Sacramento Kings

National Basketball Association team in Sacramento, California / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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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 club of the association's Western Conference Pacific Division. The Kings are the oldest team in the NBA, and the first and only team in the major professional North American sports leagues located in Sacramento. The team plays its home games at the Golden 1 Center. Their best seasons to date in the city were in the early 2000s, including a very successful 2001–02 season when they had the best record in the NBA at 61–21 (a winning percentage of .744).[11][12][13][14][15]

Quick facts: Sacramento Kings, Conference, Division, Found...
Sacramento Kings
Basketball_current_event.svg 2023–24 Sacramento Kings season
Sacramento Kings logo
ConferenceWestern
DivisionPacific
Founded1923
HistoryRochester Seagrams
1923–1942
Rochester Eber Seagrams
1942–1943
Rochester Pros
1943–1945
Rochester Royals
1945–1948 (NBL)
1948–1957 (NBA)
Cincinnati Royals
1957–1972
Kansas City-Omaha Kings
1972–1975
Kansas City Kings
1975–1985
Sacramento Kings
1985–present[1][2][3]
ArenaGolden 1 Center
LocationSacramento, California
Team colorsBlack, purple, slate gray[4][5][6]
     
Main sponsorDialpad[7]
PresidentJohn Rinehart[8]
General managerMonte McNair[9]
Head coachMike Brown
OwnershipVivek Ranadivé[10]
Affiliation(s)Stockton Kings
Championships2
NBL: 1 (1946)
NBA: 1 (1951)
Conference titles0
Division titles6 (1949, 1952, 1979, 2002, 2003, 2023)
Retired numbers11 (1, 2, 4, 6, 11, 12, 14, 16, 21, 27, 44)
Websitewww.nba.com/kings
Close

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,[1] winning that league's championship in their first season, 1945–46. They later jumped with three other NBL teams to the Basketball Association of America, forerunner of the NBA, in 1948. As the Royals, the team was often successful on the court, winning the NBA championship in 1951. The team, however, found it increasingly difficult to turn a profit in the comparatively small market of Rochester and relocated to Cincinnati in 1957, becoming the Cincinnati Royals.

In 1972, the team relocated again, this time to Kansas City, Missouri, and renamed the Kansas City–Omaha Kings because it initially split its home games between Kansas City and Omaha, Nebraska; the nickname was changed to avoid confusion with the baseball team dubbed the Kansas City Royals. After three seasons, the team truncated to Kansas City Kings, but continued to play several home games per season in Omaha, through March 1978.[16][17][18]

The franchise again failed to find success in its market and moved after the 1984–85 season to Sacramento. Between 2006 and 2022, the Kings had 16 consecutive losing seasons, the most in NBA history.[19] The Kings also had the longest active postseason drought in the four major North American sports, which started in 2006 and lasted until 2023.