391 Hello, City of Disappointment!
The Chinese men's basketball team does not want to meet the American men's basketball team so early, in other words, no team wants to meet the powerful American men's basketball team, but, many times, everything is already predestined.
Therefore, since it is really right, what can be done is to face it calmly, for example, the Chinese men's basketball team really met the American men's basketball team.
"Maybe it's true, in fact, no team really wants to meet the American men's basketball team, because we all know that they are strong, but since we have met, I think, we will definitely not lose without a fight, because we understand very well that if the Chinese men's basketball team wants to really rise, it must play against these strong teams."
"The U.S. men's basketball team is strong, but believe in it, we're going to do our best"
After the draw results came out, the men's basketball coach Du Feng and the captain Jin Feng said that even if they met the American men's basketball team, they would fight to the death!
Three days later, the quarterfinals officially began, and the first game was the Chinese men's basketball team vs the United States men's basketball team.
Even when the draw results came out, many fans already knew the result of the game, but everyone was still happy to go to the scene to cheer for the Chinese men's basketball team, after all, this new Chinese men's basketball team has made history.
Of course, there will be expectations, but that should be the future.
As for now, it should be more about enjoying the heart of the brave who is this challenger.
After the start of the game, it was not surprising that the Chinese men's basketball team began to be suppressed by the American men's basketball team.
Of course, the Chinese men's basketball team has performed well enough, and under the representative of Jin Fengfeng, the American men's basketball team did not take too much advantage of the Chinese men's basketball team in the first half.
However, because of the difference in strength all day long, in the end, 120:99! The U.S. men's basketball team still defeated the Chinese men's basketball team.
Fans are already very pleased with this result, after all, the 21-point difference is already the smallest in the history of the two pairs.
This record has gold content, you must know that the strength of the US men's basketball team in this World Cup is not weak, although it is not as peak as the 2008 American "Dream Eight", but there are also superstars such as Kevin Durant, James Harden, Kawhi Leonard, and more specially, this World Cup is the last World Cup in the career of "Little Emperor" LeBron James, so the US men's basketball team is also bound to win the final championship.
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Make history, the future can be expected!
This is people's final comment on the performance of the new Chinese men's basketball team in this World Cup.
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After the end of the World Cup, the national team randomly announced its disbandment, and regrouping may be next year's preparation for the Olympic Games.
For Jin Feng, although there are still almost two months before the start of the new season, in fact, his time is not enough, and he must improve his form to another level before the start of the new season.
So, two days later, he flew to the United States, to his new club, Sacramento, where he was going to train again behind closed doors at the King's Training Gym to prepare for the new season.
And for Jin Feng, even if the new season starts two months later, he is already a little impatient, and he already has a deep understanding of the city's NBA team ~ Sacramento Kings.
Jin Feng has a summary, that is, in the NBA league, before this, Sacramento was a city of disappointment!
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The Sacramento Kings, founded in 1948 and joined the NBA, are a professional basketball team belonging to Sacramento, California, United States, and are part of the Western Conference Pacific Division of the National Men's Basketball Professional League (NBA).
In the 1950-1951 season, he won the NBA championship as the Rochester Royals. After that, the Kings failed to break through. Until entering the 21st century, the Kings became the most enjoyable team in the NBA under the Princeton tactical system of head coach Rick Adelman, with players such as Chris Webber, Peja Stojakovic, Mike Bibby, and Vlad Divac as the core, and with Bobby Jackson and Siddo Turkglou as the main "bench bandits".
But in 2008, with Mike Bibby's transfer to the Hawks, it marked the end of the Kings' golden generation. In 2009, the team began to be rebuilt with Tyrek Evans as the core. In January 2013, the Seattle consortium announced a tentative agreement to acquire the Kings, but the Kings were eventually acquired by the Sa City consortium led by Vivok Ranatiff.
On July 11, 2017, the Kings officially announced the official signing of three veterans, Vince Carter, George Hill and Zach Randolph.
The Kings have changed their name the most in the NBA, when they were first established as "Rochester Royals", in 1957 they were renamed "Cincinnati Royals", in 1972 they were renamed "Kansas City-Ohama Kings", and it was not until 1985 that the team settled in Sacramento at home, and then changed its name to "Sacramento Kings".
Prior to the start of the 1948-1949 season, the NBL's Rochester Royals, Minneapolis Lakers, Fort Wayne Pistons, and Indiana Jets were merged into the National Basketball Association (BAA). The BAA was later renamed NBA, and the Royals were placed in the Central Division, along with Minneapolis, Fort Wayne Pistons, Chicago Bucks, and St. Louis Bombers. In the 1948-1949 season, the Royals had a 7-5 win rate (45-15), 15 straight wins, and a 23-game winning streak at home. The Royals also had a staggering 9-71 home win percentage (33-1), the second-highest home win percentage in NBA history (the highest win percentage was set by the Celtics in 1985-1986, with a record of 40-1).
