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adelman out in sacramento
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djsunyc
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5/9/2006  4:49 PM
Adelman Out In Sacramento
9th May, 2006 - 4:49 pm

Sacramento Bee - In what has been rumored for many months now in Sacramento, the Rick Adelman era is now over after eight seasons at the helm for the Kings. Adelman compiled 395-229 record in his time in Sacramento while leading the team to playoff appearances in each of his seasons in Sacramento. [READ]
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VDesai
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5/9/2006  6:32 PM
IF Larry Brown ever were to step down or something, he'd be the guy I want.
Pharzeone
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5/9/2006  7:12 PM
That's a damn shame. Talk about a classy guy. This guy hasn't made a peep about his roster throughout his tenture. I personally don't like those idiotic brothers and I guess he had to take the rap.
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
McK1
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5/9/2006  10:36 PM
time for a new voice. Adelman will be employed somewhere before long.
the stop underrating David Lee movement 1. FIRE MIKE 2. HIRE MULLIN 3. PAY AVERY 4. FREE NATE!!!
holfresh
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5/9/2006  10:39 PM

SACRAMENTO (AP) -- Rick Adelman was fired by the Sacramento Kings on Tuesday despite leading the club to eight consecutive playoff appearances as the most successful coach in franchise history.

Geoff Petrie, the Kings' president of basketball operations, gave only murky reasons for the decision, which probably was caused by clashing egos and the empty trophy case of owners Joe and Gavin Maloof, who are widely thought to be behind Adelman's departure.

Sacramento was eliminated from the playoffs on Friday by the San Antonio Spurs.

"I came to the conclusion that continuing this way just wasn't feasible," said Petrie, who also hired Adelman -- his former roommate from their playing days -- when both worked in Portland. "The dynamic that needed to be there to help it move forward just wasn't there."

The Kings also declined to renew the contracts of Adelman's four assistants: Elston Turner, T.R. Dunn, Bubba Burrage and Pete Carril, the Hall of Fame former Princeton coach who spent nine of the last 10 years as a Sacramento assistant.

Adelman, whose 752 career victories are the fourth-most among active NBA coaches, spent this season as a lame duck, but still got the Kings into the playoffs at 44-38 with a tremendous late-season surge after the arrival of Ron Artest.

His departure ends the most successful tenure of any coach in the franchise's 21 seasons in Sacramento -- but although Petrie steadfastly refused to acknowledge it, the Maloof brothers have been dissatisfied with Adelman's leadership for at least two seasons.

Adelman had far more success than all of the coaches in Sacramento's two decades of NBA experience combined, but his sometimes-prickly demeanor and his failure to win a championship left him less than beloved.

The family tentatively courted Phil Jackson last summer while Adelman still was under contract, perplexing and angering Adelman. This spring, the brothers could be heard yelling advice at the Kings' bench from their courtside seats when things went poorly on the court.

Petrie plans to meet with Joe and Gavin Maloof late this week to begin a coaching search. The brothers were in Las Vegas on Tuesday and unavailable for immediate comment.

"In theory, you would like to find someone as quickly as possible because of the draft and whatever trade opportunities can come your way," Petrie said.

Adelman is 752-481 in 16 seasons as an NBA coach, the last eight in Sacramento, where he won 395 games.

Adelman's streak of five consecutive 50-win seasons ended this year when the Kings got off to a terrible start. But Adelman might have done the most impressive coaching of his Sacramento tenure this season, molding a cohesive team with just two holdovers from the 2002-03 season.

The Kings transformed themselves into a defense-oriented team when Artest arrived in a late-January trade for Peja Stojakovic. Sacramento won 25 of its final 36 regular-season games and pushed San Antonio in the first round of the postseason, eventually losing in six games.

Both Adelman and the Maloofs made it clear they wouldn't discuss the coach's future until after the season. Adelman met with Joe Maloof on Monday.

"We knew that it was going to be a looming issue," Petrie said. "We put it aside and concentrated on the job at hand."

Adelman led the Kings to the playoffs in each of his seasons, starting with his surprising one-year revitalization of a longtime loser in the strike-shortened 1999 season.

With new acquisitions Chris Webber, Vlade Divac, Jason Williams and Stojakovic, the Kings captured the NBA's attention with their high-flying, sharp-passing style. Adelman's offensive schemes were imaginative and intriguing, though the Kings were criticized for their defense.

Sacramento increased its win total in each of its first four seasons under Adelman's watch, eventually winning the club's first two Pacific Division titles while going 61-21 in 2000-01 and 59-23 in 2001-02.

The Kings reached Game 7 of the Western Conference finals in 2002 before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers and missing a chance to play for the franchise's first championship since 1951.

Adelman reached two NBA Finals during six seasons in Portland, and also spent two losing seasons coaching the Golden State Warriors.
EnySpree
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5/9/2006  10:47 PM
Posted by VDesai:

IF Larry Brown ever were to step down or something, he'd be the guy I want.

Yes indeed. He is not as glorified as brown but adelman has out together some great teams. His teams have always been good. He always adapts to what he has. He doesn't need a certain type of player to sucseed. He is a genius.
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Nalod
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5/9/2006  10:53 PM
Adleman has proven to be a good coach, but now both in Sacremento and In portland his best teams could not get over the conf finals.

Good dude who will do ok. Sometmies you can only take a team for so many years and its time to move on.
EnySpree
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5/9/2006  11:00 PM
Also we gotta point out the mindset of the kings as compared to our knicks.

Kings have won every year with this guy no matter what and then the knicks have the worst season in franchise history if you take in to account the talent and the minds here. The coach is still here. It was a mistake but the knicks are gonna ride it out.

If brown sticks around only to be hospitalized or take time off, how pissed will we all be?
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oohah
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5/10/2006  1:21 AM
Posted by EnySpree:

Also we gotta point out the mindset of the kings as compared to our knicks.

Kings have won every year with this guy no matter what and then the knicks have the worst season in franchise history if you take in to account the talent and the minds here. The coach is still here. It was a mistake but the knicks are gonna ride it out.

If brown sticks around only to be hospitalized or take time off, how pissed will we all be?

Some of us will be real pissed. Others will applaud this new, brilliant, strategy.

oohah

Good luck Mike D'Antoni, 'cause you ain't never seen nothing like this before!
Killa4luv
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5/10/2006  8:44 AM
I don't remember his Portland team, but I don't fault him for losing to the Lakers in the wcf. Chris Webber shriveled up and Mike Bibby couldn't do it alone, although he tried and almost did.

They had the misfortune of being good, while Shaq, Kobe, and Phil were together and then Horry hit that shot. LA's victory was in the cards for them, the gods smiled upon them. If that ball bounces a different way, SAC wins that series. And goes to the Finals, where I like their chances against NJ alot.

[Edited by - Killa4luv on 05-10-2006 08:45 AM]
Pharzeone
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5/10/2006  9:47 AM
Posted by Nalod:

Adleman has proven to be a good coach, but now both in Sacremento and In portland his best teams could not get over the conf finals.

Good dude who will do ok. Sometmies you can only take a team for so many years and its time to move on.

hmm.. It took Brown 20 years to make it the NBA Final with the Phillies. And Brown clearly shouldn't have made it to the finals in 1995. Sometimes it is not in the cards for some guys. But I tell you this, with this guy there is no yo-yo effect. His teams come out and play for him at everyone of his spots. The Blazers and Kings both under and over acheive under that guy.
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
djsunyc
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5/10/2006  9:56 AM
adelman didn't change. the roster did when webber got hurt and then subsequently traded. the talent level took a hit. remember when the kings were like the deepest team in the league? then they lost talent and the wins started evaporating.

the franchise was supposedly dead in the water and boring...until they made a deal for artest and they started winning again and pushed the spurs to 6.

adelman has been the same guy there from day one. it's about the talent that dictates how far a team will go.

utimately, his portland teams weren't good enough to beat the bulls and his sacramento teams weren't good enough to beat the lakers. but those two teams were the two best in the nba at the time.

moral of the story - coaches still coach like they always have. coaches rarely change. in fact, one could argue that riley was never showtime b/c in ny he played grind it out and when he had a chance to build his own team, he made it a grind it out team as well. so that tells us what kind of coach he really was. but i digress. coaches rarely change their philosphy or methods. it's all about the talent level and how the players fit with the coach. a coach isn't hired or expected to change his methods to fit the players.
oohah
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5/10/2006  10:46 AM
moral of the story - coaches still coach like they always have. coaches rarely change. in fact, one could argue that riley was never showtime b/c in ny he played grind it out and when he had a chance to build his own team, he made it a grind it out team as well. so that tells us what kind of coach he really was. but i digress. coaches rarely change their philosphy or methods. it's all about the talent level and how the players fit with the coach. a coach isn't hired or expected to change his methods to fit the players.

All coaches have a philosophy that they like to stick to. But good coaches adjust their plan of attack to their personell. Look at the Portland teams: Did they play exactly like the Webber/Divac/Stojakovic Kings? No.

Riley didn't just decide to build a grind-it out team. He went and got the best players he could and now he is coaching them the way he thinks they should play. When Shaq is in the game, they grind it out. When Shaq is out, they run when possible to take advantage of Wade.

oohah



Good luck Mike D'Antoni, 'cause you ain't never seen nothing like this before!
adelman out in sacramento

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