Sacramento Kings: Difference between revisions

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| [https://www.sportspaper.info/basketball/nba/seasons/2017-18/sacramento-kings-media-guide-2017-18.html 2017-18]{{·}}[https://www.sportspaper.info/basketball/nba/seasons/2018-19/sacramento-kings-media-guide-2018-19.html 2018-19]{{·}}[[2019-20 Sacramento Kings media guide|2019-20]]
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/basketball/nba/seasons/2017-18/sacramento-kings-media-guide-2017-18.html 2017-18]{{·}}[https://www.sportspaper.info/basketball/nba/seasons/2018-19/sacramento-kings-media-guide-2018-19.html 2018-19]{{·}}[[2019-20 Sacramento Kings media guide|2019-20]]
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! 2020s
| [[2022-23 Sacramento Kings media guide|2022-23]]
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Latest revision as of 13:39, 16 December 2024

Sacramento Kings
First Season
1923
Team History
Sacramento Kings (1985-present)
Kansas City Kings (1975-85)
Kansas City-Omaha Kings (1972-75)
Cincinnati Royals (1957-72)
Rochester Royals (1945-57)
Rochester Pros (1943-45)
Rochester Eber Seagrams (1942-43)
Rochester Seagrams (1923-42)
Conference/Division
National Basketball Association (1949-present)
  • Western Conference (1972-present)
    • Pacific Division (1988-present)
    • Midwest Division (1972-88)
  • Eastern Conference (1970-72)
    • Central Division (1970-72)
  • Eastern Division (1962-70)
  • Western Division (1950-62)
  • Central Division (1949-50)

Basketball Association of America (1948-49)

  • Western Division (1948-49)

National Basketball League (1945-48)

Venue
Golden 1 Center (2016-present)
Sleep Train Arena (1988-2016)
Kemper Arena (1974-85)
Omaha Civic Auditorium (1972-75)
Kansas City Municipal Auditorium (1972-74)
Cincinnati Gardens (1957-72)
Rochester War Memorial (1955-57)
Edgerton Park Arena (1945-55)
Key People
Players • Head Coaches • Executives


The Sacramento Kings are an American professional basketball team based in Sacramento, California. The Kings compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Western Conference Pacific Division. The Kings are the only team in the major professional North American sports leagues located in Sacramento.

The franchise began with the Rochester Seagrams (a semi-professional team) from Rochester, New York, that formed in 1923 and hosted a number of teams there over the next 20 years. They joined the National Basketball League in 1945 as the renamed Rochester Royals, winning that league's championship in their first season. They later jumped with three other NBL teams to the Basketball Association of America, the forerunner of the NBA, in 1948.

Publications

Home programs by season

Season/Date Type Opponent Venue
1940s
Rochester Royals
1949-50 Regular Season (1 • 2) n/a Edgerton Park Arena
1950s
1950-51 Exhibition NC State Wolfpack William Neal Reynolds Coliseum
1953-54 Regular Season Milwaukee Hawks Edgerton Park Arena
December 27, 1955 Regular Season Syracuse Nationals Madison Square Garden
1955-56 Regular Season n/a Rochester Community War Memorial
Cincinnati Royals
1958-59 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1960s
1961-62 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1962-63 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1963-64 Postseason Boston Celtics Cincinnati Gardens
1964-65 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1965-66 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1966-67 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1967-68 Regular Season (1 • 2) n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1968-69 Regular Season (1 • 2) n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1969-70 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
1970s
March 12, 1971 Regular Season Boston Celtics Omaha Civic Auditorium
1971-72 Regular Season n/a Cincinnati Gardens
Kansas City-Omaha Kings
1972-73 Regular Season n/a Municipal Auditorium
2000s
Sacramento Kings
February 16, 2010 Regular Season Boston Celtics ARCO Arena

Media guides and yearbooks by season

Media guides

1960s 1960-61 • 1961-62 • 1962-63 • 1964-65
1970s 1971-72 • 1972-73 • 1973-74 • 1974-75 • 1976-77 • 1979-80
1980s 1980-81 • 1987-88 • 1989-90
1990s 1994-95 • 1999-2000
2000s 2001-02 • 2005-06
2010s 2017-18 • 2018-19 • 2019-20

