Going to a Kings playoff game? Check out these restaurants and bars in downtown Sacramento

Going to a Sacramento Kings playoff game won’t just be about the game.

It’s the 16 years of waiting, suffering through seemingly endless draft busts and ineffectual coaches to return to the postseason. Local sports bars are gearing up for hordes of fans eager to watch the hometown heroes take on Golden State Warriors.

Game 1 on Saturday already set the record for the most expensive first round tickets in NBA history, and tickets for Game 2 on Monday start at more than $250 a pop.

But if you can afford those — or come down to Golden 1 Center for a free watch party while the Kings are on the road — you might as well enjoy an additional meal, drink or activity around Downtown Commons.

Here are my favorite spots to grab bites, drinks and good times around Golden 1 Center before or after a game.

Great food

Kodaiko Ramen & Bar

An assortments of dishes served at Kodaiko Ramen & Bar on K Street in downtown Sacramento, Sunday, Jan, 19, 2020.
An assortments of dishes served at Kodaiko Ramen & Bar on K Street in downtown Sacramento, Sunday, Jan, 19, 2020.

Address: 718 K St.

Phone number: (916) 426-8863.

Hours: 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and 4-9 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and 4-11 p.m. Friday, 12-11 p.m. Saturday, 12-9 p.m. Sunday.

What to know: It’s been an unusually wet winter around these parts, and I’ve made many pilgrimages to Kodaiko, the basement “Sac Ramen Kings” under The Hardin apartment complex. It’s not just the best ramen spot in downtown Sacramento, it’s one of the Sacramento area’s best restaurants, period. Chef/owner Takumi Abe’s specials board and cocktail list is always worth checking out, and while you can’t go wrong with a classic tonkotsu stewed for 72 hours, the citrus shio ramen is a bright twist on a typically rich soup. Vegetarians and vegans fear not: the mushroom paitan is maybe the best soup on the menu — a rich cashew cream broth made flavorful by white beech ‘shrooms.

Polanco Cantina

We just went wedding dress shopping, said recently-engaged Hailey Wright, right, of Sacramento, while sitting with her friends on a patio at Polanco across from Golden 1 Center at DoCo on Thursday, July 22, 2021, in downtown Sacramento. She was toasting with her friends, sitting counter-clockwise: Megan Williams, who now lives in Woodland; Rita Dawson, visiting from San Antonio, Texas; and Haley Cameron, who is also living in Sacramento. I go all the time, Wright said about attending Sacramento Kings games. I live really close, so I usually just walk here with my fiancé.

Address: 414 K St., Suite 240.

Phone number: (916) 536-7250.

Hours: 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Monday-Wednesday, 11-1 a.m. Thursday, 11-2 a.m. Friday, 10-2 a.m. Saturday, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday.

What to know: Polanco can turn a little clubby on weekend nights, but it’s a great option for Mexican food before a game — particularly if you can grab a patio table overlooking the rest of Downtown Commons. Owned by San Rafael-based Moana Restaurant Group, three-year-old Polanco has shown a commitment to sourcing quality ingredients such as Mary’s Chicken for Sinaloa-style wings or Rancho Gordo heirloom corn for pozole. My colleague Marcos Bretón raves about the beer-battered crispy avocado tacos, tucked into corn tortillas with pineapple salsa and chipotle crema.

Camden Spit & Larder

The dining room at Cadmen Spit and Larder on Tuesday, March 5, 2019 in Sacramento.
The dining room at Cadmen Spit and Larder on Tuesday, March 5, 2019 in Sacramento.

Address: 555 Capitol Mall, Suite 100.

Phone number: (916) 619-8897.

Hours: 11:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, 11:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday, 5-9 p.m. Saturday, closed Sunday.

What to know: A block south of Golden 1 Center on Sacramento’s Capitol Mall, Camden is one of the city’s best special occasion restaurants but lacks the kind of stuffy air that might turn off game-goers. Chef/owner Oliver Ridgeway, who previously helmed the kitchen at fellow downtown standout Grange, infuses flavors of his native London with fine dining techniques and exquisite sourcing. The result is dishes such as locally-produced caviar with crumpets, mushroom tikka masala with delicata squash fritters or spit-roasted chicken with sweet potato gnocchi. Pop by for “Winston’s Hour,” named for Camden’s scooter-riding boar mascot, between 2-6 p.m. for premium sausage rolls and discounted cocktails.

Drink up!

Fizz Champagne & Bubbles Bar

A group walks past Fizz Champagne & Bubbles Bar at Downtown Commons in Sacramento on Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021.
A group walks past Fizz Champagne & Bubbles Bar at Downtown Commons in Sacramento on Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021.

Address: 615 David J Stern Walk, Suite 105.

Phone number: (916) 573-3909.

Hours: 3-11 p.m. Monday, 3-9 p.m. Tuesday, 12-9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 12-10 p.m. Friday, 12-11 p.m. Saturday, 1-8 p.m. Sunday.

