washed up prospects” part of the season. Last year it was Markelle Fultz, and this year it looks like Killian Hayes and Patrick Baldwin. News came over the weekend that the Kings are giving Killian Hayes, the former #7 overall pick by the Pistons in the 2020 NBA Draft, a 10-day contract. Hayes played 4 years with the Pistons before being cut, and then spent a 10-day contract with the Nets at the end of last season. Hayes has NBA averages of 8.1 points. 5.2 assists, 2.9 rebounds and 1.2 steals, but also has only shot 38.3% from the field and 28.1% from three over those five years. Hayes has been doing well for the Cleveland Charge in the G-League this season, averaging 24.6 points, 7.7 assists and 1.7 steals while shooting 46.1%, and was recently named the G-League Player of the Week.
Baldwin Jr., the 28th pick in the 2022 draft, has bounced around in his short stint in the NBA and hasn’t done much himself. He’s a wing player that’s listed at 7’0 tall, and he’s also having a decent season in the G-League for the San Diego Clippers, averaging 21.2 points, 8.1 rebounds, 3.4 steals, 1.2 steals and 0.8 blocks while shooting 49.5% from the field and 32.6% from three.
Both Hayes and Baldwin are still young (24 and 23 respectively), and with the Kings have nothing to lose, I don’t mind seeing if there’s anything there. The odds of either one sticking around long term seem slim though. Teams bring up these type of players toward the end of seasons all the time, and the odds are stacked against them. We’ve seen it numerous times where even when a player does well during one of these short stints that they don’t stick around (see Terrence Williams back in the day). But the Kings are so bereft of youth that adding anyone under the age of 25 is worth trying at this point, so sure, why not.
Maxime is the Center of Attention
If there’s one upside to Domantas Sabonis being sidelined for the rest of the season and Dylan Cardwell missing most of the rest, it’s that we’ll get to see plenty more of Maxime Raynaud. Raynaud has been a gem of a find for this front office, and continues to impress with his development as the season has progressed. Raynaud is averaging 10.1 points, 6.9 rebounds, 1.1 assists and 0.5 steals and 0.5 blocks in 23.9 minutes per game this season, while shooting 55% from the field. Despite being picked 42nd overall, Raynaud ranks 11th in points per game and 2nd in rebounds per game as a rookie, and those numbers will likely look even better as Raynaud gets more time down the stretch. Against the Pelicans a couple of weeks ago, he put together a 21 point, 19 rebound performance which despite the 26 point loss was still impressive. I had hoped to see Max operate a little bit more around the perimeter this season since he showcased a nice touch from three in college, but he’s sticking to basics so far and doing it well. He has a ways to go defensively (although he’s improving) and is still far from a finished product, but I think there’s a real shot that Raynaud could be the starting center for this team for years to come, even if he isn’t necessarily a star. I could also see him making the All-Rookie second team this year as well.
Rediscovering Keegan
In some good news for the Kings, Keegan Murray came back from a long absence after the All-Star break. Keegan has played just 21 games so far this season, but this final stretch of games is hopefully an opportunity for him to stretch his legs and get some opportunity as a primary scoring threat. To say it’s been a disappointing season for Keegan is downplaying it to say the least, but that doesn’t mean he can’t at least end the year on a good note. I want to see Keegan be aggressive offensively, and hopefully rediscover some of his outside shooting touch. So far, Keegan has regressed from three point range in each consecutive season, but his teams have also gotten worse with each consecutive season. I do think that Keegan is probably more of a force multiplier type of player than a guy who makes team good by himself, but he’s being paid like a player who can do a lot more than he has been doing and so now the Kings need to start seeing some of that investment pay off. Keegan’s under contract for five more years after this one, so his development is probably more important than just about anyone else’s on the team.
