Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

2024–25 Sacramento Kings season

NBA professional basketball team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The 2024–25 Sacramento Kings season was the 80th season for the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and 40th season in the city of Sacramento.[1]

Quick Facts Sacramento Kings season, Head coach ...
Remove ads

The season saw the depatures of coach Mike Brown and franchise guard De'Aaron Fox, who were fired and traded respectively. Doug Christie was named the interim head coach.[2][3]

On April 16, the Kings were eliminated from playoff contention for the second consecutive season after they lost to the Dallas Mavericks in the play-in tournament.

Remove ads

Draft picks

More information Round, Pick ...

The Kings had one first-round pick and one second-round picks entering the draft (which was two days long instead of one day like it previously has been since the NBA draft was shortened down to two rounds in 1989).[4][5]

Remove ads

Roster

Summarize
Perspective
More information Players, Coaches ...
Remove ads

Standings

Division

More information Pacific Division, W ...

Conference

More information Western Conference, # ...

Game log

Summarize
Perspective

Preseason

More information 2024 preseason game log Total: 0–5 (Home: 0–2; Road: 0–3), Game ...

Regular season

More information 2024–25 game log Total: 40–42 (Home: 20–21; Road: 20–21), Game ...

Play-in

More information 2025 play-in game log Total: 0–1 (Home: 0–1; Road: 0–0), Game ...

NBA Cup

The groups were revealed during the tournament announcement on July 12, 2024.[6][7]

West Group A

More information Pos, Pld ...
Source: NBA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
Remove ads

Transactions

Trades

June 28, 2024[8] To Sacramento Kings
Jalen McDaniels
To Toronto Raptors
Davion Mitchell
Sasha Vezenkov
Draft rights to Jamal Shead (No. 45)
2025 POR second-round pick
July 8, 2024[9] Three-team trade
To Sacramento Kings
DeMar DeRozan (sign-and-trade) (from Chicago)
To Chicago Bulls
Chris Duarte (from Sacramento)
RaiQuan Gray (two-way contract) (from San Antonio)
Two future second-round picks (from Sacramento)
Cash considerations (from Sacramento)
To San Antonio Spurs
Harrison Barnes (from Sacramento)
2031 first-round pick swap right (from Sacramento)
February 3, 2025[10] Three-team trade
To Sacramento Kings
Sidy Cissoko (from San Antonio)
Zach LaVine (from Chicago)
2025 CHA protected first-round pick (from San Antonio)
2025 CHI second-round pick (from San Antonio)
2027 SAS first-round pick (from San Antonio)
2028 DEN protected second-round pick (from San Antonio)
2028 SAC second-round pick (from Chicago)
2031 MIN first-round pick (from San Antonio)
To Chicago Bulls
Zach Collins (from San Antonio)
Kevin Huerter (from Sacramento)
Tre Jones (from San Antonio)
2025 CHI first-round pick (from San Antonio)
To San Antonio Spurs
De'Aaron Fox (from Sacramento)
Jordan McLaughlin (from Sacramento)
February 5, 2025[11] To Sacramento Kings
Jonas Valančiūnas
To Washington Wizards
Sidy Cissoko
2028 DEN protected second-round pick
2029 SAC second-round pick
February 6, 2025[12] Three-team trade
To Sacramento Kings
Jake LaRavia (from Memphis)
To Memphis Grizzlies
Marvin Bagley III (from Washington)
Johnny Davis (from Washington)
2025 WAS second-round pick (from Washington)
2028 SAC second-round pick (from Sacramento)
To Washington Wizards
Colby Jones (from Sacramento)
Alex Len (from Sacramento)
Marcus Smart (from Memphis)
2025 MEM protected first-round pick (from Memphis)

Free agency

Re-signed

More information Date, Player ...

Additions

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads