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Thursday, February 25, 2016

Four Cities. Two Teams. One Game.


Over the extensive history of the NBA, teams have set out to represent the city they are based in. Each franchise intends to weave itself into the fabric of that metropolitan area through winning and community involvement. However, there have been isolated incidents where a team has gone regional out of desire for a wider reach or out of necessity. Today, we spotlight two of these teams: the Kansas City-Omaha Kings and the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets. These are the two teams that took a regional approach to franchising for two separate reasons.


In 1972, the Cincinnati Royals shipped off for America's Heartland after declining performance on the court and in the stands. Instead of going with one city, the newly-christened Kings (since there was already a 3 year-old Royals baseball team in KC) split their home games between 7,500-seat Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City and 9,300-seat Civic Auditorium in Omaha. The Kings moved into Kemper Arena in 1974 and dropped the "Omaha" from their name the following season. They stopped playing games in Omaha after the 1977-78 season, and moved from Kansas City to Sacramento in 1985.


The New Orleans Hornets had arrived from Charlotte in 2002 after owner George Shinn could not get a new taxpayer-funded arena there. In the summer of 2005, Hurricane Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast and flooded much of New Orleans, temporarily displacing the city's sports teams. The Saints played games in Baton Rouge and San Antonio, while the Hornets elected to play most of its games in Oklahoma City. The Hornets would eventually return to New Orleans full-time for the 2007-2008 season.

I decided to run a simulation between the best editions of these two franchises: the 1975 Kings (44-38) that made the playoffs in their final year as Kansas City-Omaha, and the 2007 Hornets (39-43) who missed the playoffs as they were slowly making their way back to New Orleans full time. The Kings were designated the home team by virtue of having the better record. Here're the results:



This game was a close one down to the final minutes. Devin Brown hit a contested jumper to make it 94-93 with 2:13 left in the 4th. From there the Hornets held off the Kings at the free throw line.

Chris Paul had a monster game, logging a double-double in points and assists as well as 5 steals. Not to be outdone, Nate "Tiny" Archibald had a double-double of his own, but was done it by his 7 turnovers on the night. NOK overcame their deficiencies from three-point range by getting to the line for 33 free throw attempts and forcing 19 turnovers.

What do you think of the results? If you have anything to say about a young Chris Paul, the greatness of Tiny Archibald's career, the presence of future head coach Mike D'Antoni, or anything else, be sure to let me know in the comments below!

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