Beyond the Big Three
You’re probably already very familiar with the top prospects of this draft: AJ Dybantsa, Darren Peterson and Cameron Boozer, not to mention Caleb Wilson or Kingston Flemings. This draft doesn’t have a clear cut #1 but if the Kings have a top three pick and can get one of those top three guys, I will be absolutely thrilled. I do not think this is a Marvin Bagley situation where one guy has serious question marks. But it’s clear this draft has a ton of talent even beyond those picks, and I thought I’d highlight some names a bit lower on the list that I’ve started to pay attention to, especially as we head towards March Madness:
- Darius Acuff Jr. – The 6’3 PG from Arkansas might just be the most explosive scorer in college right now. Last week, he scored 49 points in a double overtime game against Alabama. For the season he’s averaging 22.2 points, 6.2 assists and shooting 44.1% from three. Mostly offensive minded, and not as athletic as Flemings, which is why he hasn’t been considered in the same tier.
- Keaton Wagler – 6’6 SG from Illinois averaging 18.2 points, 5.0 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 0.9 steals while shooting 42% from three on 5.8 attempts a game. He’s got great size for a guard, has 3&D potential and has decent secondary playmaking chops too.
- Braden Smith – 6’0 PG from Purdue, he’s a senior but perhaps the best playmaker in the country, averaging 14.9 points, 8.7 assists, 3.8 rebounds and 1.9 steals. I like him as a second round prospect if the Kings don’t grab a PG with their lottery pick.
- Flory Bidunga – 6’9 F/C from Kansas, he’s a sophomore but also one of the best shotblockers in college. He’s averaging 14.6 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.8 blocks. Bidunga likely gets drafted in the late first, but there’s a chance he’s there in the early second, and having another young rim protector couldn’t hurt.
That’s far from a comprehensive list, but just guys I’ve personally taken a liking to so far aside from the bigger names. Anyone in particular that has excited you guys? Let us know in the comments.
***
Upcoming Schedule:
- Monday, February 23rd at Memphis Grizzlies
- Wednesday, February 25th at Houston Rockets
- Thursday, February 26th at Dallas Mavericks
- Sunday, March 1st at Los Angeles Lakers




Could have dropped the mic here.
I really struggle to see a way out of this….they just can’t stop the self inflicted wounds.
Light the Beam!

By the way, this picture:

Just perfection. Four perfect expressions.
If only Vivek could find the person responsible for that look on his face. In a year or two it will be Scott Perry. Until then, the guilty party’s identity will remain a mystery.
We need to draft length not guards.
Kings just need to draft the BPA and not think twice about it.
I assume they did just that the last 2 drafts. Kel’ el Ware and Danny Wolf both lengthier players drafted after our picks would both be better than the BPAs we got.
Bagley was longer than Luka Doncic.
Lots of guys that were longer than Hali.
And Ayton was longer than all of them.
Length would be good, but not at the expense of talent. If the red flags on Peterson are reason enough to pass on him, fine. But I would not pass on him simply because he is not as long as Dybantsa or Boozer. Further, I wouldn’t take Yaxel Lendeborg (who I do like) over Boozer in spite of Yaxel’s four inch wingspan advantage.
I’m guessing it’s going to be talked about in these threads imore n the coming months, and Akis already alluded to it, but I do get some Marvin Bagley vibes from Boozer. Call me snake-bit, but another 20 and 10 PF from Duke with defensive limitations has me thinking more than twice, especially when I see the same projections comps to Chris Bosh.
I get that Marvin had more pure athleticism while Boozer is more skilled with a higher advertised bball IQ, but does anyone else’s spidey-sense tingle?
I get more Paolo vibes than Bagley vibes. Boozer is so much more skilled than Bagley when you watch their respective game tapes. More versatile, much more offensively skilled, a much better facilitating big.
And 1 – We have to keep in mind that none of the current consensus top five (Peterson, Dybantsa, Boozer, Flemings, Wilson) will be even 20 years old on draft day. These guys are all works in progress in one way or another. Peterson will need to establish that he can stay on the floor, Dybantsa needs to develop from the arc, Boozer needs to show that he can continue to play up. Flemings may be the most complete 19 year old on the board.
Wait they need to develop? So you’re saying the kings definitely need to find the 24 year old.
Could explain why the keep drafting upperclassmen. The last true freshman the Kings drafted was Bagley.
Someone in that front office doesn’t have patience. I wonder who that could be?