In the 1949-1950 season, the Royals did not have a single player in the top 10 scoring list in the league, and the team's leading scorer, Bob Davis, averaged just 14.0 points per game. The Royals have won many games with a strong defense, limiting opponents to 74.6 points per game. Towards the end of the season, the Royals went on a 15-game winning streak to tie the Lakers' regular 51-17 record. However, they lost by two points in the playoffs to decide the division championship, and then were swept out of the playoff race by the Fort Wayne Pistons.
In the 1950-1951 season, the Royals had the best results in history. Under the direction of owner, general manager and head coach Les Harrison, the Royals have become a team with multiple veterans. Its lineup includes Bob Davis, Bobby Wenzel, and Arnie Reisson, who finished the season with 16.3 points and 12 rebounds. The Royals ended the 1950-1951 regular season with a 41-27 run, just three wins behind the division champions, the Lakers. They easily swept the Pistons in the first round of the playoffs, then sent the Minneapolis back home in four games to make history in the Finals. [4] and defeated the New York Knicks, the New York Knicks, the first and only NBA championship in franchise history.
In the 1951-1952 season, the reigning NBA champions led the league with a 41-25 regular season record, and on February 24, 1952, the Royals set the league's single-game scoring record (124 points) against the Baltimore Bullets. In the playoffs that season, the Royals easily defeated the Pistons in the first round, but then lost to the Lakers with a score of 1-3 and stopped defending the title.
In the 1952-1953 and 1953-1954 seasons, the Royals entered the playoffs with almost unchanged lineups. But in 1953, the Royals lost to the Pistons in the first round; And in 1954, the Royals were lucky enough to reach the conference finals and lose to the Lakers due to a change in the format of the first round of the playoffs.
With the establishment of the 24-second offensive time system in 1954-55, the slow-paced Royals were squeezed out of the West competition. Although the home court was relocated to a new 10,000-seat arena, the Royals had the worst record in history at 29-43. The Royals, who barely made it to the playoffs, were eliminated in the first round by the Minneapolis Lakers. At the end of the season, team owner Les Harrison relinquished his position as head coach and handed the task to player Bobby Wenzel. Ani Reeson was sent to the Boston Celtics, while Bob Davis chose to retire.
In the 1955-1956 season, the Royals brought in seven rookies and put three rookies in the starting lineup – forwards Maurice Stokes, Jack Tweyman and guard Ed Fleming. Stokes' all-around performance of 16.8 points, 16.3 rebounds (most in the league) and 4.9 assists earned him the Rookie of the Year trophy and a member of the All-Star team that year. On January 14, 1956, Stokes set a franchise-high record of 38 rebounds per game. Although the 1955-56 season saw the Royals improve by two games from the 1954-1955 season, they stopped out of the regular season and missed the playoffs for the first time.
In the 1956-1957 season, Stokes dominated the NBA with 1,256 rebounds, ranked third in the NBA with 4.6 assists per game, and was also ranked 13th on the scoring list (15.6 points per game). Stokes' 1,256 rebounds in a single season set a new NBA record at the time. But because the St. Louis Bombers, Minneapolis Lakers, and Fort Wayne Pistons tied for the top spot in the West with a 34-38 record, the Royals, who only had a 31-41 record, dropped out of the playoff race again.
At the start of the 1957-1958 season, the Royals moved to Cincinnati, moving their home stadium to the 14,000-seat Cincinnati Garden Stadium. The Royals have had a strong season. Clyde Rovatatan, who was traded for Minneapolis, finished the season in fourth place in scoring, while Stokes was second with 18.1 rebounds per game. The Royals, who went 33-39 that season, were finally able to make the playoffs after a two-year hiatus. But was swept out of the playoffs by the Detroit Pistons.
After the Royals went 3-15 at the start of the 1958-1959 season due to an injury to Maurice Stokes, head coach Bobby Wenzel was replaced by Tom Marshall. But the team ended the season with a league-worst 19-53. This was followed by the 1959-1960 season. The Royals have won just 19 games, including a 14-game losing streak. But Jack Tweyman scored a career-high 59 points in a 122-118 win over the Lakers on June 15, 1960.