Yearbooks

1960s 1966-67 • 1967-68 • 1968-69 • 1969-70
1970s 1970-71
2010s 2014-15

Seasons

Sacramento Kings publications by season
1945-46 • 1946-47 • 1947-48 • 1948-49 • 1949-50 • 1950-51 • 1951-52 • 1952-53 • 1953-54 • 1954-55 • 1955-56 • 1956-57 • 1957-58 • 1958-59 • 1959-60 • 1960-61 • 1961-62 • 1962-63 • 1963-64 • 1964-65 • 1965-66 •  1966-67 • 1967-68 • 1968-69 • 1969-70 • 1970-71 • 1971-72 • 1972-73 • 1973-74 • 1974-75 • 1975-76 • 1976-77 • 1977-78 • 1978-79 • 1979-80 • 1980-81 • 1981-82 • 1982-83 • 1983-84 • 1984-85 • 1985-86 • 1986-87 •  1987-88 • 1988-89 • 1989-90 • 1990-91 • 1991-92 • 1992-93 • 1993-94 • 1994-95 • 1995-96 • 1996-97 • 1997-98 • 1998-99 • 1999-2000 • 2000-01 • 2001-02 • 2002-03 • 2003-04 • 2004-05 • 2005-06 • 2006-07 • 2007-08 •  2008-09 • 2009-10 • 2010-11 • 2011-12 • 2012-13 • 2013-14 • 2014-15 • 2015-16 • 2016-17 • 2017-18 • 2018-19 • 2019-20 • 2020-21 • 2021-22 • 2022-23


Head Coaches

Sacramento Kings head coaches
Eddie Malanowicz (1945-48) • Les Harrison (1948-55) • Bobby Wanzer (1955-58) • Tom Marshall (1955-60) • Charles Wolf (1960-63) • Jack McMahon (1963-67) • Ed Jucker (1967-69) • Bob Cousy (1969-73) • Draff Young* (1973) • Phil Johnson (1973-78) • Larry Staverman* (1978) • Cotton Fitzsimmons (1978-84) • Jack McKinney (1984) • Phil Johnson (1984-87) • Jerry Reynolds* (1987) • Bill Russell (1987-88) • Jerry Reynolds (1988-90) • Dick Motta (1990-91) • Rex Hughes* (1991-92) • Garry St. Jean (1992-97) • Eddie Jordan (1997-98) • Rick Adelman (1998-06) • Eric Musselman (2006-07) • Reggie Theus (2007-08) • Kenny Natt* (2008-09) • Paul Westphal (2009-12) • Keith Smart (2012-13) • Michael Malone (2013-14) • Tyrone Corbin* (2014-15) • George Karl (2015-16) • Dave Joerger (2016-19) • Luke Walton (2019-21) • Alvin Gentry* (2021-22) • Mike Brown (2022-present)

*interim head coach


Owners

Sacramento Kings principal owners
Jack Harrison & Les Harrison (1945-58) • Frank Woods, Thomas E. Woods, & Tom Grace (1958-63) • Louis Jacobs (1963-68) • Max Jacobs & Jeremy Jacobs (1968-73) • Ray Evans & H. Paul Rosenberg (1973-83) • Joseph Benvenuti, Frank Lukenbill, Gregg Lukenbill, Robert A. Cook, Frank McCormack, & Stephen H. Cippa (1983-92) • Jim Thomas (1992-98)


National Basketball Association
Eastern Conference Atlantic Central Southeast
Boston Celtics (TD Garden)
Brooklyn Nets (Barclays Center)
New York Knicks (Madison Square Garden)
Philadelphia 76ers (Wells Fargo Center)
Toronto Raptors (Scotiabank Arena)
Chicago Bulls (United Center)
Cleveland Cavaliers (Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse)
Detroit Pistons (Little Caesars Arena)
Indiana Pacers (Bankers Life Fieldhouse)
Milwaukee Bucks (Fiserv Forum)
Atlanta Hawks (State Farm Arena)
Charlotte Hornets (Spectrum Center)
Miami Heat (FTX Arena)
Orlando Magic (Amway Center)
Washington Wizards (Capital One Arena)
Western Conference Northwest Pacific Southwest
Denver Nuggets (Ball Arena)
Minnesota Timberwolves (Target Center)
Oklahoma City Thunder (Paycom Center)
Portland Trail Blazers (Moda Center)
Utah Jazz (Vivint Arena)
Golden State Warriors (Chase Center)
Los Angeles Clippers (Crypto.com Arena)
Los Angeles Lakers (Crypto.com Arena)
Phoenix Suns (Footprint Center)
Sacramento Kings (Golden 1 Center)
Dallas Mavericks (American Airlines Center)
Houston Rockets (Toyota Center)
Memphis Grizzlies (FedExForum)
New Orleans Pelicans (Smoothie King Center)
San Antonio Spurs (AT&T Center)
Defunct franchises All defunct franchises
Related Hoop Magazine • League publications • All-Star Games • Records • Seasons • Venues


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