In all seriousness I think it was some solid self awareness from Monte’s front office. There is zero development with the kings.
Draft high and just project all the hopes of this shit show onto them and just hope they carry the weight of this place.
Hali’s time here, vs what happened as soon as he had a year of Carlisle and his staff.
If the Kings land the 3rd or 4th pick the guy I would take would be Flemings and I wouldn’t think twice. Ive seen enough of him to know that hes gonna be a baller. Although it would be hard for me not to go with Wilson who’s another guy im pretty high on.
I need to check out Boozer but he seems a bit off to me. Does he fit in today’s NBA? I’m smelling bust as well.
Now that the Kings have shown some willingness to tinker around the edges of this roster going forward, I’m surprised they haven’t negotiated a buyout for Russ. I’d think a contender could use his play off the bench, but could it be his camp feels there is no team out there that would sign him? Could this potentially mean this is Westbrook’s last season?
He’s a name and I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s not back next year as well. Cheap and will sell merch with the name. Vivek special.
Yikes, I didn’t even think about him coming back next season. If a capped out Kings squad enters the summer with no PG, he could very well be back next year on another vet minimum.
Heaven forbid!
I agree. How many turnovers a game? What is three point percentage. He does dribble half the 24 seconds on almost every time he brings the ball up the court. Other than that an average player.
Sincere question, do you have faith in this front office to make the right pick if (I think we will) drop to 4-5?
Stauskas?
Stauskas, MBIII and DC
lol Stauskas? Stauskas!
Nik rocks!! ✊????
Also I wish it was but it’s Embid lol. As in wish we had drafted him as well.
Out of Service Pervis and No play in BBall Hell Joel?
Haha even after injuries he still has a better second jump than Bagley lol.
You mean the right trade?
Vivek: “Perry, are you telling me we can trade the #5 for two of OKC’s picks at #12 and #18??!! Now that’s thinking outside he box!”
Lmao first thought I had when they drop to 5.
If that happens then IMO go with Kingston Flemings. He has the tools. And only 19.
Is there some prize for the team with the most “season ending surgery” than I’m unaware of?
Back off Utah!!! That’s our move!
I think this is the most apathetic I’ve ever felt about this team in 30 years of watching Kings basketball and that’s really saying something.
I’m with you, I think this is just really really really rock bottom this time.
Finally trying to build through the draft and “tanking” only for the league about to change the rules.
No positive long term depth besides if you squint super hard Kegs and Max.
GM still trading for more expensive worse players. Sorry Hunter no one comes here and has a bounce back year.
Same, except after 41 years.
At least during the 17-win season of 08-09, you still had Petrie in the front office, so there was some hope and faith that he could rebuild again (turned out he couldn’t – due at least in part to the broke Maloofs).
But at least there was hope there.
There’s no hope here.
None.
As I stated above, the Kings will find the Bagley/Stauskas of the draft, and draft him.
It’s been that way for 41 seasons, and it isn’t going to magically change with this clueless, unprofessional, incompetent joke of a front office making so-called basketball decisions.
I tried to DM Mark Cuban asking him to buy the kings instead of pursuing the repurchase of the MAV’s. His account didn’t accept my DM unfortunately. Anyone know a way we could start getting into contact with Cuban? Wouldn’t hurt to at least plant the seed.
one idea: we could start a petition in hear, get 1000 signatures of kings fans that support his take over?
You’d probably have better odds trying to convince Michael Teel to put a group together.
Go on Shark Tank.
ArcoThunder: “Sharks, I have a business proposal of a lifetime. The Sacramento Kings are in need of new ownershi….”
All 5 Sharks simultaneously: “I’m out”
I’d prefer Elon Musk. He’d dispense with the ridiculousness in the organization. He’d actually fire people. No more Matina. No more Peja and Vlade. Maybe he could offer a free ride on a rocket for Vivek and program it to just keep going and going and going.
Kings to make a late season rush to stay out of the top four.
Oh don’t you worry none. Somewhere, lurking in the depths of the lottery, is another Bagley.
And the Kings will find him, and select him. That’s how this thing has worked for the past 41 years.
This year won’t be any different.
Badge Legend