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What History Tells Us About Reggie Theus and Eddie Jordan

The Kings sacked Reggie Theus this morning, landing somewhere between surprise and "duh" on the Richter scale. For most people who know, Sacramento's performance and the general ferver surrounding the coaching guillotine sent Theus toward the gallows of expected dismissal. But closer to the scene, Geoff Petrie's history left many of us sure Theus would survive until April.

Petrie has only fired a head coach once in his near 20 seasons as a basketball executive. In four years in Portland, Petrie stayed with Rick Adelman; Petrie left when Adelman did. Upon arriving in Sacramento in 1995, Petrie kept atrocious incumbent coach Garry St. Jean for nearly two full years. However, in March of 1996 with 15 games remaining, Petrie canned St. Jean. Since then, the Kings have gone through four coaches; only Theus saw his end come during a campaign.

Pete Carril Wanted to Help Ron-Ron

Pete Carril is a basketball legend, maybe more well-known in New Jersey and Sacramento for his work creating the Princeton offense, seriously influencing Rick Adelman's flex-motion offense and advocating for the liberal use of bow ties in the NBA. Carril's been out of the game since Adelman got axed in Sactown, but he still follows the game intently. He worked with Ron Artest for only a few months in 2006, and he regrets the partnership was so short. This is from an interview with the Sacramento Bee's Ailene Voisin:
I wish I could have gotten closer to the guy, but he didn't give me a chance. He sat with me and looked at tapes a couple times. He didn't think it was important enough. I know he listened to me, though. I'd point things out. But not enough to get him to change some things. I could have helped him. ...

I've seen where he loses concentration at times, doesn't run a play. He'll go run down in the post and stand next to a guy who is already there. Why are you doing that? And if he goes long periods without scoring, it bothers him. ... I'm not sure he (Artest) gets enough satisfaction out of [defense] anymore. Isn't knocking a guy out of the box enough? So I don't know if he's slipped (defensively) or what.
Has Ron lost the love to abuse folks on defense?

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