John Halas

Kings Notes: Murray, Coaches, Staff Changes, DeRozan

Kings forward Keegan Murray has two primary goals this season: making at least 40% of his three-point tries and being in the running for the Most Improved Player award, per Matt George of ABC 10 Sacramento (Twitter link).

The 6’8″ pro started all 76 of his games with Sacramento last year, but failed to improve upon his career-best scoring output of 15.2 PPG from 2023/24. In ’24/25, Murray averaged 12.4 points, 6.7 rebounds, 1.4 assists, 0.9 blocks and 0.8 steals per game, with a shooting line of .444/.343/.833. Murray has connected on over 40% of his threes once, nailing 41.1% of 6.3 attempts per night as a rookie in 2022/23. He’s a career 37.2% shooter from distance.

Murray is eligible for an extension of his rookie-scale contract until October 20. He said on Monday that he isn’t worried about those negotiations and is deferring to his agent.

There’s more out of Sacramento:

  • After taking over as the Kings’ interim head coach last season, Doug Christie has now built out his supporting staff with several new faces. According to Jason Anderson of The Sacramento Bee (Twitter link), Christie said on Monday that assistant coach Mike Miller will handle the club’s offense and Bobby Jackson will be entrusted to command Sacramento’s defense.
  • The Kings have announced several new basketball operations staff updates in a press statement. As Michael Scotto of HoopsHype observes (via Twitter), Sacramento has added multiple former Knicks staffers who previously worked with Kings general manager Scott Perry in New York. That group includes new director of pro player personnel Fred Cofield, new director of college scouting John Halas, and new vice president of data science and planning Tom Perry.
  • Veteran Kings forward DeMar DeRozan acknowledged that the club’s chaotic 2024/25 — which saw a coaching regime transition and trades involving several rotation players, including All-Star guard De’Aaron Fox — was difficult to handle for Sacramento players, per KCRA 3 Northern California (Twitter video link). “Just being honest with you, there was just a lot of s–t that was going on that, you know, internally we tried to fight through as players,” DeRozan said. “So I think this time around you’ll see a much different team.” DeRozan, 36, is embarking on the second season of a three-year, $73.9MM deal. He submitted a fairly steady performance during his inaugural Kings season, averaging 22.2 points, 4.4 assists, and 3.9 rebounds in 77 games on .477/.328/.857 shooting splits.

Atlantic Notes: Milton, Halas, Knox, Williams

Sixers rookie guard Shake Milton was recently cleared to resume limited basketball activities, according to an update on the team’s website. Milton was held out of summer-league action due to a stress fracture in his back. Another update on his status will be provided in approximately four weeks. The former SMU standout signed a two-way contract in late July. Another first-year guard, Landry Shamet, has resumed light basketball activities. The 26th overall pick suffered a right ankle sprain during summer league action.

In other developments from the Atlantic Division:

  • The Knicks have a strong interest in former Magic scouting coordinator John Halas, Ian Begley of ESPN tweets. Halas worked with current GM Scott Perry in Orlando and would likely be added to the Knicks’ scouting department, Begley adds.
  • Kevin Knox doesn’t have his attention set on being Rookie of the Year, as he told Marc Berman of the New York Post. Knox was one of the most impressive rookies in Las Vegas but the Knicks’ first-round forward more concerned with team wins. “I’m pretty confident I can be one of the top rookies. But one of my goals this year is just to win in New York,” he said. “I’m not really worried about winning the rookie award. I just want to win as a team, take road games, play some of the top teams and beat them to make the playoffs.”
  • Robert Williams says his recovery from a knee injury is going well and the Celtics rookie big man expects to be 100% by training camp, Chris Forsberg of ESPN tweets. Williams’ summer league schedule was cut short by left knee soreness.