SACRAMENTO, Calif., Dec. 17 (Ticker) -- The Sacramento Kings proved there is a large gap between first and second place in the Pacific Division.

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Chris Webber had 27 points and 12 rebounds and Bobby Jackson scored 19 points as the Kings remained unbeaten at home with a 95-86 victory over the Phoenix Suns.

Sacramento sits atop the Pacific, which is not much of a surprise. What is a surprise is Phoenix, which has taken advantage of the Los Angeles Lakers' slow start to move into second place.

The Kings posted their second convincing victory over the Suns this season, proving they are head and shoulders above any other team in the division.

"I don't care about the Lakers at the bottom," said Kings center Vlade Divac, who had 12 rebounds and seven assists. "We have Phoenix and Seattle right behind us and we need to take care of this team and home-court advantage."

Webber made 12-of-23 shots and Jackson, who was sidelined by an ankle sprain earlier this week, was 7-of-11 from the floor for Sacramento.

The Kings never trailed and became the eighth NBA franchise to record 2,000 wins.

Sacramento had a 59-56 lead midway through the third quarter before scoring 13 of the next 17 points to pull away. Jackson scored nine points during the spurt, which gave the Kings a 72-60 cushion with 4:21 to go.

Sacramento scored the first 10 points of the fourth quarter. Webber had a jumper and a layup and Damon James capped the run with a pair of free throws to give the Kings their largest lead at 85-66 with 8:37 remaining.

Jim Jackson scored 11 points off the bench for the Kings, who improved to 13-0 at Arco Arena this season.

Sacramento has won its last 14 games at home, where it is 111-24 since the start of the 1999-2000 season.

Rookie Casey Jacobsen scored a season-high 15 points and Shawn Marion added 14 despite battling the flu for Phoenix, which had a season-high four-game winning streak snapped.

Stephon Marbury was held to nine points on 4-of-16 shooting and Penny Hardaway made just 4-of-10 shots for eight points.

"I think (Marbury) wasn't as aggressive tonight," said Kings guard Doug Christie, who had six steals. "As good as he is, you can only hope to contain him."

"We were really exhausted," Hardaway said. "We were in the game, but they are a veteran team and they play well together here in this building."

The Suns shot just 38 percent (35-of-92) from the floor and made only 12-of-21 free throws.

"We kept missing," Phoenix coach Frank Johnson said. "When you have a chance to make shots against a team like Sacramento, you have to make them. We got caught watching them tonight more than anything."

"Shots we normally make just weren't going in tonight," Marbury said. "That's what happens when you come into an arena like this. We kept narrowing the gap, but every time we got close, we couldn't finish it out."

Webber scored nine points in the first quarter, when the Kings made 15-of-24 shots and jumped to a 32-20 lead. But the Suns scored the first seven points of the second and pulled within 34-29 on a 3-pointer by Jacobsen.