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NBA SCOREBOARD: Recap
Recap | Box Score | Today's Scoreboard
Please note that our box scores are updated after each quarter
Sacramento 115, Golden St. 84
Posted: Thursday November 09, 2000 02:15 AM
Golden St. Warriors
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Sacramento Kings
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SACRAMENTO, California (Ticker) -- Jason Williams returned from his five-game suspension for violating the NBA's anti-drug policy and the Sacramento Kings violated the Golden State Warriors.

Peja Stojakovic and former Warrior Chris Webber needed just three quarters to score 27 points apiece and Williams handed out 12 assists before sitting out the final 12 minutes as the Kings embarrassed the Warriors from start to finish, 115-84.

Vlade Divac's free throw opened the scoring, putting Sacramento ahead to stay, and Stojakovic buried a 20-footer before the Kings ran out to a 31-14 lead after one quarter and a 65-38 cushion at the half.

Stojakovic connected on 11-of-18 shots and 3-of-6 3-pointers in 27 minutes and Webber, who has made a habit of burning his former teams, hit 12-of-17 shots and grabbed nine rebounds in 31 minutes.

"It was a great win," Webber said. "And it was great to have Jason back and his style of play -- he's great with the up-tempo play. I want (the Warriors) to remember every game, not just when I play against them, what they gave up. I always try to get a few more boards when I play against my former teams."

Williams finished with four points, three steals and four turnovers in 28 minutes and left the game with his team holding a commanding 92-66 bulge.

"It was great to be back on the floor," Williams said. "I'd play a doubleheader if the ancient guys would let me. But I don't think they will, so I will settle for Friday night (at Golden State). I would settle for 100 turnovers a game as long as the team wins. It's all about winning."

"Obviously, we found our offense," Sacramento coach Rick Adelman said after watching his team grind out an impressive 79-75 victory against Portland here on Monday. "Jason was a little excited to play. He was terrific the way he set the tone at the start, pushing the ball up the court. The first quarter, we really moved the ball well as a team."

Danny Fortson had 17 points and 14 rebounds for the Warriors, who managed to outscore the Kings' reserves, 23-18, in the fourth quarter. Golden State has lost three straight since a rousing opening night win over Phoenix.

Sacramento has won 12 of its last 13 home meetings with Golden State.

Larry Hughes scored 15 points and Antawn Jamison added 10 for the Warriors, who yielded a whopping 41 points off 31 turnovers.

Golden State shot 42 percent (33-of-79) and managed just eight points off Sacramento giveaways.

"I won't look at this tape, in fact, nobody gets to look at this," Golden State coach Dave Cowens said. "We already saw it and that's enough for a lifetime. We just weren't ready to play, we played awful and that's the end of the story. Hopefully, it won't happen again."

Hughes' 17-footer had the Warriors within 18-13 with 4:42 left in the first quarter before things got ugly. Webber and Stojakovic hit back-to-back short jumpers, Webber drained an 18-footer, Stojakovic made two free throws and Webber completed a three-point play as the Kings opened a 31-14 lead with 1:11 remaining in the opening quarter.

Stojakovic had a layup, a 16-footer and a 3-pointer before feeding Lawrence Funderburke for an uncontested layup as Sacramento extended the margin to 40-16 less than three minutes into the second quarter.

"Jason came back and helped us come back and make a lot of easy shots," Stojakovic said. "It was a great feeling to have him come back."

Williams found Webber with a fancy feed for a dunk with 1:08 left in the first half as the Kings opened a 62-34 lead.

"When C Webb and them see me make a nice pass, they want to make it a better pass," Williams said. "I think we got off on a good start and got them on their heels."

Williams' first basket of the season, a medium-range jumper, opened the second half and Sacramento took its biggest lead of the night, 90-55, with 2:13 left in the third quarter.

"This is definitely a game we have to learn from since we play the same team on Friday," Jamison said. "Our defense tonight was horrible and we missed some nice shots and all they had was layups. It's one of those times you just gotta roll with the punches and get ready for Friday."

Funderburke had 12 points off the bench for the Kings, who made half of their 96 shots, 8-of-20 3-pointers and combined for a team season-high 34 assists.


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