May 28, 2002. Every Sacramento Kings fan remembers.

Trailing the dreaded Los Angeles Lakers 91-90 in Game 5 of the 2002 Western Conference Finals, the Sacramento Kings were 11.4 seconds away from moving one game closer to elimination.

Almost one game removed from the heartbreak of Game 4, Sacramento found themselves with their backs firmly planted against the wall as Mike Bibby readied himself to inbound the ball on the baseline.

Having grabbed a key rebound to give Sacramento possession, Bibby was looking to add to his 20-point night in a big way.


(Photo by Jed Jacobsohn /Getty Images)

Kings vs. Lakers: 2002 Western Conference Finals | Game 5

In one of the most memorable and controversial series in NBA history, the fourth quarter of Game 5 was a back-and-forth battle with three ties and seven lead changes.

Neither team owned a lead bigger than three for the entire duration of the period.

Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal had combined to score 58 points for the Lakers as Sacramento found themselves staring a 3-2 series deficit in the face. ARCO Arena, known for its “Arco Thunder,” was sold out with 17,317 crazed fans waiting on the edges of their seats as Bibby was handed the ball to inbound.

Chris Webber received the inbound pass and quickly dished the ball back to a cutting Bibby who broke free from Lakers guard Derek Fisher, thanks to a screen by Webber. Bibby curled around the screen and set his eyes on the basket.

He stopped. He popped. He delivered.

Broadcaster Marv Albert’s call on TV was drowned out by a deafening roar from the sell-out crowd as Bibby joined in with the rest of ARCO Arena and let out a scream of his own.

Sacramento took a 92-91 lead with 8.2 seconds remaining as all eyes shifted to Kobe Bryant. Bryant’s game-winning attempt rimmed out as ARCO Arena broke out into pandemonium, with the Kings moved to within one game of an NBA Finals berth.

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May 28, 2002 will live on as one of the greatest days in the history of the Sacramento Kings franchise. The small-market Kings had the defending champion Lakers on the ropes, and Mike Bibby had put the Kings one punch away from a knockout victory.

“The Shot” would end up being the high point for the Kings in the Conference Finals.

Game 6 may very well be the most controversial game in NBA history. Sacramento struggled from the line and in crunch time during Game 7. The Kings would fall in seven games as the Lakers would go on to defeat the New Jersey Nets in the NBA Finals.

No matter the outcome, “The Shot” remains one of the greatest moments in Sacramento Kings franchise history.

Upcoming offseason schedule for the Sacramento Kings:

Wednesday, June 25th – 2025 NBA Draft
Monday, June 30th – NBA free agent negotiations can begin
Sunday, July 6th – NBA free agents can officially sign with teams
July 10th-20th – Las Vegas NBA Summer League
August TBD – Release of 2025-26 regular season schedule
September TBD – Start of NBA training camps for the 2025-26 season

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