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Updated at 5:50 p.m., Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Kings choose Theus as new coach

By Greg Beacham
Associated Press

The Sacramento Kings reached an agreement in principle today with Reggie Theus to become their new coach, ending a meandering two-month search for Eric Musselman's replacement.

Kings spokesman Troy Hanson said the club plans to introduce Theus, the New Mexico State coach and a former Kings player, at a news conference tomorrow.

The Kings' search progressed slowly and deliberately after the club's first losing season since 1998. Sacramento nearly hired Stan Van Gundy two weeks ago before he chose the Orlando Magic, while veteran coach Larry Brown recently expressed interest in the opening.

The Kings instead chose Theus, a well-liked 13-year NBA veteran — though he has almost as much experience playing a coach on television as in real life. Theus, who transformed the New Mexico State program into an NCAA tournament club in just two seasons on the Aggies' sideline, has never coached in the NBA.

"People that know me, know that I am not someone who gets speechless, but right now I am," Theus said in a statement released by New Mexico State. "When I got involved in the interview process I really didn't give it much thought. It was just a chance to experience an NBA interview, and I never thought about this really happening."

Musselman was fired April 20 after one season that began with his arrest on a drunken-driving charge. The former Golden State coach coaxed just 33 victories from a fractured locker room filled with grumpy veterans — most of whom are under contract for next season.

Kings assistant coach Scott Brooks, and Los Angeles Lakers assistants Brian Shaw and Kurt Rambis also got second interviews with Sacramento owners Joe and Gavin Maloof, who reportedly picked Musselman after the coach wowed the brothers in an interview last summer — just as Theus apparently did last Friday at the Maloofs' casino in Las Vegas.

Theus will leave New Mexico State after a historic two-year run. The long-suffering Aggies finished 25-9 last season, capping the NCAA's biggest turnaround in the past two seasons by winning the WAC tournament and playing in the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1999.

"I have never been so happy and so sad at the same time," Theus said in the statement. "The program here at NMSU is like my baby and it means so much to me. ... The support I have received while at NMSU has been second to none.

"The one thing that I am sure of is the program is very solid and it is without a doubt one of the best mid-major jobs in the country."

New Mexico State said it will immediately conduct a nationwide search for Theus' replacement.

Theus brought excitement and credibility to the Aggies, whose fans packed the Pan American Center, and landed recruits including Herb Pope, a 6-foot-9 star from Pennsylvania. After Theus interviewed for the Charlotte Bobcats' vacancy last month, the school rewarded him last month with a new long-term contract worth $466,000 per season, making him the WAC's highest-paid coach.

But Theus' skills and style — his players called him "Hollywood" because of his designer suits and preening poses on the sideline — along with his winning record and Sacramento roots appealed to the Maloofs and Geoff Petrie, the Kings' top executive.

"I'm happy for coach and extremely pleased with the shape our program is in," New Mexico State athletic director Dr. McKinley Boston said in the school's statement. "We will work towards an appropriate transition that will protect the welfare of our student-athletes as well as our incoming recruits.

"We're happy and disappointed, but at the same time we recognize what a wonderful opportunity this is for Reggie and that in time he will do a wonderful job."

Theus, a two-time All-Star from UNLV, joined the Kansas City Kings during the 1983-84 season and moved along with the franchise to Sacramento in 1985. He was the Kings' second-leading scorer during their inaugural year in Northern California, then led the club in scoring during the next two seasons before he was traded to Atlanta.

After leaving the NBA in 1991, Theus played overseas and spent several years as an NBA television analyst for various networks while pursuing an acting career.

Theus wasn't a coach, but he played one on TV: Coach Bill Fuller, that is, for three seasons on TV in the Saturday-morning show "Hang Time."

After short stops with the ABA and Cal State-Los Angeles, Theus spent two years as Rick Pitino's assistant at Louisville before taking over at New Mexico State.