But there's another benefit: creating a pipeline of non-roster players.
Under NBA rules, the final three D-League players cut by NBA teams in training camp are assigned to that team's affiliate. In the past, that just meant that whatever D-League players the Kings invited to camp and then cut ended up with Reno, which was run totally independently with no input from the Kings, and in one case run by a coach previously fired by the Kings. Now, the Kings run the Bighorns' basketball operations. So those three camp cuts are still being exposed to the Kings system, the Kings style, the Kings philosophy. And the Kings have eyes on those players — inside eyes. Eyes in practice. Eyes on the team bus. Eyes everywhere.
If Will Clyburn and Drew Gordon elect to stay in the D-League and try to make the NBA in 2013-14, the Kings could invite them to training camp, cut them (unless they decide to sign them outright), and keep them in Reno to watch and impact their development. If injury or a trade strikes, the Kings could call them up on 10-days or for the full season having a much better idea of what they bring to the table.
I omitted David Lighty from that paragraph because I think he's more likely to head back to Europe if he doesn't have a contract. Guards do really well in Europe, and there's more competition and less opportunity for a call-up, if my read over the past few years has been accurate. (That'd actually be interesting to look at.) But big men are always needed in the NBA, and Gordon has enough promise that I think sticking around could pay off sometime in the next two years. Clyburn is a wing, but a similar case applies. Heck, he could have been drafted last month. If there's a third player the Kings could camp-cut-assign from the Summer League team, I'd guess it'd be Nick Minnerath. But the front office could also look outside the VSL squad for candidates.
Reno!
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