Before the start of the 1959-1960 season, coach Marshall was sacked and Charles Woolf was reinstated. The Royals selected the University of Cincinnati's star guard in the 1960 NBA Draft: Oscar Robertson. The Royals started the 1960-1961 season with a 140-123 win over the Los Angeles Lakers at the start of the season, and ended the regular season with a mediocre 33-46 record. Although it was 14 wins from the 1959-1960 season, it still missed out on qualifying for the playoffs by one game. Oscar Robertson became the Rookie of the Year that season, ranking third in the league in scoring 30.5 points per game and 10.1 rebounds, while he also led the league with 9.7 assists per game and set a league record with 690 assists.
The 1961-1962 season was the most successful since the 1953-54 season. The Royals only scored under 100 points in two games that season, averaging 123.1 points and 70.8 rebounds per game. Every starter had a double-digit scoring performance, with scoring leader Robertson averaging 30.8 points, 12.5 rebounds and 11.4 assists per game.
Before the start of the 1962-1963 season, the NBA redivided the division, and the Royals were divided into the Eastern Division, which included the Boston Celtics, Syracuse Nationals, New York Knicks and other strong teams. The Royals retained their opening 1961-1962 openers this season and had a similar record in the regular season, averaging more than 10 points per game for all starters.
In the 1962 draft, the Royals drafted rookie Jerry Lucas joined the team. The team's "Lucas + Robertson" combination averaged 49.1 points, 27.3 rebounds and 13.6 assists per game in the 192-1963 season. On February 29, 1963, he grabbed 40 rebounds in a game between the Royals and the Philadelphia 76ers, setting a new team record. That same year, Robertson averaged a career-high 31.4 points per game and won the league's assists leader for the third year in a row (11.0 assists). At the end of the season, Robertson also won the Most Valuable Player of the regular season trophy [5].
In the 1963-1964 season, the Royals led by the "Lucas + Robertson" combination began to enter the peak period. Robertson still led the team with a superb, 30.4 points and 11.5 assists, while Lucas averaged a dreaded 20 rebounds per game. The Royals won 48 games that season and remain in second place in the Eastern Conference after Boston. But in the first round of the playoffs, they unexpectedly lost to Philadelphia.
In the 1965-1966 season, the Royals were third in the East during the regular season, but lost 4-2 to the Boston Celtics in the first round of the playoffs. At the end of the season, Les Harrison, who had been in charge of the team since the distant days of the NBL, sold the team to the Jacobs brothers (Max Jacobus and Jeremy Jacobs). In the 1966-1967 season, with Robertson and Lucas's peak performances, the Royals once again challenged for the Eastern Conference title. But the Royals have been teetering on the brink of playoff qualification throughout the season. In the end, he failed to enter the first round of the playoffs with a record of 39 wins and 42 losses.
In the 1967-1968 season, the Royals scored more than 130 points 13 times during the season. In September 1967, he completed a 153-133 scoring battle with Seattle. Robertson missed 17 games that season due to a stock injury, but he continued to dominate the league in scoring and assists with 29.2 points and 9.7 assists. But the Royals' mediocre record of 39-43 was squeezed out of the playoffs by Detroit by one game.
In the 1968-1969 season, the Royals improved their record to 41-41. However, it is still only 5th in the expanded East, missing out on the playoffs for the third year in a row. But that year, the Royals players exploded again in the All-Star Game. Robertson entered the All-Star for the ninth consecutive time, finishing with 24 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists and winning his third All-Star MVP.
In the 1969-1970 season, Hall of Famer Bob Cousy coached the Royals. Ten days into the new season, Bob Cousy traded Lucas for San Francisco Warriors guard Jim King and forward Bill Turner (who combined for just 10.1 points and 5.7 rebounds). The Royals scored over 110 points in all of their final 21 games of the season, while averaging a staggering 127 points in six consecutive games in mid-February.
Before the start of the 1971 season, Cousy drafted center Sam Raisi with the No. 5 pick in the first round and a surprise second-round pick Nate Archibald. The Royals transformed into a fast-paced young team in the 1970-1971 season, with guard Noam van Leal claiming the league's leading assist title this season (10.1 per game). The Royals continued their fast-paced, high-scoring style of play. They have scored less than 100 points in just four games all season, scoring more than 130 points on 11 occasions. The Royals ranked third in the NBA with 116 points per game that season. But as a coach, Cousy wasn't good at organizing defense, and the team conceded the second-most points in the league that season with 119.2 points per game. Cincinnati missed the playoffs for the fourth straight year with a 33-49 record.
The following 1971-1972 season, the Royals, who were 30-52, were once again excluded from the playoffs, and the season also set a record for the worst of a team with 14 consecutive defeats. The team's only bright spot was Archibald, who averaged 28.2 points and 9.2 assists per game to rank second and third in the league, respectively.