What to know: Did the Kings just win? Celebrate at Fizz, Raymond James Irwin’s Champagne and sparkling wine bar in Downtown Commons. Celebrations can range from $8-per-glass Grandial blanc de blanc to a $14,000, six-liter bottle of 1990 Louis Roderer Cristal, one of just 2,000 produced by the French winery. More realistic are flights of three different two-ounce pours, which range from $20-$99 and offer sparkling tastes at a range of prestiges.

The Bank

A view from the mezzanine at The Bank – a new food hall with local vendors and a self-service taproom – shows the architectural details of the old D.O. Mills Bank building in downtown Sacramento on Monday.
A view from the mezzanine at The Bank – a new food hall with local vendors and a self-service taproom – shows the architectural details of the old D.O. Mills Bank building in downtown Sacramento on Monday.

Address: 629 J St.

Phone number: (916) 557-9910.

Hours: 4-10 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, 4 p.m.-1 a.m. Friday and Saturday, closed Sunday and Monday.

What to know: Did the Kings just lose? Drown your sorrows at The Bank, a 30,000-square foot watering hole one block east of the arena. Formerly the D.O. Mills Bank Building, it was converted into a three-story food and drink hall with tons of natural light in 2018. There’s food such as burgers and poke, but most people come for the pay-per-ounce basement taproom, where more than 60 types of beer, wine and cider flow. The main level is home to a sportier bar, and a mezzanine bar specializes in higher-end cocktails.

Darling Aviary

Address: 712 K St.

Phone number: (916) 758-5715.

Hours: 4-10 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 1 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Friday and Saturday, 1-10 p.m. Sunday.

What to know: Few bars can match the views of Darling Aviary, a new downtown hotspot owned by the folks behind The Flamingo House in midtown Sacramento. A neon-lit interior gives way to the no-reservations rooftop bar, which overlooks Golden 1 Center as well as the north end of K Street, downtown Sacramento’s main avenue. Cocktails range from refreshing (try the sandpiper pomegranate spritz: Vedrenne pomegranate liqueur, Chandon Brut sparkling wine, soda water and a lemon twist) to brooding (a Maker’s Mark old fashioned with smoked maple syrup, peach and orange peel) to cozy (El Tesoro reposado tequila mixed into Abuelita hot chocolate).

Fun times around downtown Sacramento

Flatstick Pub

Address: 630 K St., Suite 120.

Phone number: (916) 872-0772.

Hours: 11 a.m-11 p.m. Sunday-Thursday, 11-2 a.m. Friday and Saturday.

What to know: An indoor, basement-level mini golf course within spitting distance of Golden 1 Center, Flatstick Pub (also known as Tipsy Putt) is your place to prove that basketball players aren’t the only athletes in Downtown Commons. Tap your golf ball through a replica of Sacramento’s golden Tower Bridge or a halved keg on the nine-hole course, or shoot your shot at duffleboard, a tabletop shuffleboard/mini golf game invented by the house. Local beer and other drinks flow from more than 20 taps, which go hand-in-hand with tacos coming from the kitchen window. Games are $3 off until 6 p.m., and it’s 21+ after 5 p.m.

Punch Bowl Social

Punch Bowl Social in Sacramento, Calif.
Punch Bowl Social in Sacramento, Calif.

Address: 500 J St., Suite 100.

Phone number: (916) 925-5610.

Hours: 11-12 a.m. Monday through Thursday, 11-2 a.m. Friday, 10-2 a.m. Saturday, 10-12 a.m. Sunday.

What to know: There’s no shortage of entertainment options at Punch Bowl Social, just north of the arena in DoCo. The two-story, 25,000-square foot funhouse has rooms for bowling, billiards, darts, ping pong, arcade and board games, karaoke, giant Scrabble and more. There’s a kitchen focused on burgers and loaded fries. As the name implies, though, four- or eight-person cocktail punch bowls are one of the more fun moves.

California Museum

Christine Umeda stands next to the numbered luggage tags her husband’s family had to wear when they we sent to the incarceration camps Wednesday, March 1, 2023, at the new Uprooted: An American Story exhibition inside of California Museum in Sacramento. Umeda said, “ This is the power of the presidency, and although is was misguided it did lead to a really unconstitutional period in our time, where we were unjustly incarcerated.” Uprooted tells the story of the Japanese Americans incarceration after President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 that forcibly removed 120,000 ethnic Japanese from the west coast during WWII.

Address: 1020 O St.

Phone number: (916) 653-7524.

Hours: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, 12-5 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday.

What to know: The California Museum is the only attraction on this list further than two blocks from Golden 1 Center (half a mile away, by the Capitol), and it’s the only one without food and drinks. But the Golden State’s history museum is worth visiting if you’re a Californian who wants to know more about your homeland. Eye-catching and engaging, the California Museum paints a picture of the diverse, multifaceted state from its original Native inhabitants to today’s great innovators. It’s great for kids while also not shying away from ugly chapters of the state’s history such as Japanese Americans’ unjust incarceration during World War II, and the California Hall of Fame makes one appreciate just what an impact this state’s residents have had on the world.