Kings retire Chris Webber’s jersey
SACRAMENTO, Calif. â When Chris Webber was traded to the Sacramento Kings nearly 11 years ago, the former No. 1 draft pick initially had no intention of ever playing for that scruffy franchise out in some remote part of California. The ex-NBA rookie of the year certainly never imagined the best times of his life would occur in drafty old Arco Arena with a patchwork collection of teammates who somehow played sublime basketball together. The mere idea of seeing his No. 4 jersey in Arcoâs rafters some day would have been the most improbable thought of all. Yet thatâs exactly where Webber ended up Friday night when the Kings retired their former power forwardâs number in recognition of his pivotal role in this long-struggling franchiseâs greatest years. âIâm just happy, humbled, excited â having every emotion you can think of, including a stomach thatâs tied up in knots," said Webber, who didnât betray any of those nerves in his gray three-button suit and bright-red tie with matching pocket square. âThis was a really unexpected honor, one that I never expected to receive." Vlade Divac, Doug Christie, Scot Pollard and Mateen Cleaves were among the former teammates who returned to Sacramento for Webberâs ceremony. Gary Payton, Webberâs partner in the former starsâ promising new careers as television analysts, and Sacramento mayor Kevin Johnson also were in attendance. âThose memories of mine, the best moments that Iâve had in my life, they were here," said Webber, who made four All-Star teams and led the Kings to within an overtime Game 7 loss of the NBA finals in 2002. Webber got a two-minute standing ovation and raucous chants of âC-Webb! C-Webb!" when he stepped to center court under a spotlight at halftime. The current Kings, including former Webber teammates Brad Miller and Bobby Jackson, sneaked onto the court to watch the ceremony during the 23-minute halftime, with Kevin Martin lounging across the scorersâ table. âWhen I came here at the beginning, I really didnât know what to expect," Webber told the crowd. âIt was because of you guys that this worked. ... Iâm thankful that God brought me to Sacramento and let me be a King. You guys stood by me when the world left me for dead. I will always remember that." After Kings owner Gavin Maloof asked Webber to represent the woeful Kings at the draft lottery in three months, Webber hugged and rubbed the banner bearing his jerseyâs likeness before it was raised to the rafters. âYou made me a better player," said Divac, whose No. 21 will be hung alongside Webberâs jersey next month. âYou made all of us a better player. I played basketball for 20-plus years. My six years with the Kings and with you were the best." Guard Mitch Richmond, who was traded to Washington in that 1998 deal for Webber, is the only other player from the franchiseâs Sacramento era whose jersey hangs alongside the numbers of Oscar Robertson, Nate Archibald and four others in a club history that dates back to the Rochester Royals, one of the NBAâs original teams. With his versatile offensive game, exceptional passing and charismatic leadership, Webber was at the center of the franchiseâs longest sustained run of success during his 6½ seasons. Sacramento had eight straight winning seasons overall, including a club-record 61 victories in 2001-02 and back-to-back Pacific Division championships â still the only title banners hanging across from those retired numbers in the Arco Arena rafters. âNow, Iâm officially a part of the family forever," Webber said. âIf thereâs anything Iâm proud of, Iâm glad that I helped put Sacramento on the map." Webberâs initial reluctance to join the Kings was erased by a talk with his father, who also attended Fridayâs ceremony along with almost every member of Webberâs extended family. Webber still wasnât sure about Sacramento until his first practice, when point guard Jason Williams whipped a sublime behind-the-back pass to him for a dunk. Once Webber realized the possibilities of playing for coach Rick Adelman with a roster of young talent assembled by executive Geoff Petrie, he quickly grew to appreciate the chance heâd been handed early in an NBA career that wasnât really going anywhere. Although the Kings traded Webber in 2005 to get out from under the onerous contract he signed four years earlier, Webber is long past the âhurt and pain" of Petrieâs decision â particularly given the $123 million he made from the deal. âThe day we traded Chris, I said that the memories remain the property of the Sacramento Kings," said Petrie, the executive who built and dismantled the Kingsâ best teams. âThatâs especially true today." Although heâs just 35, an age when many NBA stars are still going strong, his perpetually unsound right knee finished off his career last year after a halfhearted comeback attempt with the Golden State Warriors. Webber still has a residence and a popular restaurant in Sacramento, and he visits the central Valley regularly. Although Webber seems happy with his new career as a provocative television analyst, he acknowledges heâll never be fully satisfied with his playing exploits, even with his name hanging forever in Arcoâs rafters. When asked to rank the importance of his jersey retirement, Webber said: âI wish I could say second to a championship. Itâs definitely the biggest honor that Iâve received in my basketball career. ... I canât lie and say (not winning a championship) isnât something that I think about. Itâs something that I always will want, and Iâm disappointed we couldnât give it to the people." â AP